Week of Events
Melon Day
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 […]
National Apple Week
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. […]
National Rice Pudding Day
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 […]
National S’mores Day
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 […]
National Afternoon Tea Week
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 […]
National Melon Day
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 […]
National Raspberry Bombe Day
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 […]
National Raspberry Tart Day
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 […]
National Panini Day
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 […]
National Gooey Butter Cake Day
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 […]
National Julienne Fries Day
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 […]
National Filet Mignon Day
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 […]
National Prosecco Day
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 […]
National Creamsicle Day
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 […]
National Honey Bee Day
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. […]
National Lemon Meringue Pie Day
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 […]
Sunday, August 9, 2026
No events on this day.
Monday, August 10, 2026
No events on this day.
Tuesday, August 11, 2026
No events on this day.
Wednesday, August 12, 2026
No events on this day.
Thursday, August 13, 2026
No events on this day.
Friday, August 14, 2026
No events on this day.
Saturday, August 15, 2026
No events on this day.
