Food Fun and Facts      Eerie Halloween Eats      Fun Recipes for Halloween!


Family Features) - Make no bones about it, it's time to conjure up some creepy cuisine for a ghoulishly good Halloween party for the kids.

In addition to making the tasty recipes below, here are some other fun ways to turn ordinary munchies into something monstrously yummy.

  • Make a bone-chilling witches brew by serving your favorite punch in a black cauldron. Use Halloween-themed ice cube trays to make ice shaped like bones or skulls.

  • Turn a basic cream cheese fruit dip into a devilish slime dip by mixing in some neon green food coloring.

  • Use Halloween cookie cutters to cut soft sandwiches and cheese slices into spooky shapes like ghosts, bats and pumpkins. You can use them to make homemade tortilla chips, too.

To scare up some more Halloween recipes and ideas, visit www.VeryBestBaking.com.

Jenny Harper is Consumer Test Kitchen Project Manager for the Nestlé Test Kitchens and VeryBestBaking.com.


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Candy Culture: Cashing in on Halloween

Newswise — According to the National Retail Federation, the average American will spend $66.28 on Halloween this year. Second only to costumes, candy eats up the largest chunk of this budget with American families spending an average of $22 each Halloween on confections.

When trick-or-treating entered the American scene in the 1920s, neighbors gave children items like apples, pastries, breads and even money. So why, 40 years later, are there $1 billion in candy sales each Halloween? How has food marketing taken over this tradition?

“Companies went after Halloween candy a long time ago,” says Nancy Childs, Ph.D., professor of food marketing. “Candy companies are active and aggressive marketers who offer convenient, pre-packaged treats to fulfill the tradition; Halloween is now a model for other holidays — candy baskets for Easter, candy canes for Christmas, holiday-themed M&Ms, chocolates for Valentine’s Day.”

Childs, a professor of food marketing at Saint Joseph’s University, has extensively researched the obesity epidemic in America. She says that when Americans began rewarding children with candy, sometime in the late 19th century, it further embedded a culture of fun and positive emotional relationships with sweet treats.

To illustrate her point, Childs demonstrates a candy-association exercise she uses in her classes at the University. Each student is given a Hershey kiss and asked to vocalize their associations with the chocolate candy. “The students are always amazed at how many vivid and emotional memories they have wrapped inside a Hershey kiss – childhood, holidays, favorite times, grandparents,” she says. “This emotional connection is very real.”

Childs encourages people to enjoy sweet treats in moderation. “The fun occasions, like Halloween, should be enjoyed for just what they are,” she says. “Fun and occasional.”

<>Childs currently serves on the USDA’s National Agricultural Research, Extension, Education, and Economics Advisory Board (NAREEEAB) as the national representative for food retailing and marketing. She can be reached at nchilds@sju.edu or by calling University Communications at 610-660-1355.

Source: Saint Joseph's University










Spiderweb Munch Recipe

Ingredients

  • 2 cups (12-ounce package) Nestlé Toll House Semi-Sweet Chocolate Morsels
  • 1 cup creamy peanut butter, divided
  • 1/3 cup powdered sugar
  • 3 cups toasted rice cereal

Preparation

  1. HEAT morsels and 3/4 cup peanut butter in small, heavy-duty saucepan over low heat, stirring constantly until smooth; remove from heat. Add sugar; stir vigorously until smooth.
  2. PLACE cereal in large bowl. Add 1 cup melted chocolate mixture; stir until evenly coated. Place on ungreased baking sheet. Using small metal spatula, shape into 10-inch circle with slightly raised 1-inch-wide border. Pour remaining chocolate mixture in center of circle; spread to border.
  3. For Spiderweb: PLACE remaining peanut butter in small, heavy-duty plastic bag. Cut tiny corner from bag; squeeze to pipe concentric circles on top of chocolate. Using wooden pick or tip of sharp knife, pull tip through peanut butter from center to border. Refrigerate for 30 minutes or until firm. Cut into wedges.

Serves
Makes 12 servings

Calories: 320g   Total Fat: 19g
Cholesterol: 0mg   Protein: 7g
Carbohydrates: 32g   Sodium: 150mg

SOURCE:
Nestlé





Mix It Up with Jenny - Eerie Halloween Eats



Spooky Graveyard Pie Recipe

Ingredients

  • 3 cups (about 32) finely ground chocolate sandwich cookies, divided
  • 3 tablespoons melted butter
  • 1 can (12 fluid ounces) Nestlé Carnation Evaporated Milk
  • 1 3/4 cups (11.5-ounce package) Nestlé Toll House Milk Chocolate Morsels
  • 2 large egg yolks
  • 2 tablespoons cornstarch
  • 8 chocolate filled vanilla wafer cookies
  • Black and purple decorator writing gels
  • Assorted Nestlé Halloween Candies

Preparation

  1. COMBINE 1 1/2 cups cookie crumbs and butter in 9-inch pie plate. Press crumb mixture onto bottom and upsides of pie plate. Set aside remaining 1 1/2 cups crumbs for dirt topping.
  2. WHISK together evaporated milk, egg yolks and cornstarch in medium saucepan. Heat over medium-low heat, stirring constantly, until mixture is very hot and thickens slightly; do not boil. Remove from heat; stir in morsels until completely melted and mixture is smooth.
  3. POUR into crust. Sprinkle with remaining 1 1/2 cups cookie crumbs. Press crumbs down gently. Refrigerate for 3 hours or until set.
  4. DECORATE cookie tombstones with writing gels as desired; let set. Insert tombstones around edge of pie. With spoon, mound cookie crumbs to form "fresh graves." Decorate graveyard with candy to make the pie as spooky as you want it to be!

Serves
Makes 8 servings

Calories: 560g   Total Fat: 29g
Cholesterol: 90mg   Protein: 10g
Carbohydrates: 70g   Sodium: 350mg


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