• National Cocoa Day

    National Cocoa Day

    A Winter Ritual Steeped in Centuries of Comfort National Cocoa Day, observed on December 13, celebrates one of winter’s simplest and most soothing pleasures: a steaming mug of cocoa. Though today’s versions brim with sweetness, whipped cream, and nostalgia, cocoa’s roots lie deep in the ceremonial traditions of ancient Mesoamerica. For the Olmec, Maya, and […]

  • Gingerbread Decorating Day

    Building Sweet Memories One Wall at a Time Gingerbread houses tap into the childlike joy of constructing tiny edible worlds — homes held together by icing, decked with gumdrops, and scented with warm spices. The tradition took hold in 19th-century Germany, inspired by the Brothers Grimm and their tale of Hansel and Gretel, in which […]

  • National Cupcake Day

    National Cupcake Day

    A Tiny Cake With a Big History Cupcakes began as an innovation in convenience. In the 19th century, American bakers discovered they could bake cake batter in teacups, saving both time and fuel compared with large, slow-baking cakes. Early recipes also measured ingredients by the cup rather than by weight, giving rise to the name […]

  • National Maple Syrup Day

    National Maple Syrup Day

    A Winter Celebration of Nature’s Sweetest Gift Maple syrup is quite literally a gift from trees — a concentrated expression of sunlight, soil, and patience. Long before European settlers arrived in North America, Indigenous peoples of the Northeast were tapping sugar maples, collecting sap in birch bark containers, and boiling it down into syrup and […]

  • Bake Cookies Day

    Bake Cookies Day

    A Day Devoted to Warm Ovens and Sweet Traditions Bake Cookies Day, celebrated on December 18, arrives right in the heart of holiday baking season. It’s an invitation to turn on the oven, dust the counters with flour, and let the scent of sugar and spice drift through every room. Cookies have ancient origins: early […]

  • Super Saturday

    The Final Sprint of the Holiday Shopping Season Super Saturday — sometimes called Panic Saturday — is the last Saturday before Christmas, a day when millions of shoppers flood stores and websites to complete their gift lists. Falling this year on December 20, it stands as one of the busiest retail days of the season, […]

  • Lunar New Year (Year of the Rooster)

    Welcoming a New Year of Renewal and Good Fortune Lunar New Year is one of the world’s oldest and most widely celebrated holidays, observed across East and Southeast Asia and throughout global diasporas. Falling between late January and mid-February, its date is determined by the lunar calendar, marking the transition from one zodiac animal year […]

  • Lantern Festival

    A Night When Light Takes Center Stage The Lantern Festival glows on the 15th day of the first lunar month, marking the joyful close of Chinese New Year celebrations. It is a night when lanterns rise, riddles dance across paper, and families gather under the first full moon of the lunar year. Rooted in over […]

  • Hanukkah

    A Festival of Light Born from Courage and Restoration Hanukkah returns each year as a warm, flickering beacon against the deepening nights of winter. Its story reaches back to the second century BCE, when the Seleucid ruler Antiochus IV Epiphanes outlawed Jewish practice and desecrated the Second Temple in Jerusalem. In response, a small group […]

  • Super Saturday

    The Final Sprint of the Holiday Shopping Season Super Saturday — sometimes called Panic Saturday — is the last Saturday before Christmas, a day when millions of shoppers flood stores and websites to complete their gift lists. Falling this year on December 20, it stands as one of the busiest retail days of the season, […]