National Bake Cookies Day takes place on December 18, just in time for Christmas. Cookies go beyond just a baked treat, as they bond generations. We love cookies for their versatility; they can be crispy or soft and chewy, traditional shapes or special cookie-cutter designs, sweeteners, spices, dried fruit, chocolate, the list goes on. Make your house smell of warm, soft cookies that have been baked to perfection by baking.
The exact history, origin, and founder of this day are still not known. We could think that someone who was fond of cookies and baking cookies would have established this food holiday. The cookie is usually cooked or baked well. It will be small, flat and sweet and made of flour, sugar and some oil or fat.
Cookies are often included with other ingredients like nuts, raisins, oats, chocolate chips, etc. They are most commonly baked until they attain a crisp texture or just long enough that the cookie remains soft. The softness of the cookie can be found depending on the time the cookies are baked.
In the 7th century, the origin of the cookie appeared to begin in Persia soon after they used sugar. During the 17th century, cookies arrived in America. Although the word cookie had come much later with the Dutch in its original form called “koekje,” meaning “little cake.”
There are many different types of cookies available. Take some time and effort in learning how to prepare a cookie and the necessary conditions to bake the cookie. Make cookies at your home, bake them crisp or the taste they prefer. Add nuts, raisins, and dry fruits.
Serve the cookies you made to your family and friends.
The average American eats approximately 35,000 cookies in their lifetime.
245 million Americans consumed ready-to-eat cookies in 2020.
Baking burns 348 calories an hour so you can make some (calorie) space prior to binging on cookies.
Chocolate-chip cookies are the most popular and common cookies baked each year.
The biggest cookie ever recorded was baked in 2003 and weighed 40,000 pounds!
Year | Date | Day |
---|---|---|
2023 | December 18 | Monday |
2024 | December 18 | Wednesday |
2025 | December 18 | Thursday |
2026 | December 18 | Friday |
2027 | December 18 | Saturday |