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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Oct. 4, 2006) – The scariest thing about Halloween
for many parents might be trying to provide treats for their children
that help keep them healthy as well.
Students in Cathy Cunningham’s introductory nutrition class for
dietetics and nursing majors at Tennessee Tech University, however, know
the tricks for offering healthy Halloween treats.
“I asked them to give me some healthy alternatives for Halloween
treats — some that can be distributed to trick-or-treaters and others
that can be served at holiday parties — and some of their responses
were more creative than I would have ever imagined,” she said.
Ten suggested items to provide for neighborhood trick-or-treaters instead
of candy and other sugary foods include:
• Fruits, such as apples or oranges;
• Boxes of raisins or bags of other dried fruits;
• Bags of plain popcorn;
• Cups of diced fruit, flavored gelatin or pudding;
• Trail mix;
• Granola bars;
• Ginger snap cookies, which are the most naturally low-fat;
• Individual packets of fruit-flavored instant oatmeal;
• Peanuts in shells, “which would make kids have to play
with their food in order to eat it,” Cunningham said;
• And bags of roasted, spiced pumpkin seeds, with the contents
labeled ‘witches’ teeth.’
“The most important thing to remember in planning a healthy Halloween
party is to schedule it during a routine mealtime,” Cunningham said.
“If you plan the party for any other time, then the children are
going to be consuming excess food — which is never healthy, regardless
of how otherwise nutritious your food choices are.”
Five ideas for child-friendly yet still healthy party foods include:
• Ants on a log — celery sticks spread with peanut butter
and topped with raisins;
• Mummy fingers — baby carrots with one end dipped in catsup;
• Brain matter — cottage cheese strained of liquid but with
curds reserved and mashed with blue, fruit-flavored gelatin and blueberries
so that it resembles a brain;
• Blood and guts sandwiches — strawberry jam or cherry preserves,
mixed with some of the same diced fresh fruit, and used as a filler for
sandwiches;
• And bug bites — round crackers, spread with peanut butter,
with pretzels placed to look like insect legs and raisins placed to resemble
eyes.
Easy eyeball ice cubes can also be made by peeling almost all of a radish,
reserving enough of its red skin so that it resembles the veins of a bloodshot
eye, and hollowing out one end of it to hold the ‘iris’ —
a pimento stuffed olive. Place each radish eyeball into an individual
cube of an ice tray, fill with water and freeze.
“Every Halloween party needs some games, so why not make it part
of the celebration to have the kids get involved in preparing their own
treats?” Cunningham suggests. “Making their own ‘ants
on a log’ or ‘bug bites’ could seem very much like a
game to a group of children.”
Another advantage to getting children involved in their own healthy holiday
food preparation is that it might help picky eaters add more variety to
their diets.
“Children are more receptive to eating any food they’ve helped
prepare,” Cunningham said.
It might likewise help children who are susceptible to over-eating as
well, because it occupies them with assembling their meal — rather
than just eating the food that has been provided for them.
--Tracey LeFevre
This information posted 11 October 2006
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