National Peanut Butter and Jelly Day
National Peanut Butter and Jelly Day on April 2 celebrates the sandwich that defines American childhood. The combination took off during World War II, when peanut butter and jelly both appeared on the U.S. military ration list and soldiers learned to make quick sandwiches with what they had. Home kitchens caught on immediately, and the PB&J never left.
How to celebrate
PB&J is simple — and the small decisions matter more than you think:
- Toast the bread. Always toast the bread.
- Pick your side: crunchy or creamy. Pick your side: grape or strawberry. Defend your choice.
- Try a grown-up upgrade: banana slices, honey, bacon, or a sprinkle of flaky salt.
- Make an Elvis: peanut butter, banana, honey, bacon, toasted.
- Drop a tray of mini PB&Js at your kid's school, the local shelter, or a firehouse.
Celebration ideas by audience
For families
PB&J lunchbox day. Everyone builds their own, everyone eats together, no one cooks.
For kids
Cookie cutters turn a PB&J into stars, hearts, or dinosaurs. The scraps are the cook's payment.
For couples
Make the grown-up version for dinner. Good sourdough, crunchy peanut butter, dark preserves, fancy salt. A little ridiculous, a lot satisfying.
At the office
Set up a PB&J bar in the kitchen. Three jams, two butters, one toaster. Watch morale tick up.
At school
Classroom PB&J assembly line for a food pantry. Kids learn, pantry gets lunches — everyone wins.
In your community
Coordinate with a local shelter or meal program. A hundred PB&Js isn't a big ask; to someone who needs lunch, it's everything.
On your own
Make one. Sit outside. Don't multitask. It's just a sandwich, and that's the point.


