http://www.democraticunderground.com/115733296Oh my.
Manifestor_of_Light (16,902 posts) Sun Oct 27, 2013, 05:55 PM
Halloween treats or cupcakes?
Ideas? I'm gonna make spice cake cupcakes and put them in baggies. Maybe some of the mini ones too.
<<<ever since college many years ago, has always given out fifty-cent pieces as treats.
cbayer (125,364 posts) Sun Oct 27, 2013, 06:01 PM
1. Yummmmm... cupcakes.
Only problem is that some parents won't let their kids eat home made foods. If you live in a small community where everyone knows everyone, that probably won't be an issue.
And I'd much rather have a cupcake than a candy bar!
Manifestor_of_Light (16,902 posts) Sun Oct 27, 2013, 06:16 PM
3. I live in a small town.
There are 1400 people, and the religious nuts have damn near destroyed trick or treat as being "evil" or "Satanic". They have a substitute at churches called Trunk or Treat, where they hand candy out in the parking lot. Very few people actually turn on their lights or pass out candy. The Methodists and Baptists do Trunk or Treat instead. They probably don't allow certain costumes like witches and vampires and devils. I think it's kinda stupid.
One year we hung a tarp on the side of the house, got out the LCD projector, and showed the original Frankenstein movie & Creature from the Black Lagoon and Day the Earth Stood Still.
The kids were so hyper none of them could sit down and watch it. I remember them mostly kicking the shit out of the lawn chairs they were sitting in & rocking them nearly to the point of breaking them. So we gave up on that idea.
We have the coolest pumpkin in town this year. We were in San Antonio recently and I got a big talavera pumpkin you can put a light inside. Que pasa, calabasa???
cbayer (125,364 posts) Sun Oct 27, 2013, 06:39 PM
5. So, did you plan to take the cupcakes to one of the Trunk or Treat events?
I love Halloween, but we never get trick or treaters to the boat.
We just moved to Mexico and Day of the Dead is the big even here. There are all kinds of special things to eats, elaborate altars and people have already started costuming at some local events. I'm really looking forward to the whole thing.
Thanks for the reminder about the pumpkin. I'm going to try to find one to carve, but I haven't seen them in the markets.
^^^too bad they didn't take nadin with them.
Manifestor_of_Light (16,902 posts) Sun Oct 27, 2013, 07:32 PM
6. No I don't go to church.
We get pretty big crowds because so few people bother to decorate and hand out candy.
I made my own witch's robe several years ago after consulting a book about pattern drafting, and wear it every year. I also have some circle contacts (corrective of course) that look weird and I wear those.
cbayer (125,364 posts) Sun Oct 27, 2013, 08:22 PM
7. That sounds like a lot of fun.
I used to make my own costumes and costumes for my kids. They are always the best kind.
And your eyes should be great.
I bet once the word gets out, you'll be swamped.
(18,681 posts) Sun Oct 27, 2013, 06:05 PM
2. Unless you know the families, they won't eat the cupcakes
I'm sure they'd be delicious, but parents won't know if they are safe.
Arkansas Granny (15,465 posts) Sun Oct 27, 2013, 06:23 PM
4. It's a sweet idea, but if my kids brought home a homemade treat from door to door trick or treating, I would trash it. The only exception would be if I personally knew the person who had given it to them.
Another consideration would be how it would hold up to bring carried around in a treat bag or basket for a couple of hours.
Okay, franksolich's annual trick-or-treating story; I tell it every year, just like I repeat the Admiral Lord Nelson joke every year on the anniversary of the Battle of Trafalgar.
When I was a little lad--probably about five years old--and we still lived alongside the verdant Platte River of Nebraska, before we moved up into the Sandhills, I went trick-or-treating with a bunch of older kids. I disremember who I was costumed as; maybe Jawahal Nehru or someone like that.
There was an old house on the edge of the town, wherein lived an old lady with a bent back. Nobody had ever gone trick-or-treating there, for one of two reasons; she was assumed to be too poor to give out treats, or she was a mean bitter grouchy old witch.
The older kids dared me to go there.
I went.
The old lady looked at me with surprise, and then invited me inside. The older kids, standing on the sidewalk next door watching, were horrified when they saw me go inside the door, and waited, breathessly, to see what would happen to me.
She took me into the kitchen, where she sat me down at the table, which had an oilcloth covering on it. Only poor people used oilcloth in that time and place, and so I wasn't impressed. Then she fired up the natural gas stove and taking a big cast-iron griddle, proposed to make me a grilled-cheese sandwich as a treat.
I was agreeable, provided she used whole-wheat bread, and real butter and real cheese. Also, could I have a glass of milk, please, a really big glass, and real milk, none of this thinned-down stuff.
While she was busy, she was talking a mile a minute, probably telling me things she'd never told anybody before. The problem was, myself being deaf, I had no idea what she was talking about, other than that she was talking about it with passion and color.
She cut the grilled-cheese sandwich in half, and sat down at the table, still talking to me. I asked for more milk, having already gotten some given me in a pint jar. After three pints of milk, and finishing the sandwich, I wiped my mouth and thanked her for the repast.
She then led me out the door, and I got back to the older kids--who'd been waiting for, maybe, half an hour, to see what'd happen to me. They were relieved and disappointed.