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Legendary Dishes Invented In Every State

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Alabama: Lane cake

The coconut and bourbon–filled Southern layer cake in Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird is perfectly Alabama. Late 19th-century Clayton home chef Emma Rylander Lane developed it. 

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Alabama: West Indies salad

This unusual salad, a Gulf Coast staple, was invented in 1947 by Bayley's Steak House owner William Bayley, Sr. 

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Alaska: Alaskan ice cream

Alaskan indigenous people make akutaq (Eskimo or Alaskan ice cream) by whisking fat or tallow (rendered suet) with berries.

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Arizona: chimichanga

This Tex-Mex classic was invented by accident in a Mexican restaurant in Arizona as a deep-fried burrito. But historians dispute on where it occurred.

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Arizona: cheese crisp

This Arizona tavern favorite is a simple but tasty treat, consisting of an open-faced flour tortilla covered in shredded cheese and broiled until bubbling.

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Arkansas: fried pickles

A salty, snappy dill pickle battered and fried to crispy perfection – this fried treat may not be for everyone, but we (along with many others) think it’s ingenious.

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California: cioppino

Served in a thick tomato and white wine broth, this hearty Italian-American fish stew is San Francisco's response to bouillabaisse. It may contain clams, mussels, shrimp, Dungeness crab, and halibut. 

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California: Cobb salad

One of America’s most famous salads, this hearty dish was invented in 1938 by restaurant owner Bob Cobb, when he cobbled a few leftovers together one night after service at the Brown Derby in Hollywood.

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