Apple: ■ Apple butter ■ Apple cider (hot, cold, or sparkling) ■ Apple/cider donuts ■ Apple crisp ■ Apple fritters ■ Apple pie ■ Apple slices with peanut butter (not very “fall,” but a healthy, yummy snack!) ■ Apple turnovers ■ Apple walnut coffee cake ■ Caramel apples ■ Sauteed cinnamon apples Pumpkin: ■ Pumpkin bread ■ Pumpkin cheesecake ■ Pumpkin chocolate chip muffins ■ Pumpkin hot chocolate ■ Pumpkin ice cream ■ Pumpkin pancakes or waffles ■ Pumpkin ravioli ■ Pumpkin roll (with cream cheese filling) ■ Pumpkin soup ■ Pumpkin spice latte (PSL)
Family Activities Get into the festive fall spirit by visiting a local pumpkin patch or an apple orchard as a family. Picking apples or selecting the “perfect” pumpkin can be a fun way to allow your kids to contribute to decorating or a snack/meal while enjoying the great outdoors. Plus, apples are fiber-rich and heart-healthy! Note: Apple picking might be more enjoyable for older kids. There are all kinds of things you can do with your pumpkins: paint them, carve them up, or stage them (like stacking) on the front porch, to name a few. While people typically eat the apples they pick, you can also use them for unique DIY projects like creating apple garlands. questioning the impact they have made on our country—and the seasonal menus at the restaurants and coffee shops around town. I say, Why not make it a “both and” instead of an “either or”?! Worse comes to worse, I guess you can always try the Charlie Brown Thanksgiving diet this year: buttered toast, popcorn, pretzels, and jelly beans… Happy pumpkin and apple season, folks! Enjoy them while they last! Whether you’re “Team Apple,” “Team Pumpkin,” or prefer neither, there’s no
gallons of hard cider each year. Many people, from children to President John Adams, would even drink hard cider for breakfast! Apples have historically been associated with the fall harvest, since that’s when they’re picked. So it makes sense that apples, a symbol of prosperity and abundance, became associated with the Thanksgiving meal that celebrates these core values; hence, why apple pie typically sits next to the pumpkin pie at the dessert table. Moreover, The phrase “as American as apple pie” was introduced in the 1920s, highlighting apples’ value to the people and their “American- ness” (Is that a word?). Like its pumpkin counterpart, apple pie was very popular during the Civil War, but it was a hit on both sides because it was so affordable and easy to make. It may have been a hit back in the 1800s, but associating apples with autumn has clearly been carried into the present day. You can’t tell me getting a whiff of cinnamon- apple anything doesn’t make you think of fall. (I have a “Honeycrisp Apple” candle burning right now… veryyy fall vibes.) Seasonal Snacks: Whether you’re a traditionalist or wanting to try something new, you can never go wrong with either of these classic fall flavors in foods or drinks.
■ Pumpkin whoopie pies ■ Roasted pumpkin seeds
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