
Some pie lovers will be eating their favorite pie on February 20 during National Cherry Pie Day. Whether they eat it for breakfast, lunch or supper or a slice at every meal depends on just how much they love cherry pie!
- 9500 BC -The first pie dates back as far as 9500 B.C. in ancient Egypt.
- 600 BC – Records indicate that cherries were a prized food in a region of China dating back to 600 BC – fit for royalty and cherished by locals.
- 70 BC – It is believed that the sweet cherry originated in the area between the Black and Caspian Seas in Asia Minor around 70 B.C. The Romans introduced them to Britain in the first century A.D.
- 8 BC – The German word Kirsch – the cherry liqueur comes from the word karshu. This is the name given to the cherries that were first cultivated in Mesopotamia in 8 BC.
- 1400 – The Romans share their findings of the pie throughout Europe — the earliest written pie recipe for a goat’s cheese and honey pie dates back to this time.
- 15th Century – While they have long been a popular dessert fruit, cherries were used for their medicinal purposes in the 15th and 16th centuries.
- 1500 – The first cherry pie is believed to be made in the U.K. for Queen Elizabeth I.
- 1600s – The English colonists brought cherries to North America in the 1600’s.
- 1644 – In the UK, Oliver Cromwell banned the eating of pie in 1644, declaring it a pagan form of pleasure. For 16 years, pie eating and making went underground until the Restoration leaders lifted the ban on pie in 1660.
- 1783 – It was during the American Revolution that the term crust was used instead of “coffyn.”
- 19th Century – In the 19th Century, fruit pies were a common breakfast food eaten before the start of a long day.
- 1925 – Traverse City, Michigan, celebrates the annual National Cherry Festival since 1925. Called the National Cherry Festival since 1931, the event is now held for two days to celebrate cherries.
- 1960s – In Kansas, it was illegal to serve ice cream with cherry pie — this old law was repealed in the 1960s.
- 1990 – Agent Dale Cooper from the popular TV show “Twin Peaks” is crazy about cherry pie.
- 2003 – The world’s heaviest cherry was grown by Gerardo Maggipinto (Italy) and weighed 0.76 oz on June 21, 2003.
- 2004 – The world record for cherry-pit spitting is 93 feet. Brain Krause, part of the Krause family cherry-pit spitting dynasty, set the record at an annual contest in Eau Claire, Michigan, in 2004
- According to the American Pie Council, the pie came to America with the first English settlers. The early colonists cooked their pies in long, narrow pans, calling them “coffyns” like the crust in England.
- One slice of cherry pie contains approximately 486 calories.
- In the United States, cherry pie is often referred to as a “great American dish.” Recipe books have many different versions of recipes for cherry pie.
- Cherry pie is the fifth most popular pie in the US – beaten only by Apple, Pumpkin, Pecan and Banana Cream.
- The wealthy English were known for their “Surprise Pies,” in which live creatures would pop out when the pie was cut open.
- The word ‘cherry’ comes from the French word ‘cerise,’ which in turn comes from the Latin words cerasum and Cerasus, the classical name of the modern city Giresun in Turkey.
- There are more than 1,000 varieties of cherries in the United States, but fewer than 10 are produced commercially.
- On average, there are about 44 cherries in one pound.
- In an average crop year, a sweet cherry tree will produce 800 cherries.
- Despite the short fruiting season, Americans consume an average of 1.5 pounds of cherries each year.
- A record-breaking sized cherry pie put Oliver, BC, on the map in 1990, and now it’s doing it again. Weighing in at 39,683 pounds and with a diameter of 20 feet, this is the world’s biggest cherry pie.
- Cherries belong to the rose family.
- Every year, the Tree-Mendus Fruit Farm hosts the International Cherry Pit Spit contest in Eau Claire, Michigan. The competition has gained immense popularity, and the town is now known as “the Cherry Pit Spitting Capital of the World”.
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