- Free Lunch - During the cowboy era, American saloons offered "free lunch," or small bites served gratis alongside drink orders. A typical free lunch included smoked oysters, crackers with Limburger cheese, rye bread, and sardines. If you want to recreate a free lunch and make it a feast, add salted peanuts, sauerkraut, cold cuts, pretzels, and dill pickles. Crafty saloon owners knew that such salty offerings not only kept customers around longer but kept them thirsty for more.
- Chili Powder - German immigrant William Gebhardt first pulverized dried chile peppers by using a meat grinder in the 1890s. The powder was popularized along the Wells Fargo stagecoach line in Texas and became a boon to home cooks and chuck wagon chefs alike. The powder also helped popularize chili as a recognizable dish across the US.
- Dead Man's Hand - bourbon whiskey, agave nectar, spicy bitters, Peychaud's bitters; fun fact: named for the cards Wild Bill Hickok was holding when he was shot, now called the "dead man's hand" (two black aces and two black eights)
- Watermelon Ranch Water - blanco tequila, lime juice, fresh watermelon juice, Topo Chico (or club soda); fun fact: "ranch water" is the name for the combination of tequila, lime juice, and sparkling water
- Madame Mustache - mezcal, agave nectar, Angostura bitters, beer; fun fact: named for Eleanor Dumont, who operated a series of gambling dens across the western frontier (and, yes, also had a mustache)
- I'm Your Huckleberry - bourbon whiskey, huckleberry syrup, lemon juice, Angostura bitters; fun fact: named for a real quote said by Doc Holliday, but made famous by Val Kilmer's delivery of the line in the 1993 movie Tombstone
- Tombstone Tonsil Painter - rye whiskey, Tawny Port, Benedictine, Angostura bitters; fun fact: "tonsil paint," or "tonsil varnish," was a cowboy nickname for whiskey
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