A large pile of walnut halves arranged on a black plate against a deep black background. The detailed textures, warm brown tones, and irregular natural shapes create a clean ingredient-focused food study emphasizing freshness and abundance.
Today is National Walnut Day.
And unlike a lot of modern food holidays that seem to appear because somebody on social media decided tacos or donuts needed another excuse for hashtags, this one actually became official through the United States government.
National Walnut Day was originally established in 1949 by the Walnut Marketing Board. Then in 1958, the U.S. Senate passed a resolution officially recognizing May 17 as National Walnut Day, signed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
So walnuts have had an officially recognized day on the calendar for nearly 70 years.
And walnuts carry more weight than people probably realize. California now produces about 99% of all walnuts grown in the United States and roughly a third of the world’s walnut supply. They’ve become tied to everything from baking and salads to snack foods, health food culture, and holiday desserts.
This photograph keeps the idea simple. Just walnut halves piled onto a black plate against a black background. No styling tricks, no added elements, no attempt to turn them into something else. The texture, shapes, and warm tones do the work on their own.
I managed to miss National Snack Day this year. It was March 4th. Somehow that critical moment in American culture slipped right past me, which is unfortunate because snack food is practically a national pastime.
To make up for the oversight, I decided to photograph a plate of Rice Krispies Treats. Not just the classic version, but also a few variations with chocolate drizzle and candy pieces mixed in.
And here is the interesting part. Depending on how you measure it, Rice Krispies Treats are often cited as one of the most popular snacks in the United States. Not potato chips. Not pretzels. Not candy bars. A square of crispy rice cereal held together with melted marshmallow.
The original version dates back to 1939, when Mildred Day, a home economist working in Kellogg’s test kitchen, created the recipe using Rice Krispies cereal and marshmallows. The idea was simple. Melt marshmallows, mix in the cereal, press it into a pan, and cut it into squares. The recipe was initially promoted as a fundraiser dessert for Camp Fire Girls groups across the country.
From there the treat spread everywhere. School bake sales, birthday parties, lunchboxes, office break rooms. Eventually Kellogg’s began producing packaged Rice Krispies Treats, turning what had once been a homemade snack into a grocery store staple.
So even though I missed National Snack Day by a day or two, this seemed like a reasonable way to catch up.