08.13
Halloween party treats simply must look scary! Whether you are sending treats to school, planning your Halloween office party, or just letting Miss Muffet know that she has overstayed her welcome, these Spider Cookies are easy and fun to make.
Spider Sandwich Cookies
Easiest of all our recipes, these little arachnids will require the following ingredients:
Halloween sandwich cookies (We used Oreos with orange filling)
Small Candy Coated Chocolate Candies (We used mini M&M’s)
Licorice Whips, cut into 2-3″ pieces
A small amount of chocolate frosting
Just insert the licorice whip pieces into the cookie filling for legs. Using dots of frosting, “glue” the candy eyes to the top of the cookie. These make great last-minute additions to any Halloween occasion.
Hairy Scary Spider Cookies
Here’s another super easy recipe that makes cute and tasty spiders! All you need is:
12 oz bag of chocolate chips
6 oz bag of either butterscotch or peanut butter flavored chips
Bag of Chow Mein noodles
Red Hots, or Mini M&M’s
Line a cookie sheet with buttered waxed paper. In a microwave safe bowl, heat the chocolate and butterscotch or peanut butter flavored chips at 50% power for 1 minute. Stir, repeat until the chips are completely melted and smooth. Stir in the chow mein noodles. Drop by spoonsful on the waxed paper. Immediately add 2 red hots or M&M’s for eyes, while cookies are still warm. Refrigerate until firm.
Spider Topped Cookies
While these take the most time of all our spider cookie recipes, you will find that they will be the most popular. They are well worth your effort!
Ingredients:
1 cup peanut butter
1 cup margarine
1 cup sugar
1 cup brown sugar
Cream these four ingredients together until smooth and fluffy.
Mix in:
2 eggs
2 teaspoons vanilla
1/4 cup milk
Sift together and add slowly:
3 1/2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
Make small balls of dough about the size of a quarter. Roll the balls in granulated sugar and place them on an ungreased cookie sheet. Bake 10-12 minutes at 375 degrees. Remove cookies to a cooling rack and immediately top each with a carmel filled chocolate candy like Rolo’s. Press this down slightly into the top of the cookie. In a few minutes, the candy will become soft. Add licorice whip legs and M&M eyes to the candy to complete your spider. See the picture for placement.
As Halloween draws closer, it’s time to start planning your pumpkin carving for this year. In the next few weeks, I will post one article per week dedicated to designing and sculpting the best Jack O’Lantern that has ever graced your porch. The first step in this process is knowing your pumpkin!
The Stem: Located on top of the pumpkin, the stem is usually brownish green. It was the umbilical cord that connected the fruit to the vine, and brought in nutrients from the main body of the plant. When choosing a pumpkin, it is best to find one with the stem still firmly attached. Never lift your pumpkin by the stem, or it will break off. This will become the handle for the “lid” of your Jack O’Lantern.
The Guts, Brains, Goop: Actually, they are called the fibrous strands that fill the cavity in the middle of the pumpkin. These gooey strands contain the pumpkin seeds.
In the summer of 1816, at the age of 19, Mary Godwin, the daughter of a radical feminist and a philosopher, ran off to continental Europe with Percy Bysshe Shelley, the well-known poet. The couple was accompanied by a friend of Shelley’s, Dr. John Polidori. They took a house near Geneva, for what was intended as a romantic summer get away. Unfortunately, the weather turned ugly, and days of thunderstorms wore on the nerves of the party. To pass the time, they gathered around the fireplace in the evening and told each other ghost stories and local legends. They hit upon the idea of a competition. Each of them would write a horror story, and when they were finished, they would choose a winner. Mary began her story at once, however, the weather eventually turned sunny, and the gentlemen were off exploring the countryside. At the end of the allotted time, only Mary’s story was finished. She published it in 1818, under a pseudonym, with the title “Frankenstein, or The Modern Prometheus” Mary went on to marry Percy, write other books and to publish her husband’s poetry posthumously, after he drowned, tragically, at the age of 30.
The story was first committed to film in 1910, by Edison Studios. To date, the tale of Dr. Frankenstein and his creature, has been told on film hundreds of times. Some have portrayed the creature as a mindless, raging beast, while others envisioned him as a gentle and misunderstood giant. In the 1930’s, the monster was most famously portrayed by Boris Karloff. It is his version of Frankenstein’s monster that has inspired many thousands of Halloween costumes for nearly 80 years.
In the glittering salons of 1930’s society, from New York to Hollywood, and all over Europe, a small, round woman, possessed of an indomitable spirit and exquisite taste, reigned over entertaining. Elsa Maxwell was a gossip columnist, whose elaborate parties were well-attended by the wealthy, the famous, and the infamous. Elsa believed that people should be actively involved in a party, and so, she invented and introduced the Scavenger Hunt to her guests.
Scavenger Hunts have become very popular Halloween entertainments. Sending guests out into the dark night to retrieve treasures lends itself to a spooky Halloween tale to start the evening. Make sure that your guests do not go out alone, and carry flashlights and/or reflective items. Depending on the age of your party guests, the hunt may be limited to the backyard or expanded to include the neighborhood. Be aware of any local curfews and inform your neighbors, in case they stumble upon one of your guests snapping a photo of their scary jack o’lantern, or creepy tree.