National Apple Pie Day

Today is National Apple Pie Day.
There is the version everyone talks about. Homemade crust, family recipe, something cooling on a windowsill that probably hasn’t existed in real life for decades.
Then there is this.
McDonald’s Apple Pie.
First introduced in 1968, originally deep fried, engineered for consistency, speed, and scale. At its peak, McDonald’s was selling millions of these every day across thousands of locations worldwide. Not a regional dessert. Not seasonal. Always there, always the same.
In the early 1990s, they made the switch from fried to baked. A decision driven by changing tastes and public pressure around health. It didn’t end the product. It just changed it. The pie stayed, because the demand never left.
This is not the pie people romanticize. It’s the one people actually buy.
Hot, handheld, straight from a sleeve, eaten in a car, in a parking lot, or somewhere between one stop and the next. No plate, no fork, no ceremony.
If there’s a case for what defines American food culture, this belongs in the conversation.
Not because it’s refined, but because it works. It always worked.
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May 13, 2026 | Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: American food culture, apple dessert, Apple Pie, baked apple pie, black background food, commercial food photography, convenience food, Dessert Photography, fast food dessert, fast food history, Food Photography, fried apple pie, handheld dessert, iconic fast food, mcdonalds apple pie, mcdonalds menu, National Apple Pie Day, qsr, quick service restaurant, secondfocus | Leave a comment