• National Quinoa Day

    Quinoa’s Ancient Origins and Global Journey National Quinoa Day celebrates a seed with one of the longest continuous food histories on Earth. Quinoa was domesticated more than 7,000 years ago in the Andean region of South America, where it thrived at high altitudes near Lake Titicaca. Indigenous civilizations including the Inca cultivated quinoa as a […]

  • Prohibition Remembrance Day

    The Origins and Impact of Prohibition Prohibition Remembrance Day reflects on one of the most ambitious and controversial social experiments in United States history. Prohibition formally began on January 17, 1920, when the 18th Amendment to the Constitution took effect, banning the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages nationwide. The movement that led to […]

  • National Bootlegger’s Day

    Prohibition and the Rise of the Bootlegger National Bootlegger’s Day, observed on January 17, looks back at a turbulent chapter in American history when alcohol was outlawed but never truly absent. The Eighteenth Amendment went into effect in 1920, banning the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages across the United States. Supporters of Prohibition […]

  • National Hot Buttered Rum Day

    Colonial Roots of a Winter Warmer National Hot Buttered Rum Day, observed on January 17, celebrates a drink born from necessity, trade, and the realities of early American life. Rum became deeply embedded in colonial culture during the 17th century, when New England distillers began converting surplus molasses imported from Caribbean sugar plantations into spirits. […]

  • Soup Swap Day

    Soup Swap Day

    The Meaning Behind Soup Swap Day Soup Swap Day celebrates one of the simplest and most communal food traditions: cooking in quantity and sharing the results. The idea is straightforward. Participants each prepare a large batch of soup, then divide it into portions and exchange containers so everyone goes home with a variety of homemade […]

  • Popeye Day

    Popeye Day

    Origins and Early History of Popeye Day Popeye Day is observed annually on January 17 and honors one of the most recognizable characters in American popular culture. Popeye the Sailor first appeared in 1929 in the comic strip Thimble Theatre, created by Elzie Crisler Segar. Although the strip existed before Popeye, the character quickly became […]

  • International Snowmobile Safety and Awareness Week

    Origins and Historical Background of International Snowmobile Safety and Awareness Week International Snowmobile Safety and Awareness Week is observed annually during the winter season as a week-long observance dedicated to promoting safe and responsible snowmobile use. The observance emerged alongside the growth of recreational snowmobiling during the mid twentieth century, when advances in engine design […]

  • National Gourmet Coffee Day

    The Rise of Gourmet Coffee National Gourmet Coffee Day celebrates how coffee evolved from a basic commodity into a craft defined by origin, technique and intentional flavor. For much of the twentieth century, coffee in the United States was treated as a uniform product. Beans were blended, roasted dark to mask defects and brewed for […]

  • National Fresh Squeezed Juice Week

    The Origins of Fresh Juice and Human Nutrition National Fresh Squeezed Juice Week celebrates one of the simplest and oldest ways humans have extracted nourishment from plants. Long before blenders, juicers or packaged beverages existed, people crushed fruits by hand to access their liquid and nutrients. Archaeological evidence suggests that early civilizations in Mesopotamia, Egypt […]

  • National Peking Duck Day

    The Imperial Origins of Peking Duck National Peking Duck Day celebrates one of the most iconic and carefully refined dishes in Chinese cuisine. Peking duck traces its roots to imperial China, with written records dating back more than six hundred years to the Ming Dynasty. Ducks were originally raised in the wetlands surrounding Beijing, then […]

  • National Popcorn Day

    Popcorn’s Ancient Roots and Cultural Journey National Popcorn Day celebrates one of the oldest snack foods in human history, long before it became synonymous with movie theaters and sporting events. Archaeological evidence shows that popcorn was enjoyed by Indigenous peoples in the Americas thousands of years ago. Corn itself was domesticated in southern Mexico more […]

  • Martin Luther King Jr. Day

    Honoring a Legacy of Justice, Courage, and Service Martin Luther King Jr. Day is the only U.S. federal holiday dedicated to a private citizen — and the only one formally recognized as a national day of service. Observed on the third Monday in January, it commemorates the life and legacy of Reverend Dr. Martin Luther […]