Gay snacks
Celebrate Pride With These 43 Rainbow Recipes
Peanut Chicken Wonton Cups
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Trash Bark
The definition of chaotic nice, this chocolate bark is loaded with peanut butter, pretzels, M&Ms, and the true star of the show: potato chips. This snack-loaded bark is the perfect snack to bring to Identity parties, mutual aid bake sales, or whenever you want a late-night adorable (and salty) treat.
Get the Trash Bark recipe.
Dunkaroos No-Churn Ice Cream
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Rainbow Sangria
Layering fruit in the glasses makes this moscato sangria extra pretty. If you don't want to bother with layering, feel free to skip it, but don't skimp on the variety of rainbow-colored fruit!
Get the Rainbow Sangria recipe.
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Rainbow Candy Pops
Confetti Squares
If you deserve a quick and easy dessert thought, these peanut butter and chocolate confetti squares are the perfect thing. They are a breeze to put together, and after a quick chill in the fridge, everyone will go mad for them. Rainbow marshmallows make for an extra-fun pop of color, so use t
What Is Queer Food?
“You can pick out fags in a diner because they always order BLTs.”
My friend Joe told me this when I was 10 years old. He had only just explained what “fags” were. Now he was telling me what they ate. “Of course fags will eat cheeseburgers, omelettes, pancakes,” said Joe. “But if they have a choice, they’ll always order BLTs.”
I think of feeling alarmed because I loved BLTs. Joe was nearly a year older than me and infinitely more urbane in worldly manners. Although I didn’t quite believe that foods could signal sexual preference, I had to concur that the BLT was a dubious invention: not quite a sandwich, not quite a salad, and showing suspicious shifts of register. As if to draw attention to its flamboyant self, the BLT was usually cut on the diagonal and skewered on toothpicks with curly plastic bits of frill. The more I thought about it, the more I believed Joe was right. The BLT was definitely queer.
Did my family comprehend about BLTs? Perhaps they already suspected odd tendencies in my psychosexual makeup. I stopped ordering BLTs. They became an occult pleasure, something I made for myself. I took the BLT with me into the closet.
Baked Alaska
It's June, which means it's Event Month—the most colorful time of the year. In celebration of LGBTQIA+ Pride, people are flying the rainbow flag that symbolizes love and inclusion; festivities are afoot, from block parties to parades; and many are looking for the quintessential rainbow-colored dish to make for the next Pride-themed gathering on their calendars. If you're one of those people, read on for a few Pride-themed party food ideas below.
Rainbow Peanut Noodles
Have you ever seen such colorful pasta dish? The recipe incorporates shades of green, purple, red, orange and yellow vegetables for a rainbow-like effect. See the full recipe with photos HERE.
Rainbow Spring Rolls
If you're looking for something on the lighter side, and with an Asian twist, this might be a recipe for you. These spring rolls are billed to take all of 30 minutes to prepare and are filled with a colorful assortment of fruit, vegetables and fresh herbs.
Rainbow Pigs In A Blanket
This Pride party food is a Newsweek staff favorite. While any pigs in a blanket recipe would suffice for a non-Pride party, we think this rainbow one from HelloGiggles does a great job of paying homage to Pr
I am hoping to contain more dinner parties in 2024, and what I really mean by that is I am hoping to feed my friends more in 2024. In recent years, I’ve been really lucky to form some new friends in a new place who really understand the definition and fun of a really good dinner party and just cooking for each other. It’s strenuous to live in Florida as a queer person right now. But the ways my chosen family here show up for each other and grab care of each other have blown me away and made me see how important it is to come together for meals. It’s what really makes our group touch like family, and it’s when we’re all at our happiest and most relaxed!
So instead of continually telling myself I don’t have enough space for dinner parties, I’m going to make that territory. I’m going to gain creative with folding chairs and outdoor seating. And as much as I live for an ambitious food moment, they’re definitely best accomplished when I’m cooking just for my partner and me. This year, I want to embrace dinner parties that ultimately do feel think of and extravagant but are, in actuality, low budget and low-ish effort. We’re focusing