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Friday, December 25, 2015




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Saturday, October 31, 2015


Get your $3 burrito this weekend. Initially, customers scored a free burrito if they dressed up as a burrito. Anyone who shows up to a Chipotle on Halloween night (starting at 5 pm) with something "unnecessary" added to their costume will score a $3 burrito! Normally, you'd only have to wear a Halloween costume to get the deal... but not this year. Earlier this month, Chipotle released a spot featuring the fictitious "Cheapotle" - an additive-filled rip-off of the Mexican Grill- that tries to serve a customer a chicken rice bowl with additives like disodium guanylate and disodium inosinate. "We've always focused on sourcing the highest quality ingredients, and we are challenging our customers to learn about the unnecessary ingredients used in typical fast food by adding something "unnecessary" to their costume", said Mark Crumpacker, chief creative and development officer. The chain will donate up to $1 million of the proceeds to the Chipotle Cultivate Foundation to support a more sustainable food future. -The $3 deal is only on Halloween from 5 p.m.to close. A few examples would include a mummy wearing roller skates, a princess with a beard, etc. 
This may be better than any candy you'll stuff into a pillowcase this season. On Halloween you can score a $3 "Boorito" from your favorite joint, Chipotle. What does it take to snag the deal? According to Chipotle, "unnecessary additives in fast food are creepy," and to shed light on that notion, the burrito haven is asking its customers to incorporate something "unnecessary" into your costume. If you visit Chipotle between the hours of 5 p.m. and close on Halloween, the $3 burrito can be yours. What a time to be alive.

In the event you're out of ideas for unnecessary costume additions, Chipotle's got it all thought out for you. How about adding some roller skates to your mummy costume, or a beard with those fairy wings? We're thinking about donning a halo with our sexy Donald Trump costume. Just kidding. Take a peek at the hilarious and informative ad, to find out more about how you can walk away with the best Halloween treat in town.
Credit to: DOMINIQUE HAIKEL 




                                                Erin Edgemon | eedgemon@al.com

Want to score a Halloween deal and have an excuse to wear your costume a little longer?
Today only Chipotle is offering $3 burritos to anyone who spooks them by "adding something unnecessary to your costume."
The restaurant suggests adding something that really doesn't typically go with your costume (maybe not what you would wear to your party later) like a cowboy hat on a ghost or scuba gear on a skeleton.
This year's deal is a ploy to teach customers about "unnecessary additives" that are typically found in fast food.
The offer is good from 5 p.m. to close.
Visit Chipotle's website for more details on the campaign and to find your local restaurant.
Credit to:

Friday, October 30, 2015


In all my adult life, I've never been a fan of Halloween. And not for religious reasons or because I'm easily frightened or anything like that. The truth is: Halloween depresses me. It seems desperate. But I'm a mom now. And biases and personal attitudes have no place when it comes to one's child and this candy-based yearly mayhem. So I suck it up, think of something creative and educational for my son to wear (he's no old enough to have strong opinions yet), get dressed in something I thought of that morning, buy seventy dollars' worth of candy, and wait for the knocks of tiny fits on the door.
And then, I make it rain.
Okay, so I'm not married to one of the professional football players in our town, the ones who answer the door themselves and give out FULL-SIZED CANDY BARS. I do only ever deal in "fun size." But with those, this lady does not skimp.
Last year was our first year in this neighborhood. It's a fairly nice neighborhood situated within walking distance of a not-so-nice neighborhood. I was warned beforehand that the kids from the poorer streets would flood ours. "Just be aware," said a neighbor. "Some will have two bags, saying they're collecting for a sick brother or sister." She shook her head to indicate that this was why America is in a terrible moral state.
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Sure enough, I got a lot of kids at the door who weren't from our block. And yes, many held pillowcases for two. Some were clearly teenagers. (My mother cut me off at sixth grade, and I totally support her decision.) But I couldn't be as upset about it as some of the neighbors. I couldn't say, "Nuh uh, if your sister is really sick, let her come here and prove it. Also, quick, what's her birthday and middle name if she exists so much?" I couldn't tell the teenagers they were too old.
I figure: if you're willing to lie for candy, if you're willing to dress up when you're far too old for it, humiliate yourself in front of strangers, then dammit, you probably need these red-nougated 3 Musketeers bars more than I do. Have three. Go with God. Not my job to be the Sheriff of Halloween Town.
Maybe someday I will tell off these youths. Maybe someday I'll adopt the belief that it's my moral imperative to set these kids on the right path with my tough-but-fair rules on candy appropriations. Maybe a future president will someday say, "I was about to embark on a life of scamming and crime till one Halloween when a lady said 'No, I don't think you live around here and also I think you're making up that sick sibling and also are you like seventeen?'" But not yet. Not as long as we can afford the extra bag of candy it costs us once a year.
The lady next door can give out healthy snacks. The family across the street can give allergy-friendly stickers. The dentist can seriously take a vacation or just turn out the lights and don't answer the door because honestly, handing out dental floss on Halloween is like a divorce lawyer handing out his cards a wedding. No one wants your hard doses of reality today, sir. You are RUINING everyone's buzz. Not cool. And everyone can shake their heads at the bussed in poor kids. But that's not going to be me. Not this year, anyway. Because guess what? I don't hold this holiday sacred. I don't really care who shows up at my door. If it's within the two hour trick-or-treating window, you're getting a fist full of candy. It doesn't matter if you're too old, too obviously lying, the meter reader, or the sanitation department telling us that pizza boxes STILL aren't recyclable. You are going away with delicious empty calories in fun holiday packaging. And you will like it.
So this year will be another year of liberal candy distribution. Maybe it won't always be like this. And maybe I'm making it harder for the Halloween gatekeepers to get their point across, and yeah, maybe society needs such people. I suppose I'm glad we have them. But I'm even more glad I'm not one of them. Happy Halloween, anyone.

Credit to:

Brach’s recipe for witchy fingers cookies. Brach’s

Candy corn is one of those treats that divide people into camps. Some people love it; others shun it.
I fondly recall candy corn as a Halloween treat when baby boomers were kids, so it surprised me to learn that it dates back to the 1880s. When the Goelitz Confectionery Company began mass production at the turn of the 20th century, the candy was called “Chicken Feed.” How cute is that?
Today, 25 million pounds of candy corn are sold annually, according to the National Confectioners Association. Brach’s makes 80 percent of all candy corn and has new flavors this fall that include Peanut Butter Cup, S’mores, Caramel Macchiato and Pumpkin Spice.
Here’s a whimsical Halloween cookie recipe from Brach’s that makes creative use of candy corn.

Witchy Fingers cookies

Makes about 16 cookies
  • 1 (16-ounce) roll of refrigerated sugar cookie dough, softened
  • Brach’s Indian Corn (1 per cookie)
  • Small tube of red icing
  • Plastic Spider Rings (optional) to decorate cookies
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Divide roll of cookie dough into 16 slices, and roll each slice into long strips approximately ½ inch wide by 3 inches long. (The dough will expand during baking)
Place six of the strips on an ungreased cookie sheet and bake for 6 minutes. (Bake in batches, only 6 at a time. They will cool quickly.)
Remove cookies from oven and immediately dab each “finger tip” with red icing.
Place one Brach’s Indian Corn on top of red icing and press lightly. Wrap a spider ring around the other end, if desired.
While the freshly baked cookies are still soft, use a straight-edge or butter knife to gently press three horizontal lines in the center of each cookie, to make “knuckles.”
Let cool completely before serving.

Credit to:


The so-called war on sugar has a new battleground: Halloween. Some Americans are so spooked about the harmful effects of sugar they are finding healthier ways to indulge during the holiday, without disappointing children by handing out apples.


Sugary chocolates still dominate Halloween candy handed out and provide an annual sales treat for companies like Hershey Co, privately held Mars and Nestle SA. But as more consumers demand healthier candies, manufacturers could see the so-called "War on Sugar" scare away some of the $2.1 billion that the National Retail Federation says Americans will spend on Halloween candy this year.



The World Health Organization has linked sugar intake with chronic diseases including diabetes and heart disease, a finding disputed by the Sugar Association, a U.S. trade group.



Some companies, like upstart candy maker Unreal, privately owned health products maker Xlear Inc and Kosher Foods producer Kayco, have developed low-sugar candies from unusual concoctions, like puffed quinoa and cabbage, to win over health-conscious, sugar-wary shoppers.



The data may give some a fright. Nearly one-fourth of Americans say they are buying healthier candy like dark chocolate or chocolates with added fruits or nuts for seasonal occasions like Halloween than five years ago, National Confectioners Association (NCA) data shows.



In addition, one in five say they are more likely to buy chocolates or candies in a smaller portion size. Confectionery makes up about 13 percent of Americans' 10.8 million tonne-per-year sugar consumption, and the candy industry says that Americans know there is sugar in candy and moderate their intake accordingly.



TOIL AND TROUBLE



Still some shoppers are trying different brews this year. Kevin Schiffman, a self-described "health freak," bought a can of Unreal chocolates for $20 during a recent trip to Whole Foods, opting to spend significantly more on the treats he plans to hand out to trick-or-treaters than last year.



The treats, which are made from fair trade cocoa and cane sugar, puffed quinoa, and cabbage, carrots and beets for coloring, contain around 5 grams of sugar per serving, compared with over 20 grams for many traditional candy bars.



In prior years, he said he handed out assorted chocolates like Reese's and Kit Kats, wary that health-minded people sometimes draw groans and eye-rolls from trick-or-treaters by giving out apples or toothbrushes.



"There wasn't really much out there that you could choose from unless you're giving out fruit," said the 35-year-old Boston-area resident, who works in sales at WikiFoods, a Cambridge, Massachusetts, food company.



"We don't want to get eggs on the house." Xlear hopes to win over customers with its Sparx brand of candies that use xylitol, a fibrous sugar found in birch trees and corn cobs that it says is safe for diabetics and lower in calories than cane sugar.



At the moment, they are only sold at health food stores and distributed to dental offices to give to kids as part of Halloween candy buyback programs, though the company is planning to expand, said Shad Slaughter, a consultant at Xlear.



Kayco has introduced Chocolate Leather, a chewier, lower-sugar chocolate bar. "With the growing awareness of parents who would like their kids to eat less sugar, this is going to grow," said Glenn Schacher, a research and development specialist in New York who developed the product of Kayco



The Obama administration has pushed for food companies to include added sugar content on their labels, which has drawn sharp rebukes from the sugar lobby. For the moment, most Americans will still hand out candy and chocolates filled with sugar to trick-or-treaters on Saturday and use the holiday as an excuse to indulge.



"I can be a pig four times a year," said Tom Cardamone, a 46-year-old Brooklyn, New York, resident, who said he is not normally much of a candy eater. "Every holiday, I know it's candy, and I have my addictions."

Credit to: