Shelly F - Ohio
Disney Extraordinaire
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2004
- Messages
- 10,166
Save some for them and take the rest into work.
I don't know if you are talking to me, but if you read my second post I said I posted my question on this board by accident so I apologize profusely for posting the most outrageous thing you have ever read on the budget board. I don't currently throw out the candy - I just said I was considering getting rid of it after a week - what I really meant was out of my house.
Other people posted that there are places that take donations, which I hadn't even thought of before. So thank you for that suggestion, and now I will go back to my usual lurk mode before I offend anyone else with something even more outrageous.
The boys get a couple of pieces of their favorite candies that night, but then 1 piece with their lunch and 1 piece after dinner. They usually forget about it after a week.
Then.....we get to make the most amazing gingerbread houses ever! Weird looking ghosts become melting snowmen and we've even turned a skeleton sucker into a pretty cool santa (just covered him up with icing!).
Tell you friends now, and it is a great Saturday after Thanksgiving activity! Invite them over and bring their leftover candy and leftover Thanksgiving treats too! Friends always have something different to eat, so you get to trade and sample. (And you get rid of ALL the leftovers - from Thanksgiving an Halloween)
Halloween candy cookies! Every year my husband makes these and people go nuts over them. He makes chocolate chop cookie dough (without the chocolate chips) and then takes all of the leftover candy from what we were handing out, plus whatever good stuff is left in my daughters bucket, chops it all up and adds it to the dough. The cookies are amazing. You would never think snickers, butterfingers, almond joys, whoppers, peanut butter cups, twix etc would taste so good all mixed up and chopped up in cookies, but they do! You get a different taste with every bite. The non-chocolate candy we use for gingerbread houses.
Curious how other parents handle consumption of Halloween candy.
In the past, we have let our kids eat several pieces of candy on Halloween night and then they save the rest and we let them have one or two pieces each night for dessert - on nights we have dessert (we generally only eat dessert on weekends or special occasions). This results in them still having candy weeks or months after Halloween is over.
I'm not a total health food nut by any stretch of the imagination, but we normally try to limit the amount of candy and junk food in the house and I've always hated having the candy around so long after Halloween.
I'm considering this year letting them gorge themselves for a full week - as much as they want, and then tossing whatever is left after that. Would love to hear opinions on this and to find out what other parents do.