Healthy Bites subpage_title_arrow

BOO! It’s Halloween!

Halloween is this Sunday night – what fun kids will be having! Well, adults too with their Halloween parties.  It is estimated that over 65 million kids between the ages of 5 and 14 will be out trick-or-treating.  And parents are probably groaning thinking about all of the candy – code word SUGAR – that will be coming home.

 Halloween candy tips to lighten the load:

 Non-Food Options                                  

  • Pencils, erasers, markers, sidewalk chalk
  • Glow sticks, mini rubber bouncy balls, marbles
  • Stickers, bubbles

 Non-Candy Options 

  • Individual bags of goldfish crax, pretzels, Nilla wafers
  •  Sugar-free gum; granola bars 
  • Mini bottled water

 Candy 

  • Buy what you don’t like
  • Buy small pieces of individual candy – not large candy bars
  •  Buy just the right amount (no leftovers)

 What to do with the leftovers:

  • Freeze it and dole it out. One piece per day, for example.
  • Bring leftovers into work.
  • Crush or cut it up, put it into bags and freeze. Add candy pieces later throughout the year to brownie, cake or cookie batter.
  • Check with area nursing homes – they may accept it for treats for their residents.
  • Some organizations that will take certain types of candy to send to our military troops.

 Be sure to serve your little goblins a healthy dinner before they head out for trick-or-treating. And think of orangey foods to serve: grilled salmon, baked sweet potato fries, carrot salad and butterscotch pudding. YUM.