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Archives for 2020

Archives for 2020

Hershey’s Halloween Treats

October 9, 2020 By Jeannine Cintron

Happy Choco-Ween! Halloween and chocolate go together better than goblins and ghouls. These recipes are as festive and adorable as they are indulgent. Your kids might not even miss trick-or-treating. Get more ooey-gooey good recipes at hersheys.com.

Monster Cupcakes

6-1/2 cups vanilla frosting
16 drops green food color
3/4 cup chocolate sprinkles
72 pieces candy eyes
1/2 cup HERSHEY’S Kitchens Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chips or HERSHEY’S SPECIAL DARK Chocolate Chips
1 teaspoon red sprinkles

  1. Prepare HERSHEY’S “ESPECIALLY DARK” CHOCOLATE CUPCAKES; cool completely. Tint vanilla frosting to desired shade of green.
  2. Spoon or pipe about 3 tablespoons frosting on top of each cupcake. Flatten top of frosting and edge off sides with knife or spatula.
  3. Cover top of each cupcake with chocolate sprinkles. Position candy eyes on side of green frosting; add chocolate chip “bolts” to the side and design scar with red sprinkles or thin frosting. Use similar techniques to design a Monster bride, if desired. Carefully remove cupcake papers, if desired and place on serving plate. Makes about 36 decorated cupcakes.

Chocolate spider Halloween treats

REESE’S Peanut Butter Pumpkin Spiders

8 REESE’S Peanut Butter Pumpkins (1.2 oz. each)
32 Large pretzel twists Large (2-1/2 to 3 in.)
1/4 cup HERSHEY’S Milk Chocolate Chips, HERSHEY’S SPECIAL DARK Chocolate Chips or HERSHEY’S Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chips*
Candy eyes

  1. Line tray or cookie sheet with wax paper. Remove wrappers from desired number of peanut butter pumpkins. For each spider, cut 8 matching curved sections from pretzels which will form the legs. Set aside remaining pretzels pieces.
  2. Place milk chocolate chips in small microwave-safe bowl. Microwave at MEDIUM (50%) 30 seconds; stir. If necessary, microwave at MEDIUM an additional 10 seconds at a time, stirring after each heating, until chips are melted and smooth when stirred. Transfer to small heavy duty plastic food storage bag. Cut off one corner of bag about 1/4 inch from the tip.
  3. For each spider, place peanut butter pumpkin on prepared tray. Attach pretzel legs and candy eyes to spider with melted chocolate. Allow chocolate to set before moving spiders.

* This amount of chocolate will make about 8 spiders.

Read Next | Bunny Butt Cupcakes


Witch Hat Halloween treats

KISSES Witch’s Hat Cookies

24 HERSHEY’S KISSES Brand Milk Chocolates
24 fudge bottomed striped cookies
1 cup HERSHEY’S Milk Chocolate Chips
Decorating icing or gel in tube (optional)
Chocolate sprinkles (optional)

  1. Remove wrappers from chocolates. Place cookies with chocolate-coated bottom facing up on wax paper covered tray or cookie sheet.
  2. Place milk chocolate chips in small microwave-safe bowl. Microwave at MEDIUM (50%) 1 minute; stir. If necessary, microwave at MEDIUM an additional 15 seconds at a time, stirring after each heating, until chips are melted and smooth when stirred. Dip bottom of chocolate piece into melted chocolate and place in center of cookie. Repeat for all the cookies. Allow chocolate to firm before continuing.
  3. Pipe icing or gel around base of chocolate piece. Use chocolate sprinkles to make square buckle for hat, if desired. Refrigerate until ready to serve. Makes 24 cookies.

berry trifle
Read Next | Your Kids Will Love These Recipes

Filed Under: Recipes and Food

Getting Your Family Dressed, Fed, and Out the Door

October 9, 2020 By Sandi Haustein

Your husband hits the snooze button for the third time, you haven’t even thought about what to pack in your kids’ lunches, they’re still sleeping and need baths, and everyone has to be out the door in fifteen minutes. Sound like mornings at your house? It doesn’t have to. With these time-saving tips, you can reduce the stress of your family’s rushed mornings.

Get a head start the night before. Anything you can do ahead of time will help in the AM when time is tight. Start right after school by making sure all homework papers go right back in each child’s backpack after assignments are finished. Each evening, make sure your kids have put their backpacks in a designated morning spot, taken baths or showers, and laid out their next day’s clothes. Then, all they have to do when they wake up is get dressed, eat breakfast, and stop by their morning spot for everything they need to take to school.

Say no to Mr. Snooze Button. If you’re not a morning person, consider going to bed at a decent hour so you’ll be less tempted to sleep in (and in and in). Tracy Webb, a self-described night owl and mother of two, enjoys staying up late but admits that her family’s mornings run a lot smoother if she goes to bed by 10:30 PM and gets up as soon as her alarm goes off. When you get a full night’s sleep, you wake up refreshed and ready to face whatever your day holds.

Teach your older children to get ready on their own. Taking charge of a morning routine is an important step in your children’s growing independence. Train your kids to pick out school clothes, fix an easy breakfast, brush their teeth and their hair, and get shoes and coats on – all by themselves. This way, you can focus on finishing any last-minute morning tasks or helping younger children get ready.

Divide and conquer. If your children are too young to get ready on their own, split morning responsibilities with your spouse like Leia Rayman does. While Leia showers, her husband, Cory, feeds breakfast to their infant daughter, Janelle, lays her back down for a short nap, packs her bag for the sitter, and leaves for work. Leia is then free to finish getting ready before waking Janelle up, dressing her, and dropping her off with the sitter on her way to work. If you have multiple young children, try playing man-to-man: each of you take one child to feed, dress, and get to daycare or school.

Read Next | Make a Lunch Kids Will Devour

Make mass batches of your family’s go-to sandwiches. Some sandwiches freeze great in individual sandwich bags, especially if you hold the mayo (try a little butter for moisture instead). Thirty minutes is all it takes to fill your freezer with a big batch of sandwiches that will last a couple of weeks. The frozen sandwich acts as an ice pack for the rest of the lunch but thaws by lunchtime. Add in a prepackaged yogurt, a piece of fruit, and a juice box, and you have a healthy lunch that’s easy to grab and pack in a hurry.

Institute a “No breakfast until shoes are tied” rule. In Carolyn Brednich’s house of four boys, breakfast used to be the time-zapper of their morning. As the boys laughed and dawdled at the breakfast table, the minutes ticked by, leaving them in a rush to get dressed and gather backpacks. Now, the kids have to be completely dressed with shoes on before they can sit down to eat. Since implementing this rule, Carolyn’s sons stay focused on getting ready quickly. “Boys are always hungry, so breakfast is a good motivator to hurry up!” she says. You can implement the same type of rule with technology. If your kids waste time texting or watching TV in the morning, allow them electronics privileges only after they are completely ready for the day.

Expect the unexpected. Whether your kindergartener spills milk at breakfast or your teen forgets his backpack at home, the unexpected happens, even with the perfect routine in place. Emily Hanauer, a mother of four, says, “Don’t beat yourself up if things don’t go perfectly. Sometimes my kids have to buy lunch because I didn’t realize we were out of bread, or my four-year-old wears his favorite shirt three days in a row because I don’t want to fight him over it. Some things just aren’t a big deal in the long run.” Try setting your departure time ten minutes earlier than needed to account for the occasional flat tire or that forgotten backpack.

Use these tips to make your mornings less stressful, but remember what’s most important – that your mood, as the parent, sets the tone for the day. Take a tip from Emily: “No matter how crazy it is or how late we are running, I always pray for the kids and give them each a giant hug before we get in the car. I want their day to start on a good note, knowing that I love them.”

Now that sounds like something worth waking up for.

By Sandi Haustein, a freelance writer and mom to three boys. She prides herself on getting her kids to the bus stop on time.

kid doing science experiment
Read Next | This Is What the the New Normal Will Be like for Your Kids

Filed Under: Positive Parenting

Parents Should Know about These Common Eye Myths

October 8, 2020 By Michelle Yannaco

It’s important to separate fact from fiction, especially when the topic is eyesight. Knowing how to take good care of your eyes is the first step in protecting your sight. Don’t be blind to the facts—below are 10 common myths about vision, along with the facts.

Myth: Failure to use proper glasses will hurt your eyes.
Fact: This statement does have some truth in it for a small number of people. Some children have eye problems that can be corrected, and it is important that they wear their glasses. But vision problems caused by heredity or physical injury do not go away, even with glasses. While corrective glasses or contacts are needed to improve eyesight, using your eyes with or without glasses will not damage your vision further.

Myth: Reading in dim light can damage your eyes.
Fact: Reading in dim light can cause eye strain, but it will not hurt your eyes permanently.

Myth: Watching television for too long or sitting too close can damage your eyes.
Fact: There is no evidence to suggest that watching television for too long or sitting too close can damage your eyes. Young children often sit close to the television screen because they have a greater ability to focus on objects closer to their eyes than adults do. Due to this, children hold their reading material close as well. However, as they grow older, these habits usually change. If not, this may be a sign of myopia (nearsightedness). To detect possible eye problems, children should have regular eye exams.

Myth: Eating carrots will improve your vision.
Fact: While it is true that carrots, as well as many other vegetables, are rich in Vitamin A, which is an essential vitamin

for sight, only a small amount is necessary for good vision. A well-balanced diet, with or without carrots, provides all the nutrients the body needs. In fact, too much Vitamin A, D or E may actually be harmful.

Myth: Reading fine print for too long will wear out or damage your eyes.
Fact: This is one of the most widely held myths about vision. Some people are concerned that they should not read too much because it will wear out their eyes. Although extensive or prolonged reading of fine print can cause eye strain, there is no evidence to suggest that it will damage or wear out your eyes.

Read Next | Don’t Overlook Eye Exams as Part of Annual Physicals

Myth: Wearing contacts prevents nearsightedness from getting worse.
Fact: Wearing contact lenses will not permanently correct nearsightedness. Myopia or nearsightedness is usually an inherited condition, and contact lenses can only be expected to improve vision. Contact lenses cannot prevent nearsightedness from getting worse.

Myth: Cataracts can be removed with a laser.
Fact: A cataract is a clouded lens of the eye—this procedure cannot be performed by a laser, only by surgery. However, after the surgery, the wrapping around the lens (called the casing) is left behind. This casing can become cloudy and cause blurry vision. The casing can then be opened with a laser, but the procedure should not be confused with the surgical removal of the clouded lens.

Myth: An eye examination is necessary only if you’re having problems.
Fact: Everyone should follow proper eye healthcare, which includes regular eye exams, whether or not you are having any noticeable signs of problems. Children should be tested at birth, at 6 months of age, before entering school and periodically throughout the school years. For adults, the frequency depends on your doctor’s advice and may be every two years or more often. If you have diabetes or an eye disease, you should go every year for a comprehensive eye exam.

Myth: There’s nothing you can do to prevent vision loss.
Fact: More than 90% of eye injuries can be prevented, when simple and relatively inexpensive safety precautions are followed. That means choosing the correct eye safety glasses for the job and wearing them 100% of the time. Regular eye exams can help save your sight. Early detection of vision problems is crucial to preventing vision loss from many eye diseases—especially diabetic retinopathy and glaucoma.

Provided by Prevent Blindness America

pediatrician with child
Read Next | Health and Wellness Resources for Your Staten Island Child

 

Filed Under: Health and Safety

CityParks Green Girl Afterschool Program

February 5, 2020 By Michelle Yannaco

CityParks Green Girls Empowered by ING Afterschool program is an environmental science club that engages middle school girls throughout the school year in fun-filled online adventures about New York City’s parks and waterways, encouraging them to realize their potential to create change within the natural environment.

Through hands-on activities and the stimulating concepts of virtual field exploration, technology, advocacy and project-based science, Green Girls develop an understanding of natural ecosystems in NYC’s parks, learn about future careers in the sciences and understand their own power to advocate for the environment and their parks.

This year, because of the pandemic related changes, Green Girls will have a particular opportunity to focus on how climate change is affecting our city and our future. Students will learn about the history of climate action and how young people have advocated for the environment. The Green Girls Afterschool program will take part in advocacy as a group.

The program is available online in spring 2021 from March 8 – June 10, 2021.

If you have any questions or would like to register your child via phone please contact Sam Schwartz at (212) 360-2746 or sschwartz@CityParksFoundation.org. Applicants will be notified of acceptance into the program.

You can apply online at cityparksfoundation.org/green-girls-school-application.

For more information and to learn more about City Parks Foundation programs visit CityParksFoundation.org.

summer camp kids
Read Next | This Is Everything You Need to Find an Amazing Summer Camp Program in Staten Island

Filed Under: Featured Articles, School, Camp and Education

11 Ways to Celebrate a Safe, Socially Distant Halloween

October 9, 2020 By Jeannine Cintron

Halloween is scary all on its own, but a year without Halloween is even scarier. You might not be planning any trick-or-treating this year, but Halloween is far from cancelled. Here’s a few safe but fun ways to celebrate the spookiest time of year with your family.

  1. Switch out your boring old face mask for a cool Halloween one in the days leading up to Halloween. You can decorate your own face mask to make it festive or purchase something fun at the store.
  2. Weather permitting, host an outdoor Halloween party for friends. Check out some yummy treats you can serve.
  3. Jump in the car and hunt for haunted houses in your neighborhood. Staten Island is home to some heart-stoppingly spooky ones. Here’s where to find the best haunted houses around.
  4. Create your own haunted house! You can be one of the stops on everyone’s haunted house route this season. The more elaborate the decorations, the more crowds you will attract.
  5. Host a scary movie marathon, compete with candy corn instead of popcorn. For younger kids, try some of the less scary flicks.
  6. Read Next | This Is How People Celebrate Halloween Around the World

  7. Have you ever “boo’ed” someone? It’s a fun new trend where you leave a basket of Halloween/autumn goodies outside a friend or neighbor’s door with a tag that says” you’ve been boo’ed!” They pay it forward by booing someone else. You can even keep it anonymous for an air of mystery.
  8. Host a Zoom costume party. This is a super fun idea for little kids who want to show off their costume to all their friends.
  9. Host a Trunk-or-Treat in your neighborhood, enlisting responsible adults to “man” their trunks and ensure everyone is staying socially distant and safe.
  10. Host a spooky scavenger hunt. Look to Pinterest for some fun ideas.
  11. Drive-in movies have been a quarantine staple this year. Pack up some festive snacks and check out a Halloween-themed one
  12. Go pumpkin picking! Here’s some nearby farms.

berry trifle
Read Next | Your Kids Will Love These Recipes

Filed Under: Fall Tagged With: safety, Halloween

Incredible Kids Awards

November 18, 2020 By Jeannine Cintron

Staten Island’s Incredible Kids Awards recognizes and honors outstanding children in the community. Each month, we ask Staten Islanders to nominate kids who’ve made a difference in their community or in the lives of others. The honorees and their impressive achievements will be recognized in Staten Island Parent and on siparent-com.go-vip.net, and will receive a $150 Amazon gift card, courtesy of Staten Island University Hospital.

Scroll down and click the button at the bottom of the page to enter or vote for the child you feel deserves to be honored in Staten Island’s Incredible Kids Awards.


Meet June’s Featured Pediatric Specialists

Staten Island University Hospital’s board-certified pediatric sleep specialists evaluate and treat conditions that may cause your child to suffer from inadequate sleep or breathing problems. Left untreated, these problems may lead to learning and behavioral issues, as well as serious conditions affecting the heart and lungs. Our program is one of the few in New York City that is certified to provide sleep testing on children from birth through the teen years.

 

Dr. Chan SIUH

 

Siu-Pun Chan, MD

Siu-Pun Chan, MD is a New York-based Northwell Health physician who specializes in Pediatric Pulmonary Medicine, Sleep Medicine, Pediatrics.

Dr. James SIUH

 

Pushpom James, MD

Pushpom James, MD is a New York-based Northwell Health physician who specializes in Pediatric Pulmonary Medicine, Sleep Medicine, Pediatrics.

 

incredible kid button

Click the button above to enter or vote for a child in Staten Island’s Incredible Kids Awards!

Nomination Period: June 1 – June 16
Voting Period: June 16– June 3
June will be the last Incredible Kids Awards Month!


Meet Staten Island’s Incredible Kids

Meet the September Incredible Kid of the Month, Caylee Pecorato!
Meet the October Incredible Kid of the Month, Angelina Palmer!
Meet the November Incredible Kids of the Month, Amina & Ariana Cross!
Meet the December Incredible Kid of the Month, Julianna DiLeo!
Meet the January Incredible Kid of the Month, Elena Borrero!
Meet the February Incredible Kid of the Month, James Fauci!

Filed Under: Family Fun

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