• National Banana Pudding Day

    There’s something about banana pudding that feels like a hug from the inside. Maybe it’s the layers: the soft slices of ripe banana, the rich vanilla custard, the nilla wafers that soften to a cake‑like texture and the cloud of whipped cream or meringue on top. Maybe it’s the way the flavors meld after a […]

  • National Cherry Turnover Day

    Turnovers may have originated as a clever workaround to baking bans. In 15th‑century England some towns outlawed cakes to curb flour consumption, so bakers folded pastry around fruit filling and claimed it wasn’t a cake at all. These ‘pocket pies’ became popular throughout Europe. A turnover is essentially a hand pie: flaky puff pastry or […]

  • National Red Wine Day

    Wine has been part of human culture for at least eight thousand years. Archaeologists have discovered traces of fermented grape juice in Neolithic pottery from Georgia, and Greek and Roman writers extolled wine’s virtues. Today red wine is made from countless grape varieties—Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Pinot Noir, Syrah—each reflecting its terroir. National Red Wine Day, […]

  • National Cabernet Sauvignon Day

    Cabernet Sauvignon has earned the title ‘king of red grapes’. It arose in 17th‑century Bordeaux as an accidental cross between Cabernet Franc and Sauvignon Blanc, inheriting thick skins and small berries from its parents. Those traits give the wine deep colour, robust tannins and the ability to age gracefully. Over the centuries Cabernet spread across […]

  • Hispanic Heritage Month

    A Celebration Across Two Months Hispanic Heritage Month unfolds across two months—beginning on September 15 and ending on October 15—reflecting the complex tapestry of Latin American independence and culture. The starting date, September 15, honors the anniversaries of independence for Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua; Mexico’s independence follows on September 16, and […]

  • Filipino American History Month

    October’s arrival ushers in Filipino American History Month, a period of storytelling, culinary delights and remembrance. The timing honors a remarkable event: on October 18, 1587, a group of ‘Luzones Indios’ from the Philippines—then a Spanish colony—landed at Morro Bay, California, as part of the Spanish Manila galleon trade. They became the first recorded Filipinos […]

  • German American Heritage Month

    German American Heritage Month, often observed in October, celebrates a lineage that predates the founding of the United States. On October 6, 1683, thirteen German families from Krefeld arrived at William Penn’s colony in Pennsylvania aboard the ship Concord. They established Germantown and laid the groundwork for future waves of German immigration. Over the next […]

  • Italian American Heritage Month

    Italian-American Heritage Month takes place in October, coinciding with Columbus Day and the harvest season. Italians began immigrating to the United States in significant numbers in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Initially, many came from Sicily and southern regions like Calabria and Campania, fleeing poverty and political unrest. They arrived with little more […]

  • Polar Bear Week

    Honoring the Kings of the Arctic Polar Bear Week, observed each year during the first full week of November, shines a light on one of the world’s most majestic yet vulnerable animals. Timed to coincide with the annual polar bear migration toward Hudson Bay, Canada—where bears gather near Churchill to await the freeze-up—this week raises […]

  • 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 […]

  • Christmas Bird Count Week

    A Tradition Rooted in Conservation Christmas Bird Count Week is one of the longest-running citizen science efforts in the world, transforming casual birdwatching into meaningful conservation data. The tradition began in 1900 when ornithologist Frank Chapman proposed a new idea: instead of the popular holiday “side hunts,” where birds were shot competitively, people would count […]

  • 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, […]