Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Kristen Bell Spills The Beans About Her 'Dishonest' Parenting Trick For Dealing With Her Kids' Halloween Candy

Kristen Bell Spills The Beans About Her 'Dishonest' Parenting Trick For Dealing With Her Kids' Halloween Candy
Allen Berezovsky / Getty Images

Some parents have really committed to learning how to make their Halloween candy—poof!—disappear, no matter the cost.

From "hilarious" videos circulated each year of kids filmed crying after being told all their candy is gone, to parents sharing "tips and tricks" for repurposing all that candy, it seems some parents will stop at nothing to keep the candy for themselves or make it go away entirely.


Then we look to the adorable couple that is Kristen Bell and Dax Shepard, and we realize there's a better way to curb the sugar.

In the Bell and Shepard house, moderation, consistency and honesty are key.

Their children, Delta, age 4, and Lincoln, age 6, are both enrolled in school. At the preschool they attend, they are encouraged to eat healthy foods and to celebrate their benefits and visual appeal.

Bell said:

"Our preschool reiterates all the time at lunch, 'You always eat your growing food before you eat your crunchies.' So they talk about what their growing foods are and why you eat them—and then your pretzels are crunchy and come last."

Bell encourages a consistent approach to healthy foods by promoting this idea in her home.

Bell explained:

"When I tell my kids what they have to eat, it's not just my rule, and that's all they'll hear about it. I tell them, 'When you eat broccoli, your brain grows bigger. Your body grows bigger. You can jump higher. You can feel better in school. You can watch more movies with me and understand them.' I let them know the effects of what eating good food means. And they're pretty willing to get through it."

Bell uses this same approach for enjoying Halloween candy, though there's a little exception here that Bell personally considers to be "a bit dishonest."

Bell confided:

"This is one place where we are a bit dishonest in our parenting, but if they ever asked, I promise I would tell them the truth. When they're trick-or-treating, we let them eat a couple of pieces of candy, and then when we come home, they put their pillowcases on the washing machine where they aren't readily available."

You would think that after the kids placed their pillowcases full of candy on the washing machine that it would turn into one big parental free-for-all, eating candy all night. But this isn't the case for Bell.

She clarified that she and Shepard might take a few pieces out of the pillowcases to enjoy, but only from the pile of candies she doesn't intend to give back to her children.

Every year, the morning after trick-or-treating, Bell sorts through the candies, looking for the particularly unhealthy varieties. Once those have been taken from the pile, she swaps in other delicious, but healthier options, focusing on more natural ingredients, such as sugar in place of high-fructose corn syrup.

Bell said:

"I make little changes, and they never know the difference. So I'm fine being dishonest about that. But if they asked, I'd say, 'I care about your body and these are better for you.'"

Even in this process of providing healthier, fun options, though, Bell still promotes honesty and openness with her children. She's clearly thought this out and even knows what to say to her kids when and if they ask her about the decisions she's made regarding their health.

And Bell is hardly the polar opposite of some of her more popular roles, like Frozen and The Good Place.

Though she may not want "to shove some chocolate in her face" when preparing for her sister's coronation, or to eat all the shrimp at the cocktail party like Eleanor Shellstrop, Bell still believes in "fun foods" and a healthy dose of moderation. She even stated that she continues to allow her kids to eat one or two pieces of candy each day until it's all gone.

Many parents could learn from this trick, as the emphasis is otherwise on who actually gets the candy in the household. Many parents refer to this as the "parent tax" and justify taking from the trick-or-treat candy that way.



Other parents could learn from this, as well, particularly those who allow their children to eat candy on Halloween night and then throw the rest away, or who hide the candy away in the hopes that their children will choose the healthier options that remain readily available in the house.

Whatever the reasons for filtering the candy supply, parents can learn a thing or two from the Bell and Shepard house.

Providing healthier sweets with more natural ingredients or overall less sugar allows children the fun of eating some candy without as many health risks.

Also teaching kids early on about eating their healthy foods before their "crunchy" or chewy ones can help with Halloween night. This way, they will fill up on their healthier foods and will be able to respect the nutritional value of those foods, while still having a chance to enjoy the flavor of their favorite snacks and treats.

There's always something to learn, even during a fun and spooky holiday.

The cookbook Bring Back the Taste of Childhood: 40 Candy Recipe you can make at Home is available here.

George Takei's Halloween Costume Contest 2019

More from Trending

Screenshot of Molly Ringwald; Donald Trump
@mollyringwald/Instagram; Win McNamee/Getty Images

Molly Ringwald Urges Fans To Speak Out Against ICE And 'Fascist' Trump In Powerful Video

Actor Molly Ringwald—best known for her roles as a member of the "Brat Pack" in films like Sixteen Candles and The Breakfast Club—denounced President Donald Trump and ICE, telling fans she "can’t stay silent and neither should you."

Ringwald, speaking out mere days after ICE agents murdered ICU nurse Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, told her followers in a post on Instagram that she had previously "been so proud to be an American but right now this is a fascist government.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Liam Conejo Ramos receiving pilot wings
@johnquinones/Instagram

5-Year-Old Boy Abducted By ICE Gets Wings From Pilot On Flight Home To Minneapolis In Sweet Viral Video

5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos, who was taken to an ICE detention facility in Texas along with his father, finally returned home to Minneapolis on Sunday and received his pilot wings thanks to Delta Air Lines pilots on the flight from San Antonio.

Ramos and his father were abducted by ICE agents on their way home from preschool in the Minneapolis area last month; Ramos is the fourth student from the Columbia Heights School District to be swept up in the Trump administration's nationwide immigration crackdown.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Carlson in pink jacket and Carlson from interview
MPR News

Woman In Pink Jacket Who Filmed Alex Pretti's Murder Speaks Out In Emotional Interview

Stella Carlson, better known online as the "woman in the pink jacket" who recorded the murder of ICU nurse Alex Pretti by ICE agents in Minneapolis, is urging Americans not to let ICE "intimidate" them.

Calls for an investigation have intensified from across the political spectrum after analysis of multiple videos showed ICE officers removing a handgun from Pretti—a weapon that authorities said Pretti was permitted to carry but was not handling at the time—before fatally shooting him.

Keep ReadingShow less
A photo of purse with "See you later" and a waving hand
Photo by Junseong Lee on Unsplash

People Break Down The Real Reason They Stopped Liking Someone But Never Told Them

Not every relationship is a forever deal.

Sometimes it's best to just let people go.

Keep ReadingShow less
Jordin Sparks; Halle Berry
Gary Gershoff/Getty Images; Kate Green/Amazon MGM Studios/Sony Pictures Entertainment/Getty Images

Fans Defend Jordin Sparks After She Publicly Asks Halle Berry To Read Her Screenplay About Menopause

You miss one hundred percent of the shots you don't take, and singer Jordin Sparks put that philosophy into action at the end of January.

Halle Berry has been a household name in Hollywood for the last few decades, and now in the middle of her life, she's loudly advocating for increased representation and awareness around women's health and women's experiences, especially what happens to a woman's body during perimenopause and menopause.

Keep ReadingShow less