• National Lemon Juice Day

    Lemon juice is a kitchen workhorse. The tart liquid cuts richness, balances sweetness, tenderises meats and keeps fruits from browning. Lemons themselves are thought to be hybrids of citron and bitter orange, first cultivated in India and later spread by Arab traders across the Mediterranean. Christopher Columbus carried lemon seeds to the New World on […]

  • More Herbs, Less Salt Day

    Salt is one of the oldest seasonings, but in modern diets it can be overused. More Herbs, Less Salt Day, observed each August 29, encourages home cooks to reduce sodium and experiment with herbs and spices instead. The holiday highlights the aromatic possibilities of basil, rosemary, thyme, dill, cilantro, mint and countless others. Each herb carries […]

  • International Bacon Day

    Bacon sizzles in the pan like applause, releasing a fragrance that can wake a teenager from a dead sleep. The sound and smell are almost as satisfying as the taste: a perfect balance of salt, smoke, fat and crunch. Humans have been curing pork belly since at least 1500 BCE, when the Chinese discovered that salting […]

  • National Toasted Marshmallow Day

    Long before marshmallows became sweets, the marsh mallow plant (Althaea officinalis) grew in European and African marshes. Ancient Egyptians boiled its sap with honey as a delicacy for pharaohs. In 19th‑century France confectioners whipped the sap with egg whites and sugar to create puffy candies. Eventually gelatin replaced the sticky plant extract, making mass production […]

  • Eat Outside Day

    Eating outdoors connects us to our earliest ancestors, who gathered around communal fires under open skies. In the Middle Ages, European nobles hosted hunting feasts on grassy lawns, while peasants picnicked on bread and cheese in the fields. In the 17th century Bavarians invented beer gardens, serving lagers under chestnut trees to keep cellars cool. […]

  • National Trail Mix Day

    Trail mix is the original energy bar—lightweight, nutrient‑dense and infinitely customisable. Hikers have been mixing dried fruit and nuts for centuries; Native Americans made pemmican from dried meat, fat and berries, while Europeans packed raisins and almonds on journeys. The modern version, sometimes called GORP (Good Old Raisins and Peanuts), became popular with backpackers in […]

  • National Dessert Day

    National Dessert Day

    A Sugar-Dusted Celebration National Dessert Day is a sugar-dusted sigh of relief in the midst of the year, a day when even the most disciplined eater allows themselves a sweet […]

  • National Chicken Cacciatore Day

    A Dish with Centuries in Its Bones Chicken Cacciatore is one of those rustic dishes that feels as though it has been simmering in our collective memory for centuries—and in a way, it has. The Italian word “cacciatore” means “hunter,” and the recipe’s roots reach back to the Renaissance, when hunters in central Italy cooked […]

  • National Roast Pheasant Day

    A Feast with Ancient Roots Long before supermarket poultry cases and industrial farms, pheasants held pride of place at medieval banquets and Victorian shooting parties. National Roast Pheasant Day pays homage to a game bird whose story stretches from ancient Asia to modern country estates. Native to China and parts of Central Asia, pheasants were […]

  • National Cheese Curd Day

    The Joy of the Squeak When you bite into a fresh cheese curd and it squeaks against your teeth, you’re experiencing a tiny moment of dairy magic. National Cheese Curd Day, celebrated on October 15, honors this uniquely Midwestern delicacy. The holiday was launched in 2015 by the Culver’s restaurant chain, but the snack it […]

  • National Liquor Day

    National Liquor Day

    From Alembics to Old Fashioneds Picture a small still bubbling over a coal fire, copper coils dripping clear liquid into an earthenware jug. Before liquor became a fixture at cocktail bars, it was the product of experimentation and alchemy. Distillation dates back at least to ancient Mesopotamia, where perfumers and physicians tried to capture aromas […]