Title: | How to Make them Goodies |
Notice: | Please Don't Start New Notes for Old Topics! Check 5.* |
Moderator: | FUTURE::DDESMAISONS ec.com::winalski |
Created: | Tue Feb 18 1986 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 4127 |
Total number of notes: | 31160 |
Does anyone know of any Halloween cakes, cookies, deserts to make. Would like easy recipies since my daughter (8) is going to be making with my help. Should I do a Dir/title= Halloween?? Thanks -Donna-
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2069.1 | Cookie-Pops! As much fun to make as to eat! | DOCTP::FARINA | Thu Oct 26 1989 19:10 | 64 | |
Buy some lollipop sticks from a candy-making shop. Go home. ;-) Make up a batch of Toll House Chocolate Chip Cookies (or other *drop* cookie recipe - oatmeal works well). Preheat oven as directed. On your cookie sheet, place 4 or 5 lollipop sticks (depending on size of sheet), then place a heaping tablespoon of dough on the end of the stick, spreading into a circle. -------------------------------------- | | | | | | | | | | | O O O | | O O | | | | | |__________|____________|____________| Bake for a few minutes longer than normal. Let cool completely before removing from sheet. Meanwhile, have your daughter make funny/scary faces on a tray, using candy corn, licorice laces (for mouths and eyebrows), gum drops, etc. Once the cookies have coolled, melt a hershey bar or two over hot water. Spread a tablespoon of melted chocolate on each cookie-pop and press on the faces! They're great fun to make, give, receive, and eat. I've been making these for years, and no one ever tires of them. This year I skipped the lollipop sticks, though. I made a double batch last Saturday and got 24 cookies. I used an 8-oz Hershey bar for the "frosting." One year I made cupcakes, frosted them with chocolate frosting, then stuck large marshmallow pumpkins on the top. This year, I also make banana pops. I melted an 8-oz Hershey bar with 3/4 cup of peanut butter and some skim milk (I didn't measure - just until it was good dipping consistency). I cut the bananas in half, stuck the lollipop sticks in through the cut end, and dipped. A lot dripped off, though, so I put them in the freezer after the first coating, and dipped again once they were cold. These can be decorated with candy corn, too, if you like, or rolled in nuts or coconut. To be honest, though, the adults liked these more than the kids did. The icy cold banana bothered them! Most of them licked the chocolate-peanut butter coating (which gets very fudgy in the freezer) off and took a token bite of the banana. Most of the kids were under 6, though. BTW, these banana pops count as 1 Fruit, 1/2 Protein, 1/2 Fat, (undetermined milk, since I didn't measure), and 50 optional calories on Weight Watchers! The mixture covered 16 pops (9 whole bananas), and I've been able to have a couple of the leftovers! The cookie-pops are a lot of fun to make, and you tend to giggle a lot while making the faces, so that would be a good one. They don't take very long, either. I've make oatmeal scotchies this way, and used miniature marshmallow to make Mr. Stay-Puft from Ghost Busters (more time consuming, because I cut the miniature marshmallows up to make arms, legs, hat, and made the angry face by melting chocolate chips and drawing it on with a toothpick - I'm a doting aunt!). Have fun! Susan | |||||
2069.3 | From the Nashua Telegraph... | STEREO::WHITCOMB | Thu Nov 02 1989 14:09 | 13 | |
SPIDER CANDY ------------ 1 bag of marshmallows 1 bag of chow mein noodles 2 pkgs. (recipe didn't specify what size) semi-sweet chocolate chips Melt the chocolate in a pan or crockpot over low heat. Stick 8 noodles in each marshmallow to make spider's body. Dip in chocolate. Place on wax paper to harden. | |||||
2069.4 | worm apples | ULTRA::EYRING | Wed Nov 07 1990 14:49 | 3 | |
Bake apples, however you usually do it. When they are cool, insert gummy worms into the apples. (IF no cool, worms melt.) | |||||
2069.5 | spooky punch | WMOIS::HERTEL_K | Fri Oct 29 1993 07:01 | 8 | |
Anyone ever hear of a type of punch made with dry ice? The recipe is 1/2 hi-c orange 1/2 gingerale some amount of dry ice. It's supposed to bubble and smoke like a witches brew. Does this sound safe?? If so, does anyone have any other recipes? | |||||
2069.6 | RANGER::PESENTI | And the winner is.... | Fri Oct 29 1993 08:40 | 3 | |
It's safe as long as you don't touch the dry ice with your bare skin. So, no bobbing for apples in the punch bowl. Dry ice is just carbon dioxide in wicked cold form, and wicked stuff is always appropriate on Hallowe'en. | |||||
2069.7 | How much ice? | WMOIS::HERTEL_K | Fri Oct 29 1993 10:24 | 4 | |
I spoke with a person at the ice company. He said that putting the ice directly in the punch will cause the punch to become bitter. Has anyone tried this? How much dry ice would I need? | |||||
2069.8 | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Oct 29 1993 10:45 | 8 | |
� I spoke with a person at the ice company. He said that putting the ice � directly in the punch will cause the punch to become bitter. Has � anyone tried this? While in college, several of the fraternaties' Halloween parties featured punch spiked with dry ice (among other things). I never noticed a bitter taste, but then again between the alcohol and the very sweet base it may have been impossible to notice one. | |||||
2069.9 | You have been warned. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Oct 29 1993 11:46 | 6 |
Dry ice has an interesting side effect. It causes water to freeze, so you end up with water ice forming a spiky covering on the dry ice. It does not cause alcohol to freeze. If you have an alcohol-based punch, it is possible for it to get stronger as the evening goes on! Ann B. |