DIY Snack: Chocolate Covered Pretzels

HalloweenPretzels

Chocolate-covered pretzels are one of my favorite snacks before an afternoon swim or bike ride. I grab a few on my way out the door for a blast of carbs. They also make great road trip food, especially when mixed into a big bag of trail mix with roasted almonds,dried fruit, and toasted coconut. 

I always attempt a Halloween baking project with my nieces and nephews. This year, I settled on decorating pretzels to give the kids a break from the constant flow of sugary treats. I know pretzels aren’t quite health food, but they do qualify as more of a snack than a dessert, at least for the under 5 set.

I brought my bag of supplies over to my sister's house. Within an hour after the kids came barreling over after school, we had platters full of chocolate-covered pretzels covered in sprinkles and shredded coconut. My sister gamely let the kids eat their fill of pretzel β€œsnacks.” And she and I snacked while packaging up the rest into little bags for my apartment building's Halloween party.  

The best part about this pretzel project is that the kids participated in every step. I didn’t have to worry about them getting burned by a hot oven or cookie tray; licking raw eggs off their fingers; or flinging batter from the electric mixer onto the ceiling.

No kid project is without a mess, of course. My sister stood by with a tub of baby wipes to swipe chocolate off the kids’ fingers and faces before they left the kitchen. And we covered the work surface with paper, Maryland crab feast-style, so that the clean up consisted of two steps: roll all of the trash into the paper and pitch.

β€”Bec

HalloweenPretzels2


A DIY Snack: Decorated Chocolate-Dipped Pretzels

 

What you need to gather:

-craft paper or newspaper

-masking or painter’s tape to secure the craft paper or newspaper

-parchment paper

-grid-shaped pretzels or gluten-free pretzels of any shape

-chocolate. We chopped a few 3.5 oz. bars of Perugina Chocolate, one white and one dark.

-Toppings like: sprinkles, shredded coconut

What you need to prepare:

-To minimize cleanup, cover the table or work surface with craft paper or newspaper and secure it with masking or painter’s tape.

-Line a baking tray or dish with parchment and set it near your work area.

-Set small dishes of toppings out.

-Set a pile of pretzels out for each decorator.

-On the side, have wipes or wet paper towels ready to swipe messy hands.

How to melt the chocolate:

- Divide chocolate into small ramekins or other microwave safe dishes, one for each person decorating. Microwave for 60 seconds, remove and stir. If chocolate is not completely melted, microwave for an additional 30 seconds.

How to decorate:

-Dip pretzels in chocolate and then right into the toppings.

-Set finished pretzel on the parchment-lined baking tray.

Let the chocolate dry:

-The kids ate a bunch of the fished pretzels before the chocolate dried, but I preferred to wait. Be sure the chocolate is totally dry before you pack the pretzels to give as gifts. The white chocolate hardened on its own in about 20 minutes. The regular chocolate took longer; setting the tray in the fridge seemed to speed up the process.

To Package (or not):

-To prepare these as a gift, package into food safe bags and tie with a ribbon. To keep as a snack, store pretzels in an airtight container.

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