Question by Mackenzie R: What are some good ideas for a halloween treats and baking halloween pastries?
My friends and I are having a halloween sale/party. We are also having basket entries, so ideas for that would be good too! Help us!

Best answer:

Answer by momx3
you can make cupcakes and decorate them with chocolate frosting and gummy worms or plastic spider rings or use white icing tinted green and put halloween sprinkles on. I also make pig in a blankets and either cut part of the wennie or put ketscup on the end.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

Throwing Halloween Parties For Kids – 3 Exciting Party Games

Halloween holidays are about partying and excitement. Halloween crafts & games are especially inclined towards kids. It is their enjoying the festivity with good spirit. You need to be creative and innovative to invent new craft ideas to entertain the kids and decorating the house the Halloween way.

Many traditional Halloween games find their roots down in the old folklore. While for looking for these games, internet is the ultimate source, here are a few recommended choices for your next Halloween:

1. Bob the Apple

Here you need a lot of apples dipped in to silver tub. The tub is half filled with water. The game is to pick maximum number of apples in a given time frame with touching with hands. Yes, you pick them with your mouth. This is perhaps the most traditional and the most common yet real fun game for Halloweens.

The trick in this game is quite simple – trap the apple at the tub’s bottom and bite it! It is quite quick and the apple won’t drown away that easily.

2. Make your own treat.

This is based on dirty eating – that is edible dirt and worms.

In clear plastic cups, add scoops of chocolate ice cream at the bottom, one scoop per child. Give each child their cups. Now give them a Zip-Loc baggie. Fill in this baggie with some Oreo cookies. Now instruct the kids to smash these cookies into bit and pieces. What next, pour the cookies in your ice cream. Add the gummy worms. And dig in hard with the spoons. Your personalized spooky ice cream treat is ready to eat.

3. Scary Pumpkin Windows

Get square pieces of orange construction sheets. Now let the kids draw some scary pumpkin faces on them. Further cut out these faces. Let the paper be square because as you may want to decorate the windows with this. Tape this to your windows and illuminate from behind using a lamp. Enjoy the sight of scary windows, the Halloween way!

The choices are surely endless. Just challenge your left brain harder and let your thoughts go wild. You shall be able to develop many other ideas to make your Halloween more exciting. And as we always say, never forget to log on to the internet for any and all sorts of searches and it is indeed the World Wide Web! Hope we have given a kick start to your imagination!

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Do you know any halloween treats or games?

Question by smileys2014: Do you know any halloween treats or games?
I am doing a halloween party for my youth group. Do you have any fun ideas for some fun halloween games and some cool halloween treats? If you know some cool treats I could make, if you can could you give me a picture too so I can see what it will look like. Thanks!

Best answer:

Answer by kclightman
For sweets, have pudding cups on hand. Spread cool Whip on and have some black decorating gel so everyone can draw their own ghost faces on them.

Witch hat cookies: Take a package of Fudge Stripe cookies, turn them upside down, and glue unwrapped Hershey’s kisses on them with orange icing. They look like perfect witch hats.

Caramel apples of course!

Dirt with worms: Crumble a bunch of oreos and mix them up with pudding. When well mixed, bury gummy worms in them.

But you need savory things too, because too much sugar will make everyone sick. Chips and salsa or onion dip are always good.

Shrimp spread:
take 1 block of cream cheese on a plate. Cover with 1 tin tiny canned shrimp. Cover with cocktail sauce. Sprinkle with dill and lemon juice. Serve with Ritz crackers.

Antipasto salad:
In a bowl mix 1 package cherry tomatoes, halves; 1 can quartered artichoke hearts; 1/2 jar kalamata olives; 1 package mushrooms, washed & halved; thinly sliced shallot or red onion; snipped parsely. Dress with garlic salt and basalmic vinegar.

Antipasto meat salad:
In a bowl: 1 cup cubed hard salami, 1 cup pepperoni, slices cut in half; 1 cup cubed mozzerella cheese; 1/2 jar kalamata olives. dress with lemon juice, olive oil, and fennel seeds. Serve with toothpicks.

Add your own answer in the comments!

Halloween games

Halloween games

Most children love all things Halloween. As adults, we assume it’s because Halloween means candy and children generally love candy. But many children love more than just the abundance of candy at Halloween time. They really get into the ghoulish aspect of the holiday and delight in the displays of goopy brains and squishy body parts.

Halloween games, therefore, can be really fun and goopy, if you wish. The kids will go with it, don’t worry.

First up, a brain game. There’s a fun game on store shelves where you pick through a rubber “brain” to figure out what’s in it. You can create this easily yourself. Make some jello and fill it with a variety of items, like gummy worms and other gummy candies, some small candy and trinkets and other items. Tell the children to root around in the bowl of jello (call it a “brain” if this will get the kids more interested) to figure out what’s in it. It’s goopy and messy and kids love it. Best yet, color the jello black so it’s too dark to see what’s inside and it looks more like goopy brain matter (the way kids see it, anyway).

In that same, or similar vein, kids love the spaghetti game. Be sure they are wearing a smock over their clothes or are wearing play clothes before playing this game. Make a big bowl of spaghetti and fill it with all kinds of items, like plastic bugs, gummy worms and other items that might feel a bit strange. Make the children feel around in the bowl of spaghetti and identify the items they feel. Once they are done and cleaned up, have them list as many items as they can remember. Whoever gets the most items listed (and right) gets a prize. Spaghetti, anyone?

Another similar game that’s always popular is to take a cardboard box and paint it black, both the inside and outside. Carve a small hole in the top, really just large enough for the children to get their hands into, and fill the box with a variety of items. They can be related to Halloween (like a small pumpkin) or not (wrapped Tootsie rolls or a tiny toy Hummer car). Have the children guess what’s inside the box and award the box itself to the child who guesses the most number of items correctly. To make this goopy and silly, be sure to include some items that might feel like body parts or brain matter.

Kids love creating silly fictional stories, often with absurd plotlines. Halloween is the optimum time to let them run wild with their imaginations. Have them spend a bit of time writing out the scariest story they can think of. Some children might need some direction not to make it ridiculously grotesque, so use caution with these children in your clarification of this assignment. Once the stories are written, have the children hand them in and then have a guest reader for each one of them. Each child will come to the front of the class and read the story with as much dramatization as they can muster. Once the story is read, everyone has to guess who wrote the story. The writer should play along, otherwise everyone will know it was their story! The winner is the child who wrote a story so intriguing and unusual that nobody knew it was his or hers!

Kids love the word find games when you give them a word or words relating to a holiday or something else and have them find words within those words. In this case, give them Halloween-related words and ask them to find as many scary words as they can. For example, you might give them the word “Halloween” and see how many scary words they can make from the letters. Or you could give them a series of words and let them rearrange the letters in all of the words to create scary words, or even create a story from the scary words. Put a time limit on this game and award a prize for the child who creates the most words in the least amount of time.

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