• National Prime Rib Day

    National Prime Rib Day is observed annually on April 27th throughout the United States, celebrating the luxurious beef roast that represents the pinnacle of American steakhouse dining and special occasion home cooking. This meat-focused holiday honors prime rib, the standing rib roast that combines marbled beef, slow roasting technique, and dramatic presentation into one of […]

  • National Blueberry Pie Day

    National Blueberry Pie Day is observed annually on April 28th throughout the United States, celebrating the classic American dessert that showcases sweet-tart blueberries encased in flaky pastry. This pie-focused holiday honors a preparation that represents summer's bounty preserved in dessert form, combining indigenous North American fruit with European baking traditions. Unlike celebrations focused on year-round […]

  • National Shrimp Scampi Day

    National Shrimp Scampi Day is observed annually on April 29th throughout the United States, celebrating the Italian-American dish that bathes succulent shrimp in garlic-butter-wine sauce and serves them over pasta or with crusty bread. This seafood-focused holiday honors a preparation that demonstrates how immigrant cuisines adapt to American ingredients and tastes, creating dishes that become […]

  • National Bubble Tea Day

    National Bubble Tea Day is observed annually on April 30th, celebrating the Taiwanese beverage phenomenon that combines tea, milk, sweeteners, and chewy tapioca pearls into drinks that have captured global imagination and spawned an international industry. This drink-focused holiday honors bubble tea, also known as boba or pearl milk tea, that transformed from local Taiwanese […]

  • Cinco de Mayo

    A Celebration Rooted in Resistance and Resilience Cinco de Mayo may arrive each year in a whirlwind of mariachi melodies, folklórico skirts, and platters of tacos and mole poblano, but beneath the festive surface lies a powerful historical story. In 1862, Mexico was weakened by years of internal conflict and drowning in foreign debt. When […]

  • Mother’s Day

    Celebrating the Women Who Shape Our Lives Mother’s Day is a celebration of care, strength, and the quiet power of love that sustains families and communities. Observed in more than 100 countries, the holiday honors mothers, grandmothers, guardians, and all those who provide nurturing and guidance. In the United States, it is celebrated on the […]

  • World Cocktail Day

    The Birth of the Cocktail World Cocktail Day marks the moment when mixed drinks stepped out of informal tavern culture and into the written record. The date traces back to May 13, 1806, when a New York newspaper called The Balance and Columbian Repository published what is widely considered the first definition of a cocktail. […]

  • World Whisky Day

    The Origins and Evolution of Whisky World Whisky Day celebrates one of the most storied spirits in human history, a drink shaped by geography, agriculture and time. Whisky’s roots trace back more than a thousand years to early distillation practices. The technique of distilling alcohol likely traveled from the Middle East into Europe through monks […]

  • Memorial Day

    Honoring Those Who Gave Everything Memorial Day, observed on the last Monday of May in the United States, is a national day of remembrance for the men and women who […]

  • National Moonshine Day

    The Origins of Moonshine in American History National Moonshine Day honors a spirit born from necessity, resistance and rural ingenuity. Moonshine refers to illegally distilled spirits, most often made from corn, sugar or other fermentable grains, and produced outside government regulation. While moonshine is strongly associated with the American South and Appalachia, its roots stretch […]

  • National Cognac Day

    The Origins of Cognac National Cognac Day celebrates one of the world’s most carefully regulated and historically rich spirits. Cognac is a type of brandy produced exclusively in the Cognac region of southwestern France, and its story begins not with luxury but with practicality. In the 16th century, Dutch merchants trading salt and wine along […]