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Christmas

From present ideas to party food, find all your Christmas inspiration here.

need ideas for yummies to hang on the tree

14 replies

breaghsmum · 02/12/2008 22:45

i want to make some nice treats to hang on my tree, any suggestions ?

OP posts:
MilaMae · 02/12/2008 23:29

I've threaded popcorn in the past you can put cranberries on too. Have made gingerbread hearts the AK recipe is good but now just tie on the Ikea hearts. Hawkins Bazaar sell tiny candy canes and Lidl sell these white chocolate circles covered in 100s & 1000s that I'm going to thread on (cheaper than the foil covered things). None of it will see Xmas Eve as the dc nibble it

TheRealMrsJohnSimm · 02/12/2008 23:39

Probably a very daft question but......if edibles aren't wrapped and you have a real tree is there any issue with sap or chemicals from the tree getting into the food?

Yes I know.....neurotic mother alert

cherryontopofthexmastree · 02/12/2008 23:52

string some pop corn? make stained glass biscuits?

breaghsmum · 03/12/2008 11:47

stained glass biscuits??? pray tell

OP posts:
cherryontopofthexmastree · 03/12/2008 11:49

you can get a kit from tesco- basically its gingerbread biscuits with a hole cut out of the middle, you put boiled sweets in the whole- something clear like fruity ones, then cook for a bit to melt the sweet and it looks like stained glass

ChristmasPresence · 03/12/2008 16:29

I used last year's advent calender (the plastic bit from the inside) and used it as a mould - pour in melted choc and hey presto you instantly have lots of chocolates for the tree. Wrap in foil, or cellophane and use those bauble hooks to hang them up.

SatsumaMoon · 03/12/2008 16:37

Ikea have some little decorated cones (which you could probably make yourself) which you can fill with sweets, etc

TheGoat · 03/12/2008 16:40

i have another word for christmas tree yummies - micefood.

misshardbroom · 03/12/2008 16:48

milamae - that is such a great idea. Only I've just scoffed the packet of them that I bought

I do Nigella gingerbread tree biscuit things iced with royal icing so it goes hard and doesn't drip off tree. Could do gingerbread men with each family member's name iced on??

Also I do candy canes (£1 for about 10 of them in Sainsbo's).

Not edible, but food related... I always do dried orange slices hung on tartan ribbons, and - just for a moment - believe I'm a proper wife & mother.

MilaMae · 03/12/2008 17:36

How do you dry orange slices? Do you just slice,put on a baking sheet and put in airing cupboard?

ChristmasPresence · 03/12/2008 19:10

Also, I always get gold or red-coloured sweets, eg mini bags of maltesers, single finger Twix and hang them on the tree.

idlingabout · 03/12/2008 19:23

Sorry, just mis-read this as hanging yummy mummies on the tree

misshardbroom · 03/12/2008 19:33

Dried orange slices... I slice the orange into thin (5mm??) slices and place them on a sheet of baking parchment on a baking tray. Then I put them in a really low oven (maybe 70 - 100 degrees centigrade depending on how fast your oven is) and then I watch them like a hawk! I think I give them half an hour or so, after which I pop back and check them every 5 - 10 minutes. Sometimes I turn them over if I think they're a bit too thick, but usually I don't need to.

Or... you can buy the slices ready dried in Hobbycraft but then you miss out on the lovely smell drifting through your house, and the all-round feelings of smugness.

MilaMae · 03/12/2008 19:50

Many thanks don't often get to feel that all round feeling of smugness so will have a go. What's the betting I'll be chipping off orange scented black tar off my baking sheet ?

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