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Chef James

“The duty of a good Cuisinier is to transmit to the next generation everything he has learned and experienced.”
 
Fernand Point, 1941

FEATURED FOR FEBRUARY

Updated: Over 9,000 Food Festivals

St. Patrick’s Day Facts & Food

St. Patrick’s Day Recipes
 

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FEATURED RECIPES & TIPS

· Original Frank's Redhot Wings

· Ultimate Party Wings

· More Chicken Wing Recipes

· More Appetizer Recipes·

· French Onion Dip

· Jack's Screaming Red Sauce

· Potato Salad Recipes

· Cole Slaw Recipes

· Chicken Salad Recipes

· Kickoff Kabobs

· Banana Bread Recipes

· Mushroom Appetizer Recipes

· Crunchy Snack Mixes

· Mustard and Mustard Sauces

· Salsa Recipes

· Baked and Stuffed Potato Recipes

· Mac & Cheese Recipes
 

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February Food Holidays:

For Details, History and more DAY, WEEK and MONTH Food Holiday designations, including LINKS to Holiday Origins and Additional Information:
SEE Detailed FEBRUARY Food Calendar

FEBRUARY is:

• Black History Month

• American Heart Month

• Bake for Family Fun Month

• Canned Food Month

• Chocolate Lovers Month

• Fabulous Florida Strawberry Month

 Grain of the Month: Barley

 Great American Pies Month

• National Bird Feeding Month (one of the most difficult months in much of the U.S. for birds to survive in the wild)

• National Cherry Month

• National Children's Dental Health Month

• National Grapefruit Month

• National Hot Breakfast Month

• National Potato Lover's Month

• National Snack Food Month

• Sweet Potato Month

• Return Shopping Carts to the Supermarket Month

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DID YOU KNOW?

Bread really does tend to land buttered side down when dropped. In 2001, Robert Matthews of Aston University in Birmingham, England, had over 1,000 school children drop almost 10,000 buttered bread slices from table height.  Sixty-Two percent (6,101) slices landed buttered side down.

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Thursday, February 19, 2026

Daily Trivia Questions are below

TODAY’S FOOD QUOTE

“I have trouble with toast. Toast is very difficult. You have to watch it all the time or it burns up.”
Julia Child (1912-2004)
 

FOOD HOLIDAYS - TODAY IS:

• National Chocolate Mint Day

• National CSA Week (Feb 15-21, 2026) Formerly CSA Day [CSA Innovation Network] Community Supported Agriculture
 

TODAY IN FOOD HISTORY

1526 Charles de L'Escluse, or Carolus Clusius was born (died April 4, 1609). A pioneering French botanist, he contributed to the establishment of modern botanical science. Published many influential books including ‘Rariorum plantarum historia’ (1601).

1764 Gottlieb Sigismund Kirchhof was born. He discovered glucose, developed a method for refining vegetable oil, and also experimented with brewing and fermentation.

1847 The Donner Party is rescued after being snowbound in the Sierra Nevadas. Almost half of the original 87 members died, and some of the survivors seemed to be well fed considering the ordeal they went through. Cannibalism itself is not a crime, and no charges were ever brought.

1855 Bread Riots in Liverpool.

1881 Kansas became the first state to prohibit all alcoholic beverages.

1888 The Hotel del Coronado in San Diego, California opened, At the time, the 399 room hotel was the largest resort hotel in the world, and today is the second largest wooden structure in the U.S.
[Historical Photos on Hotel website]

1896 The Detroit Convention and Business Mens' League was formed to attract convention business to Detroit, Michigan.

1897 Adelaide Hunter Hoodless founds the Federation of Women's Institutes of Canada which promotes pasteurization of milk as one of its main projects.  (Pasteurization Facts)

1903 Tsingtao, China's first brewery, was founded by German settlers. (Some sources say it was 1897).

1906 Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake Company (W.K. Kellogg Company) was founded by Will Keith Kellogg to manufacture breakfast cereals (cornflakes).  (Kellogg’s Corn Flakes Trivia)

1913 Cracker Jack begins to put prizes in each box.

1953 The play 'Picnic' opened at the Music Box Theatre in New York City.

1976 Iceland broke off diplomatic relations with Great Britain when the two couldn't settle their disagreement on the 'cod war' fishing rights issue.
(Cod fish Trivia  ---  Cod Quotes)

1985 Cherry Coke was introduced. Actually, soda fountains (remember them?) had been making them for decades.

1999 A record 6,000 pound strawberry shortcake was created in McCall Park, Plant City, Florida, the Winter Strawberry Capital of the World.
(Strawberry Trivia  ---  Strawberry Quotes)

2001 UK: The first suspected case of foot-and-mouth disease is detected in Essex. The disease ravages livestock in Britain in the worst epidemic since 1967.  By March it has spread to mainland Europe. Millions of animals are destroyed (see also Jan 14, 2002)

2012 A team at Maastricht University in the Netherlands announced they have successfully used stem cells to grow muscle tissue, with the goal of producing the first lab-grown hamburger later this year.

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A FEW FEATURED FOOD FESTIVALS
(See All 9,000 Food, Wine & Beer Festivals)

February 12-March 1, 2026  Riverside County Fair & National Date Festival - Indio, California

February 19-22, 2026  South Beach Wine & Food Festival - South Beach, Florida

February 19-22, 2026  Newport Seafood & Wine Festival - Newport, Oregon

February 20-22, 2026  National Pheasant Fest & Quail Classic - Minneapolis, Minnesota

February 21-March 2, 2026  New York City Beer Week
New York, New York

(SEE ALL FOOD FESTIVALS and OTHER FOOD EVENTS)
 

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FOOD TRIVIA QUIZ    (new DAILY questions)

1) All of the following events took place in the same year.  What year is it?
· Grand Rapids, Michigan became the first U.S. city to fluridate its drinking water, to reduce tooth decay.
· 'Cheerioats' cereal was renamed 'Cheerios'
· Tupperware Corp. is founded by former duPont chemist Earl W. Tupper.

2) This small annual herb, a member of the carrot family, is second in popularity only to black pepper throughout the world. It has dark green leaves and tiny white or pink flowers.  The fruit, when green, has an unpleasant taste, but when ripe is aromatic and is used as a spice.
   The plant is native to the Mediterranean area, and was used by ancient Persians, Egyptians, Hebrews, and Romans both medicinally and as a condiment. It is referred to several times in both the Old and New Testaments of the Bible. (i.e. Isaiah xxvii, 25 and 27, and Matthew xxiii, 23) and in the works of Hippocrates, Dioscorides, Horace and Pliny. It was a common ingredient in many recipes of the Middle Ages. It was a symbol of greed to the ancient Greeks, and in Europe it was said to inspire faithfulness in men.
   It is used today in India, North Africa, the Middle East, Mexico, America, central and eastern Europe. It is an essential ingredient in mixtures such as garam masala and panch phoron, and is used in pickles, relishes, sausages, stews, baking cheeses, liqueurs and salads.  
   Can you name this fruit used as a spice?

Click Here for Today’s Quiz Answers
 

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Read an article about Chef James and the FoodReference.com website published in the Winona Daily News, Minneapolis StarTribune, and numerous other newspapers: Click here for the Article
 

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Dedication
This website is dedicated to:
· Gladys Ehler, my mother, who taught me patience and how to make Sauerbraten (it is still my favorite)
· Edward Ehler, my father, who taught me a love of books and history.
· Barbara Saba, my sister, who taught me how to dance.
· Cpl. Thomas E. Saba, my nephew.  Died in action on Feb. 7, 2007 in Iraq.  He was 30 yrs. young.

          Chef James
 

TOP

DID YOU KNOW

In 1890 women baking at home produced more than 80% of the bread eaten in the United States.  By the late 1920s, 94% of the bread eaten was baked by men in commercial bakeries.

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A FOOD LIFE

"There are those who say that a life devoted to food -- cooking it, eating it, writing about it, even dreaming about it -- is a frivolous life, an indulgent life.  I would disagree.  If we do not care what we eat, we do not care for ourselves, and if we do not care for ourselves, how can we care for others?"
Fictional cookery writer Hilary Small, in episode 6, series 2 of 'Pie In the Sky'

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Click Here for
Food Emergency
Websites, Phone #s, E-mails, etc.

 

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Classic Fish and Seafood Recipes
 

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DID YOU KNOW?

Mescal, called "nectar of the gods" by Cortez, is a colorless spirit distilled from the juice and pulp of the agave plant.  It is not aged, has a strong flavor, and is frequently sold with a blue agave worm in the bottle.

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IN SEASON FOR WINTER

VEGETABLES
(Recipes  --  Tips)
Avocados
Beets
Brussels Sprouts
Cabbage
Carrots
Celery
Collard Greens
Kale
Leeks
Onions
Parsnips
Plantains
Potatoes
Pumpkin
Rutabagas
Sweet Potatoes & Yams
Swiss Chard
Turnips
Winter Squash

FRUITS (Tips)
Apples
Bananas
Grapefruit
Grapes
Kiwifruit
Lemons
Limes
Oranges
Pears
Pomegranates

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DID YOU KNOW?

The "Flower of Kent" is a large green skinned apple variety, and is thought to have been the variety that struck Sir Isaac Newton.

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Website last updated on Thursday, February 19, 2026