Posted on 03/07/2025 5:59:11 AM PST by Red Badger
NATIONAL FLAPJACK DAY
March 7th delivers National Flapjack Day with piping hot flavor and goodness. The day honors the sturdy, wholesome cakes we've been cooking up for generations! Recipes handed down from grandmother to son and mother to daughter continue to bring smiles to families all across the country.
#NationalFlapjackDay
Flapjacks were a staple of pioneers pursuing new lives on the frontier. Packed with nutrients and energy, flapjacks provided the fuel they needed to withstand the often arduous trails.
Stacked high, flapjacks remind us of mornings in grandma's kitchen when the coffee was fresh. We topped them with fresh blueberries and real maple syrup. Maybe today you add pecans or walnuts, thick-sliced bananas, and your favorite nut butter. Fresh whipped cream always makes flapjacks seem extra special, too.
No matter where you go, the flavor and aroma of hot off-the-griddle flapjacks never go wrong. They'll fuel you up for a day of hiking, playing, exploring, and celebrating, too!
HOW TO OBSERVE NATIONAL FLAPJACK DAY
Mix up a batch of flapjacks and invite the family to add their favorite toppings.
Share your most enjoyable memories and the best ways to serve them up, too!
Take a photo of your flapjack meal. Do you add chocolate chips or peaches? How tall is your stack - three, four, maybe five high?
Join the conversation by using #NationalFlapjackDay on social media.
NATIONAL FLAPJACK DAY HISTORY
Kodiak Cakes founded National Flapjack Day in 2020 to celebrate the celebrate a healthier flapjack to fuel our consumers' daily frontier, whatever and wherever that may be.
National Day Calendar®
Everyone loves flapjacks, they’re filling and delicious, but now there’s an even better reason to eat them all day long. This March 7th, join Kodiak Cakes in celebrating National Flapjack Day — but it’s not just a celebration of all things syrup, butter, and breakfast. It’s an excellent excuse to indulge in a staple food that’s been an important part of adventures of any size since the days of the frontier.
Before over-processed ingredients and nutrient-deprived grains, meals needed to be balanced, hearty, and full of ingredients that could keep folks going. That’s the legacy Kodiak Cakes is dedicated to preserving through our flapjack mix, a mix that began with our founder Joel Clark and a small red wagon.
Back then, he took to the neighborhood streets to sell brown bags of his mother’s heirloom recipe. Today, Kodiak Cakes has taken that same dedication to the national spotlight. So, grab a stack, split a few silver dollars, or fill a plate with your favorite flavor – Happy National Flapjack Day.
In 2020, the Registrar at National Day Calendar proclaimed National Flapjack Day to be observed on March 7th, annually.
Flapjacks FAQ
Q. What are the best toppings for flapjacks?
A. Well, others may disagree, but here at National Day Calendar, we like to top our flapjacks with butter, sweet pieces of fruit, walnuts, and real maple syrup.
Q. Can I eat flapjacks for supper?
A. Another terrific way to celebrate is by having breakfast for supper!
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Notable Birthdays for March 7
Increase A. Lapham (1811-1875) - Founder of the Wisconsin Natural History Association.
Henry DeLamar Clayton (1827-1889) - Major General for the Confederate Army.
Luther Burbank (1849-1926) - Botanist who developed over 800 strains and varieties of plants, including fruits, flowers, and vegetables.
Henry Draper (1837-1882) - Astronomer who was/is a leading pioneer astrophotography (images of space).
Whitcomb Judson (1846-1909) - Inventor of the zipper.
Janet Collins (1917-2003) - Prima ballerina who was one of the few classically trained ballerinas of her time.
Betty Holberton (1917-2001) - Engineer who was one of the six original programmers of the first Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer.
Rene Gagnon (1925-1979) - Marine who was photographed raising the flag at Iwo Jima.
Willard Scott (1934-2021) - Fondly remembered as the weatherman for NBC who celebrated centenarian birthdays and notable anniversaries.
Janet Guthrie (1938-Still Living) - First female auto racer in the Indianapolis 500 and Daytona 500.
Bryan Cranston (1956-Still Living) - Actor who played Walter White in the t.v. series Breaking Bad.
Amanda Gorman (1998-Still Living) - Poet who delivered the poem The Hill We Climb at President Biden's inauguration.
Memorable Events for March 7
1778 - Captain James Cook sees the Oregon coast for the first time.
1801 - Massachusetts enacts first voter registration law.
1876 - Alexander Graham Bell is granted a patent for his telephone.
1929 - The first nonstop flight from America to Asia across the Bering Strait is made by Noel Wien and Calvin Cripe.
1945 - The 9th Armoured Division attacks Remagen Germany and crosses Rhine.
Ping!....................
Think I’ll order the Rachel Corrie Special.
Seems like this should have been part of so-called “Fat Tuesday.” Some folks won’t be eating delicious pancakes for a few more weeks.
With a side of scrambled eggs....................
Since flapjacks are high in carb calories, it will do them good!....................
Yummy!
I make flapjacks (pancakes) with sourdough discard, about 4 or 5 dozen at a time. They freeze REALLY well.
Added sugar, extra eggs, vanilla, blueberries, and chocolate and vanilla chips make them more like muffins but everybody loves them, and they don’t even need syrup.
Fry them up in coconut oil.
Not a fluffy and foamy pancake like you get at the Pancake House. Just better.
Cheers!
“the Rachel Corrie Special”
Please help me out here. Thanks.
I can’t recall ever hearing anyone in real life refer to a pancake as a flapjack. Only in fictional Westerns and such.
But I love pancakes, especially sourdough.
I worked one summer at “the pancake resteraunt “ and we made 45 different pancake combos- plus folks could request combos that weren’t on the list. Some of the combos were pretty wild, like lobster, class and blueberries, scallops and shrimp, some would request veggies be mixed in- the place was almost always packed.
Then I went to work at “the omellette factory”, a tiny little resteraunt that also was always packed, as their 40± varieties of omelets was massive as well. Both places were gold mines for their owners. I’d get to work in the morning gbefore we opened and people were already lined up outside waiting to get their breakfast.
If anyone gets out to Ogunquit maine, look for the omelets factory for a great breakfast!
https://www.omelettefactoryme.com/
“Jack” is a bit trickier. It’s likely a generic stand-in, common in English for tools or everyday objects (e.g., “jackknife,” “lumberjack”). It might also nod to jakke, an old term for a simple dish or a person (like “every man’s jack”), making “flapjack” a humble, everyman’s flatbread.
"Flapjack" first popped up in print around 1553, in a dictionary by Richard Huloet, as “flapjacke,” meaning a flat cake or tart. By 1600, it’s in Shakespeare’s Pericles, Prince of Tyre (Act II, Scene 1): “Come, thou shalt go home, and we’ll have flesh for holidays, fish for fasting-days, and moreo’er puddings and flapjacks.” Here, it’s a treat—likely a baked flatbread or early pancake, not quite the modern fluffy stack. Back then, it wasn’t strictly our pancake. It could mean anything flat and fried or baked—apple tarts, oatcakes, or dough slapped on a griddle.
By the 18th century, “flapjack” narrowed to something closer to today’s meaning: a batter-based cake cooked on a flat surface and flipped. English cookbooks—like Hannah Glasse’s The Art of Cookery (1747)—start linking it to griddlecakes, though recipes vary (some with fruit, some plain).
The “flap” action—flipping it mid-cook—becomes key. It’s distinct from “pancake” (from “pan” + “cake,” broader and older), emphasizing the flipper’s skill.
In the U.S., “flapjack” is a casual synonym for “pancake”—big, round, fluffy, stacked with syrup. But in the UK, it diverges: by the 1900s, “flapjack” often means a chewy oat bar, baked and cut into squares, leaving “pancake” for the griddle version. The old “flat cake” sense morphs with local tastes.
I've never been able to master the flipping of a flapjack in the pan. I always use a boring and uninteresting spatula. I learned my lesson the last time I tried flipping my flapjack.
The secret to flipping is to wait until the bubbles around the edges burst and become permanent holes. The they flip easier without the messy middle.................
oh, when she took on the D9. Gotcha
Absolutely correct on the cultural & religious connection to Shrove Tuesday:
(From the Wikipedia article on Shrove Tuesday) - “Shrove Tuesday (also known as Pancake Tuesday or Pancake Day) is the final day of Shrovetide, which marks the end of the pre-Lenten season. Lent begins the following day with Ash Wednesday. Shrove Tuesday is observed in many Christian countries through participating in confession, the ritual burning of the previous year’s Holy Week palms, finalizing one’s Lenten sacrifice, as well as eating pancakes and other sweets.[2][3]“
I observe both Pancake Day & Ash Wednesday every year and appreciate the shout out. Today is Friday and many businesses — including fast food chains — have “Fish Fridays” during Lent, or other seafood offerings like lobster bake at discount. So whether you out or at home, enjoy! 🍣🐟🍤
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