• National Lemonade Day

    Lemonade seems like the simplest of beverages—just lemon juice, water and sugar—yet its story spans continents. Lemons likely originated in northeast India and spread west along trade routes. In 10th‑century Egypt, records describe a drink made from lemon juice and sugar called qatarmizat, sold by street vendors. In Europe, lemons were prized not only for […]

  • National Chocolate Pecan Pie Day

    Pecans are America’s native nut. Indigenous peoples along the Mississippi and Texas rivers foraged pecans for millennia before European settlers arrived, and the word ‘pecan’ itself comes from an Algonquin term meaning ‘a nut requiring a stone to crack’. French colonists first wrote about the tree in the 18th century, and by the 19th century […]

  • National Hawaiian Pizza Day

    Pizza may hail from Italy, but Hawaiian pizza is a product of mid‑century North America. In 1962, Sam Panopoulos, a Greek immigrant who ran a diner in the Canadian town of Chatham, Ontario, decided to experiment with toppings. He opened a can of pineapple packed under the brand name Hawaiian, added a few rings atop […]

  • National Spumoni Day

    Before Neapolitan ice cream was a supermarket staple, Italians were layering frozen creams and candied fruit into moulds called spumoni. This dessert likely originated in Campania or Sicily in the late 19th century and combined three flavours—usually cherry, pistachio and vanilla—swirled with candied citrus peel and nuts. The layers were moulded in a cylindrical shape […]

  • National Sweet Tea Day

    For many in the American South, sweet tea isn’t just a drink—it’s a ritual. In the mid‑19th century, tea was a luxury item, as were sugar and ice. Recipes for sweetened iced tea didn’t appear until 1878, when a community cookbook from Virginia offered a version using green tea steeped with sugar and cooled. The […]

  • National Bao Day

    Bao—soft, pillowy buns filled with savoury or sweet fillings—are part of the culinary heart of China. Legend credits the military strategist Zhuge Liang with inventing steamed buns during the Three Kingdoms era, using dough in place of human heads as a ritual offering. Historically, baozi evolved from mantou, plain steamed buns eaten as staples in […]

  • Eat a Peach Day

    In late summer, peaches perfume markets with their floral sweetness. The fruit, which likely originated in China more than 4,000 years ago, was so beloved there that poets compared it to immortality. From the foothills of the Himalayas peaches travelled west along the Silk Road through Persia—giving rise to their species name, Prunus persica—and on […]

  • World Plant Milk Day

    Plant‑based milks might seem like a recent trend, but humans have been blending nuts, grains and seeds with water for centuries. Medieval European cooks made almond milk to use during Lent when animal products were forbidden; in China, soybeans were ground and boiled to create the drink we know as soy milk. In modern times, […]

  • National Pecan Torte Day

    Unlike a sponge cake, a torte relies on nuts for body instead of flour. In central Europe tortes are dense confections layered with buttercream and fruit, but in the American South the pecan torte stands apart: it’s a single layer of ground pecans folded gently into whipped egg whites and yolks. No leavening is needed; […]

  • National Sponge Cake Day

    A true sponge cake is more air than anything else. Unlike butter cakes, sponges rely on whipped eggs for their rise, creating a structure of tiny bubbles that results in an airy crumb. The cake’s origins are entwined with the discovery in 17th‑century Europe that beaten eggs could act as a leavening agent. Genoese bakers […]

  • National Coconut Week

    The coconut is a study in versatility—simultaneously fruit, nut and seed, offering food, drink, fiber and fuel. National Coconut Week, observed during the last week of August, honors the tropical palm tree that has sustained island cultures for millennia. Coconut palms likely originated in the South Pacific and drifted on ocean currents to tropical shores […]

  • National Cuban Sandwich Day

    The Cuban sandwich—pressed bread stuffed with roast pork, ham, Swiss cheese, pickles and mustard—is a story of migration and cultural mingling. Its roots lie with the Taino people of the Caribbean, who made flatbread from cassava called casabe. When Spanish colonists arrived, they introduced pork, cured ham and cheese, and the sandwich began to take […]