FoodReference.com Logo

FoodReference.com     (since 1999)

 

HOME   |   Articles   |   Food_Trivia   |   Today_in_Food_History   |   Food_History_Timeline   |   Recipes   |   Cooking_Tips   |   Food_Quotes   |   Who’s_Who   |   Culinary_Schools_&_Tours   |   Trivia_Quizzes   |   Food_Poems   |   Cookbooks   |   Free_Magazines   |   Food_Festivals_&_Events

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
 

** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** **
 

 


** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** **

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
 

** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** **
 

 


** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** **
 

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

** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** **

DID YOU KNOW?

Sorghum is a member of the grass family has been grown in India for about 4,000 years, and has been a major crop in Africa for even longer. It was also used as a staple food in China thousands of years before rice. Today the largest sorghum producers are the U.S., China and India. Sorghum is used as a feed grain, in porridges, unleavened bread and beverages.

** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** **

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Daily Trivia Questions are below

TODAY’S FOOD QUOTE

“Good bread is the most fundamentally satisfying of all foods; and good bread with fresh butter, the greatest of feasts.”   James Beard (1903-1985)
 

FOOD HOLIDAYS - TODAY IS:

• National Margarita Day (Margarita History & Trivia)

• Cook a Sweet Potato Day ? (Sweet Potato Recipes)
  (Sweet Potato Nutrition  ---  Sweet Potato Trivia)

• National Girl Scout Cookie Weekend (Feb 20-22, 2026) [Girl Scouts of America]

• National FFA Week: Feb 21-28, 2026
  [Future Farmers of America]

• UK: [Real Bread Week] (Feb 21-March 1, 2026) A celebration of additive-free loaves and the people who make them.
 

TODAY IN FOOD HISTORY

1403 Charles VII of France was born. His mistress, Agnes Sorel, was a celebrated cook who created several dishes, and had several culinary creations named in her honor.. (Agnes Sorel soup garnish, Agnes Sorel Timbales, etc.)

1512 Amerigo Vespucci died (born March 9, 1454). Italian explorer and cartographer, he was the first to realize that America was a new previously unknown continent. German cartographer (mapmaker) Martin Waldseemόller is credited with the first usage of 'America' on a map, to honor Vespucci.

1630 Quadequina, an American Indian, supposedly introduced English colonists to popcorn. He had brought some to their first Thanksgiving dinner. (Some sources say 1631). (Popcorn Trivia)

1732 George Washington, the first U.S. president, was born.

1819 Spain ceded Florida to the United States.
(Florida Food Trivia)

1870 Thomas Elkins, of Albany, New York received a patent for a 'Dining, Ironing Table and Quilting Frame Combined'

1879 Frank Winfield Woolworth opened his first 'Woolworth's Great Five Cent Store' in Utica, New York.

1893 Quebec declares beer of not over 4% alcohol is a 'temperance drink' (making it legal).

1895 Lever Brothers Ltd. registered 'Lifebuoy' soap trademark.

1920 The first artificial rabbit is used at a dog racing track in Emeryville, California.
(Rabbit Trivia & Recipes)

1925 Sir Thomas Clifford Allbutt died. An English physician, he invented the short (6 inch) clinical thermometer. Before this, a foot long thermometer was used that took 20 minutes to determine a patient's temperature. Ouch!

1971 'One Bad Apple' by The Osmonds is #1 on the charts.

1987 Andy Warhol died. American painter of the pop art movement. In the  1960s he made paintings of Campbell's Soup cans, Coca-Cola cans and other American products.

1997 Scientists in Scotland announced the first successful cloning of a mammal. Dolly, a sheep was cloned from an udder cell of an adult sheep. (Dolly was actually born July 5, 1996 but only just announced).

2005 Winn-Dixie supermarket chain filed for bankruptcy reorganization.

2011 U.K. The Cornish Pasty wins "protected geographical indication" (PGI) status from European commission. Only pasties prepared in Cornwall and following the traditional recipe can now be described as Cornish Pasties.  The Cornish Pasty Association said a genuine Cornish pasty had a distinctive "D" shape and was crimped on one side, never on top.  "The texture of the filling is chunky, made up of uncooked minced or roughly cut chunks of beef (not less than 12.5%), swede, potato, and onion with a light seasoning. The pastry casing is golden in colour, savoury, glazed with milk or egg and robust enough to retain its shape throughout the cooking and cooling process without splitting or cracking. The pasty is slow-baked and no artificial flavourings or additives must be used."

2021 Coronavirus: U.S. death toll surpasses 500,000; however infections, hospitalizations and deaths are slowing; as more than 44 million in U.S. have received at least one dose of vaccine.

** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** **

 

** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** **

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)
 

** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** **

FOOD TRIVIA QUIZ    (new DAILY questions)

1) All of the following events took place in the same year.  What year is it?
· There are about 2,780,000 farms, averaging about 390 acres.
· Farmers made up less than 5 percent of work force for the first time.
· Hamburger Helper was introduced.

2) This is one of the oldest cultivated flowering plants. The flowers are edible, with a taste reminiscent of grapes and mint. It has been cultivated for so long that its origin is unknown. Some of the other names for the cultivated flower are ladies-delight, stepmother's flower. The wild forms are also known as johnny-jump-up and love-in-idleness. Name this flower.

3) An Australian (or New Zealand) dessert named for a Russian Ballerina, it consists of a meringue base with whipped cream and fruit.  Name this dessert.

Click Here for Today’s Quiz Answers
 

** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** **

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
 

** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** **

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

Farmers are more than twice as likely to die on the job as police officers and nearly four times as likely to be killed on the job as firefighters.

** ** ** ** ** **

 


** ** ** ** ** **

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'

** ** ** ** ** **

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

 

** ** ** ** ** **

Classic Fish and Seafood Recipes
 

** ** ** ** ** **

DID YOU KNOW?

Bagels are formed from an eggless dough (flour, yeast, water and oil) into a donut shape, then droped in rapidly boiling water, cooked 3 - 5 minutes on one side then flipped and cooked 3 -5 minutes more on the other side. Drained, sometimes brushed with egg and then baked for 10 minutes or so.

* ** ** ** ** **

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

** ** ** ** ** **

DID YOU KNOW?

Cloves are actually dried flower buds, which are picked before they open. The clove tree is a member of the myrtle family and is native to the Spice Islands of Indonesia (Moluccas).

** ** ** ** ** **

  Home   |   About Us & Contact Us   |   Privacy Policy   |   Chef James Biography   |   Bibliography   |   Food Links  

Please feel free to link to any pages of FoodReference.com from your website.

For permission to use any of this content please E-mail: james@foodreference.com

All contents are copyright © 1990 - 2026 James T. Ehler and www.FoodReference.com unless otherwise noted.
All rights reserved.

You may copy and use portions of this website for non-commercial, personal use only.
Any other use of these materials without prior written authorization is not very nice and violates the copyright.

Please take the time to request permission.
 

Website last updated on Sunday, February 22, 2026