Welcome Friend!
It is officially my favorite time of the year! It is Autumn!!!!! Happy first day of Autumn everyone! :) Although it may not feel like fall yet, it soon will and that makes me very happy. Apple desserts, fresh apples on the trees, fall foliage, pumpkin pie, pecan pie, pumpkin carving...the list of favorites goes on and on. I do miss a good northeastern fall, but I'll take what I can get here in Texas. Our leaves don't so much change color as they just turn brown and fall off, but hey...that's part of the "charm" of Texas right? Right! (I think.)
So, I got my Real Simple magazine the other day and they always have a part with interesting facts. This time they were about Halloween. I know it's not Halloween yet, but I just thought I'd share them with you as they seem fallish to me.
So, I got my Real Simple magazine the other day and they always have a part with interesting facts. This time they were about Halloween. I know it's not Halloween yet, but I just thought I'd share them with you as they seem fallish to me.
- Trick or treating harks back to the Middle Ages and All Souls' Day, when poor people in Britain would beg for soul cakes, a sweet-bread treat, and pray for dead relatives in return.
- When trick-or-treating first became popular in the United States in the 1800s, more children played mischievous pranks than asked for candy. By the 1950s, though, the focus had switched to good old family fun, with sugar-hyped children dressed in costumes.
- The candy-collecting tradition has spread from the United States to Canada, Australia, and Western Europe, where more and more little govlins now trick-or-treat. In parts of England, children carry lanterns called punkies (which look like jack-o'-lanterns) and parade through the town on the last Thursday of October. In Ireland, rural neighborhoods light bonfires, and children play snap apple, in which they try to take a bite from apples that are hung by strings from a tree or a door frame.
- Chocolate makes up about three-quarters of a trick-or-treater's loot, according to the National Confectioners Association.
- In the event that the spoils aren't scarfed down whole hog, seperate chocolate out and keep it in a cool, dark, dry place. Milk chocolate is good for no more than 8-10 months, while dark lasts up to two years. Hard candy will also keep in a cool, dry place for about a year. Store soft candies in a covered dish away from direct heat and light. Enjoy them within six months.