Kid-friendly Spooky Halloween Lizard Liquid Recipe - Sticky Fingers Cooking
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Recipe: Spooky Halloween Lizard Liquid

Recipe: Spooky Halloween Lizard Liquid

Spooky Halloween Lizard Liquid

by Dylan Sabuco
Photo by CynthiaL04/Shutterstock.com
prep time
10 minutes
cook time
makes
4-6 servings

Fun Food Story

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Spooky Halloween Lizard Liquid

A wickedly colorful treat, this bubbling brew changes its look depending on your choice of sorbet—creepy green, eerie red, or glowing orange. You’ll blend smooth pumpkin purée with sorbet and then add sparkling water for a sweet, earthy, bubbly treat perfect for little ghouls and goblins!

Happy & Healthy Cooking,

Chef Erin, Food-Geek-in-Chief

Fun-Da-Mentals Kitchen Skills

  • blend :

    to stir together two or more ingredients until just combined; blending is a gentler process than mixing.

  • measure :

    to calculate the specific amount of an ingredient required using a measuring tool (like measuring cups or spoons).

  • pour :

    to cause liquid, granules, or powder to stream from one container into another.

Equipment Checklist

  • Blender (or pitcher + immersion blender)
  • Can opener
  • Liquid measuring cup
  • Wooden spoon
scale
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Ingredients

Spooky Halloween Lizard Liquid

  • 1/2 15-oz can pumpkin purée
  • 1 pinch granulated or brown sugar, or honey drizzle
  • 1 C sorbet (lemon, raspberry, lime, or orange flavor)
  • 2 C sparkling water

Instructions

Spooky Halloween Lizard Liquid

1.
intro

Have fun making this silly and fun Halloween drink! The color can be green, red, or orange, depending on the sorbet you choose.

2.
measure + blend

Measure 1/2 can pumpkin purée, 1 pinch of sugar, and 1 cup sorbet into a blender (or pitcher for use with an immersion blender). Blend the mixture until smooth. Pour in 2 cups of sparkling water. Stir a few times and serve this wicked concoction.

Surprise Ingredient: Pumpkin!

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Photo by Irina Wilhauk/Shutterstock.com

Hi! I’m Pumpkin!

"I'm orange, round, like to sit on your porch making faces in the Fall, and I'm good to eat! I'm a pumpkin! Of course, not all pumpkins are orange. We can be white, red, yellow, tan, blue, dark green, and even black! We're not always round, either! We might be tall and oblong or short and squat. We love it when families come to the pumpkin patch to pick out their favorite pumpkin to take home!"

History

  • The pumpkin is a winter squash that is believed to have originated in Central America. Seeds from pumpkins were found in the highlands of Oaxaca, Mexico, dating back to 7000 to 5500 BCE, about 9,000 years ago! 
  • Now, pumpkins are grown on six continents. The only continent that can't grow pumpkins is Antarctica!
  • Native Americans were eating pumpkins for centuries before European colonists arrived. They ate pumpkin seeds, used them as medicine, and made mats from flattened and dried strips of pumpkins.
  • Archaeologists have found pumpkin residue among the 800-year-old ruins of the Ancestral Pueblo people. 
  • A pumpkin is not the same as a Jack-o-Lantern. A pumpkin is only a Jack-o-Lantern once it's carved! Carving pumpkins into Jack-o-Lanterns is a tradition that started hundreds of years ago in Ireland. The Irish used to carve turnips, but when Irish immigrants arrived in North America and found pumpkins aplenty, they began to use those instead. 
  • Pumpkins were once endorsed as a remedy for freckles and snake bites. As if we need a cure for freckles!
  • According to Guinness World Records, Stefano Cutrupi of Italy harvested the heaviest pumpkin on September 26, 2021. His humongous pumpkin weighed over 2,702 pounds.

Anatomy & Etymology

  • Why are pumpkins orange? Before a pumpkin matures, it's green in color due to the presence of chlorophyll, a green-pigmented nutrient required for the pumpkin to absorb and use sunlight for energy and food. However, as a pumpkin matures, it develops phytonutrients called "carotenoids," which give a pumpkin its bright orange color. 
  • The stem of a pumpkin is often referred to as its "handle."
  • Thin, hairlike "tendrils" are often attached to the pumpkin's stem. As it grows, the pumpkin's tendrils cling to the vine and are green in color. These tendrils attach to and wind themselves around fences, posts, other plants, and objects on the ground to anchor the vine and protect the plant from the wind. 
  • Leaves grow on the pumpkin's vine and absorb sunlight to provide energy for the plant and its fruit.
  • We collectively refer to the pumpkin's outer skin and inner fruit as the pumpkin's "shell." Ribs are the indentations around the outside of the pumpkin's shell. 
  • The meat of the pumpkin is called the "pulp," or sometimes affectionately referred to as "pumpkin brains!" Attached to the pulp are lots of pumpkin seeds that can be cleaned, dried, and roasted with salt (delicious!). The inner part of each pumpkin seed contains a nut (technically, the "germ" of the seed), and this is what eventually develops into a new pumpkin. 
  • The word "pumpkin" originated from the Greek word for "large melon," which is "pepon." The French called it "pompon." The English used "pumpion." And, American colonists changed "pumpion" into "pumpkin."  

How to Pick, Buy, & Eat

  • A pumpkin is used as a vegetable in cooking, but it's actually a fruit! It's a member of the Cucurbita family, which includes squash and cucumbers. 
  • Pumpkin flowers and seeds are edible.
  • Undoubtedly the most popular recipe that uses pumpkins is pumpkin pie. But pumpkin pulp can be used for everything from baked goods to soups to ice cream, pudding, and even beer!
  • You can store uncut pumpkins for up to 60 days in a cool, dark place!

Nutrition

  • Pumpkins contain potassium, vitamin C, soluble fiber, and beta carotene. 
  • Vitamin C and beta carotene are two powerful antioxidants that help protect cell membranes and the immune system. 
  • Potassium is good for circulation and healthy blood pressure, and it's great for bones. It also helps take blood pumped from hearts through arteries and veins to muscles and organs.
  • Beta carotene is great for the health of our eyes! The body takes beta carotene and converts it to vitamin A, which our eyes need to stay healthy. When this happens, it signals the immune system to create white blood cells, which help the body fight off infection. 
  • Soluble fiber is so good for our digestive systems! Fiber also helps slow the absorption of blood sugar into our tissues.

 

History of Punch!

Photo by New Africa/Shutterstock.com
  • Punch originated in India and was called "paanch," meaning "five," as it was often made with five ingredients, like lemon or lime juice, sugar, water, spices, and alcohol.
  • East India Company employees introduced the drink to England in the 17th century. The word "punch" was first recorded in 1632. Eventually, it made its way around Europe and to the United States. 
  • In the US, punch is often a party drink made with fruit or fruit juices and some type of drink mixer, like lemon-lime soda, ginger ale, or soda water. It can be non-alcoholic for children and family parties or have added alcohol, like rum or wine, for adult parties.
  • In the 1950s and 60s, sherbet punch was very popular. Sherbet, an icy dessert made of fruit juice and milk, was added to the fruit punch to make it creamy and more colorful. When you added the soda to the sherbet, it also made the punch fizzy. Rainbow sherbet punch was especially popular. You can also use dairy-free sorbet in place of the sherbet.

Let's Learn About Halloween!

Photo by Lordn//Shutterstock.com
  • Halloween, as a holiday, has evolved and changed tremendously over the centuries. It started around 2,000 years ago, and most historians agree that the very first Halloween celebration began in Europe by the Celts. Who were the Celts? Celtic people lived in Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Cornwall, Isle of Man, and Brittany and spoke unique languages and had special cultural traditions. 
  • The first festival the Celts celebrated was known as Samhain (pronounced "sow-win"), and it was a time to celebrate the harvest, start a new year, honor the beginning of winter, and commune with otherworldly spirits. In addition, people had big bonfires to honor people who had died.
  • People started wearing costumes on Halloween to honor otherworldly spirits walking among us on Earth. During Samhain, people dressed in feathers and furs so spirits would not recognize them, and this is said to be the start of people dressing up on Halloween.
  • Today, people in several countries celebrate Halloween on October 31, the eve of All Saints' Day. Halloween is also known as All Hallows Eve. Halloween costume parties are popular for both adults and children. 
  • Another activity is "trick-or-treating," where children in costumes go house to house (or business to business) to ask for treats. The "treat" is usually one or more wrapped candies, but sometimes includes fruit and money. The "trick" refers to a threat of mischief if a child is not given a treat. 
  • Trick-or-treating began in Scotland at least 500 years ago, with the tradition of "guising." Kids dressed in disguises would get a treat as a reward for giving a small performance at each house.
  • Halloween decorations include hollowed-out and carved pumpkins or "jack-o'-lanterns," ghosts, skeletons, spiders, witches, and black cats.

Lettuce Joke Around

What do ghosts use to wash their hair?

Sham-boo!

Lettuce Joke Around

Why are ghosts so bad at lying? 

Because you can see right through them!

Lettuce Joke Around

Why didn’t the skeleton want to go to school? 

His heart wasn’t in it!

That's Berry Funny

Who helps the little pumpkins cross the road to school?

The Crossing Gourd!

Lettuce Joke Around

What is the most important subject a witch learns in school? 

Spell-ing!

Lettuce Joke Around

What do you use to mend a jack-o-lantern?

A pumpkin patch!

Lettuce Joke Around

Why didn’t the skeleton cross the road? 

He didn’t have the guts!

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