• National Vanilla Custard Day

    Custard is one of those simple pleasures that belies its sophistication. Made of milk or cream gently thickened with egg yolks and sweetened, it is both a technique and a dessert. The basic custard can be baked in a water bath as crème brûlée, stirred on the stove for pastry cream or ice cream base, […]

  • National Eggplant Day

    Eggplant, with its glossy purple skin and spongy flesh, has traveled a long way from its origins in India and Southeast Asia. The earliest written mention appears in the ancient Chinese agricultural treatise Qimin Yaoshu from the sixth century. Eggplants were cultivated in India, China and Burma long before they reached the Mediterranean. Arab traders […]

  • National Pineapple Juice Day

    Pineapples are like the sun captured in a fruit — spiky on the outside, juicy and sweet inside, with a perfume that transports you to tropical shores. They originate in the lowlands of South America; indigenous peoples in what is now Paraguay and southern Brazil domesticated the plant and spread it throughout the continent and […]

  • National Fajita Day

    Fajitas were born out of necessity and thrift on the dusty ranches of the Texas–Mexico border. In the 1930s vaqueros were paid in part with less‑desirable cuts of beef—the skirt or ‘faja’—which they marinated with citrus and spices, grilled quickly over mesquite coals and wrapped in warm tortillas. The word itself comes from the Spanish […]

  • National Ice Cream Pie Day

    Ice cream has deep roots—ancient Persians chilled sweetened syrup in snow, Chinese cooks froze milk and rice into a congealed treat, and European courts served flavoured ices in silver chalices. But the idea of layering ice cream into a pie is distinctly American and tied to the growth of home refrigeration. In the first half […]

  • National Pinot Noir Day

    Pinot Noir is often called the heartbreak grape, not because of its flavour but because of how notoriously difficult it is to grow. Its clusters are tight like a pinecone, which is why medieval Burgundian monks named it ‘pinot’ from the French word for pine; its skins are thin, its vines are sensitive and it […]

  • National Hot & Spicy Food Day

    Heat isn’t just a sensation on the tongue; it’s a cultural thread that runs through countless cuisines. Capsaicin, the compound that gives chili peppers their fire, originated in wild peppers of Central and South America more than six thousand years ago. Indigenous peoples cultivated chilis for flavour, medicine and even pest control. When Christopher Columbus […]

  • National Soft Ice Cream Day

    If regular ice cream is a slow dance, soft serve is a waltz—it swirls, folds and floats on air. Its story begins in the early 1930s when a New York ice cream truck driver named Tom Carvel found himself with a flat tire on a hot day. As he sold melting ice cream from the […]

  • National Bacon Lovers Day

    Bacon begins as a simple cut of pork belly, but centuries of curing and smoking have transformed it into an icon. Evidence of salted pork belly dates back to at least 1500 BCE in China, where villagers preserved meat in brine. The Romans borrowed the technique and called it petaso; medieval Europeans perfected dry curing […]

  • National Lemonade Day

    Lemonade seems like the simplest of beverages—just lemon juice, water and sugar—yet its story spans continents. Lemons likely originated in northeast India and spread west along trade routes. In 10th‑century Egypt, records describe a drink made from lemon juice and sugar called qatarmizat, sold by street vendors. In Europe, lemons were prized not only for […]

  • National Chocolate Pecan Pie Day

    Pecans are America’s native nut. Indigenous peoples along the Mississippi and Texas rivers foraged pecans for millennia before European settlers arrived, and the word ‘pecan’ itself comes from an Algonquin term meaning ‘a nut requiring a stone to crack’. French colonists first wrote about the tree in the 18th century, and by the 19th century […]

  • National Hawaiian Pizza Day

    Pizza may hail from Italy, but Hawaiian pizza is a product of mid‑century North America. In 1962, Sam Panopoulos, a Greek immigrant who ran a diner in the Canadian town of Chatham, Ontario, decided to experiment with toppings. He opened a can of pineapple packed under the brand name Hawaiian, added a few rings atop […]