It’s Halloween and I’m excited to get out of the office so I can race home to carve my Jackolantern before the trick-or-treaters start coming around. This is the first Halloween in the new house so I have no idea how many trick-or-treaters I’ll get. I was surprised at how few we always got in the townhouse, considering that I knew many children lived in the complex. This time being in a neighborhood, I’m hoping we’ll have quite a few (I’m torn on whether or not to buy another bag of candy on the way home, because I don’t have ALOT but then I don’t want to have alot left over if i only get a few). I gutted and cleaned my pumpkin last night, so it’ll be ready to carve when I get home (carving it too early leaves it looking shriveled by the time Trick-or-Treaters come a’knock’n. But the one I carved for our annual Orange and Black party is posted on the right.
Speaking of the party, we had a smaller than normal crowd this year (I think because we held it on a Friday since a bust October schedule prevented us from having a free Saturday night), but it was still a good time. This year I decided I was going to bake pretty much all the food for the party myself. Bad idea. It’s not that the food wasn’t good, but I took the day off to prepare for it and still didn’t have time to get everything done. After baking and cleaning, I managed to not get much more decorating done than the food table, placing a skull on the mantle, exchanging the white tea lights in the tea light holder with orange and black ones, and hanging a skeleton on the door. And I didn’t even have time to go get changed until the first two guests had already arrived!
The baked good I was most proud of and the was certainly most popular (both in terms of the amount eaten and the talk generated) were these “Witch’s Fingers” cookies. They looked so great coming out of the oven that I told TheBoyfriend™ that I sure hoped they tasted good because they looked so good that I plan on making them every Halloween from now on regardless. They actually ended up tasting good too (they are like an almond/butter/shortbread cookie), though some guests couldn’t bring themselves to try one. When you Halloween food looks gross enough to prevent people from trying it, it’s good stuff!
The next evening we attended a costume party hosted by our Jiu-Jitsu instructor. For this I carved our the patch on our school’s Jiu-Jitsu gis into a pumpkin. That was really well-received by fellow Jiu-Jitsu students and (surprisingly to me) non-Jiu-Jitsu students alike. I was surprised at just how much attention that jack-o-lantern actually drew. Our costumes which we’re really thrown together at the last minutes were also the talk of the evening it seems. Last year we attended as “Peace and Quiet” (a hippie and a mime), which everybody thought was great. This year, despite racking our brains, we couldn’t figure out a way to top it. TheBoyfriend™ found a unique costume at Kroger (of all places) for what he thought was only $4.99 (it was in the wrong spot, it was actually $12.99), so he bought it. It was an Elvis costume, but the catch was (if I can possibly describe it clearly) that it fit over the top of your head like a mask (stopping just before your nose) then the entire body wrapped around your neck and clasped in the front. The effect, wearing all black so that your body seemingly disappeared, was an Elvis with a tiny body and a full size head. I’m not much a fan of unaltered store-bought costumes and was hoping to still figure something out. But when it came time to leave and i still didn’t have anything fully created, an executive decision was made; I too would be attending as some small-bodied, big headed character. When we got to Kroger, the creativity kicked in. His Elvis was dressed in all white. They had a devilish character in all red. Slicing off the Elvis mask’s rubber sideburns and making a quick trip to Michael’s Arts and Crafts for a small set of wings and a halo turned Elvis into quite the convincing angel. Hence, as a floating miniature Angel and a floating miniature devil, we set off to the party as a great representation of a conscience (the little angel on one should and devil on the other). I don’t know how many pictures we posed for that night with one of us on either side of another party-goer’s head. Even people we didn’t know were asking to take a picture with us. I’d post one, but for all the pictures that were taken that night, we don’t have one.
I’ll post tonight’s Jack-o-Lantern once it’s carved. Have a happy, spooky, and safe Halloween!