Spooktacular Food Network Halloween Recipes

Trick or Treat! Give me something good to eat! It's that time of year when we scare up delicious Halloween treats for ghouls and boys. Whether you're hosting a Halloween party or just baking with your children, you'll find the most spooktacular recipe to make at Food Network. The Spooky Halloween Recipes for Kids will give you and your children creative ideas.  

My little ghoul enjoyed making these Ghastly Meringues






Wishing you much enjoyment making spooktacular Halloween recipes. Find more ideas from Food Network in their Halloween Section.   

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Le Ballet de Dracula


‘Tis the season for a scary ballet. Le Ballet de Dracula is everything the wholesome Nutcracker isn’t...scary, bloody and spooky. LakeCities Ballet Theatre’s artistic director, Kelly Lannin prepared the audience on Friday night not to get too comfortable because it was about to get scary…it was the perfect way to get into the Halloween spirit.


My daughter and I started the weekend off right with some ballet bonding time. We sat in the audience anticipating to be transported back in time to 1897 Transylvania. When the curtain opened…stage magic did the trick and we were in Romania.

The Weolas (scary bat-like animals) opened up the show crawling out with cat-like confidence using their contorted arms and legs. We are introduced to Dracula’s minion, Ratcliff (Asia Waters) who scares the Weolas away by showing a golden cross.

The ballet takes a romantic turn when daytime arrives and the town celebrates the engagement of Aurelia (Amanda Evans) and Marius (Steven Loch). This first act is happy and light. The folk dancing was delightful…especially the Maypole dance with the gypsies, Romanian dancers and villagers all weaving in and out together all in the name of love. 


When Dracula arrives with his pumpkin stealer minion, the scene turns creepy. In order to claim his new bride, Dracula hypnotizes Aurelia with a mysterious pas de deux.

My daughter kept asking, “When is it going to get scary again?” The answer came when act two began with more stage magic…fog, fangs, and hissing from Dracula’s scary brides that reminded me of the Wilis in my favorite ballet, Giselle (but much more frightening).   

The brides hissed as they were awakened from their sleep in Dracula’s castle. They executed haunting jetés and bourrées with one hand gracefully over their neck. Their movement had a dark and eerie feel.
 

Dracula rose from his coffin with a dramatic red cloak ready to bite his new bride. Just when you think she’s a goner, Marius arrives to save Aurelia and with the help of Radcliff, he stakes Dracula. With each hit of the stake, Dracula’s brides collapse and finally so does Dracula. The ending makes you wonder…are they really safe from Dracula, is he truly dead?


Thanks LakeCities Ballet! We are now in a Halloween kind of mood!

Need Halloween costume inspiration? This was one of my favorite costumes…a Dracula bride. My beautiful former student wears it well.

Happy Halloween!!

Posts you may have missed:
Five Fun Fab Ways to Free Yourself for Fall 
Halloween Superstitions, MacBeth and Merde

Happy Birthday to my Little Brother!!

 Happy Birthday Sean!!
Funny Uncle, hostess with the mostess, dog lover and family man!

We called my brother Sean the morning of his birthday to send him good wishes on the way to school. My children talked non-stop (sometimes at the same time) and he was so patient. I think he would have let them keep talking all day if I let them.

Sean is the middle child which means he's empathetic and independent. He's also a really good negotiator...even with children.

I was looking up my brother's birthday personality on a site called The Secret Language (it's so fun, you have to check out). Sean's birthday report read, "Can be found with a hint of a smile on their lips and a twinkle in their eye. They like nothing more than entertaining or being entertained. This couldn't be more spot on for my brother. My children love their Uncle Sean for this reason...he's a thoughtful entertainer and also appreciates being entertained by children. 

This is a picture of me and my brother at the kid table. It reminds me so much of my son and daughter having their own "coffee talk!" 
My brother was a great playmate. There's a three year age difference between us. We always had fun playing together...hot wheels, Barbies, Atari, or Pac Man. I loved being his big sister...and still do.
Here we are the day of my wedding. I could not look at my brother because I knew I would cry. 


Sean and my beautiful sister-in-law Jeyhan. They were high school sweethearts, a gorgeous couple and now a sweet little family.


My sister Paige and brother Sean at our cousin's wedding in San Miguel de Allende. This was one of the most fun family trips of all time. 
Here we are as teenagers. We've had a lot of fun together Sean. Here's to our children having the same kind of fun growing up together. 




Many happy returns Sean!

I love you!

xx, Ashley

Happy Fall! Links to make you smile!!


Cozy weekend mornings in the fall are the best! It's nice to open up the windows and let in the fresh cool air. My children love to listen to the birds sing, and watch the many bunnies in our yard hop around while I make breakfast. The smell of bacon and pumpkin muffins perfume our back patio. We stay in our pajamas as long as we can.

Don't we all live for the weekends? I never want them to end. Early fall mornings are a treat for the senses.

I've made a wish list of things I want to do this fall. It's pretty simple and I'm sure it will be easy to accomplish. Cheers to autumn and may your weekends go by as slow as molasses.

1. Laugh. If we're living for the weekends, there needs to be more laughter during the work week. My fellow teacher friends shared two clips with me that gave me such a good belly laugh. Laughing is the best!

2. Watch old movies. My children are at ages now when they will watch them with me. Roman Holiday is ready for us this weekend.

3. Buy a cozy blanket. Remember building forts when you were a kid? Well, most of our blankets are used just for that. I need a movie-watching blanket for my fort on the sofa. I like this one.

4. Bake. Perfect my pumpkin muffins and make apple cider donuts.

5. Go to the State Fair of Texas. Eat fried foods (specifically the Awesome Deep Fried Nutella), check out the haunted houses and ride the farris wheel.

6. Make soup. My children like to sing Maurice Sendak's words with Carol King, "Sipping once, sipping twice, sipping chicken soup with rice."  There's nothing more cozy that coming home from the cold soccer field and warming up our two little soccer players' tummies with soup.

7. Drink more chocolate chai tea. Enough said.

8. Wear navy. It compliments fall's brilliant blue sky so well. I'm loving this color for my nails.

Life's too short to be busy enjoy your fall!

Links you may have missed:
I'm Eloise, I'm Six 
Five Fun Ways to Free Yourself this Fall 
A Sick Day a Snow Day a Just Say No Day 
Soups On 

When I Was Little

Grandparents’ Day was chosen in 1978 by President Jimmy Carter to be the Sunday after Labor Day each year. In elementary school, we celebrate the whole week long…inviting grandparents to have lunch, spend some time with their grandchild at school and maybe even read a story.
Second grade children are asked to do an interview with their grandparents, finding out three questions: What was transportation and communication like when they were little and how did they have fun with their family?
I read a captivating story to my second grade class called “When I Was Little” by Toyomi Igus that focuses on the special relationship between a little boy and his grandfather. The little boy, Noel, can’t imagine living without TVs, video games, refrigerators, and indoor plumbing. Noel is taken to another time (maybe seventy years ago) and tries to imagine what it would have been like back when his grandfather was little. What they realize is that the need for love and caring never changes.
I’ve given this assignment for years but this year, because MY daughter is in second grade, has been the most meaningful. It was so sweet to hear my daughter interview both sets of grandparents…it was funny too!
We had my husband’s parents on speaker phone and my husband would whisper a question for our daughter to ask her Nana and Pappo. “Did you chase dinosaurs? Was everything in black and white when you were little?”  Nana just happened to be making cookies while we were interviewing her.
We were also delighted to hear that both sets of grandparents learned something new about each other (after forty-one years for my parents and 52 years for Derek’s parents). It was a pleasure to hear them laugh and say, “I didn’t know that about you!”
I think you’ll enjoy taking a walk back in time through several seven-year-old’s interviews with their grandparents’. Take a look at some highlights from my second grade class (and my daughter’s) interview with their grandparents:
Transportation:
· There were no electric windows, seat belts, or air conditioning. They had to walk, bicycle, ride the trolley or the bus. They had airplanes but most people didn’t fly…if they did, they would dress up.

Communication:
· They did not have cell phones, but rotary phones. They sent letters. They had a party line which about eight other families shared so you had to make sure you answered the right calls!

Family fun:
· Fishing, swimming, camping, drive-in movies, playing in the woods, helped make butter, picnics, going to the A&W root beer stand for fresh watermelon, jumping rope, going to Bell Dairy for ice cream, roller skating, camping, ice skating, ice fishing, riding horses, going down to the train station and watching the trains go by, flying kites, playing cards, going to sporting events, listening to the radio, playing cowboys and Indians, playing with dolls…

We love our grandparents. They are the puzzle pieces to who we are and shape who our children become.

“What children need most are the essentials that grandparents provide in abundance. They give unconditional love, kindness, patience, humor, comfort, lessons in life. And, most importantly, cookies.”  ~Rudolph Guliani



It's a Family Affair: Chapel Hill, North Carolina

We recently returned from our week-long family vacation visiting my brother Sean and his beautiful family in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. It was just the trip to take before school starts and we have to get back into routine. The Chapel Hill/Durham/Raleigh area is truly amazing, and we had the best time. Here are a few photos of our family affair...


My brother thought it would be fun to have the kids start out their vacation with piñatas. He was right! You can tell this went over very well!


Chapel Hill smells like camp did when you were a kid...with the enormous pines seeping through the screened in porch. 


Have you ever played cornhole? It's very addictive! I found that drinking lime-a-ritas with my sister-in-law improved my game. My son (who loves corn dogs) misunderstood the name of the game and anytime someone would make it in the hole, he'd shout "corn dog!" 
One of the most beautiful day trips we took was to the Museum of Life and Science in Durham. We spent a long time observing butterflies. We loved the Magic Wings Butterfly House most of all but visiting the "into the mist" at the end was probably the highlight for the kids. Mist is mysterious and magical...it also cooled us off! 




My brother's favorite hotel, The Carolina Inn is known as UNC's living room. Built in 1924, it has been compared to Washington's Mount Vernon and is a Tar Heels dream stay. It's one of those places you wish that the walls could talk. The walls do talk with the many old photographs of celebrations and milestones covered all over the inn's walls. 



When my brother told my kids that they had an awesome pool we could walk to every day with a big slide and diving board they couldn't wait...neither could my sister. I think a big slide turns everybody into a kid again. 
Before touring UNC we ate at Top of the Hill. The lizard chips (sliced dill pickles and jalapeno chips fried in their house beer) were a hit at our table and so was the beer. Top of the Hill is a unique restaurant that has a full-time cask-conditioned ale program that you can watch while you eat. My son waved at the men brewing and got a friendly beer-sprayed hello back! He was thrilled!
My sister Paige and her boyfriend Steven also came with endless fun. What kid wouldn't want to wear an animal mask?
My brother truly thought of everything to make sure our stay was fun-filled...board games, water balloons, toys... He even stocked the bar with Aperol to make my favorite cocktail
The very best part of our trip was meeting my niece...smelling, squeezing and kissing her was the greatest!
Our last evening there the power went off and we played board games like hedbanz and Despicable Me Operation until it came back on. It's always those things you think would make the vacation a disaster that actually end up making it the most memorable and fun. When the lights did come back on, my sister Paige decided to braid all the girl's hair into crowns...the braided sisters! 


Traveling in the company of those we love is home in motion. ~Leigh Hunt  


Posts you may have missed:

GET LOST WITH YOUR FAMILY IN LOST PINES, TEXAS

SAN ANTONIO: THE VENICE OF SOUTH TEXAS



Happy Birthday to my Tar Heel Dad!!

Happy Birthday Dad!!
FIJI, up for anything, athlete and more.

Last week my family visited my brother and his family in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. We all had the pleasure of walking in my Dad's footsteps visiting the campus where he got his undergrad at UNC Chapel Hill. It is a gorgeous campus full of history and TREES! 

My Dad proudly informed us that UNC was chartered in 1789 and opened its doors for students in 1795 as the nation’s first public university. UNC has earned a reputation as one of the BEST universities in the world. Holding majestic memories, he rarely goes a day without wearing Carolina blue. 

You can tell from these photographs why he has a love for trees AND that he had a great time! Even before my brother and his wife moved from Texas to North Carolina, my Dad made several trips there to visit his lifelong college friends.

I dated a Phi Gamma Delta in college at the University of Alabama for a while and loved it when my Dad met the guy...they did their secret FIJI handshake! 



My Dad walking my son up to his fraternity house to show him where his old room was. 


My brother and my children drinking from the Old Well (the most cherished drinking fountain in North Carolina). Legend has it that drinking from the Old Well the first day of classes will bring students good luck. It was some of the sweetest water I have ever tasted.
The UNC campus trees have survived the Union army's occupation during the Civil War, hurricane winds and ice storms. They are the treasures of the campus. 


My Dad took this picture of the South Building over forty years ago. It was such a good feeling to see him reminisce. 


Tar Heels on Hand,

To steal the Thunder from the Sky:
Then take our stand,
As every man does right by Blue and White,
We'll give the Tar Heels a Hand,
And cheer them on to do or die (Yeah!)
All of us are for U.N.C.
and you can betcha we're proud to be
the Tar Heels on Hand!

Happy Birthday to my Tar Heel Dad!! xx


Posts you may have missed: 

TEN THINGS I'VE LEARNED FROM MY DAD

HAPPY BIRTHDAY DAD!!

MEETING PRESIDENT AND MRS. GEORGE W. BUSH: UNWAVERING COURAGE AND PARENTING PHILOSOPHY COURTESY OF MIDLAND '64