Saturday, October 17, 2020

October 17 - National Pasta Day

 

Happy National Pasta Day! Pasta lovers celebrate! October is National Pasta Month, and October 17 recognizes National Pasta Day.  


While we find noodles all over the world, pasta is a type of noodle of traditional Italian cuisine.  

 
The first reference dates to 1154 in Sicily and was first attested to in English in 1874. Typically, it is made from an unleavened dough of durum wheat flour.  

 
The flour is then mixed with water or eggs and formed into sheets or various shapes. It can then be served fresh or dried to be stored for later use. 

 
Types of Pasta 

 
Look for pasta in pasta in both savory and dessert dishes. Since it’s so versatile, pasta lends itself to sweet and every other dish on the table.  

 
Cooks feature pasta as a main dish, but they also serve up delicious hot and cold side dishes as well. And then, of course, those special desserts we can’t resist making our mouths water.  

 
Cooks originally made fresh pasta by hand. However, today, many varieties of fresh pasta are made commercially.  

 
Large-scale machines bring choices to our grocers daily. Smaller pasta machines on the market make having the freshest pasta at home even easier.


  • • Dried and fresh pasta come in several shapes and varieties. 

    • There are so many kinds of pasta! According to the Encyclopedia of Pasta (2009) by pre-eminent Italian food historian Oretta Zanini De Vita, three hundred and ten specific kinds of pasta identified by over thirteen hundred names have been documented!  
  • • In Italy, names of specific pasta shapes or types vary with locale. 
  • • Example: Cavatelli is known by twenty-eight different names depending on the region and town! 

The size and shape of pasta may determine the best sauce to pair with it as well. For example, serve linguine with lighter, thinner sauces to avoid breaking the noodles.  


A similarly shaped noodle, fettuccine, is less delicate. That’s why it carries heavier sauces like alfredo.  


Learn more about pasta from the National Pasta Association. 



HOW TO OBSERVE 


Explore the world of pasta. Whether you’re cooking up a salad, main dish, or dessert, recipes abound. National Day Calendar® offers several on their recipe page, too! 



If you don’t feel like cooking, take the family out to an Italian restaurant. 


No matter what you are planning, invite friends to join you. It’s the best way to Celebrate Every Day®!   


Use #NationalPastaDay to post on social media. 


HISTORY 


National Day Calendar® continues researching the origins of this delicious food holiday. 


What is your favorite kind of pasta? 


#NationalPastaDay 

@SharethePasta 

@BarillaUS

@Foodimentary 

@nichecinema 

October 17 - National Mulligan Day

 

Happy National Mulligan Day! Today is observed annually on October 17. It offers an opportunity for giving yourself a second chance or, as some people call it, a “do-over.”    

In golf, a mulligan happens when a player gets a second chance to perform a specific move or action. 


According to the United States Golf Association (USGA), three different stories explain the origin of the term.  


The first derives from the name of a Canadian golfer, David Mulligan, a one-time manager of the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City, who played golf in the 1920s.   


A different, later, etymology gives credit to John A. “Buddy” Mulligan, a locker room attendant at Essex Fells C.C., New Jersey, in the 1930s.   


Another story, according to American humorist and author Henry Beard, states that the term comes from Thomas Mulligan, a minor Anglo-Irish aristocrat and a passionate golfer of whom was born in 1793. 


According to the United States Golf Association (USGA), the term first achieved widespread use in the 1940s. 


HOW TO OBSERVE 


We can all think of something that at one point in time, we have said, “I wish I could do that over.”   


Celebrate the day by taking your do-over. Also, be considerate and offer a Mulligan to a few friends and neighbors out there. Some days we all deserve it.  


Use #NationalMulliganDay to post on social media. 


HISTORY 


C. Daniel Rhodes of Hoover, Alabama created National Mulligan Day as a way to give everyone a day to have a fresh start.   


Along with National Mulligan Day, Rhodes also created National Brother’s Day (May 24) and National Yard Sale Day (Second Saturday in August). 


#NationalMulliganDay 

@USGA 

@nichecinema