Tuesday 5 April 2016

April 6 Sorry Charlie Day

April 6  Sorry Charlie Day


Sorry Charlie Day is observed each year on April 6. Have you ever been rejected, for anything, Sure you have. We all have. Sorry Charlie Day is for all of us who have been discarded, and yet somehow survived it.Celebrate this day by taking a minute to remember a past rejection. After doing this, be happy und realize the fact that this happens to all of us. Some level of rejection is an inevitable part of life.

Nevertheless, rejection can become a problem when it is prolonged or consistent, when the relationship is important, or when the individual is highly sensitive to rejection. The experience of rejection can lead to a number of adverse psychological consequences such as loneliness, low self-esteem, aggression, and depression. 

April 6  Sorry Charlie Day

April 6 Student-Athlete Day

April 6 Student-Athlete Day


April 6, 2013 marks the 26th celebration of National STUDENT-Athlete Day, Created by theNational STUDENT-Athlete Day (NCAS) in 1987. The program seeks to encourage families, schools and communities to support their STUDENT-athletes in their endeavors.
Events celebrating the day can take place throughout the entire month or in conjunction with an event that is already in place. It has become one of America’s strongest endeavors promoting the positive virtues of sport and student-athletes as a whole, and the positive affect they both have on society.

+More than 4.1 million student-athletes honored
+In 2015, over 229,000 student-athletes honored
+All student-athletes honored have achieved a 3.0+ GPA and are involved in outreach and community service. 

April 6 Student-Athlete Day

April 6 Tartan Day

April 6 Tartan Day


National Tartan Day is a US observance on April 6 each year. It commemorates the Scottish Declaration of Independence, from which the American Declaration of Independence was modeled on. It also recognizes achievements of Americans of Scottish descent.

Tartan Day parades occur in major cities such as New York on or around April 6. These parades often feature bag-pipe bands playing Scottish music and people dressed in kilts with tartan patterns that represent their Scottish clans. Special award events are also held on Tartan Day, often organized by groups such as the American Scottish Foundation.

In the United States it is estimated that there are 6 million people who claim Scottish descent. Little was done to follow up the New York event in 1982. In 1998, a Coalition of Scottish Americans with the Support of Senator Trent Lott successfully lobbied the Senate for the designation of April 6 as National Tartan Day "to recognize the outstanding achievements and contributions made by Scottish Americans to the United States". 

April 6 Tartan Day

April 6 Teflon Day

April 6 Teflon Day


Teflon Day is observed each year on April 6. It honors the accidental invention of Teflon on April 6, 1938, by Dr. Roy Plunkett.While working in the Chemours Jackson New Jersey lab that April day, Plunkett, along with his assistant, accidentally discovered polytetrafluoroethylene. Chemours registered the Teflon trademark in 1945. Dr. Plunkett was added to the Inventors’ Hall of Fame in 1985.

If Plunket invented Teflon, which was trademarked in 1945, then Marion A. Trozzolo brought from the laboratory into the kitchen. The Kansas City, Missouri professor had been using the substance to coat his scientific utensils. He later founded Laboratory Plastic ware Fabricators.
In 1961, he marketed the first US-made Teflon coated frying pan, “The Happy Pan”.
But once DuPont decided to market cookware coated with the stuff, a much shorter name was needed. You're probably way ahead of me at this point: DuPont decided to call the coating Teflon. 

April 6 Teflon Day

April 6 Caramel Popcorn Day

April 6 Caramel Popcorn Day


Caramel Popcorn Day takes situate on April 07, 2016.In January, we celebrated National Popcorn Day. We now add delicious caramel popcorn to the calendar, one of America’s favorite snacks.Caramel popcorns history goes back 150 years.
The day celebrates the combination of Caramel and Popcorn. Caramel corn is an American confection made of popcorn coated with a sugar or molasses based caramel candy shell.Popcorn is an amazing food, and a delightful treat, capable of being so many different forms of things.

The simplest way, of course, is merely to buy a bag of caramels from the grocery store, along with some plain popping corn. You then melt the caramels in a double boiler, and pour the resultant rich silky material over the popped corn, shaking to prevent it from sticking together in the process.

You can try looking at existing recipes for varieties such as

April 6 Caramel Popcorn Day


Monday 4 April 2016

April 5 Caramel Day


April 5 Caramel Day


It’s April 5 Caramel Day. Caramel is made with butter, brown and white sugar, milk or cream, and vanilla. It is usually enjoyed as an ice cream topping, a candy filling, or on its own. You can also find caramel flavored puddings, popcorn, desserts, and coffee.

Caramels are made by adding milk and fat to sugary syrup that has been heated and stirred constantly until it reaches a light brown color. Americans began making sugary syrups in the 1600s; American women were using caramelized sugar and water to make candies. Milton Hershey’s first business was the Lancaster Caramel Company.

The longer caramel cooks, it takes on a deeper color and a darker flavor until the sugar becomes bitter and is no longer tasty. To celebrate you can enjoy some of your favorite caramel candies or make a batch of homemade caramel.

Following are a few yummy caramel recipes for you to enjoy:

Easy Caramel Corn
Hot Caramel Apple Dip
Caramels
Caramel Filled Chocolate Cookies
Caramel Custard 

April 5 Caramel Day


April 5 Deep Dish Pizza Day


April 5 Deep Dish Pizza Day


April 5th recognizes a food holiday that is Deep Dish Pizza Day, let us thank Pizzeria Uno’s founder Ike Sewell, without whom this day wouldn’t exist. Ike Sewell credited with creating the spectacular deep dish pizza in 1943 in Chicago. This wonderfully tasty pizza, also known as Chicago-style pizza, is characterized by a superb buttery crust that can be as high as 3 inches tall, along with generous amounts of flavorsome sauce, toppings and cheese.

In ancient Greece, the Greeks covered their bread with oils, herbs and cheese which some people believe is the beginning of the pizza.
In Byzantine Greek, the word was spelled “πίτα”, pita, meaning pie.
A sheet of dough topped with cheese and honey, then flavored with bay leaves was developed by the Romans. The modern pizza had its beginning in Italy as the Neapolitan flatbread.
The original pizza used only mozzarella cheese, mainly the highest quality buffalo mozzarella variant which was produced in the area surrounding Naples.
It was estimated that the annual production of pizza cheese in the United States in 1997 was 2 billion pounds. The first United States pizza establishment opened in 1905 in New York’s Little Italy.
Pizza has become one of America’s favorite meals. 


April 5 Deep Dish Pizza Day

April 5 Go For Broke Day

April 5 Go For Broke Day


Go For Broke Day is observed annually on April 5. The phrase “Go for broke” has roots in Hawaiian Pidgin meaning “wager everything”. It was adopted from the 442nd Infantry Regiment's unit motto "Go for Broke", which was derived from the Hawaiian pidgin phrase used by craps shooters risking all their money in one roll of the dice. On April 5, 1945, Sadao S. Munemori "saved two of his men at the cost of his own life and did much to clear the path for his company's victorious advance" near Seravezza, Italy. Munemori was a member of the 442d Regimental Combat Team.

Know that stepping out of what you know is the only way you can truly grow as a person, with new experiences and challenges paving the way for personal growth and a realization of which you truly are. Falling into a rut is a sure way to lead to depression and a failure to make the most out of life, don’t be one of those who look back and asks of your life ‘what if?’ Instead, go for broke.

There’s a saying that is close to the heart of this day, “It is better to regret the things you’ve done, than the things you haven’t.” This quote goes straight to the idea of “Life is meant to be experienced doing things, not sitting around not doing anything.” Old age is the time of regrets, why not take this opportunity you have as few regrets of things you haven’t done to follow you to the end? Get out there, carpe diem.

Best of luck dear friends and now “Go For Broke Day”. 


April 5 Go For Broke Day

April 5 Raisin and Spice Bar Day


April 5 Raisin and Spice Bar Day


Observed annually on April 5 is National Raisin and Spice Bar Day too with Go For Broke Day. Sometimes comfort foods come in the form of raisins and spice fresh from the oven. There are many variations of recipes you can use for making raisin and spice bars. Some of them date back many years. But the most common is a bar made with cinnamon, allspice, raisins and chopped pecans or walnuts. 

April 5 Raisin and Spice Bar Day


Try this delicious Raisin Spice Bars recipe.

April 5 Read a Road Map Day

April 5 Read a Road Map Day


Annually Read a Road Map Day is observed April 5. It encourages people to go on an adventure the old fashioned way, with a paper map! Do not use the electronic devices and unfold a traditional road map. Make known yourself with it and take a little trip. Use your capability for using a map. Teach someone else to read a map.

Learn more about maps and how they are made. Take a short road trip and use only paper maps to guide you. Take a navigator who does the map reading and directing for you. If you do not have a navigator, please make sure you only read the map when your car is at a complete stop.
If you have never read a map, take some time to learn to read one. We consider it will be a good skill to have in the unlikely event of disaster. 

April 5 Read a Road Map Day

April 5 SAAM Day of Action – First Tuesday

April 5 SAAM Day of Action – First Tuesday


April 5 SAAM Day of Action – First Tuesday in April recognized in the United States and observed annually as part of Sexual Assault Awareness Month (SAAM), SAAM Day of Action provides a day to focus awareness on sexual violence prevention.
Since 2004, the National Sexual Violence Resource Center has promoted a day dedicated to ending sexual violence against women. Their campaign is ongoing. For more information visit www.nsvrc.org.  

For complete information regarding SAAM Day of Action, see:


April 5 SAAM Day of Action – First Tuesday


Sunday 3 April 2016

April 4 Chicken Cordon Bleu Day


April 4 Chicken Cordon Bleu Day


Once a year observed on April 4 is Chicken Cordon Bleu Day. The a special dish all about combining chicken, ham and cheese. “Cordon bleu” means “blue ribbon” in French.

The French term Cordon Bleu is translated as “Blue Ribbon”. This dish is a take on the popular Veal Cordon Bleu. It is a flattened chicken breast which is wrapped around ham and cheese such as Swiss or Gruyere. The chicken is held together with toothpicks and dipped in an egg wash and breaded.

The earliest recipe we were able to find was in a March 1964 printing of the Cincinnati Enquirer by the Cincinnati Gourmet Stanley Demos. Despite some misconceptions, it is an American dish. Demo’s mentions in his column that he got the idea to try chicken instead of veal “to be different.” It has been a popular dish since.

The most basic in variations is the chicken being baked instead of fried, which is what seems to be the most common in the Americas. A similar variant comes from Hungary, where veal is used in place of the chicken, but the filling is the same. One variation not commonly known of outside of its home of Switzerland is the Schnitzel Cordon Bleu.

Few delicious recipes for you to enjoy:

Chicken Cordon Bleu Bake
Chicken Cordon Bleu Casserole
Chicken Cordon Bleu Recipe
Chicken Cordon Bleu Sandwich
Chicken Cordon Bleu with a Cream Mushroom Sauce


April 4 Chicken Cordon Bleu Day


April 4 Hug a News Person Day

April 4 Hug a News Person Day


Hug a Newsperson Day April 4th is Hug a Newsperson Day. Each year this day gives everyone the opportunity to say “thank you” and hug their local newsperson. The Merriam-Webster dictionary tells us that the word “newsman” dates back to 1596. 

April 4 Hug a News Person Day