• National Pasty Week

    National Pasty Week

    History and Origins of National Pasty Week National Pasty Week is observed annually in late February and celebrates a savory pastry with deep ties to labor history, migration, and regional identity. The pasty originated in Cornwall, England, where it became closely associated with tin miners during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The Cornish pasty was […]

  • National Kahlua Day

    National Kahlua Day

    History and Origins of National Kahlua Day National Kahlua Day is observed annually on February 27 and celebrates a coffee liqueur that blends Mexican agricultural heritage with modern cocktail culture. National Kahlua Day recognizes Kahlua as more than a sweet after-dinner drink. It highlights the layered history of coffee cultivation, sugar production, and rum distillation […]

  • The Big Breakfast Day

    The Big Breakfast Day

    History and Origins of The Big Breakfast Day The Big Breakfast Day is observed annually in late February and celebrates the concept of a substantial morning meal rooted in agricultural and labor traditions. Historically, large breakfasts were common in agrarian societies where physical labor demanded sustained caloric intake early in the day. In rural Europe […]

  • International Polar Bear Day

    International Polar Bear Day is observed annually on February 27. The observance was established by Polar Bears International, a nonprofit conservation organization founded in 1992 and headquartered in the United States. The organization introduced the observance in the mid 2000s, with 2008 widely cited as the first formal International Polar Bear Day. The date is […]

  • National Chocolate Souffle Day

    History and Origins of National Chocolate Souffle Day National Chocolate Souffle Day is observed annually on February 28 and celebrates a dessert rooted in French culinary technique and precision. The souffle, whose name derives from a French term meaning “to puff,” emerged in the eighteenth century as chefs refined egg-based preparations. Early souffles were savory […]

  • National Pancake Day (IHOP)

    History and Origins of National Pancake Day National Pancake Day is observed annually in late February or early March, typically aligned with Shrove Tuesday in many traditions, and celebrates one of the oldest prepared foods in human history. Pancakes, in their most basic form, consist of ground grain mixed with liquid and cooked on a […]

  • National Fruit Compote Day

    National Fruit Compote Day is observed annually on March 1 and celebrates a preservation technique that predates refrigeration, industrial canning, and modern food storage systems. National Fruit Compote Day recognizes fruit compote not merely as a sweet topping, but as a culinary response to seasonality, surplus harvest, and the need to extend perishable ingredients beyond […]

  • Chocolate Chip Cookie Week

    Chocolate Chip Cookie Week is observed during the second week of March and celebrates one of the most influential baked goods in modern American culinary history. While the holiday itself is relatively recent, the chocolate chip cookie it honors has reshaped domestic baking, commercial chocolate production, and industrial food distribution since the 1930s. Chocolate Chip […]

  • Berries and Cherries Month

    Berries and Cherries Month is observed in March and celebrates early season fruit cultivation, agricultural labor, and the global systems that support berry and cherry production. Berries and Cherries Month recognizes strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, blackberries, and cherries as crops shaped by botanical science, climate patterns, and international trade. Wild berries were gathered long before formal […]

  • Frozen Food Month

    Frozen Food Month

    Frozen Food Month is observed in March and celebrates one of the most important preservation and distribution technologies of the modern food system. Frozen Food Month recognizes how freezing transformed what people could eat, when they could eat it, and where food could travel without becoming unsafe or unusable. Humans have used cold for preservation […]

  • National Flour Month

    National Flour Month is observed in March and celebrates an ingredient so foundational that it often becomes invisible in daily cooking. National Flour Month recognizes flour as the engineered result of grain domestication, milling technology, and global commodity trade, an ingredient that underpins bread, noodles, pastries, sauces, and countless regional staples. Flour begins with grain […]