пятница, 3 июля 2015 г.

Quick and Easy {NO SUGAR} Elementary School Halloween Party!

Quick and Easy {NO SUGAR} Elementary School Halloween Party!

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No sugar or artificial dyes (almost) at this healthy school Halloween party. Plan games, activities, and real food without fuss!
Healthy school Halloween party plan, complete with more food ideas than you need plus games, activities, and minimal prep work needed.

Are you in charge of planning a kids’ Halloween party for your child’s elementary school classroom this year?


Are you low on time and ideas?


Do you wish Halloween (and classroom parties) could have far less sugar and hyped up children than they do?


I’m here to help.


Do People Want Healthy Halloween Parties?


After I posted this on Facebook a few years back:


Healthy Halloween Party on Facebook
Facebook post about my healthy Halloween party at my kid's elementary school

I decided to share this simple Halloween party plan with you all.


That’s almost as many likes as I got when I birthed a child, for Heaven’s sakes! Apparently this “no sugar Halloween party” is a hot topic…


And because I am who I am, it is also a (sort of) low maintenance plan, at least as far as games go, so if you’ve got a few parents to help, you could totally pull this off with even just a couple days notice.


We had a blast with a one-hour Halloween party in second-grade with this plan, and as a former teacher, I was totally energized being in front of the classroom again. I’ve tweaked and reused it a few times since then too, for kindergarten and fourth graders!


Katie here, just interrupting for a sec if I may with an exciting announcement about something I’m super passionate about…kids cooking dinner!


Kids make dinner with the Instant Pot and slow cooker!
Your kids can learn to cook!

If your dream would be a night off dinner – or you know it’s vital that your kids have life skills like cooking – or they’re ASKING to help in the kitchen but you’re not sure where to start – these brand new videos can help!


It feels like you don’t have time for anything else – but teaching kids to cook truly creates time where there was none once they start pitching in on dinner prep. #kitchenmiracle


For a fun sneak preview of one of our recipes, here’s my 5yo making mac and cheese in the Instant Pot – can you figure out what that secret VEGGIE ingredient is?


No White Sugar Halloween Party Food


A few parents thanked me for planning food that didn’t include a bunch of candy, and I didn’t hear any kids say, “Hey! Where’s the cupcake with inch-thick frosting and a sugar cookie as big as my face?!??”


I’m thinking the food went over well.


Here’s a real food menu for a Halloween party, complete with some dramatic presentation– because I love to show kids (and adults) that healthy food can still be FUN and we don’t need to drown ourselves (and our kids) in sugar!!


Healthy Pumpkin Muffins


Whole wheat, sucanat as the sweetener, real pumpkin puree (and here’s the gluten-free pumpkin muffin version)


Try homemade pumpkin muffins for a healthy school Halloween party. Easy to make gluten-free, egg-free, etc!
Healthy Homemade Pumpkin Muffins

Healthy Pumpkin Cookies


4 cups whole wheat flour, 2 cups real pumpkin puree and only a smidge over 1/2 cup honey for 6 dozen cookies! I made half raisin, half chocolate chip.


Now in my wisdom of later years, I’ve realized that a party treat should have no more than 3 items, or a lot of good food gets tossed in the trash. I’d skip the muffins and keep the cookies since there’s less sweetener and kids think “cookies” are more fun!!


Soft and delicious, these simple, kid-friendly pumpkin cookies have a mere third teaspoon honey per cookie - but no one will know they're healthy but you!
Healthy Pumpkin Cookies

Carrot Witches’ Fingers


I explained that I had invited a group of witches to do a singing and dancing number for the class, but instead of witch singers somehow a box came with just witch fingers. (They’re baby carrots with a sunflower or pumpkin seed stuck in the end – and they look just as good with shelled sunflower seeds too.)


Have a healthy school Halloween party with these Witches' Fingers
Witch's Fingers (carrot and sunflower seeds)

Slimy Eyeball Grapes


I held up that sticky eyeball toy on the left and asked if anyone would like one on their plate, then sent a dad around with a bag marked “EYEBALLS” to serve. (They’re peeled grapes. I recommend peeling one per child for the touchy-feely experience, then offering extra unpeeled grapes.)


Peel grapes to make
Eyeballs (peeled grapes)

Popcorn


I said I had also invited a skeleton to do a comedy routine, but the parking lot was so busy with parents that when he got out of my van and rushed out without looking both ways, he got hit by a car! I could only collect his vertebrae in the bowl…


(The popcorn is popped in coconut oil and covered in about a stick of butter per cup of unpopped popcorn kernels…it was so good I had parents asking how I did it! Full instructions in Healthy Snacks to Go)


Popcorn is a healthy Halloween party option - tell the kids the skeleton you invited fell apart!
Skeleton Vertebrate (popcorn)

Cheesy Ghosts


Slices of white cheese cut into ghost shapes with a cookie cutter (or freehand with a knife). The family who did these used pre-wrapped slices and wrapped them back up so they were super easy to pass out. They wanted to keep going and make orange pumpkin shaped cheese, too!


No sugar or artificial dyes (almost) at this healthy school Halloween party. Plan games, activities, and real food without too much prep work.

No sugar or artificial dyes (almost) at this healthy school Halloween party. Plan games, activities, and real food without too much prep work.

They were SO cute, but I forgot to bring my camera to the actual party!


Drink: 100% White Grape Juice with a Gummy Worm


Here’s where the only white sugar at our party entered. I apologized to the kids and said that I had been gardening before coming to the party, so “I’m terribly sorry if anything out of the ordinary got in your cups from the garden…”


It was fun.


But if I really had my druthers, I’d just serve water. In general, I’m not a fan of juice, and I’ve since gone to only water when I help plan parties, usually with something fun about it like the Christmas ice cubes we made for that party.


Skip the gummy worm and you also have a party without any artificial colors, another feat worth Facebooking about.


Simple Halloween Kids’ Party Games


Make a goofy (or scary) monster out of your recycling for your kids' Halloween party
Trash monster as a Halloween party activity - plus healthy food ideas!

Landfill Monsters


Ask the children to bring in recyclables or (clean) trash for this activity. An email from the teacher will be a great quick reminder to parents.


Either in groups or individually (we introduced it as a group activity but most kids wanted to make their own, and there were lots of parents to help), tell the kids they’ll be creating monsters out of trash.


Kids can try to build the largest, scariest, most creative, etc. monster, using cereal boxes, toilet paper rolls, bottle caps, oatmeal canisters, plastic bags, and whatever else you can drum up.


Trash monster as a Halloween party activity
Make a goofy (or scary) monster out of your recycling for your kids' Halloween party

Be sure to tell them that if they finish early, they should make a friend for their monster, a baby monster, a pet monster, or whatever, rather than run around and bother others.


Optional: Have a “show and tell” where the groups/individuals get to share their monsters and tell which “-est” they made (cutest, ugliest, etc.).


Supplies needed:

  • trash and recycling (everyone contributes)
  • duct, masking and packing tape
  • string and yarn
  • scissors
  • permanent markers (if kids are old enough, to draw faces)
  • optional: embellishments like pipe cleaners or foam stickers

Time: give at least 20 minutes to build, maybe more, plus sharing time

Extra Benefit: We’re told kids don’t get a lot of creative time these days AND that life can get too competitive…but this open-ended project with no real winners is perfect!!


Apples on a String


Skip bobbing for apples - put them on a string instead!
Simple Halloween party game - apples on a string

Here in Michigan, we had an apple shortage the year I first used this healthy Halloween party plan. I told the kids there just weren’t enough apples to bob for apples, alas, so we would make the apple fly instead.


Bonus: This method is quicker, needs no water, and has far less germ sharing than actually bobbing for apples.


Children paired up, and one child held an apple SLICE on a string while the other tried to eat it as fast as they could – without using their hands. Emphasize that rule a few times. I would say, “Without using your —” and wait for the class to fill in “hands.”


If you can, have another parent or two passing out the apples while you’re explaining the rules.


Choose a winner for round one from the whole class OR a winner from each row/table/group of desks.


Be sure to explain from the start how the winner is chosen – do they need to have the apple gone as in “in their mouths,” or do they need to run up to a leader and show that they’ve swallowed the apple, etc.


Round two is simply switching places. Kids might ask, “Can we move the apple around?” and the simple answer is that if you make it hard for your partner, they’ll probably make it hard for you!


Give prizes to any winners OR have a championship round in the front of the class where the 2-8 winners from both rounds compete for one big winner. You can be silly and have adults hold the strings and purposely make it difficult, if the class has that personality.


Supplies needed:

  • apples sliced in eights (enough for one for each student plus extras for a championship round and the ill effects of gravity)
  • 3-foot lengths of string tied around the middle of the apple
  • prizes (or not…)

Time: 10-15 minutes


Note: Tie the strings tightly enough to make a dent in the apple or you’ll end up with many on the ground. This game can also be done with pretzel rods, but that’s decidedly less healthy.


Mummy Wrap


Divide the class into groups of four kids.


Each team will wrap “mummies” using a roll of toilet paper. They can have a child hold the end and spin around, or the kids can walk around the “mummy” to wrap him or her.


Any time the mummy gets dizzy or wants to switch, they can just tear the paper and start a new mummy on another child. In this way, all the kids can really participate and be silly, and there’s some decision making about how to be fastest. Also, hopefully no one gets toooooo dizzy. (I recommend doing this game before food, not after!)


The first team to use all their toilet paper wins!


Supplies needed:

  • rolls of toilet paper, enough for each group of 4 to have one
  • prizes

Time: 10-15 minutes?


We didn’t actually have time for this game, but we’ve decided to make it a Christmas game of “putting garland on a spinning Christmas tree” like in a department store. We’ll put a bow on their heads as they play to keep it festive!


Backup Activity: Halloween Word Play


This is a good 5-minute game that takes zero prep and can be inserted if you (a) don’t have enough time at the end of the party for the Mummy Wrap or (b) have a bit of extra time to kill.


Simply write “HAPPY HALLOWEEN” on the board and set a timer for 3, 4 or 5 minutes. The kids work independently or in groups to make as many words as they can using the letters in Happy Halloween.


They may use letters more than once, but not in the same word.


For example, having both “low” and “wall” on a list is fine, even though there’s only one “w” available.


The word “wool” would not work, because there’s only one “o” to use in each word.


Make sense?


I recommend this game for 2nd grade and up, maybe first grade if it’s a pretty bright class.


Award prizes to the top 3 (or more) with the most words; bonus prizes for the longest word.


Supplies needed:

  • paper and pencils
  • prizes

time: 5-10 minutes


Quick and easy NO SUGAR school Halloween party. Games, activities, and real food plan done for you!
Healthy school Halloween party plan, complete with more food ideas than you need plus games, activities, and minimal prep work needed.

Backup activity: Holiday Word Ball


This is a little twist on “quiet ball,” that rainy day school game where kids sit on their desks and toss a ball around. Anyone who misses or is not quiet has to sit down on their chair.


In this version, the leader chooses a category related to the holiday. For Halloween, I had prepared:


  • orange things
  • things made of pumpkin
  • scary costumes
  • Halloween TV specials
  • Halloween decorations
  • Halloween animals

The leader calls out a category, and when each child catches the ball, they have to say the name of anything that would fit that category. If someone can’t think of anything, they have to sit down in their chair and a new category begins.


For example: “things made of pumpkin” might include cookies, pies, pancakes, muffins, pumpkin seeds, jack-o-lanterns…


When anyone drops the ball after a decent throw – determined by the adult in charge – they are also “out” and have to sit down.


Supplies needed:

  • ball or holiday something to throw – I had a stuffed pumpkin
  • list of categories

Time: as short or as long as needed; a good time filler while waiting for the “costume parade” to come around.


I hope this helps some last-minute planners out there make their child’s school Halloween party a festive, fun, and healthy experience!


Other Halloween posts:


Healthy school Halloween party plan, complete with more food ideas than you need plus games, activities, and minimal prep work needed.
No sugar or artificial dyes (almost) at this healthy school Halloween party. Plan games, activities, and real food without fuss!

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Original article and pictures take www.kitchenstewardship.com site

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