• Southern Food Heritage Day

    Honoring a Rich Culinary Legacy Southern Food Heritage Day celebrates the complex, multicultural traditions that gave rise to one of America’s most beloved regional cuisines. The flavors many associate with the South—cornbread, fried chicken, gumbo, collard greens, peach cobbler—are the product of centuries of blending Indigenous, African, European, and Caribbean influences. This day, established by […]

  • National Pulled Pork Day

    A Feast of Patience and Flavor National Pulled Pork Day celebrates the succulent, slow-cooked meat that has become a hallmark of American barbecue. Made from pork shoulder—also known as the Boston butt—this cut is marbled with fat and connective tissue that melt during long cooking, producing meat that shreds easily into juicy, flavorful strands. Pulled […]

  • National Gumbo Day

    National Gumbo Day

    A Stew That Tells a Story October 12 is National Gumbo Day, a tribute to a dish that embodies the history of Louisiana in every spoonful. Gumbo simmered into existence […]

  • Indigenous Peoples Day

    Indigenous Peoples Day

    Honoring Survival, Resilience, and Culture Indigenous Peoples Day reorients the focus of a fall holiday from colonization to survival, resilience, and celebration of Native cultures. For decades, Columbus Day was […]

  • National Dessert Day

    National Dessert Day

    A Sugar-Dusted Celebration National Dessert Day is a sugar-dusted sigh of relief in the midst of the year, a day when even the most disciplined eater allows themselves a sweet […]

  • National Cheese Curd Day

    The Joy of the Squeak When you bite into a fresh cheese curd and it squeaks against your teeth, you’re experiencing a tiny moment of dairy magic. National Cheese Curd Day, celebrated on October 15, honors this uniquely Midwestern delicacy. The holiday was launched in 2015 by the Culver’s restaurant chain, but the snack it […]

  • Diwali

    Diwali

    The Festival of Lights Diwali, the Festival of Lights, arrives as a burst of color and warmth in the long nights of autumn. The Sanskrit word dipavali means “row of lamps,” and across South Asia and the global diaspora, flickering diyas made of clay and ghee adorn windowsills, balconies, and temple steps. The holiday is […]

  • National Liquor Day

    National Liquor Day

    From Alembics to Old Fashioneds Picture a small still bubbling over a coal fire, copper coils dripping clear liquid into an earthenware jug. Before liquor became a fixture at cocktail bars, it was the product of experimentation and alchemy. Distillation dates back at least to ancient Mesopotamia, where perfumers and physicians tried to capture aromas […]