
We love Halloween! Seriously, in our house Christmas may last a little longer, but there is nothing like the feeling of an approaching Halloween for us. Once October 1st rolls around we are ready to go and we have to hold ourselves down until the 15th (completely arbitrary date, incidentally) to start decorating, which we do fairly low-key for all our love of the holiday. Weâll put up a dark wreath on the front door, witches will fly outside our front window, slightly spooky lanterns suddenly pop up in the living room and sometimes even in the bathroom (what is a bath if not a more pleasant smelling witchâs brew, reallyâŠ), and our black cat is suddenly not just a pet but also a lovely real-life Halloween decoration.

And so, as the end of August and the start of September approach, it is time to start planning for our annual Halloween party. (This might be a good time to tell you that Iâm not necessarily known for doing things at the appropriate time always, while weâre on the subject. For example: I will happily watch Christmas movies in May â seriously: not a problem for me. At all.)
The party itself is not a massive shindig, if Iâm honest. Itâs not a full-on come-to-our-haunted-house-in-full-fancy-dress type thing: itâs really more of a chance for the English speaking kids that our kids have befriended over the years to get together, catch up, and do some light Halloween celebrating, Anglo-American style.
I do always look forward to it very much: itâs fun to see them all every year, another year older, some of them having gone off in different directions as theyâve gone on to different schools. The Halloween party is a chance to reconnect for them and us. Itâs also quite a challenge to organize so I begin thinking about it already around this time of year with anticipatory glee. Since Iâm in the Halloween-planning mood already, and you can never begin too early, for this blog post I thought Iâd share some ideas for family-friendly Halloween get-togethers. Here goes.
Halloween Quiz Lots of people love celebrating Halloween, but how many know its origins, or its equivalents around the world with their accompanying traditions? There are dozens of fun factoids you can pour into this quiz. All you really need to do is read up on this holiday, maybe branch out a little into witches, ghouls and superstitions, and before you know it youâll have a ton of questions to choose from. Of course, there are also a bunch of ready made quizzes available online; I just prefer to make them myself because, well: control freak, nerd, show-off â take your pick!
If there are younger kids at the party, do take care to keep the questions and answers accessible to all â or make some questions that are better answerable for the older kids, and some for the younger ones, then team up older and younger kids to give them even chances. Surprisingly, I found that some of the âyoungerâ questions were actually quite challenging for the older kids as well.
Halloween Mad Libs Itâs mad libs, Halloween style! There are plenty of mad libs templates you can find online for this, but if youâre feeling creative, you can come up with your own stories as well.
Halloween Creations There are a bunch of games that will allow kids to be creative and really run with their own ideas. Itâs great fun to see what they come up with! Here are some options:
Witchâs Brew: have everyone come up with their own witchâs brew â whatâs in it, how would it taste, what would it do, what spell goes with it?
Draw What You Hear: play some Halloween songs or haunting melodies and have the kids draw something thatâs described in the song or how it makes them feel. Some good songs for this are Monster Mash by Bobby âBorisâ Pickett & The Crypt Keepers, and Purple People Eater by Sheb Wooley, or for more abstract pictures Erutanâs Transylvanian Lullaby, and Camille Saint-SaĂ«nsâ Danse Macabre.
If I Made a Movie: Have them think up a movie title for a Halloween movie they would, and have them explain what the story would be.
Or just play a game of Once Upon a Time⊠Give a (spooky) story prompt, then hand the tale off to the next person to add their few lines, then to the next person, and so onâŠ
Who Are You? For this game, you ask everyone to answer 6 questions about themselves â questions like: favorite scary monster? favorite Halloween candy? etc â then collect the sheets. Without revealing the names, you read out the answers on each sheet and see if the others can guess whose sheet it is.
Fun food You can dress up a lot of easily made drinks and snacks as something else. Pink lemonade? Unicorn wee. Snack sausages? Severed fingers (just slice a little sliver off the top and tear the other end off, then leak some tomato ketchup out of the torn end). Lasagne: entrails and sinew with a layer of grilled ectoplasm (who knew you could grill that stuff?!) Cola? Witchâs brew: just pour it over into a lightly more ornate bottle and stick on a homemade label. Be sure to list the ingredients, like snail slime, eye of newt, you know â the usual.
If you have the time and you feel so inclined, you could of course also decide on some Halloween themed snacks of your own creation, such as cupcakes decorated with flying bats made out of fondant, monster shaped cookies, or mummified sausages (sausages wrapped in ribbons of puff pastry).

One time, I actually made something that looked almost too disgusting to eat: I had carved a nauseated face in a pumpkin, and then put some risotto con fungi in a heap in front of it and some in the pumpkinâs mouth. It took a while before I could get anyone in the house to eat risotto againâŠ
Of course, standard fall treats are always fun: roasting marshmallows over a fire, making smores, serving pumpkin spiced lattes and hot cider. To make them more Halloween-y, you can do these wearing a witchâs hat or a vampire cape, and possibly playing some eerie music in the background.
Gift bags or baskets We put together a little something for the guests to take home afterwards to extend the fun a little longer. I usually make a Halloween crossword, a word search, or a word scramble to put in the bag, with a cute pen or pencil. Iâll add a small bag of candy, or even a homemade decorated cupcake, and a spooky thank you card.
One year, when I was feeling particularly inspired, I even spent quite a bit of time making stuffed Halloween monsters out of old socks and scarves. I placed them together in a big basket with a sign in front of it saying âAdopt a Monsterâ. (They all got adopted, even though they looked fairly awful and amateurish. I am NOT good at sewing. Itâs the thought that counts, I guess.)
Honestly, I could probably keep listing and coming up with Halloween party suggestions, but seeing as how itâs still only August, I think Iâll leave it at this for now. Knowing myself, Iâll be writing a few more blog posts to do with Halloween in one way or another between now and 31 October. So if you love the season like I do, check back for more over the coming few weeks.
Krijg helemaal zin in Halloween đ
Haha, ja ik ook!