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Hosting a Halloween Party for Small Spooks

Trick & tips for an easy, fun event
Hosting a Halloween Party for Small Spooks: Main Image
Plan ahead so all you'll have to do Halloween night is put on your costume, put out the refreshments, and start the activities
Trick or treat--it's party time! This year, plan a Halloween party at home for ghouls and goblins as an alternative to trick-or-treating--or do both!

It's as easy as saying "boo!"

Decorate the house with traditional jack-o-lanterns and Indian corn, or go with a spooky theme and suspend fake cobwebs, bats and pretend witches. Let children invite friendly spooks and goblins, turn on scary music, play a few games while you serve easy-to-prepare, child-friendly snacks. Enjoy the party!

"My children love having friends over for a Halloween party," says Ann Freebing, mum to five in Austin, Texas. "The gang has a place to go after trick or treating. They hang out, check out their loot, watch a scary movie, and feast on homemade treats. They can't wait."

Ghoulish steps for a perfect party

Plan ahead so all you'll have to do Halloween night is put on your costume, put out the refreshments, and start the activities.

Four weeks ahead, have the children help:
  • Invite guests
  • Decorate the house

Two weeks ahead:

  • Decide what treats to make and serve; keep it casual with things you can prepare in advance (and remember to ask about food allergies)
  • Ask children to help choose music and a scary movie to watch
  • Plan tried-and-true activities such as pumpkin carving and bobbing for apples
  • Older children will enjoy setting up a haunted house and planting spooky surprises in the bathroom, stairway, basement, garage, or back yard.

Two to three days before the party:

  • Complete grocery shopping
  • Baking and store goodies in airtight tins or freeze
  • Set up the party room, haunted house, pumpkin carving area, etc.

The day of the party:

  • Arrange the party room if necessary, set the table, organise drinks
  • Make homemade Halloween face paint
  • Set up a carving station and set out pumpkin carving tools, carving templates, markers, sponges and paints
  • Arrange serving plates with home treats
  • Set up music, DVD player, etc.

Whip up some edible face paint

  • 3 tablespoons, plus 1 teaspoon cornstarch
  • 2 teaspoons all purpose flour
  • 5 teaspoons vegetable shortening
  • 1/8 teaspoon food coloring

Stir together the cornstarch and flour in a small bowl, and blend in the shortening. Add food colouring, drop by drop, to desired colour. Stir in the glycerin and mix well. To apply face paint, use a brush, fingers or a make-up sponge. Make additional batches for multiple colours.

Decide on devilishly delicious treats

Buy or make guaranteed child-pleasers such as homemade cookies or a festive cake, brownies, cupcakes and rice crispy treats. Honour the occasion with pumpkin-flavoured goodies. Or serve a meal with child-friendly chilli, mac 'n' cheese, or sloppy joes and coleslaw. Try these treats:

  • Screeching Sloppy Joes
  • Grandma's Creepy Coleslaw
  • Frightening Fudge Cupcakes
  • Scary Porridge Spice Cookies
  • Poisoned Peanut Butter Museli Chewies
  • Aweful Apple Spice Cake
  • Crazy Cranberry Ginger Cider
At Halloween, Judith H. Dern loves dressing up as a ghost or medieval duchess. And carving a pumpkin is a must.