Late night thought on a road trip in the US and I can’t stop think what an “All American meal with a great from every state” would consist of. Like something that a state is know for being exceptional in from beef to white tail to peaches to oastets to sunflowers to almonds to coffee. Even better it’s something an average American could actually eat in one meal.
Extra bonus points include the greater US (American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands)!
If others want to through other wide geographic/culture dishes like an EU, North African, all of China please do so too, it would be interesting to see too!
If you’re putting 50+ things in one meal, you’re definitely already eating American
Anywhere in the US you go, if they have a “California-style” anything it has avocado.
Grind up one of every official state bird, and make it into a hot dog.
Besides Rhode Island not a lot of state birds looking tasty 😅
But maybe on to something for options looking at state game birds, water fowl, and duck!
So much cardinal in there.
You’re not gonna get much off a goldfinch
Every US state has official state foods, sometimes getting as specific as state vegetable, state dessert, state grape, etc.
This list should give you a head start: list of official US state foods
Man, that is both a huge list (I didn’t even think about state mushrooms for example) and also surprising to see some states have none! You’re right great heat start for a list.
I’m saying for AZ it would be prickly pear cactus jelly
Only 5 states with a non desert, prepared food, LA gumbo, CT pizza, OK has a whole meal, TX chilli, and NJ taylor swift sandwich
You could have a month (or quarter year) featuring food from the different states. Louisiana is known for boiled crabs and crawfish, as well as Cajun and creole cooking. Maryland is known for crab cakes. Utah is known for gelatin salads. Nebraska (Omaha) is known for its steaks. North Carolina is known for two distinct types of barbecue sauce.
North Carolina also has good Mexican cuisine due to immigration. Don’t sleep on elote, tamales, or alambre in NC.
And South Carolina has Mustard based BBQ!
I know, I was thinking just ingredients from each state, but all the different forms people have recommended makes me think you could take these ingredients and make a bunch of different styles of meals like you were saying.
To add to your list from others on here and some I thought of. Burritos, tacos, pasties, hotpots, stir fries, burgers, pho, sushi rolls, etc, because we have such a diversity of people here!
Oh man, bbq, there was a restaurant that did that well in Virginia that let you taste different styles of bbq sauce and seasonings from across the country. It was awesome! For NC are you talking about their sauce that doesn’t have tomato is much stronger viniger flavor for it? Another interesting bbq is Alabama white bbq sauce which also forgoes tomato base and instead has a mayo and horseradish base!
I was speaking from personal experience in the states I mentioned, as well as everyone else responding to your post.
You can separate native recipes from recipes brought later by other cultures, but the only difference is native recipes were brought by the original settlers.
Burritos are an interesting example. In Mexican rural areas, burritos were plain, as the people didn’t historically have access to spices. When the burrito was originally brought to Texas, the cooks added spices. Now, you can find burritos almost anywhere in the world, each city making them with their own flavor. Just like hot dogs and pizza.
Minnesota is home to the juicy lucy, a cheeseburger with the cheese being cooked inside the patty. Serve that with a tater tot hot dish
Not including Minnesota cheese would feel like a crime!
you forgot lutefisk and lefse!
Maryland: blue crab, Old Bay, and soft shell blue crab.
All great! A seasoning should be super versatile in different recipes (I know people who would old bay on litterally anything too, so it probably would be the first time if it seemed weird).
Brisket. Tx.
I think Pasties for Michigan.
Cherries in your coffee, cherries in your wine, cherries in your toothpaste, cherries all the time!
Taylor brand Pork Roll.
No, stop. You’re wrong.
Which state is that?
New Jersey
Jersey
Virginia ham is quite tasty.
Ooh what kinda of flavor is Virginia ham normally?
Ham flavor
These snozz berries taste like snozz berries
Salty but also I’ve had some great spiral cut sugar cured ham.
Colorado is known for its lamb, green chili, melons, and peaches.
If you put a peach in this meal, tho - that’s Georgia’s peach.
I would agree with that.
Love all those myself! Great choices to pick from
And Chili Colorado- not because it has any relation to the state but because it shares a name.
I think Georgia comes to mind for peaches
Gotta be pizza for Connecticut.
Interesting what makes Connecticut pizza stand out to you?
There is a particular style called New Haven apizza which has thin, crispy crust. It’s baked in a very hot, usually coal-fired oven. It’s the best.
Green Chile from Hatch, New Mexico.
Down to the city! Gotta order some from down there now!
Bourbon.
Kentucky I can only assume. Great choice could used in cooking, sauce or you know as a drink!
Kentucky also has the Hot Brown and Derby Pie.
Derby pie is delicious.
The wiki someone posted mentions blackberry as the state fruit, which I didn’t know but could definitely see. I have fond memories of picking blackberries outside so grandma could make blackberry cobbler.
As far as drinks go, we also have the Mint Julip and the Oaks Lily, which are basically signature drinks of the Kentucky Derby.