• National Bundt Day

    National Bundt Day

    The Ring That Redefined Home Baking When you picture a Bundt cake, you likely envision a dense, golden ring crowned with glaze or dusted with confectioners’ sugar, its fluted edges casting delicate shadows on a cake stand. The shape is instantly recognizable, yet the story behind it is surprisingly modern. The Bundt pan—responsible for that […]

  • National Homemade Bread Day

    The Oldest Comfort Food Bread is older than recorded history. Long before agriculture, Paleolithic people ground wild grains into meal and baked flatbreads on hot stones. With the advent of farming around 10,000 years ago, grains became humanity’s staple crop, and by 6000 BCE Egyptians were fermenting doughs with wild yeasts to make airy loaves. […]

  • National Apple Cider Day

    National Apple Cider Day

    The Taste of Autumn There’s a moment in late autumn when the air smells of fallen leaves and woodsmoke and you can almost taste the season on the breeze. That’s when apple cider comes into its own. Observed on November 18, National Apple Cider Day celebrates this golden beverage and the long journey that brought […]

  • Mickey Mouse’s Birthday

    Mickey Mouse Birthday

    A Whiskered Icon Turns Another Year Older On November 18 we pause to wish a happy birthday to one of the most recognizable characters on the planet: Mickey Mouse. Since his official debut in the animated short Steamboat Willie in 1928, Mickey has grown from a mischievous black‑and‑white figure whistling at the helm of a steamboat […]

  • Mickey Mouse Day

    Mickey Mouse Day

    Celebrating a Cultural Icon Every November 18, fans around the world observe Mickey Mouse Day—a holiday honoring the debut of the world’s most famous mouse. Unlike Mickey Mouse Birthday, which focuses on the character’s longevity, this day celebrates his first appearance in the groundbreaking short film Steamboat Willie. When the cartoon premiered in 1928 with synchronized […]

  • Minnie Mouse Birthday

    Minnie Mouse Birthday

    Celebrating the Sweetheart of the Disney Universe On November 18 we also celebrate the birthday of Minnie Mouse, Mickey’s stylish and spirited counterpart. She first appeared alongside Mickey in Steamboat Willie in 1928, immediately winning hearts with her polka‑dot dress and upbeat personality. Minnie has grown from a damsel in distress to a symbol of independence, […]

  • National Carbonated Beverages Day

    The Pop, the Fizz, and the Buzz Pop the top of a cola can or uncap a bottle of fizzy cold brew and you’ll hear a gentle hiss and crackle—the sound of carbon dioxide escaping from a pressurized solution. That effervescent rush is what National Carbonated Beverage with Caffeine Day, observed every November 19, invites […]

  • National Zinfandel Day

    National Zinfandel Day

    Uncorking America’s Heritage Grape Wine lovers sometimes speak of Zinfandel as though it were a person—a charismatic rogue with an adventurous past who somehow became a pillar of American culture. National Zinfandel Day, held on the third Wednesday of November, offers a chance to uncork that story alongside a good bottle and reflect on how […]

  • National Play Monopoly Day

    Rolling the Dice on Fun and Strategy National Play Monopoly Day on November 19 invites families and friends to dust off their game boards, appoint a banker and embark on an epic journey of property deals and friendly competition. Monopoly has been a fixture on game night tables for nearly a century, teaching players about negotiation, […]

  • Transgender Day of Remembrance

    Honoring Lives Lost and Confronting Violence Transgender Day of Remembrance (TDOR), observed every year on November 20, is a solemn day dedicated to honoring transgender and gender-diverse people whose lives were taken by acts of anti-trans violence. The day was founded in 1999 by activist Gwendolyn Ann Smith to memorialize Rita Hester, a Black transgender […]

  • National Gingerbread Cookie Day

    A Sweet and Spicy Tradition Gingerbread has a long and flavorful history that spans continents and centuries. In China, ginger has been used medicinally for more than 4,000 years. Medieval crusaders returning from the Near East brought ginger and other exotic spices to Europe, where bakers began blending them with honey to create spiced biscuits. […]