*cranberry juice
*7-up
This is a staple for every occasion at my house. Add equal parts and have alot of it because it will go fast. Can be served over ice or partially frozen leaving a slushy consistency.
*cranberry juice
*7-up
This is a staple for every occasion at my house. Add equal parts and have alot of it because it will go fast. Can be served over ice or partially frozen leaving a slushy consistency.
1 (16-ounce) can chill without beans 1 (16-ounce) can retried beans 1 (8-ounce) package cream cheese
1 (8-ounce Jar chunky pico de gallo
1 (4.5-ounce) can chopped green chiles, undrained
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
Toppings: shredded Cheddar or Monterey Jack cheese with peppers, chopped black olives, sliced green onions
BONE CRACKERS:
COOK first 6 ingredients in a heavy saucepan over low heat, stirring often, 15 minutes or until cream cheese is melted. Sprinkle with desired toppings, and serve warm with Bone Crackers. Yield: 6 cups. Prep: 10min., Cook: 15 min.
2 (13.5-ounce) packages 9-Inch flour tortillas
1/2 cup butter or margarine, melted
1/2 teaspoon garlic salt
CUT tortillas with a 3 1/2 inch bone-shaped cutter, and place on baking sheets. Stir together butter and garlic salt; brush mixture on tortillas. BAKE at 250° for 30 minutes or until crisp. Yield: 60 crackers. Prep: 20 min., Bake: 30 min. NOTE: Flour tortillas may be cut into bone shapes using kitchen shears.
Ok, maybe a little gross, but a really eye catching food for all those Halloween enthusiasts.

In no way is there any kind of justification or morality for this kind of dish! I only know that a cold cut bedecked skull upon a platter into the midst of a crowd of Halloween revelers chanting Meat Head. Meat Head. MEAT! HEAD! is to know what it is to touch the face of an angel.
Here’s how to make your own.
Supplies
– 1 plastic skull
– 1 box of red or green gelatin
– Cream cheese (optional)
– Food coloring (optional)
– Plastic wrap
– 1-2 cookie sheets
– 1 1/2 pounds thinly-sliced cold cuts
– 1 hard boiled egg
– Olives or cocktail onions
– Toothpicks
1. Wash a plastic skull. If it isn’t labeled as food safe, wrap it tightly in plastic wrap. Place this on the most decorative platter you possess.
2. Prepare a batch of gelatin, using HALF the amount of water suggested. Pour this onto a plastic wrap-lined cookie sheet to a depth of 1/4 inch, chill and let it congeal. Use a red-colored flavor for a gory look, or green if you should care to add an alien undertone to the festivities.
3. When the gelatin has set to a rubbery consistency, slice it into swatches and mold these around the skull. It may not be possible to thoroughly cover the entire head. You may also opt to augment coverage with cream cheese, stirred with the food coloring of your choice.
4. Layer the entire surface with thin slices of cold cuts. Deli ham can provide a smooth, only mildly-revolting skin, but salami and mortadella evoke a delightful soupçon of postmortem putrefaction.
5. Halve a hard boiled egg, then halve the yolk and press sides into the eye sockets. Pimento-stuffed olives or pickled cocktail onions make delightfully disturbing pupils. If you should care to amp the hue with beet juice or red food coloring, who in the world would stop you?
6. Augment the presentation by decking the platter with cooked, sauced spaghetti, meat scraps, pimento-topped hummus – however the spirit moves you.
7. Lower the lights, clear a space on the buffet table, and select thematically appropriate music for your ascension into Halloween host immortality as you introduce Meat Head to his adoring new fans.
Serve with forks and crackers. Most guests by then are whipped into a state of meat-adoring ecstasy and will simply lunge at Meat Head with their fingers, clawing off his flesh and stuffing it into their gaping maws, but you yourself may wish to maintain a sense of decorum. You’re not a savage, after all.
PREP; 30 MIN., BAKE’ 20 MIN. PER BATCH
Children will love these sausage balls that stare back at them.
3 cups all-purpose baking mix
1 pound ground hot or mild pork
1 (10-ounce) block extra-sharp
Cheddar cheese, shredded
72 small pimiento-stuffed olives
COMBINE first 3 ingredients in a large bowl until blended.
SHAPE sausage mixture into 1-inch balls, and place on lightly greased baking sheets. Press 1 olive deeply in the center of each ball.
BAKE at 400° for 20 minutes or until lightly browned.
NOTE: For testing purposes only, we used Cracker Barrel Extra-Sharp Cheddar Cheese.
Cut bun-length hot dogs lengthwise into quarters. Place on grill rack crosswise, and grill uncovered to desired degree ot doneness. They’ll curl into “worms” on their own as they cook. Serve alone or in buns with mustard and ketchup. In addition to red, offer colored ketchups such as green and purple.