Posts for March, 2010

What are some easy Halloween decorating ideas?

  • March 31, 2010 9:21 am
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This is the first Halloween party I have ever thrown so I want it to be great. I already have the usual ideas and am looking for something unique and interesting.

Don’t have a very big budget so preferably something easy and fairly inexpensive. All help is appreciated.

What are some easy Halloween decorating ideas?

What are some REALLY easy cute Halloween recipes that i can serve at my spooky Halloween party?

  • March 31, 2010 5:21 am

What are some REALLY easy cute Halloween recipes that i can serve at my spooky Halloween party?

Does anyone have any HALLOWEEN decorating ideas for outdoors?

  • March 31, 2010 3:21 am

I already know how I am decorating the inside of my home but as for the outside I don’t know….the front yard is very small and I wanted to make the decor. but it has to be easy because my 3 yr old and 5 yr old will be helping make them. Any ideas?

Does anyone have any HALLOWEEN decorating ideas for outdoors?

Halloween Trick or Treat Yummy Recipes | Parentsology

  • March 31, 2010 1:21 am

Halloween Trick or Treat Yummy Recipes

Get our collection of yummy Halloween recipes, just in time for trick or treat. You get 30 easy
and yummy ghoulish recipes.

1. Flying Broomstick Ghosts
2. Wacky Halloween Lollipops
3. Hay Bale Candy Drops
4. Green Monster Toes
5. Spooky Graveyard Squares
6. Halloween Oatmeal Cookie Triangles
7. Mystery Halloween Cookie Pops
8. Munchable Scarecrows
9. Squirmy Crawler Cupcakes
10. Totally Batty Cupcakes
11. Caramel Candy Apple Surprise
12. Creepy Black Cat Cake
13. Creepy Crawly Ice Cream Cups
14. Trick or Treat Ice Cream Cones
15. Halloween Banana Bites
16. Glitter Popcorn Snack
17. Strawberry Rice Mini Rounds
18. oh so Gooey Nachos
19. Wicked Witch Popcorn Balls
20. Crispy Rice Pumpkin Pops
21. Fluffy Ghost Pops
22. Eerie Eyed Mint Cocoa
23. Ice Spider Punch
24. Wrapped Up Mummy Dip
25. Monster Face Burgers
26. Ghoulish Squirm Sandwiches
27. Pumpkin Joe Pie
28. Crispy Witch Fingers
29. Frankenstein’s Coffin Surprise
30. Bloodshot Red Ghoul Eyes

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Tagged as: cooking, food, halloween, Holidays, Recipes

Halloween Trick or Treat Yummy Recipes | Parentsology

Halloween Recipes: Rice Krispie Goblins! – Food & Party on The …

  • March 30, 2010 9:21 pm

Photo From Make and Takes

So many Halloween recipes, so little time!

There are several easy Halloween treats you can make using the classic Rice Krispies treat recipe. Add a bit of green food coloring for these scary Goblins (visit Make and Takes for the complete recipe). Or, if you have a bit of orange on hand…

Drfink makes Rice Krispie Jack-o-Lantern Treats. Using the original Rice Krispies recipe (link above), make a large pan of Rice Krispie treats, adding orange food color to the melted marshmallows. Then, take a pumpkin-shaped cookie cutter and cut out treats. Put treats on waxed paper and decorate with frosting to make a Jack-o-Lantern face or use candy corn for the eyes and mouth.

Do you make Halloween Rice Krispie treats?

Related Posts:

Halloween Recipes: Snack-o-Lantern Fruit CupsKids Jump for Spider Ice CubesQuick and Easy Oreo Balls for Halloween

Halloween Recipes: Rice Krispie Goblins! – Food & Party on The …

Black Coffee and a Donut: Why Yes, Halloween is Our Favorite …

  • March 30, 2010 7:21 pm

So last year we did Haunted Gingerbread Houses. I bet you have been unable to sleep wondering what those crazy BCD girls had in mind to celebrate Halloween this year, right?? This year, we let others throw the parties (thanks Hayley, Kim, and Sarah!) and decided to focus on one of our other passions: crafts. And not just any crafts, edible crafts!

Not sure exactly where we got the idea, but sometime, oh, maybe July-ish, we started thinking about our Halloween crafts (doesn’t everyone?). we both fondly remembered the grade-school treat of a Dum-Dum pop wrapped in a tissue with eyes drawn on to make a spooky ghost, so we decided to go with a more “sophisticated” (and infinitely more complicated) version: Caramel Lady Apple Ghosts.

We had it all planned out: on Sunday, not only were we going to create dozens of Caramel Apple Ghosts, we were ALSO going to cook BCD Dad’s birthday dinner and dessert (post to come) AND carve jack-o-lanterns. an ambitious plan? yes. an impossible plan?? Evidently, yes. These caramel apples were trouble from beginning to end, and took a lot longer than we thought! Eventually we got them all made, and had a delicious dinner, but sadly the jackos got the boot. there are only so many hours in a day!!

Our first step on the caramel apple project was to get the ingredients (Erin had already gotten all the necessary crafting supplies, or so we thought…). we wanted to use lady apples because they are smaller (and therefore cuter) and also because smaller apples means a higher surface to volume ratio, therefore a greater caramel to apple ratio, and therefore more delicious caramel per bite! BCD parents had dutifully checked for lady apples at the H-Mart a couple of weeks ago and even brought us back a few samples to make sure they were exactly what we wanted. so we were confident in our supplier. On the day we were to make our delicious crafts we confidently strutted into the produce section and quickly found… nothing. NO LADY APPLES ANYWHERE! Apparently they “ran out.” we immediately panicked, we couldn’t just use regular apples– they aren’t cute enough! so we called BCD Mom. if anyone knows where to find obscure grocery items, it’s her! She let her fingers do the walking, and after calling a number of specialty and gourmet markets with no luck, tracked down the apples at Lotte market, a Korean market which happened to be on our way home. we rushed over there, grabbed the apples, then headed back to BCD headquarters to get started…

Before we got to cooking, we of course needed to create and apply adorable little labels to the Popsicle sticks which would go into each apple (our friends had to know who they were from, of course!). we have a habit of going a little clip-art crazy when it comes to this type of project, not to mention the fonts, format, phrasing, etc, etc. Finally we ended up with these:

Check out that spooky font! And the BATS!

Gellie wants to help

After stabbing each apple with its labeled Popsicle stick, and chopping the peanuts, it was time to make the caramel (also known as Disaster Sauce). we were using this recipe from Martha Stewart. Doesn’t it look deceptively simple?? Yeah, well, it’s NOT. making caramel, or any candy-making, really, is hard. (We now appreciate so much more our Aunt Gloria’s homemade candies from back in the day!) It’s complicated, requiring exact measurements of ingredients and temperature, and it’s hazardous, as the hot melted sugar is the same approximate temperature and consistency as napalm (but more delicious, I’m assuming).

Anyhow, we followed the recipe and managed to get all the apples dipped in caramel and peanuts despite 1) a boil-over scare which threatened to burn down the house AND horribly disfigure both of us for life, and 2) the caramel changing consistency once it reached its final cooking temperature, meaning it quickly went from a smooth sauce which easily coated the apples to a slimy, oily paste that slid directly off the apples and back into the pot– what’s up with that??

This is why caramel tastes so good… butter, sugar, cream, & corn syrup.

Disaster Sauce in the making

You can see how close we came to a boil-over…

With apples dipped and fires/burns avoided, it was time to get crafty. we had grossly underestimated the amount of cheesecloth we would need to turn our little ladies into spooky ghosts, so BCD Mom came to the rescue again– she went to two different stores to track down more (THANKS MOM!). then each apple needed to be wrapped in a cut-to-size piece of waxed paper, then in cheesecloth, and THEN tied with jute (also known as “spooky rope”). what a process! Finally we drew on eyes and a mouth, and they were ready to go! Here’s the final product, what do you think?

This Halloween season flew by, but we got to indulge in our favorite things: costumes, parties, cooking, and crafting. Time to start thinking about next year!

Happy Halloween Everyone!

P.S. please enjoy some Halloween pictures!! see Xani as WWII icon Rosie the Riveter, and Erin as a witch who’s been burned at the stake!

We Can do it!

I won’t be burned!

Eyeing some delicious cupcakes at Kim’s Halloween Party

Xani as Rosie and Hayley as a Jedi

Tannor hates being Yoda

Biggie makes a great Ewok!

The whole Jedi family

The punch was STRONG!

Trick or Treat!

Black Coffee and a Donut: Why Yes, Halloween is Our Favorite …

Witches' Broomsticks – Halloween Recipe

  • March 30, 2010 5:21 pm

Witches’ Broomsticks – Halloween Recipe

*. 1 (11-ounce) can refrigerated french bread dough.
*. 1 egg yolk.
*. 1 teaspoon water.
*. 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese.
*. 1 teaspoon dried oregano leaves.
*. 2 (12-inch) pieces black string licorice.

1. Preheat oven to 350 F. Lightly grease baking sheet.
2. Cut bread dough into 8 equal pieces; roll each piece into 10-inch length. Fold to 1/3 of dough down, leaving 3 inches at bottom. Twist doubled top 2/3 portion to form broom handle. Cut bottom part into 5 to 6 lengthwise strips to form bristics of broom. Place shaped dough pieces on prepared baking sheet, about 2 inches apart.
3. Beat together egg yolk and water with fork; brush evenly onto dough. Combine cheese and oregano in small bowl; sprinkle evenly onto bottom portions of brooms.
4. Bake 15 to 20 minutes or until golden brown. Remove to wire rack; cool slightly.
5. Cut licorice evenly into 8 lengths; wrap around bottoms of brooms to “tie” bristles.

Note: MAKE 8 SERVINGS.

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Witches' Broomsticks – Halloween Recipe

whats a easy and fast recipe for pumpkin cookies?

  • March 30, 2010 3:21 pm

I dont want to make home made pumpkin. I have Libbys cans of it. and i made pumpkin pie last time. I want to make something different. more like Pumpkin cookies.
Sounds good. Forgot to mention. I don’t like nuts of any type in cookies lol

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whats a easy and fast recipe for pumpkin cookies?

Do you have fun & easy Halloween recipes for pre-schoolers?

  • March 30, 2010 7:21 am

I’m teaching a “cooking” class for 3 & 4 year olds and am looking for fun & easy recipes with a Halloween theme. Also need non-Halloween recipes. Thank you!

Do you have fun & easy Halloween recipes for pre-schoolers?

Mad Scientist Mixology: Halloween Cocktail Recipes. » Curbly | DIY …

  • March 29, 2010 9:21 pm

Mad Scientist Mixology: Halloween Cocktail Recipes.By Chrisjob

A giant bowl of wispy punch is certainly festive, but a true ghost-host offers their guest customized cocktails that suit their own tastes. Here’s a few ideas to get your fall festivities popping.

Garnishes: ANY mixed drink can get a scary-fun makeover with a frightful garnish. Simply mix up drinks per usual, but sink one of the following into your highball or martini glass:

  • Plastic spider rings
  • Gummy worms
  • Novelty eyeballs
  • A few drops of black and red food coloring
  • Candy corn
  • Plastic skulls or bones

Black Screwdriver

1 1/2 ounces Blavod Black Vodka, chilled
3 ounces Tangerine juice, pulp-free and chilled
Halloween candy (garnish)

Jack-O-Latern

1 oz Hennessy VSOP Cognac
1 1/2 oz orange juice
1/2 oz ginger ale
1/2 oz Grand Marnier
orange wheel and lime twist for garnish

Black Martini

3 1/2 oz gin or vodka
1/2 oz blackberry brandy or black raspberry liqueur
orange twist or black olive for garnish

Bayou Slime

2 parts Cruzan dark Rum
6-8 fresh mint leaves
1/2 part Fee Brothers Spiced Cordial Syrup
1 egg white

Jack-O-Lantern, ver. 2
2 oz Goslings dark Rum
1 oz Pumpkin Molasses
1/2 oz chilled coffee
Splash Kahlua
Garnish: Ginger bread cookie

For last year’s list, Halloween Hooch, click here.

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Mad Scientist Mixology: Halloween Cocktail Recipes. » Curbly | DIY …