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Is Giving Out Candy on Halloween Adding to the Obesity Problem?

NovusDies
NovusDies Posts: 8,940 Member
I was just sitting here thinking about the probably 10k calories of candy the average kid might be taking home.

It is generally pretty cold does anyone make a pot of soup and give it out in cups?

What are other good alternatives? Seaweed snacks? They are green. Maybe fiber one bars? Or should a person focus on protein? I have a bunch of squid that I could smoke. That seems Halloween-ish.

Discuss.







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Replies

  • lkpducky
    lkpducky Posts: 17,620 Member
    edited October 2019
    NovusDies wrote: »
    I was just sitting here thinking about the probably 10k calories of candy the average kid might be taking home.

    It is generally pretty cold does anyone make a pot of soup and give it out in cups?

    What are other good alternatives? Seaweed snacks? They are green. Maybe fiber one bars? Or should a person focus on protein? I have a bunch of squid that I could smoke. That seems Halloween-ish.

    Discuss.

    Ask and you shall receive
    https://www.candystore.com/blog/facts-trivia/10-insane-japanese-snacks-will-haunt-nightmares/
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,091 Member
    NovusDies wrote: »
    I was just sitting here thinking about the probably 10k calories of candy the average kid might be taking home.

    It is generally pretty cold does anyone make a pot of soup and give it out in cups?

    What are other good alternatives? Seaweed snacks? They are green. Maybe fiber one bars? Or should a person focus on protein? I have a bunch of squid that I could smoke. That seems Halloween-ish.

    Discuss.







    Totally ignoring the issue of how kids would respond to receiving something other than candy:

    If parents won't let their kids eat unwrapped treats, home-wrapped bags of loose candy, or homemade treats like caramel apples, I sincerely doubt they'd let them consume cups of soup or home-smoked squid.

    It also seems very inconvenient if everybody were to start handing out food that had to be eaten on the spot. How many houses would kids go to if everything they received needed to be consumed immediately? I imagine it would turn into alternating stops for food with tricks that could be dangerous or illegal.

    All that said, I recall receiving the small snack size boxes of raisins, small coins, and (from the dentist in the neighborhood) toothbrushes, dental floss, and sugarless gum.
  • NovusDies
    NovusDies Posts: 8,940 Member
    lkpducky wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    I was just sitting here thinking about the probably 10k calories of candy the average kid might be taking home.

    It is generally pretty cold does anyone make a pot of soup and give it out in cups?

    What are other good alternatives? Seaweed snacks? They are green. Maybe fiber one bars? Or should a person focus on protein? I have a bunch of squid that I could smoke. That seems Halloween-ish.

    Discuss.

    Ask and you shall receive
    https://www.candystore.com/blog/facts-trivia/10-insane-japanese-snacks-will-haunt-nightmares/

    Those roasted baby craps are something I would have really wanted as a kid. Instead I just got candy.
  • NovusDies
    NovusDies Posts: 8,940 Member
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    Theoldguy1 wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    I was just sitting here thinking about the probably 10k calories of candy the average kid might be taking home.

    It is generally pretty cold does anyone make a pot of soup and give it out in cups?

    What are other good alternatives? Seaweed snacks? They are green. Maybe fiber one bars? Or should a person focus on protein? I have a bunch of squid that I could smoke. That seems Halloween-ish.

    Discuss.

    1) I wouldn't let my kid consume anything not in the original packaging until after I looked at it (unless I knew the people they got it from). Soup, given what could easily be put in it by a nutjob and be undetectable would probably be one of the first things dumped out.

    2) Kids have been trick or treating for years before childhood obesity became a thing. If the child has a weight problem (and even if they don't), the parents need to be parents and tell the child beforehand they can keep x number of candy items. Give the rest away or pitch.

    So, cans of soup?

    Those are scary and pretty nasty overall.

  • NovusDies
    NovusDies Posts: 8,940 Member
    NovusDies wrote: »
    h5rlvh58sikk.jpg

    No doubt. Where is the dressing?

    No dressing, dude. Dressing has calories. <nods>

    A light vinegar dressing would add practically nothing. Plus the kid might want relief from all the sweetness they have to endure.
  • NovusDies
    NovusDies Posts: 8,940 Member
    My friends' kids all have severe food allergies, so I tend to give out colored pencil sets, Play-Doh, silly putty, full sized coloring books, crayons, rubber stamps, keen hole punches (stars, foot prints, snow flakes, etc) and sketch books.

    Weirdly, the Play Doh is very popular with the teenagers. I totally didn't see that one coming.

    Interesting. Last year we gave out glow sticks and other assorted cheap crap. I looked at the playdoh as an option but figured the older kids would scoff at it.

  • NovusDies
    NovusDies Posts: 8,940 Member
    NovusDies wrote: »
    NovusDies wrote: »
    h5rlvh58sikk.jpg

    No doubt. Where is the dressing?

    No dressing, dude. Dressing has calories. <nods>

    A light vinegar dressing would add practically nothing. Plus the kid might want relief from all the sweetness they have to endure.

    Make it apple cider vinegar and you have the virtue-signalling bingo.

    That would keep the costs down. Thanks.
  • snickerscharlie
    snickerscharlie Posts: 8,578 Member
    edited October 2019
    When I was a kid, we used to get tons of fruit, especially apples and oranges.

    Hated it because a) it was fruit, not candy and b) it took up waaaaay too much room in the bag and make it heavy as hell. Thankfully, the pins and razor blades thing put an end to that nonsense by the time my daughter was trick-or-treating. :D

    There was one house that gave out full sized-chocolate bars every year. They were the best house on the block. Until they moved. I think the new owners got their house egged that first year. :p
  • ElizabethKalmbach
    ElizabethKalmbach Posts: 1,415 Member
    @NovusDies Yeah... I had the $.56 full sized cans and ran out early on. It was completely unexpected.

    This year, I have a case of glue and tiny packs of borax/glitter.

    SLIME KITS. :D
  • vanityy99
    vanityy99 Posts: 2,583 Member
    My friends' kids all have severe food allergies, so I tend to give out colored pencil sets, Play-Doh, silly putty, full sized coloring books, crayons, rubber stamps, keen hole punches (stars, foot prints, snow flakes, etc) and sketch books.

    Weirdly, the Play Doh is very popular with the teenagers. I totally didn't see that one coming.

    - Oh, and the fidget spinners the one year were incredibly popular. *eye roll*

    I just had late 90s kid nostalgia. I would’ve been so happy seeing that in my bag.