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| #Post#: 82173-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Do apples feature in traditional American Halloween? | |
| By: Aleko Date: November 1, 2025, 3:13 am | |
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| I've once again been observing how in the last decade or so the | |
| traditional English Halloween has been completely swamped by | |
| imported American merchandise, to the extent that everybody | |
| knows instinctively that a particular shade of orange = | |
| Halloween-themed, even though pumpkins aren't native to Europe | |
| and weren't grown and rarely ever imported here before the | |
| millennium. (The early settlers in New England were used to | |
| carving their Halloween lanterns out of turnips, but finding no | |
| turnips in the New World they made do with pumpkins instead.) | |
| I was wondering whether any of the traditional customs are still | |
| practised at home, and it occurred to me for the first time what | |
| a large part apples played in the Halloween of my youth. At | |
| parties on 31 October apple-bobbing (apples are floating in a | |
| tub of water, and you have to kneel down with your hands behind | |
| your back and grab one with your teeth) was absolutely de | |
| rigueur. It's a fun party game, but unlike other party games | |
| such as Pin the Tail on the Donkey, it was only ever played at | |
| Halloween. Nobody ever said this, it was just understood. And of | |
| the many ways in which one could predict one's future on that | |
| night, by far the commonest was to peel an apple all in one | |
| strip without breaking it and, standing up and not looking | |
| backwards, throw it with the right hand over the left shoulder. | |
| Then turn around and look, and it will have fallen in the shape | |
| of the initial of the person you're destined to marry. | |
| Well, of course apples are in season in October, so it's natural | |
| that they would be eaten and used at any festival taking place | |
| then (the same is true of turnips), but they are also | |
| traditionally a magical fruit (think Eve and the serpent, Snow | |
| White, many Grimm tales) so I wonder if there's more to it than | |
| that. And whether there are Halloween apple customs where you | |
| live? | |
| #Post#: 82174-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Do apples feature in traditional American Halloween? | |
| By: vintagegal Date: November 1, 2025, 8:43 am | |
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| I've always heard of bobbing for apples, may have done it once | |
| or twice as a kid. I doubt anyone does it anymore. | |
| #Post#: 82175-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Do apples feature in traditional American Halloween? | |
| By: Rho Date: November 1, 2025, 9:41 pm | |
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| Bobbing for apples was associated with Halloween in America for | |
| years. I haven't heard about it in a while because it is now | |
| considered unsanitary. No Halloween/Apple customs otherwise | |
| that I know of. Candy Coated apples are less popular too. | |
| Skeletins, zombies, gravestones etc have gained in popularity | |
| for decore. | |
| #Post#: 82177-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Do apples feature in traditional American Halloween? | |
| By: lowspark Date: November 3, 2025, 1:46 pm | |
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| I remember bobbing for apples as a kid and I hated it. Glad it's | |
| gone as a tradition because it's really just a big tub of saliva | |
| after about the third kid. Plus it's just hard to do. | |
| I have also seen it set up by hanging the apples by a string | |
| instead of putting them in a tub of water. Still hard but maybe | |
| not quite as gross. | |
| I don't necessarily remember it as specific to Halloween | |
| although that does make sense. | |
| I do remember apples being a legitimate trick-or-treat bag | |
| filler. I remember always coming home with one or two in my | |
| halloween bag at the end of the night. I don't think any of us | |
| ever ate them though. Who wants an apple when there's all that | |
| candy! | |
| I don't know what my mom did with them. Probably threw them | |
| away. | |
| Then someone (supposedly) stuck razor blades in the apples they | |
| handed out so that put an end to that. | |
| I say "supposedly" because who knows. Might have happened. Might | |
| have been urban legend. But anyway, that was the story when I | |
| was a kid. | |
| #Post#: 82178-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Do apples feature in traditional American Halloween? | |
| By: Hmmm Date: November 3, 2025, 3:06 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| We did bobbing for apples a few times as a child but I don't | |
| think it is done anymore. I know my kids were never introduced | |
| to it. | |
| Other apple related things from my youth for Halloween were | |
| candied apples or caramel apples. We did them at one Halloween | |
| party we hosted for the kids one year. I remembered why they | |
| seem to loose favor for Halloween. They took forever to make and | |
| only a couple of bites of any of the apples were eaten... which | |
| was the same as when I was young. | |
| #Post#: 82181-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Do apples feature in traditional American Halloween? | |
| By: lowspark Date: November 4, 2025, 8:30 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Ah yes! Candied apples! I don't think I've seen one in a long | |
| time. I remember eating them as a kid though. The candy was the | |
| red, hard, stick-in-your-teeth kind of stuff and not a whole lot | |
| of the apple itself got eaten. | |
| I do see caramel apples sometimes for sale in candy/chocolate | |
| stores. I often wonder who still buys those. | |
| Candied and caramel apples are hard to eat, messy, and IMO not | |
| all that great. They do LOOK quite tempting though. | |
| #Post#: 82182-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Do apples feature in traditional American Halloween? | |
| By: Titanica Date: November 4, 2025, 9:42 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=lowspark link=topic=2648.msg82181#msg82181 | |
| date=1762266605] | |
| Ah yes! Candied apples! I don't think I've seen one in a long | |
| time. I remember eating them as a kid though. The candy was the | |
| red, hard, stick-in-your-teeth kind of stuff and not a whole lot | |
| of the apple itself got eaten. | |
| I do see caramel apples sometimes for sale in candy/chocolate | |
| stores. I often wonder who still buys those. | |
| Candied and caramel apples are hard to eat, messy, and IMO not | |
| all that great. They do LOOK quite tempting though. | |
| [/quote] | |
| I buy caramel apples, and I love them. Especially the ones | |
| covered with peanuts! | |
| #Post#: 82188-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Do apples feature in traditional American Halloween? | |
| By: Lula Date: November 6, 2025, 8:40 am | |
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| Has anyone else ever made rotting corpse faces? You carve a | |
| face into an apple and let it sit at room temperature for a few | |
| days... | |
| #Post#: 82190-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Do apples feature in traditional American Halloween? | |
| By: Aleko Date: November 6, 2025, 2:48 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| No, that�s a new one on me! Sounds very creepy. Though I do a | |
| nice line in eyeballs: nurdle the centre out of a white pickled | |
| onion and replace it with an anchovy-stuffed olive. They�re very | |
| lifelike! | |
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