|
|
How
to Host a Super Bowl Party
(ARA) - When Super Bowl XXXVIII is broadcast live from Houston’s
Reliant Stadium on Sunday, February 1, 2004, millions of football
fans worldwide will eagerly tune in for an afternoon of exciting pre-game
fun followed by an evening of great football, revelry, refreshments,
and friendly rivalry. For those not lucky enough to have a ticket
to America’s favorite sporting event, it’s a premier Couch
Potato day.
To
maximize the fun, I’ve collected practical tips to make your
Super Bowl party memorable.
Kicking
off the preparations
-
Decide
on a guest list. Do you want a small or large crowd? Do you want
to include children?
-
Keep
a list ready for when guests ask what they can bring.
-
Plan
invitations with a football theme. If you use e-mail, be sure
to tell the guests they must “complete the pass” by
RSVPing; E-vite.com is a convenient way to send invitations. If
you make your own invitations, cut out football-shaped ones from
construction paper. Or bake edible cookie invitations.
Creating
a stadium atmosphere
-
Decorate
your house with a football theme and team colors. Make your tablecloth
a playing field. Set a festive welcome at the front door with
an oversized football on the door that you can make from foam
board. A football-themed rug right inside the door will help keep
dirt out of the house. Make felt pennants to hang around the house.
-
Ask
guests to dress in team jerseys and colors. Wear a referee-style
shirt.
-
Put
themed props around the room, such as megaphones, miniature footballs,
and whistles for calling penalties.
-
Settle
in for a long day of television with comfortable, football-themed
beanbag chairs. Have plenty of cushions, footrests, and a cozy
afghan or blanket for the couch potatoes.
-
Make
sure everyone can see the TV. You don’t want anyone squinting
or straining to see the action. If there’s not enough seating,
set up TVs elsewhere to handle the overflow.
-
Play
Super Bowl trivia and award football-themed prizes.
-
Enjoy
a game of touch football before kickoff and during half-time.
-
Don’t
leave anyone on the sidelines. If children are attending, make
sure there are lots of toys and activities to keep them busy.
Set up an area for them to decorate their own T-shirts during
the pre-game, with iron-on transfers or tube paints.
Tackling
food and drink
-
Plan
the menu in advance. This is one party where you do not want to
have to get up and down to serve guests or prepare and warm food.
Select a menu that allows for lots of couch time.
-
Use
paper or plastic serving pieces and utensils. Have lots of napkins
personalized with a Super Bowl-related slogan or the teams’
names.
-
Serving
trays are useful for shuttling food between the kitchen and TV
room.
-
Place
food far enough away from the TV to avoid blocking anyone’s
view.
-
For
chips and dips, get bowls that combine the two, so there are fewer
items to refill, knock over, and carry.
-
Serve
other snack foods, like pretzels, in a football helmet. Be sure
to line it with foil and a napkin.
-
Popcorn
in individual, movie-style popcorn servers is a great idea. If
you choose to make it plain with butter on the side, serve interesting
spices and condiments to sprinkle over it, especially for those
who are salt or diet-conscious.
-
Let
younger partygoers make their own popcorn or get a cotton-candy
maker.
-
Stock
plenty of ice and keep an ice crusher handy. Fill an ice chest
or a large metal bucket with your drinks and keep it within guests’
reach.
-
Get
everyone a personalized can or glass holder/cooler. These containers
have insulated foam liners that keep beverages cool for hours.
Their solid bases also help prevent spills.
-
If
you are serving hard liquor, use a vodka set that keeps individual
shot glasses chilled in ice with the vodka carafe in the center.
Also, buy large beer steins or handsome Pilsner glasses.
-
Prepare
pots of food that can feed an army of visitors. Chili is an all-time
favorite -- one cauldron can gently simmer all night. Or, get
a warming tray for finger foods, like Swedish meatballs. Make
football-style pennants to use as grabbers, using construction
paper glued to toothpicks. Hot dogs on buns, in a help-yourself
tray, are also a good choice.
-
Get
out the ever-popular fondue set to dip bread into cheese or fruits
into chocolate, or make s’mores, roasting the marshmallows
over the flame.
Post-game
wrap-up
-
At
the end of the festivities, serve coffee so everyone can drive
home refreshed.
-
Make
clean-up easy with a supply of large trash bags.
By
following these Super Bowl party tips, you can rest assured that long
after the final football has been snapped, everyone will remember
not only the touchdown that clinched the game, but also the fabulous
job you did hosting the party.
For
more information, visit www.lillianvernonproducts.com
(Lillian
Vernon Online )
Editor’s
Note: Lillian Vernon is the founder of Lillian Vernon Corporation,
a 52-year-old national catalog and online retailer that markets gift,
housewares, gardening, Christmas and children’s products in
seven catalogs titles, two Web sites and in 14 outlet stores.
Courtesy
of ARA Content
|
|