We have found a few things on the internet to help create a FUN holiday with the kids during March Break!!
Food
Broken Glass Jello
4 small boxes of jello, different colors
1 can sweetened condensed milk (Like Eagle or something)
2 envelopes unflavored gelatin
water
Dissolve each box of jello separately, into one cup of hot water. Pour into individual containers (small tupperware works well) and chill overnight.
9×13 pan.
Cut flavors of jello into small blocks.
Mix together carefully in pan.
In a separate bowl, dissolve 2 envelopes unflavored gelatin in 1/4 cup cold water. Add dissolved gelatin to 1 3/4 cup hot water and condensed milk. Cool.
Pour cooled milk mixture over jello and chill overnight.
This makes for great party food. The colors are so pretty your guests will be impressed, like you took hours to make it!




Finish product Step 1 Step 2 Step 3
Semi-Homemade Donuts
This recipe for semi-homemade donuts starts from a can, but comes out baked hot and fresh. Using ready-to-use biscuit dough, these donuts are easy and fast to make.
* biscuit dough - ready to use or from scratch
* small circle cutter - I used a medicine cup that came from children’s Tylenol
* 1/4 - 1/2 cup cooking oil - vegetable or canola
* tongs
* paper towels
* cinnamon and sugar mix
Open the biscuit can and spread all the rolls out. Then using a small circle cutter, press out a donut hole right in the middle. (View pictures below)
Then get your pan on medium heat with 1/4 - 1/2 cup oil. Depending on how many you make, you will need more oil. You want enough oil to cover half of the donut when cooking. Place 3-4 doughy donuts into the pan and leave until the bottom is golden brown. Don’t do anything else but watch these, as they cook fast and don’t want them to burn. Then turn them over and cook another minute or so. Using tongs, place the cooked donut on paper towels to drain and cool slightly.
Now place the donuts on a plate and sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar. Use a shaker You could also top your donuts with a powdered sugar/milk glaze. Even a chocolate frosting with sprinkles would be yummy.




Easy Treat
You need a bag of pretzels
Chocolate wafers 2 colours from the bulk store (milk chocolate, strawberry or vanilla)
1 Measuring cup
Wax paper
Candy sprinkles(optional)
Pour 2 cups of wafers into a glass measuring cup
Heat for approx. 1 min. stir, repeat as needed for 1 min
Then dip your pretzels
While they are hot, sprinkle candies!
Take an opposite colour of chocolate and drizzle onto the pretzel, vice versa



Rainbow Cake
I stumbled upon this really neat way to make a rainbow cake.
Click on the link for step by step instructions!
Fun activity to do with the kids on “Family Day”!
http://omnomicon.blogspot.com/2009/01/how-to-make-rainbow-cake.html

Making things using items around the house!
A great activity for the kids on rainy/snowy days or Birthday parties!
Save your paper towel rolls, NOT toilet paper rolls
Take an exacto knife and cut rings of different thicknesses
Set out markers, feathers, buttons, fabric, magazines etc.
Have the children glue the items to the paper towel rings
Set aside to dry
Once dried, cut a slit and they have now created a bracelet.

Balloon Car
This air-powered carton car needs just a huff and a puff to get its little wheels rolling.
Use a clean, half-pint milk carton.
Loosely tape a balloon to the top so that air can get through.
For the wheels, slide two thin dowels through two straws (the dowels should be thinner and slightly longer than the straws).
A parent should use an awl to puncture a small hole in four plastic jar or bottle lids (four of the same size or two sets of different sizes).
Slide the ends of dowels into the holes of lids (the holes should be small, so that the dowels fit snugly into them).
Tape the straws to the bottom of the carton. If the car seems unbalanced, tape a washer to carton’s bottom or side. Rev up the “engine” by inflating the balloon, and then release so that the car can get going.
Siblings can have races on the kitchen floor!

22 Boredom Activities
Find that letter
Pick a letter and take turns naming items in the store that start with it. Get creative: “B” is for banana, but also for a box of cereal! 4 and up
I-Spy times three
Name three items your child can look for, like something that’s bigger than his fist, something that’s liquid, and something that’s red. 3 and up
Banana notes
Pick up a banana and let your kid draw a picture on the skin with a pencil eraser. By the time you get home, your artist’s work will magically appear — just in time for a snack! 3 and up
Grocery store entertainment
Color scout
Choose a color for the day. Tell your child that her job is to watch and tell you every time you put something of that color in the cart. 2 and up
Basket case
Challenge your child to find another shopping cart with two items that are the same as two already in your cart. 3 and up
Build a word
Have your child try to find all the letters in her name on a package from your cart. If your kid’s older, pick a simple sentence (”I love to eat cheese!”) and have her search the box for each letter. 4 and up
Doctor’s office pick-me-ups
Little Picasso
In the exam room, whip out a crayon so your child can draw on the paper covering the table. Older kids can play tic-tac-toe or hangman. 18 months and up
Hide-and-seek
Grab three paper cups from the sink and turn them upside down. Hide the cotton ball under a cup, switch the cups around, and see if your child can guess where the ball is. Try it again — and then give him a chance to trick you. 3 and up
Floss art
At the dentist’s, see if you can snag your free dental floss before the exam. It’s fun to arrange into different shapes and to figure out how to make animals or flowers. 3 and up
Card shark
Pull a bunch of subscription postcards from various magazines in the waiting room. Deal them out and play Go Fish: “Do you have one with yellow on it?” 4 and up
Sock toss
Take your child’s sock off and roll it into a ball (you’ll have to take his shoes off for the weigh-in anyway). See if he can toss it so that it lands on a magazine placed a few feet away. 2 and up
Walk this way
When you’re brought to the exam room, ask a nurse if you can have a cotton ball and a tongue depressor. The challenge for your child: Carry the cotton ball across the room on the tongue depressor. Can she make it? How many times? 4 and up
Post office diversions
Got a stamp?
Make a show of hiding stamps in all of your child’s pockets. Have her search for where you actually put them. 2 and up
Fill in the blanks
If your child knows how to write her name, grab one of the mailing forms and have her fill out as much as she can (give her a hand with the rest). This’ll help her memorize important information, too! 4 and up
Mime games
While you’re standing in line, designate a leader and a follower. As the leader makes motions or funny faces, the follower mirrors the action. Try to be sneaky enough that nobody else knows you’re playing. 3 and up
Number hunters
If your post office has personal mailboxes near the line, read a number from one of the boxes and see if your child can find it. 3 and up
Post your pic
Have your child draw a picture. Put it in an envelope that you’ve addressed to yourself (or Grandma), then have him stamp it and mail it before you leave. 2 and up
Restaurant fun
A sweet deal
Arrange the silverware in a tic-tac-toe grid and use packages of sugar (white) and artificial sweetener (pink) as X’s and O’s. 4 and up
Pepper picker-upper
Sprinkle a teaspoon each of salt and pepper onto a napkin. Have your child rub a plastic spoon (not one you’ll eat with!) on his hair for about a minute. Then, if he holds the spoon over the napkin, you can watch as the static electricity makes the pepper — but not the salt — jump onto the spoon. 4 and up
Straw magic
Have your child put two straws in her mouth. Put one into her drink and leave the other on the outside of the glass. See how much of her drink she can swallow. Odds are, not much! 3 and up
Who’s next?
Guess who’s going to walk through the door or past your table. Will he be wearing a hat? Something red? Or maybe a beard? See how many correct guesses you can make as a group. 3 and up
Modern art
When your child gets antsy from coloring the kids’ menu, use the crayons to make rubbings of the things you have on hand — a fork, a penny, a rough table surface. Just put a paper menu over each item, rub with the side of the crayon, and watch the textures appear, in color! 2 and up
HOPE THESE FEW IDEAS HELP FOR THE FUN WEEK WITH THE CHILDREN!!