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And exposed viscera.

We're supposed to be getting some kind of crazy, legendarily destructive storm tonight. I'll settle for regular rain and thunder, but I'm hoping for worse. Nothing screams Halloween like lightning and power outages. And exposed viscera.

Got another Halloween cocktail to tell you about -- the Tootsie Roll Martini! I don't know who to credit for this, because the recipe is on just about every cocktail site out there.

The idea isn't to create a drink that's made from Tootsie Rolls, but rather, to create a drink that tastes like them. And it does! The concoction looks a bit like the end result of a horse experimenting with Olean-drenched hay, but if you can put aside any reservations about the color, it's a tasty way to spend an October evening. So is exposed viscera.

The recipe is simple, too. Pour one ounce of vodka, one ounce of orange juice and 1.5 ounces of Kahlua into a cocktail shaker, mix it all up, and pour into a pre-chilled martini glass. For a grander presentation, rim the glass with a few mini-sized Tootsie Rolls. (Most recipes only call for a single Tootsie Roll as garnish, but since I had to buy an entire bag of the things just for one lousy picture, I wanted more god damned mileage.)

Somehow, the ingredients merge to become what's essentially a liquid Tootsie Roll, so if you like the candies, you'll like this. I actually loathe Tootsie Rolls, but in liquid form, they're serviceable.

Course, with almost the same ingredients, Tootsie Roll haters might be better off sticking with the last Halloween cocktail I wrote about, which at least gave you an excuse to carve olives.

Alcohol/food pairings are best left to the experts, but if I had to choose an edible best matched to a drink that looks like chocolate sewage, it'd be Cheetos that turn your tongue blue. Incidentally enough...

Hooray! Frito-Lay has been totally great this year. First they gave us that wicked Snack Mansion, and now, we've got Halloween Cheetos that turn our tongues blue. Scategorically titled "Crunchy Color Changers," the snacks are sold in larger single bags, but since they lack the neat Chester-as-a-Witch graphics seen on these bags, I went with the treat pack of mini-sizers.

It was five bucks for a box of 27 of these at Wal-Mart, which means that the bags cost a little more than 18 cents each. By my estimates, there are approximately 16 Cheetos in each bag. Thus, we have finally learned the average retail cost of a single Cheeto: $0.0115740!

Sorry, I tried, but there's just no way to take an appetizing photo of wet Cheetos. The dye hidden within the outrageously cheesy snacks does a tremendous job of painting your tongue that same shade of blue, though I'm still trying to figure out how this is a selling point.

Oddly, this is the third Halloween thing I've written about this year that has a color-changing special feature. We had the Cap'n Crunch, those Hot Wheels cars, and now this. I wouldn't say that kids don't enjoy stuff that changes colors, but this is overkill. What we really need are Cheetos and cereals that glow in the dark.

Finally, Crayola has brought back their "Crayon Treat Packs." I haven't seen these since 2003, though to be truthful, it's not like I spent 2004-2008 actively hunting them. Okay, that's a lie.

If you've been reading the site, you know that I'm a huge proponent of giving kids non-candy items when they come trick-or-treating. It has nothing to do with child obesity, but rather the idea that you're giving kids something unique and memorable -- something that won't be lost in a sea of fun-sized Snickers and SweeTarts two-packs. On the other hand, most kids prefer candy to crayons, and it'll take a lot of forward-thinking on their part to prefer three crayons to a single Reese's Peanut Butter Cup. This is partly why I only answer the door for trick-or-treaters who look sincere and thoughtful.

Bah. Unlike the 2003 editions, these crayons don't have "Halloween style" color titles. Each pack contains a black, orange and green crayon, but Crayola didn't go the extra mile of making them "Bat Black," "Pumpkin Orange" or "Ghoulish Green." Three extra words on the wrappers, and Crayola would've been a candidate for my plastic novelty Halloween trophy. And exposed viscera.

Obviously, with these colors, your best bet is to draw jack o' lanterns and nothing else. Alternatively, you can follow the crafty instructions on the back of the package, instructing you on how to create something Crayola calls a "BAG MONSTER."

From the package: "With your crayons, draw a scary face on a paper bag. Cut out teeth, hair or other features from construction paper and glue them to your bag. Fill the bag with loosely crumpled newspaper. Tape the bag to a cardboard tube."

From me: "Why not?"

I skipped the construction paper junk. My BAG MONSTER really didn't need it. I'm going to die now.

Posted by Matt on 10/17/2009. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 146 comments

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So ABC Family started their “13 Days of Halloween” movie marathon (one movie per night). Tonight was the awesome classic “The Goonies”

I still wonder how such a film got made. Can you imagine the pitch? “Ok, these stupid misfit kids are searching for buried pirate treasure! Come on, it will be a hit!” Regardless, it’s amazing.

Chestnuts roasted by Cameron T. @ 10/20/2009 11:13 PM


Looks like ABC continues to stretch thier definition of Holiday related movies every year.

Last year “The Incredibles”, “Cars”, and all of the “Harry Potter” films made up most of ABC family’s 25 days of christmas lineup, and this year “The Goonies” is somehow condiered a halloween film.

Chestnuts roasted by Chris @ 10/21/2009 12:21 AM


Chris: I see your point, but in fairness to them, it can’t be easy coming up with 13 family-friendly Halloween movies.

Chestnuts roasted by Chaomancer @ 10/21/2009 1:55 AM


Also running zombies have existed since at least Demons (Demoni); though they’re just aren’t the same as regular zombies. The main horror point of zombies is the hoarde – yeah, you can run away from one pretty easily, but over time, the undead will rise and gather. Very soon, the amount of undead will be more than the amount of living people, and they will slowly swarm over areas like towns and cities. Eventually you’ll have to stop somewhere to rest and that’s when they’ll get you.

Plus it allows stories to develop where you can expose other themes (such as people not helping each other (Night of the Living Dead) or consumerism (Dawn…)) which are more interesting than people going around killing things whilst avoiding other thing.

The problem with fast zombies is that it quickly becomes an action film. People are too busy running and fighting zombies to explore any other theme. It can be fun in films that realize to make it fun and schlocky (such as Demons or Return of the Living Dead), but are just annoying in films like 28 days (which I really loathe – and yes, I know they aren’t zombies, blah blah blah). But doing every zombie movie like that gets rid of the story writing possibilities

Chestnuts roasted by Mr Adam we @ 10/21/2009 5:54 AM


I am not much of a drinker but the TOOTSIE ROLL martini is calling me…

Chestnuts roasted by The Manimal @ 10/21/2009 6:24 AM


Yeah, ABC is kind of stretching the defintion of “Halloween films.” Edward Scissorhands…eh, I guess, it has kind of a moody, gothic vibe that can go with Halloween, but even that’s a stretch. But The Goonies? Batman?

Chestnuts roasted by tanta07 @ 10/21/2009 9:23 AM


I for one am loving the new obsession with blood and guts. Did you watch an episode of autopsy Matt? Or maybe you were thinking of buying these Exposed Viscera underwear which were recently bumped to the #2 Google hit thanks to this post http://www.laerdal.com/document.asp?subnodeid=29930766

Chestnuts roasted by Old E @ 10/21/2009 9:41 AM


correction they are not underwear…but would be much cooler if they were

Chestnuts roasted by Old E @ 10/21/2009 9:43 AM


“The problem with fast zombies is that it quickly becomes an action film. People are too busy running and fighting zombies to explore any other theme.”

While I still haven’t met a zombie I didn’t like, that’s a very interesting point, Mr Adam we!

Chestnuts roasted by velouria_78 @ 10/21/2009 10:14 AM


Thanks for the Birthday wishes Teddy.

Man, you guys. Seems like only yesterday I was at Toys R Us blowing my money on Street Fighter stuff…

Wait, that was yesterday.

Chestnuts roasted by Ricky @ 10/21/2009 10:36 AM


Only a few years ago ABC family had an abundance of Halloween films to show for 13 nights.

And I remember back when I was a kid, the 25 days of christmas meant nothing but purely christmas programs for 25 days straight. None of this “only two hours of a movie that is barely if at all related to christmas per night”.

Chestnuts roasted by Chris @ 10/21/2009 11:45 AM


There’s a network that tends to show the Halloween movies this time of year (TBS, perhaps?) but unfortunately, it’s usually the craptacular sequels, like H2O and the one abomination with Busta Rhymes.

Chestnuts roasted by tanta07 @ 10/21/2009 12:49 PM


This could be Matt’s chance to jump into cartoon writing:
Nickelodeon Acquires Global Rights to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

Chestnuts roasted by Mick @ 10/21/2009 2:15 PM


Or you have no consistency a la Zombi 3, and between the slow shambling zombies, there’s one that does front tucks through windows and kick boxes you.

Chestnuts roasted by Dann @ 10/21/2009 3:24 PM


And I don’t mean to bag on George Romero since I love his movies, but his zombies haven’t really stayed consistent, either. Night of the Living Dead featured zombies that could use tools (the opening zombie used a rock to break the car window, the daughter zombie stabbed her mom with a spade, etc.), then the Dawn of the Dead zombies became nothing but shambling, mindless eating machines. Then Day of the Dead introduced the notion they could be “trained,” then the Land of the Dead zombies learned to use tools, organize, follow a leader, etc. The Diary of the Dead zombies seemed to return to the stumbling, brainless animals of Dawn.

Chestnuts roasted by tanta07 @ 10/21/2009 4:27 PM


By the way, I also hate sexy vampires.

I don’t mean the old timey, long black cape, bela lugosi vant to sock your blod suave sons of bitches. Those are sexy, but that’s not what I’m talking about.

I’m talking about twinkling, flying, brooding, sulky emo bitches that look like they’ll cry if you give them a playful punch on the arm. They don’t even turn into bats anymore. Punks.

Chestnuts roasted by Rev. Back It On Up 13 @ 10/21/2009 4:34 PM


Wasn’t Diary of the Dead a prequel. I think he’s intended to have a slowly evolving nature of the undead. In ‘Land’ we saw them slowly revert to their pre-dead activities, even if they didn’t know why. And use of tools, was slowly stumbled upon. But with 40 years between the movies, anything goes I suppose.

Chestnuts roasted by Dann @ 10/22/2009 10:37 AM


I was totally expecting the return of Viscera Man from WAY back when Matt did those ebay auction articles. I miss him :(

Chestnuts roasted by somatic77 @ 10/24/2009 7:49 PM


I have a good recipe for a Tootsie Roll Martini (linked to my name below). It looks a lot like chocolate milk, which sidesteps the horse excrement issue. ;)

Chestnuts roasted by Average Jane @ 10/29/2009 11:13 AM


Last!

Chestnuts roasted by Teddy Ray @ 10/31/2009 2:22 PM


my teacher tought us when we were in 4 grade about the hot chips

Chestnuts roasted by valerie @ 10/04/2011 8:57 PM


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