The times. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1972-current, October 31, 2018, Image 12
Nick Bowman Features Editor | 770-718-3426 | life@gainesvilletimes.com S'hc Srtnes gainesvilletimes.com Wednesday, October 31,2018 What’s your favorite candy? What sweet Halloween treat does Georgia love the most? <* ''IcsrtO •UOtf BVU lOO twl 10 •“» of them,” Wiley said. Candy corn is another popular item Wiley sells at J&J. Although she’s not sure how many customers purchase it to actually eat it, she said they sell “a ton of candy corn.” She said a lot of it ends up as deco ration — or maybe it goes to Alabama, where it’s the most popular Halloween candy. While the J&J family has had years of practice stocking for Halloween, each year is a bit of a surprise. Wiley said it’s always a guessing game since the candy is sold throughout the entire season. Early on, it’s picked up for school festivals and church events. During the middle of the sea son, customers are stocking up and preparing for trick-or-treaters. Then there’s the last-minute shoppers who don’t but candy until the day before or the day of Halloween. Regardless, Wiley said J&J always has candy ready for its customers. And one thing is for sure whether it’s Halloween or not: Chocolate sells no matter what. “We sell a little bit of non-chocolate, but it’s mostly chocolate, really,” Wiley said. miniature granola bars. As she looked at the 16 feet worth of candy at the front of the store, the items that needed restocking were Reese’s, Snickers and M&M’s. But there are definitely some candies that aren’t as popular, she said. “Some of the unpopular ones are some of the old-timey candies,” Wiley said. “Or anybody that’s trying to go a healthy route, like if it says sugar-free or gluten-free. “Anything healthy is not Halloween candy.” Clair Robins, a blogger at the bulk candy seller www.candystore.com, analyzed the seller’s shipments to each of the 50 states in recent years and found some surprises among national tastes. The most popular candy in Georgia is Jolly Rancher. After Swedish Fish won most popular the past couple of years, Jolly Rancher took over the top spot with 142,000 pounds — or just a bit lighter than the space shuttle Endeavor — sold over the past 11 years. The nation’s most popular are Skit tles, M&M’s and Snickers. “If you had told me to list 20 things, Jolly Ranchers wouldn’t have been one ■’ QUtStions^^s tetusit \Z r ' Nr ° r ‘'“"«» BY LAYNE SALIBA lsaliba@gainesvilletimes.com Each Halloween, the one thing everyone can count on are giant piles of candy greeting, luring and taunting them as they walk into the grocery store. But is there a best Halloween candy in 2018, with its flood of new flavors, textures and types promising to keep us all wired for days after the Wednes day holiday? How does one even pick between Peep’s Spooky Cats or Reese’s Spooky Eyeballs? Turns out, Gainesville shoppers tend to keep it classic for Halloween, accord ing to Emily Wiley of J&J Foods and daughter of store owner Darrell Wiley. “Anything chocolate, like Reese’s and Snickers, is popular,” she said. The way to go, though, is with the bags of assorted candy. That’s her favorite and what seems to be custom er’s favorite, too. That way, “kids can find the perfect thing they like.” The most popular is the bag filled with dif ferent chocolate candies, but the non chocolate bag is also popular. People go for variety — so long as that variety doesn’t include those aAJONi doi O! V For a frightfully spooky Halloween, serve up a cemetery BY DANIEL NEMAN Tribune News Service It has come to this. What started, cen turies ago, as a combination of a harvest festival and concerns that spirits could eas ily enter our world at this time of year has now developed into a holiday where people serve food that looks like cemeteries. Trick-or-treating is important, too. Kids like their candy. Adults like to hand out candy if they can hang onto a little for themselves. Doughnuts and apple cider are a vital part of the Halloween celebra tion, as well, and so are costume parties where adults dress up like pregnant nuns or their favorite characters from “Game of Thrones.” But this year, cemetery food is where it’s at. It’s theme eating at its finest, a dip or des sert that looks like it’s scary but really isn’t. Cemetery food is just a fun, Halloweenish way to nibble at a dessert or a dip and feel like you’re in the spirit of the season. Emphasis on the spirit part. With cemetery food, the way it looks is more important than the way it tastes. If you can create an amusing representa tion of a graveyard, it doesn’t matter if it is made with chocolate pudding mix, Cool Whip and crushed Oreos. Sounds terrible, right? On the other hand, it is made with chocolate pudding mix, Cool Whip and crushed Oreos. It sounds amaz ing, right? And it kind of is, though you may wish you were eating a handful of mini-Snickers bars instead, because they are so much more healthful. The pudding-Cool Whip graveyard scene comes from the folks at Kraft, who devised it as a way to use as many Kraft products as possible. I am not ashamed to play into such an obvious commercial ploy, because it looks tastes great and looks so cute. This is decor, rather than cooking, so it takes almost no time to make. You begin by mixing milk and instant chocolate pudding. Be sure to use the instant pudding and not the stuff that you have to cook, because that will never set and it will turn into a soupy mess more horrifying than anything else you will see on Halloween. Not that I would know. Ahem. Anyway, you just mix the pudding goo with some Cool Whip goo and then mash up some Oreo cookies (Nabisco, which makes Oreos, is owned by the same company that owns Kraft, which makes Jell-0 pudding and Cool Whip). You pour half of the cookie crumbs into the agglomerated goo and the other half on top. All that’s left then is the decorating. The other cemetery spread I made is savory, but it is just as fun in a not-really- scary kind of way. Basically, it’s a four- layer dip with some ghosts and gravestones on top. The dip itself is typical and does not involve much effort. It has refried beans on the bottom, straight from the can. Then, a mixture of sour cream and packaged taco seasoning. There is a bare-minimum-gua- camole on top of that (avocados mashed together with minced garlic and a bit of mayonnaise), and a cup of salsa on top. A sprinkling of sliced green onions completes the illusion of grass, sort of. The hardest part, if you are not artisti cally inclined, is cutting the ghosts, tomb stones and a spooky tree out of tortillas. This task will be easier if you use relatively decent tortillas; the cheapest ones tend to fall apart when you try to cut them with the tip of a knife. The tortilla props only take seven or eight minutes to bake, and they become nicely crisp. Just stick them in the spicy cemetery, and see if anyone can resist the fun. Yield: 12 servings 1 (16-ounce) can refried beans 2 cups sour cream 1 (1-ounce) package taco seasoning 2 avocados, mashed 1 clove garlic, minced 2 tablespoons mayonnaise Pinch of salt 1 cup salsa 2 scallions, green parts only, chopped 2 large flour tortillas 1. Spread refried beans into a small baking or casserole dish. Mix together sour cream and taco seasoning, and spread on top of the beans. Mix together the avocados, garlic, mayonnaise and salt, and spread on top of the sour cream mixture. Spread salsa on top, and scatter chopped scallions across the salsa. Refrigerate at least 1 hour, and up to 1 day. 2. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. 3. Cut tombstones, ghosts and a scary tree out of the tortillas, and place the shapes on the prepared baking sheet. Bake until lightly browned and crispy, about 7 to 9 minutes. If desired, decorate these shapes with a black, food-safe marker or black decorating gel. Place shapes in cemetery and serve with potato chips or tortilla , chips. / / \ \ J Yield: 18 servings 2 (3.9-ounce) packages chocolate- flavored instant pudding 3 cups cold milk 1 (12-ounce) tub frozen dessert topping, such as Cool Whip, thawed and divided 15 Oreo cookies, crushed 3 (or more, optional) oblong vanilla creme sandwich cookies Black decorating gel 5 candy pumpkins 10 candy corn pieces 1. Whisk together pudding mixes and milk in a large bowl until thoroughly combined. Let stand 5 minutes. Stir in 3 cups of the thawed dessert topping and half of the Oreo cookie crumbs. Spread into a 13-by-9-inch baking dish or casserole. Sprinkle with remaining Oreo crumbs. 2. Refrigerate 1 hour. Meanwhile, decorate vanilla sandwich cookies with decorating gel to resemble tombstones. 3. Insert decorated cookies into top of dessert just before serving. Add candies. Drop large spoonfuls of remaining thawed dessert topping to resemble ghosts.