A field of sunflowers is an arresting sight: tall stalks topped with golden faces that seem to follow the sun across the sky. This heliotropism — the tendency of buds and young blooms to turn toward light — has captivated humans for millennia. Sunflowers are native to North America, domesticated by indigenous peoples around 3000 […]
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As the sun settles over terracotta rooftops and piazzas glow with the last light of day, Italians often raise sparkling glasses to toast the evening. National Spritz Day, celebrated on August 1, honors this ritual and the effervescent cocktail at its heart. The spritz’s story begins in the early 1800s, when Austro‑Hungarian soldiers stationed in […] Brownies at Brunch Month takes a beloved dessert and invites us to enjoy it during our mid‑morning meal. The idea might sound indulgent, but brunch itself is about breaking rules—a hybrid of breakfast and lunch that welcomes everything from mimosas to macaroni and cheese. Brownies, dense squares of chocolatey goodness, have an origin story steeped […] Few foods deliver comfort as swiftly as a warm sandwich with crisp, golden grill marks. National Panini Month honors the Italian art of pressed sandwiches and the joy of toasting bread until it crackles. The term “panini” simply means “sandwiches” in Italian, but outside Italy it has come to denote a specific style: fillings nestled between […] Goat cheese—fresh, tangy and endlessly versatile—has been gracing tables for thousands of years. National Goat Cheese Month spotlights this ancient dairy product and the farmers and cheesemakers who craft it. Goats were among the first animals domesticated by humans, valued for their ability to thrive on sparse vegetation and provide milk rich in fat and protein. In […]
Imagine standing in front of a display of mustard jars at the National Mustard Museum in Middleton, Wisconsin. There are hundreds: smooth Dijons, grainy old‑world blends, bright yellow ballpark mustard, fiery Chinese mustard, even fruit mustards tinged blue. Each jar tells a story that stretches back thousands of years to a tiny seed. Wild mustard […] In the green coastal corner of northwestern Spain known as Galicia, vineyards cling to granite slopes overlooking the Atlantic Ocean. Here the Albariño grape has thrived for centuries, soaking up ocean mists and bright sunlight to produce wines that smell of peach, lime blossom and sea spray. The grape’s name likely comes from albus, Latin […] The humble sandwich is a marvel of convenience and creativity. National Sandwich Month celebrates the endless possibilities that arise when you place fillings between slices of bread. The story of the sandwich often leads back to John Montagu, the 4th Earl of Sandwich, an 18th‑century British aristocrat who purportedly requested meat tucked between bread so […] The raspberry’s tangy sweetness comes with an ancient pedigree. Wild raspberries grew across Asia Minor and North America for millennia, but it was the Romans who first cultivated them. In the fourth century the agricultural writer Palladius encouraged planting raspberry bushes in orchards; Roman soldiers are said to have carried canes north into Britain. By […] There are few summer pleasures sweeter than biting into a ripe peach and having juice run down your chin. National Peach Month celebrates this juicy stone fruit and its journey from China’s orchards to global fame. Peaches were first domesticated over 7,000 years ago near the Chinese Loess Plateau, where wild ancestors still grow. Traders along […] Throughout the South and in many parts of Asia and Africa, catfish have nourished communities for generations. National Catfish Month, observed every August, recognizes the importance of this whiskered fish in culinary and economic life. Catfish thrive in warm freshwater rivers and ponds and are prized for their mild, sweet flavor and firm texture. In […] Walking past a bakery in Kingston, the scent of flaky pastry filled with spiced meat is enough to stop you in your tracks. The Jamaican patty is a sensory experience: golden pastry that flakes under your fingertips, the warmth of curry and Scotch bonnet pepper hitting your nose before you even take a bite. Like […]
Origins and Historical Background of National Black Business Month National Black Business Month is observed annually in August and was established to recognize the contributions, resilience, and economic importance of Black-owned businesses. The observance originated in 2004 through the efforts of historian and entrepreneur John William Templeton and engineer Frederick E. Jordan Sr., who sought […] |
2 events,Farmers’ markets are more than shopping venues; they are community hubs where growers and eaters meet face‑to‑face. National Farmers Market Week, observed during the first full week of August, celebrates these vibrant gatherings and the people who make them possible. Farmers’ markets have existed in various forms for centuries, from medieval European town squares to […] Few things evoke childhood bliss like an ice cream sandwich: the soft give of cake or cookie, the cold creaminess of vanilla, and the way it all smushes together with each bite. According to urban legend, the treat originated around 1900 on the streets of New York’s Lower East Side, where a pushcart vendor pressed […] |
2 events,A slice of watermelon on a hot day is like a gulp of summer itself. The first thing you notice is its color: a vibrant pink or deep red framed by a pale rind and striped green skin. Bite in and the flesh yields with a crunch that gives way to juicy sweetness, the juice […] Grab a handful of nuts and you’re holding one of humanity’s oldest snack foods. Long before agriculture, our hunter‑gatherer ancestors cracked open shells to eat the nutrient‑dense seeds inside. Archaeologists have found 50,000‑year‑old walnut shells at Paleolithic sites and charred nutshells near ancient campfires. The Romans believed that walnuts were food of the gods; the […] |
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The Quiet Elegance of White Wine A glass of chilled white wine catches the light in a way that feels effortless — pale gold, straw, sometimes almost silvery. A gentle swirl releases aromas of citrus peel, white flowers, stone fruit or wet stone. The first sip might be brisk and mouthwatering, or soft and rounded, […]
The Accidental Cookie That Changed Dessert Forever There’s an alchemy that happens when butter, sugar, eggs, flour, and chocolate come together in a mixing bowl and slide onto a baking sheet. The aroma of cookies baking can fill a house with anticipation and memories. The story of the chocolate chip cookie begins in 1938 at […] |
2 events,An oyster is a study in contrasts: its rough, irregular shell hides a soft, opalescent creature that tastes like the ocean. Slurp one from its half shell and you might taste brine, minerals and a hint of cucumber; chew and you’ll discover a creaminess that lingers. Humans have been eating oysters for thousands of years. […] In North Africa, couscous is not just a side dish; it is the centerpiece of communal meals and family celebrations. Tiny grains of semolina steamed until fluffy, couscous is both humble and intricate. The earliest written references date back to thirteenth‑century North African cookbooks, but oral traditions suggest it is older. Berber women traditionally prepared […] |
2 events,In August of 1893, Frank J. Wisner, owner of the Cripple Creek Brewing Company in Colorado, was staring at the snow‑capped peaks of Cow Mountain while sipping a glass of his Myers Avenue Red root beer. Inspired by the contrast of dark rock and white snow, he imagined a mountain of vanilla ice cream floating […] India Pale Ale, or IPA, is a beer style that has inspired passionate devotion among craft beer enthusiasts. National IPA Day, celebrated on the first Thursday of August, pays tribute to this hop‑forward brew and its storied past. The origins of IPA trace back to the late 18th century, when British brewers sought to supply ale […] |
3 events,Braham Pie Day is a small‑town festival with a big heart. Held on the first Friday in August in the Minnesota town of Braham—dubbed the “Homemade Pie Capital of Minnesota”—the event draws thousands who come to eat pie, listen to music and celebrate community. Braham’s pie fame dates back to the 1930s and ’40s when […] Raspberries ripening on the cane are like rubies clustered among green leaves. Pluck one and its hollow core makes it almost weightless; pop it into your mouth and it bursts with tart sweetness. The combination of raspberries and cream is simple, classic and ancient. In Britain and throughout Europe, berries and cream have long been […] The Global Story of Beer International Beer Day celebrates one of humanity’s oldest and most widely shared beverages. Beer predates written language and organized agriculture, emerging alongside early human settlements. Archaeological evidence suggests that fermented grain drinks were being produced more than 7,000 years ago in Mesopotamia and ancient China. In these early societies, beer […] |
4 events,Frozen custard is ice cream’s rich cousin. It’s smoother, silkier and seems to melt on the tongue in a luxurious way. The secret is egg yolks. Traditional ice cream uses cream, milk and sugar; when you add egg yolks and churn the mixture with less air, you get a dense, creamy texture that resists melting. […] In many gardens, zucchinis seem to appear overnight, their dark green or golden bodies hiding beneath broad leaves until suddenly they’re the length of baseball bats. This prolific squash, also known as courgette, is actually a relatively young cultivar. While its ancestors — the gourds and squashes of the Cucurbita genus — were cultivated in […] Soft, chewy and slightly sweet, mochi seems almost otherworldly. Bite into it and the texture resists before yielding, a pleasurable contrast to the creamy ice cream or red bean paste often hidden inside. Mochi’s roots lie deep in Japanese history. Pounded rice cakes are mentioned in texts from the Yayoi period (around 300 BCE), and […] Walk into a convenience store in Honolulu and you’ll see neat rectangles of rice topped with a slice of Spam, wrapped snugly in a band of nori. This is SPAM musubi, a beloved snack born from the blending of Japanese and American food cultures in Hawaii. Its story begins in the 1930s and 1940s, when […] |
3 events,Close your eyes and imagine the perfume of a perfectly ripe melon: sweet, heady and slightly floral, it fills a market stall with the scent of summer. Slice through the green-striped rind and the flesh glows apricot‑orange, dripping with juice. In Turkmenistan, melons are not just a fruit but a national treasure. The Central Asian […] Apples are so ingrained in our culture that they have inspired proverbs, fairy tales and national symbols. National Apple Week celebrates the fruit during the second full week of August, just as early varieties start to ripen in orchards. Apples originated in the mountains of Kazakhstan and spread along trade routes to Europe and Asia. […] There’s something inherently comforting about rice pudding. Perhaps it’s because its ingredients are so modest — rice, milk, sugar, sometimes eggs or cream and spices — yet when simmered slowly they create a dessert that is creamy, fragrant and soothing. The history of rice pudding is as old as rice cultivation itself. Sweetened rice dishes […] |
3 events,A crackling campfire, the smell of pine and smoke, and a circle of friends and family passing a bag of marshmallows and a bar of chocolate — these are the ingredients for s’mores. Roasting marshmallows over an open flame is a rite of summer. The perfect marshmallow is held over glowing embers until its outside […] Afternoon tea is a ritual of pause and pleasure. National Afternoon Tea Week, held during the second full week of August, celebrates the tradition of sitting down mid‑afternoon to sip tea and nibble delicate treats. The custom is credited to Anna, the seventh Duchess of Bedford, who in the 1840s began taking tea with bread […] Close your eyes and imagine the perfume of a perfectly ripe melon: sweet, heady and slightly floral, it fills a market stall with the scent of summer. Slice through the green-striped rind and the flesh glows apricot‑orange, dripping with juice. In Turkmenistan, melons are not just a fruit but a national treasure. The Central Asian […] |
3 events,A bombe glacée is a showstopper dessert: layers of ice cream, sherbet or custard frozen in a domed mold and unmolded to reveal concentric bands of color and flavor. The dessert originated in France in the late nineteenth century, when molded frozen desserts were the height of culinary fashion and elaborate molds filled with ice […] A tart is the essence of simplicity and precision: a crisp pastry shell baked until golden and filled with something delicious. In the case of a raspberry tart, the filling showcases the berry’s pure flavor. Tarts have deep roots in European pastry tradition. Medieval cooks made open‑faced pies filled with savory meat and later sweet […] Panini is the Italian plural for panino, a small bread roll or sandwich. In Italy, a panino can be as simple as prosciutto and cheese between slices of ciabatta. The concept of grilling or pressing a sandwich, however, has long roots. In cafés in Milan and Florence in the mid‑twentieth century, bars served pressed sandwiches […] |
2 events,St. Louis has many culinary claims to fame, but few inspire as much local pride as gooey butter cake. The dessert began, so the story goes, with a happy accident in the 1930s at a German American bakery. A baker preparing coffee cake reversed the proportions of butter and flour in the topping, producing a […] The julienne cut — slender matchstick strips — is a hallmark of French technique. To julienne potatoes for fries, you slice them into planks, then into sticks about an eighth‑inch square. When fried, these thin strips yield fries that are crisp on the outside and tender inside, with plenty of surface area to catch salt […] |
2 events,In French, filet mignon means dainty fillet. The cut comes from the tenderloin of the cow — a muscle that does little work, resulting in an exceptionally tender piece of meat with fine grain and delicate flavor. In Europe the tenderloin has been prized for centuries; chefs often used it to make filet de boeuf […] Prosecco is Italy’s answer to celebration. Made primarily from the Glera grape in the hilly vineyards of the Veneto and Friuli regions, this sparkling wine is light, aromatic and effervescent. The name derives from the village of Prosecco near Trieste, where the grape and wine were first recorded in Roman times. For centuries, locals made […] |
1 event,An orange creamsicle embodies summer nostalgia. Beneath a thin shell of icy orange sherbet lies a core of smooth vanilla ice cream. Each lick delivers tangy citrus followed by creamy sweetness, and by the time you reach the stick, you may be covered in drips but content. The creamsicle’s origins trace back to a boy […] |
2 events,In late summer the garden hums with life. If you pause and watch, you’ll see honey bees moving from flower to flower, their legs dusted with pollen, their translucent wings catching the light. Each bee visits thousands of blossoms in a single day, gathering nectar that will be transformed into honey back at the hive. […] The contrast between tart lemon filling and airy, toasted meringue defines lemon meringue pie. Its history is a fusion of several culinary innovations. Lemon custards and tarts have been popular in Europe since the Middle Ages, when lemons brought back from the Middle East and North Africa were prized for their acidity and perfume. Meringue […] |
2 events,Bratwurst, which translates loosely to finely chopped meat sausage, is as much a part of German food culture as beer and pretzels. The sausage dates back to at least the fourteenth century, when butchers in Franconia ground pork and veal with spices and stuffed the mixture into casings. Each region developed its own style: Nürnberger […] Rum conjures images of sun‑drenched sugarcane fields, pirates and tiki cocktails. The spirit’s history is tied to the transatlantic slave trade and colonial plantations. In the seventeenth century, plantation workers in the Caribbean discovered that molasses, a byproduct of sugar production, could be fermented and distilled into a strong spirit. The liquor became known as […] |
3 events,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, […]
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 […] 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 […] |
3 events,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 […] 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 […] 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 […] |
2 events,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 […] 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 […] |
4 events,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 […] 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 […] 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 […] 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 […] |
2 events,Before Neapolitan ice cream was a supermarket staple, Italians were layering frozen creams and candied fruit into moulds called spumoni. This dessert likely originated in Campania or Sicily in the late 19th century and combined three flavours—usually cherry, pistachio and vanilla—swirled with candied citrus peel and nuts. The layers were moulded in a cylindrical shape […] For many in the American South, sweet tea isn’t just a drink—it’s a ritual. In the mid‑19th century, tea was a luxury item, as were sugar and ice. Recipes for sweetened iced tea didn’t appear until 1878, when a community cookbook from Virginia offered a version using green tea steeped with sugar and cooled. The […] |
4 events,Bao—soft, pillowy buns filled with savoury or sweet fillings—are part of the culinary heart of China. Legend credits the military strategist Zhuge Liang with inventing steamed buns during the Three Kingdoms era, using dough in place of human heads as a ritual offering. Historically, baozi evolved from mantou, plain steamed buns eaten as staples in […] In late summer, peaches perfume markets with their floral sweetness. The fruit, which likely originated in China more than 4,000 years ago, was so beloved there that poets compared it to immortality. From the foothills of the Himalayas peaches travelled west along the Silk Road through Persia—giving rise to their species name, Prunus persica—and on […] Plant‑based milks might seem like a recent trend, but humans have been blending nuts, grains and seeds with water for centuries. Medieval European cooks made almond milk to use during Lent when animal products were forbidden; in China, soybeans were ground and boiled to create the drink we know as soy milk. In modern times, […] Unlike a sponge cake, a torte relies on nuts for body instead of flour. In central Europe tortes are dense confections layered with buttercream and fruit, but in the American South the pecan torte stands apart: it’s a single layer of ground pecans folded gently into whipped egg whites and yolks. No leavening is needed; […] |
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A true sponge cake is more air than anything else. Unlike butter cakes, sponges rely on whipped eggs for their rise, creating a structure of tiny bubbles that results in an airy crumb. The cake’s origins are entwined with the discovery in 17th‑century Europe that beaten eggs could act as a leavening agent. Genoese bakers […] The coconut is a study in versatility—simultaneously fruit, nut and seed, offering food, drink, fiber and fuel. National Coconut Week, observed during the last week of August, honors the tropical palm tree that has sustained island cultures for millennia. Coconut palms likely originated in the South Pacific and drifted on ocean currents to tropical shores […] The Cuban sandwich—pressed bread stuffed with roast pork, ham, Swiss cheese, pickles and mustard—is a story of migration and cultural mingling. Its roots lie with the Taino people of the Caribbean, who made flatbread from cassava called casabe. When Spanish colonists arrived, they introduced pork, cured ham and cheese, and the sandwich began to take […] |
2 events,Pie is one of America’s most enduring desserts, and peach pie is arguably its summer queen. Peaches, with their fragrant flesh and rosy skins, reached North America via Spanish settlers and quickly took to southern orchards. Early American cooks prized pies for their ability to preserve fruit and provide portable meals. By the 19th century […] The waffle has travelled an impressive journey from medieval pious fare to brunch favourite. Medieval Europeans cooked unleavened communion wafers in patterned irons, and by the 13th century artisans began to sell thicker street waffles seasoned with honey and wine. Waffle irons with elaborate designs—coats of arms, biblical scenes and lattice patterns—were prized household possessions. […] |
3 events,A well‑made whiskey sour is a lesson in balance. The drink likely evolved from sailors’ grog—spirits mixed with citrus juice and sugar to ward off scurvy. By the mid‑19th century, bartenders in the United States were combining whiskey, lemon and sugar with ice and shaking them to a frothy chill. One popular origin story credits […] Green Goddess dressing is a testament to how the theatre can influence cuisine. In the 1920s San Francisco’s Palace Hotel hosted the actor George Arliss, who was starring in the play The Green Goddess. To honour him, the hotel’s chef, Philip Roemer, created a dressing as vibrant as the title. He blended mayonnaise with fresh […] On a summer afternoon in 1904, David Evans Strickler, a 23‑year‑old apprentice pharmacist at Tassel Pharmacy in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, decided to liven up the soda fountain menu. He split a banana lengthwise, nestled three scoops of ice cream between the halves, drizzled them with chocolate and strawberry sauces, sprinkled crushed nuts on top and finished […] |
2 events,Charcuterie is the craft of curing, smoking and preserving meat, a tradition that dates back to at least 15th‑century France. The word comes from ‘chair cuite’, meaning cooked flesh, and referred to shops that sold sausages, pâtés and rillettes. French guilds regulated production, and regional specialities evolved—think saucisson sec in the Auvergne, jambon de Bayonne […] The Popsicle owes its existence to an 11‑year‑old boy’s forgetfulness. In 1905, San Francisco resident Frank Epperson mixed powdered soda pop with water and left his cup, stirring stick and all, on the porch overnight. Temperatures dipped below freezing, and he awoke to find a sweet ice block on a stick. Epperson dubbed his accidental […] |
2 events,Bananas are so ubiquitous in grocery stores that it’s easy to forget their exotic origins. The fruit likely originated in Southeast Asia, where wild bananas were first domesticated more than two thousand years ago. These early bananas were filled with hard seeds; farmers selectively bred plants for their creamy, seedless flesh. Arab traders carried bananas […] Pots de crème—literally ‘pots of cream’—are small French custards baked in individual cups. Their history stretches back to the 17th century when custards were prized at Versailles for their smooth texture and rich flavour. While early versions were encased in pastry shells, the dessert evolved into a standalone pudding cooked slowly in a water bath. […] |
4 events,National Crackers Over The Keyboard Day is one of those quirky celebrations invented to make us chuckle. The day was dreamt up by Thomas and Ruth Roy, a husband‑and‑wife acting duo who have created dozens of ‘special’ days through their company Wellcat Holidays. This one encourages workers and students to break one of office etiquette’s […] 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 […] 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 […] 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, […] |
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3 events,Every year around this time, I find myself craving national cherry popover day. It signals a call to gather over plates and conversation. In kitchens and cafes across the country, people take note of the date and remember how national cherry popover day connects them to seasons past and present. Long before anyone thought to […]
You know it's early September in Chicago when the scent of roasting meat and warm pita wafts down Halsted Street, luring people toward a tiny shop with a spinning column of marinated goodness. National Gyro Day falls on September 1st every year, but the celebration is less about a single date and more about the […]
As soon as my calendar flips to September, national tofu day comes to mind. It nudges us to slow down and savor something simple and satisfying. In kitchens and cafes across the country, people take note of the date and remember how national tofu day connects them to seasons past and present. Ages before a […] |
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A Taste of Late Summer It’s hard to say what triggers it first—cooler air or the thought of National Blueberry Popsicle Day. The holiday arrives on September 2, just as summer begins to fade but warm afternoons still linger. It’s a sweet reminder to slow down, savor the season’s final berries, and enjoy the simple […]
A Bowl Full of Comfort The first hint of fall often sends me rummaging for ingredients to make grits for breakfast. It’s a meal that invites neighbors and families to linger a little longer at the table. Across kitchens and cafés, people take note of the date and celebrate National Grits for Breakfast Day, remembering […] |
3 events,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 […]
The Taste of Late Summer September mornings have a way of making National Baby Back Ribs Day taste even better. It conjures childhood memories, smoky air, and the warmth of kitchens and backyards long ago. Across patios, cafés, and barbecue joints, people take note of September 3 and remember how this hearty dish connects them […]
A Toast to Comfort and Heritage There’s a certain light in early September that makes me think of National Welsh Rarebit Day. The date, September 3, seems made for something warm and toasty, something that blurs the line between simple sustenance and quiet indulgence. In kitchens and cafés across the country, people take note of […] |
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A Day for Sweet Second Helpings By the time the sun sets a little earlier, I’m already picturing Eat an Extra Dessert Day. It arrives each year on September 4 as a gentle nudge to set aside guilt and lean fully into life’s sweeter moments. Across kitchens and cafés, people take note of the day […]
The Flavor of Late Summer Long afternoons and shorter days mean one thing to me: it’s time for National Macadamia Nut Day. The holiday, celebrated on September 4, feels like an invitation to slow down and savor something buttery, crisp, and a little indulgent. Across kitchens and cafés, people take note of the date and […]
A Day to Share the Table Every year around this time, I find myself craving something less about flavor and more about purpose—National Food Bank Day. It arrives on the first Friday of September, quietly inviting us to think about how we feed not only ourselves but each other. Across communities, churches, schools, and kitchens, […] |
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A Season for Simplicity When the school buses reappear on the streets, I know National Cheese Pizza Day has arrived. It fills the air with anticipation and the promise of good eating. On September 5, kitchens and cafés across the country celebrate the most iconic slice of all—a perfect union of dough, tomato, and melted […]
A Bite of Spice and Story You can tell it’s early September when friends start talking about World Samosa Day. It sparks cravings and conversations about recipes passed down through generations—the sound of sizzling oil, the fragrance of cumin and coriander, and the joy of sharing something flaky and warm. Across kitchens, cafés, and street […] |
