So, I feel like I’m pretty good about seeking out homemade versions of recipes that are a little out of the ordinary recipe repertoire. But, apple fritters had never crossed my mind as something to make at home. For one thing, apple fritters aren’t on my radar. When I’m around apple fritters at a food establishment, that usually means I’m around donuts. And I have my favorite donut that I stick with for my once-a-year indulgence. But when my daughter suggested we make apple fritters for the first day of fall this year, I was excited to try. And, let me tell you, these are delicious!! We have definitely found a new tradition for autumn. We’ve made them twice already, and I am eagerly waiting for the next opportunity to make a batch. They’re fairly simple to make, although my first batch did get a bit overcooked and my second try was a bit undercooked (easily remedied with a few minutes in the oven). I highly recommend these, at least once! But I think, like for us, it may just become a new favorite treat.
Tag: Season-fall
Hobbit Day
September 22nd marks the shared birthday of Bilbo and Frodo Baggins. Of course, the LOTR enthusiasts debate how the Shire calendar matches up with ours and, therefore, think the birthday falls on a different day. But, for plain folk like myself, I’m just happy to have a day to celebrate hobbits.
In other years, Hobbit Day has merely been a mention from me at the dinner table. But, as I’m edging out of survival mode, I thought this would be a great year to do something fun to celebrate. There are a million and a half great ideas online (and I ‘pinned’ some of them here), but we started simply this year.
We began the day with apple cider, since Hobbit Day lined up with the first day of fall. Then we made Lembas bread. Wow! Way better than I thought it might be. Very simple ingredients too. (We didn’t have chia seeds, so used two eggs in place.). We wrapped these in green fabric ‘leaves’ and headed out for a mini picnic amongst trees.
I brought one of our copies of The Hobbit, of course, and we had hot apple cider and Lembas bread while I read. I had made a pair of hobbit feet the night before, but since they needed adjustments, they didn’t make it on the journey. We did, however, choose hobbit names, using some of these little charts.
We also translated some Elvish and wrote letters to each other the best we could. Then we sealed them with sealing wax, which proved a great lesson in trial and error, since I didn’t know what I was doing and we didn’t actually have the proper equipment. I held a flame up to old crayons to get the ‘wax’ and then we tried everything from carved corks to rubber stamps to pencil tops with no erasers to get the designs. Nothing seemed to work very well, but it sure was fun trying.
We watched some of Peter Jackson’s The Hobbit (just the opening) and Lord of the Rings (just the opening, after the prologue). There are great tours of people visiting Hobbiton on the YouTube. And, of course, I busted out my tin whistle for a little hobbit theme music.
I’m glad to finally be celebrating Hobbit Day!
Here are some of the things I look forward to in future years:
–More Hobbit feet (obviously)
–Definitely making a Gandalf hat
—Making this awesome miniature
–Reading more of the books together as the kids get older, sharing favorite parts, etc.
–Watching more of the films when the kids are older
–More decorations!!
(These are the ones we currently have around the house:)
-A Hobbit door I made out of cardboard
-A Hobbit scene I decoupaged onto an old cupboard door I found at ReStore
-This silhouette I found on Etsy
-This sign I made and sell on Etsy
Looking forward to more Hobbit Days in the future!
The Tricky Parts of Trick-or-Treating
I’ve been out of the trick-or-treating loop for awhile. In my pre-parenting days, I didn’t really think much about it, and then once our kids were born, we lived somewhere that wasn’t really set up for trick-or-treating, and we didn’t want our kids having candy anyway. But, now with the kids a bit older and living in a bigger city, there’s little way to escape the event.
And, being the type that I am, I can’t help but feel a bit overwhelmed at the sheer volume of waste created for this annual tradition. I watch handfuls of candy go into each child’s bag sometimes. I know this might not apply to everyone, but many of the parents I know do not let their kids eat all of this. So, it either goes directly in the trash or Switch Witch takes it or it sits in a drawer for months until it finally ends up in the trash. On the whole, it seems more and more parents have become label readers. Ingredients like corn syrup, Red 40, Blue 1, palm oil, and more are found in almost every candy and are often things parents like to avoid.
So, we’ve got either food waste or, for those who do want to consume the candy, there’s sometimes litter, teeth issues, and, of course, health issues. Also, because of the bite-sized amounts given, there is waaay more packaging used than would normally be used for candy.
All around, the whole thing really bums me out. Besides, I’m personally not a fan of the GIMME, entitled, MORE, MORE attitude that is associated with trick-or-treating. But, what to do? As a parent, I know, I feel stuck. I want my kids to be able to participate in holiday activities, and, unfortunately, this sometimes means dealing with all the wasteful candy.
REDUCE
The best way to reduce the candy waste is to either <gasp!> not trick-or-treat, or find less wasteful alternatives to hand out. The tricky part with that, of course, is A)How do you dictate what is given out? and B) What is a good alternative, since cheap, plastic trinkets are no better than the candy waste?
Sometimes in trick-or-treating situations, it isn’t even other parents handing out the candy. I find that most parents of young children understand how we don’t want to be bombarded with a sugar-y mess. I find the most “generous” candy givers are older. They are sentimental about the tradition and have either over-purchased candy that they don’t want to keep around and/or are truly trying to give the kids candy do something kind. So, the reducing part of this can get tricky… One of the best ways is with awareness. Maybe through articles or other means, we can start to spread the word and try to figure out alternatives to the candy overload.
If your church or organization is involved in a Trunk-or-Treat, maybe you can gently suggest candy alternatives. If you or someone you know is heading up organizing a trick-or-treat at shops, maybe you can talk to the shop owners about this. At your own home, you, of course, have control over what you pass out, but I’m wondering if house-to-house trick-or-treating is even done as much with all the other options out there.
So, what are less wasteful alternatives? As I mentioned, cheap, plastic toys are definitely not the answer. Those cheap bubble containers or mini whistles or spy glasses or anything purchased in bulk are usually things kids take one look at and then never think about again. Or they break after about 20 minutes. And they end up in the trash. Ugh. And things like glow sticks are so horrible for the environment.
So, what wouldn’t end up being wasteful? You can Google “Halloween candy alternatives” and see what comes up, but a lot of times the plastic trinkets will be what you see. Some alternatives that sounded promising to me were local honey sticks, homemade play dough in reusable containers, hot chocolate packets, stickers, mini figs, coloring pages (you can print these out yourself), a small bag of craft supplies and instructions, homemade clay Halloween pins, or homemade small Halloween finger puppets. Obviously, none of these are zero-impact, but I think it’s a start in rethinking old traditions.
If you’re holding a Halloween event with a small group, you can each bring a homemade treat and set up mini booths shaped like houses to pass the treats out to the kids.
Instead of passing out candy at a Trunk-or-Treat, maybe people could collect photos of their kids at each station or the kids could do a small craft at each station. Or there could even be supplies out at each car so the kids could participate in the actual decorating.
At a harvest festival, you could charge a small admission and maybe the kids could play games for tickets and then trick-or-treat at small “shops” and decide what they’d like to buy with their tickets. That way you can buy higher quality items and the kids would be choosing things they want (and “earning” them).
This whole thing is, pardon the pun, tricky. At the very least, just start to become more aware. If someone tries to plunk a whole fistful of candy into your child’s bag and you know it won’t get eaten, politely refuse and ask for just one, please. Don’t overbuy candy for your own home if you know it doesn’t get passed out or eaten. If you really feel you “need” candy for passing out, but you never go through a whole bag, share with a neighbor.
Look for candy with the least amount of packaging and the least amount of offensive ingredients. Maybe opt for crackers or pretzels or organic candies instead of the brands or foods that are overflowing in corn syrup.
REUSE
See if anywhere around town would be able to use any candy you won’t be consuming.
Candy wrappers can be made into many creative projects such as headbands, bracelets, barrettes, coin purses, decoupaging and more. Search “candy wrapper reuse projects” and see what you find.
RECYCLE?
Candy wrappers are not usually recyclable, unfortunately. You can look into programs like this one from Terracycle or this one from Rubicon though.
ENDING THOUGHTS
As I mentioned in the pumpkin waste post, changing traditions, especially very established holiday traditions, is tough. But, part of being human and being on this planet is changing our ways as we gain new information. So, I really don’t mean to be the Bah Humbug of Halloween here, but I think it’s time to start speaking out and thinking differently about our approach to trick-or-treating. I’m sooo far from having the magic answer on this one, but I think it’s something to start talking about.
Thank you, as always, for being here. Your actions can and will make a difference.
Fall (Autumn)
Halloween Picture Books
I was on a search this fall for Halloween picture books I like; it was tougher than I imagined it would be. I’m sure there are many great ones out there I have yet to discover, but I also came across many that didn’t really meet my expectations. While not all of these are necessarily “Halloween” books, I felt all of them could fit into the category.
Here’s a list of some of the ones I’m keeping on our Halloween book reading list:
Bears in the Night
How Many Seeds in a Pumpkin?
Miss Fiona’s Stupendous Pumpkin Pies
The Monster at the End of This Book
Room on the Broom
What Was I Scared Of? (by Dr. Seuss)
“Ghost” stories for little ones:
Mrs. McMurphy’s Pumpkin
The Teeny Tiny Woman
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Switch Witch