Best Gifts for Every Fall Celebration

Fall gifts have been typecast. People typically picture bold-colored fruits and vegetables— plentiful with gourds — all nestled in a wicker cornucopia.

But fall gifts, like autumn itself, can be so much more. Whether in a basket, crate, or box, or it can hang or be filled, our top gift choices for fall 2023 all have elegant design and endless imagination.

12 best fall gifts

Fall gifts with a pumpkin shaped basket full of sweet treats and baked goods.

For the sweet-toothed lover of all things autumn

Finally, a pumpkin that doesn’t need carving and is already stuffed with treats. The Pumpkin-Shaped Gift Basket is loaded with countless, irresistible snacks, making it easy for anyone within noshing range to bounce from autumnal treat to autumnal treat: classic caramel Moose Munch Popcorn, pumpkin spice loaf cake, cranberry orange loaf cake, pumpkin cookies, gingerbread sandwich cookies, paradise dried fruit mix, and more.

Fall gifts with a box of snacks for game day.

For the sports fan who needs to up their snack game

Some football fans just grab whatever they see in the supermarket munchies aisle. You can show them what they’re missing by sending them the Hometeam Snack Box. They’ll watch this season’s games skybox style with gourmet snacks that include Moose Munch Popcorn, an all-beef, football-shaped sausage, sharp white cheddar cheese, black bean and corn salsa, and more.

Fall gifts with four bowls with owl etchings on the outside.

For those in need of seasonal serverware

Fall is the start of hearty fare season — soup being one of the season’s go-tos. To serve up such a meal with seasonal flair, opt for the Fall Owl Soup Bowls. Sculpted to look like owls (hence the name), these ceramic bowls, which come four to a set, are adorned with bright maple leaves and are perfect for soups and other hot dishes. I wonder if the aforementioned football sausage would fit in one of these bowls??? Anywho…

Fall gifts with a box of Royal Riviera Pears.

For the fruit lover who mourns the passing of summer

Some wait all year to savor peachescherriesstrawberries, and other fruits of summer. Still, autumn, too, has its signature fruits. Aside from the countless varieties of apples, there’s the famous and classic Royal Riviera Pears. For over 85 years, these Southern Oregon-grown gourmet jewels have boasted a sweet flavor, a buttery texture, and extreme juiciness.

Fall gifts with a tray of pumpkin spice cinnamon rolls.

For the sweet-toothed pumpkin lover

At some point in recent history, pumpkin spice became the flavor of fall. And for even longer, cinnamon rolls have been a guilty pleasure dessert. Combine the two, and you get decadent, handcrafted Pumpkin Spice Cinnamon Rolls. They’re infused with pumpkin, cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, ground cloves, brown sugar, and butter. Just pop them in the oven (ooh, that smell!) and then drizzle the icing on top.

Fall gifts with a basket of chocolate sweets and other goodies.

For the Halloween gourmand

For the discriminating grownup who disdains drugstore candy but loves celebrating Halloween with upscale fare, the Simply Chocolate Grande Autumn Sweets Basket is sure to satisfy. Yes, it’s bursting with chocolate, but it’s also loaded with other grand treats. Selections include dark chocolate sea salt caramel popcorn, turbinado sugar & sea salt cashews, chocolate cherries, a dipped dried pineapple ring, dipped graham crackers, a milk chocolate acorn, dipped Oreos, a jumbo peanut butter cup, pecan patties, pumpkin pie almonds, and so much more.

Fall gifts with a bouquet of orange chysanthemums.

For the friend who loathes an empty vase

A true flower lover pivots with the seasons, so supply the bloom buff in your life with the perfect autumnal arrangement. With its blazing orange tint, the Autumn Harvest Orange Mums channel both the season’s fiery leaves and hues of pumpkins too. (In fact, the accompanying metal burgundy planter is adorned with a rustic pumpkin design.)

Fall gifts with a fall designed turkey platter.

For the Thanksgiving host

The biggest holiday for every American, Thanksgiving is practically autumn’s grand finale (though winter doesn’t officially arrive for a few more weeks). Get the Thanksgiving meal host who wants to serve guests in style the Fall Leaves Turkey Platter and the Fall Leaves Gravy Boat. Each piece in this matching ceramic set is decorated with hand-sculpted fall leaves, acorns, branches, and berries.

Fall gifts with a bouquet of greenery, fall leaves, and tiny pumpkins in a pumpkin shaped vase.

For the fall enthusiast who prefers their decor sans florals

Flowers, though, aren’t necessary to create a stunning centerpiece, as evidenced by the Harvest Pumpkin Centerpiece. This gift, which includes noble fir, western red cedar, incense cedar, safari sunset Leucadendron, and natural cinnamon sticks — all sprouting from a ceramic pumpkin — creates a visual and olfactory treat for any autumn aficionado.

fall gifts Scented Soy Candle Hello Fall

For the scent-sible one

No season is associated with so many distinct smells as fall, and these candles from Jarful House emit all the best ones you can think of. They come in five different varieties, with such names as “Pumpkin Patch,” “Autumn Harvest,” and “Sweater Season” (which, we assure you, does not smell like a worn sweater). Hand poured and made from 100% soy, these candles will fill any home with all the finest fall fragrances.

fall gifts Dried Flower Bouquet

For the “set it and forget it” flower aficionado

Flowers are beautiful, and are one of the best ways to brighten up any home, but they can be a lot of work to take care of. Enter dried flowers! These stunning arrangements from For Love of Pampas capture the majesty of the season and, best of all, last for up to a year — no watering required!

fall gifts Fall Harvest Soap Flower Wheelbarrow

For the scent-sible “set it and forget it” flower aficionado

This gift from Naturally Gifted perfectly combines the two previous presents into one fabulous idea. Soap flowers — which are, in case it wasn’t obvious, flowers made from soap — are lightly scented and last forever, making them ideal for the person who wants to enhance their home decor but doesn’t want to have to change up their look over and over again.


An animated ad for 1800flowers.com's fall collection

64 Quotes and Sayings About Fall

If one season can inspire the greatest creative minds, it is fall. Perhaps it’s the sound of crunching leaves beneath the soles of the season’s best boots, porches crowded with gourds, or the aromatic flavors enticing us from the kitchen. The sounds, sights, and scents of autumn have been a source of inspiration for ages.

But don’t take our word for it: When trying to craft the perfect summation to this vibrant season, tap into the best of what’s been written to add the perfect sentiment to your autumn scrapbook, letters, and greeting cards.

Fall quotes about leaves

  1. “Fall, leaves, fall; die, flowers, away; Lengthen night and shorten day; Every leaf speaks bliss to me.” – Emily Brontë
  2. “There’s nothing quite like autumn in New York. But it’s not only the leaves that change. Something in the air brings out the true colors in everyone.” – “Gossip Girl”
  3. “You expected to be sad in the fall. Part of you died each year when the leaves fell from the trees and their branches were bare against the wind and the cold, wintery light. But you knew there would always be the spring, as you knew the river would flow again after it was frozen. When the cold rains kept on and killed the spring, it was as though a young person died for no reason.” – Ernest Hemingway
  4. “Autumn leaves don’t fall, they fly. They take their time and wander on this their only chance to soar.” – Delia Owens
Tree with colorful leaves in fall
  1. “October, baptize me with leaves! Swaddle me in corduroy and nurse me with split pea soup. October, tuck tiny candy bars in my pockets and carve my smile into a thousand pumpkins. O autumn! O teakettle! O grace!” – Rainbow Rowell
  2. “It looked like the world was covered in a cobbler crust of brown sugar and cinnamon.” – Sarah Addison Allen
  3. “The lesson of the falling leaves the leaves believe such letting go is love such love is faith such faith is grace such grace is god I agree with the leaves.” – Lucille Clifton
  4. “I hope I can be the autumn leaf, who looked at the sky and lived. And when it was time to leave, gracefully it knew life was a gift.” – Dodinsky
  5. “Don’t you love New York in the fall? It makes me want to buy school supplies. I would send you a bouquet of newly sharpened pencils if I knew your name and address.” – Nora Ephron
  6. “Autumn is a second spring when every leaf is a flower.” – Albert Camus
  7. “How beautifully leaves grow old! How full of light and color are their last days!” – John Burroughs
  8. “Autumn leaves shower like gold, like rainbows, as the winds of change begin to blow.” – Dan Millman
Peak Fall Colors in New England
  1. “It’s the first day of autumn! A time of hot chocolatey mornings, and toasty marshmallow evenings, and, best of all, leaping into leaves!” – Winnie the Pooh
  2. “The leaves fall, the wind blows, and the farm country slowly changes from the summer cottons into its winter wools.” – Henry Beston
  3. “The falling leaves, all over the forest, are protecting the roots of my plants. Only look at what is to be seen, and you will have garden enough, without deepening the soil in your yard. We have only to elevate our view a little to see the whole forest as a garden.” – Henry David Thoreau
  4. “There is something incredibly nostalgic and significant about the annual cascade of autumn leaves.” – Joe L. Wheeler
Halloween pumpkins in a wheelbarrow dark autumn mood

Fall quotes about the new season

  1. “Days decrease, / And autumn grows, autumn in everything.” – Robert Browning
  2. “There is a time of year in New York when…even before the first leaf falls…you can feel the seasons click. The air is crisp, the summer is gone. And for the first night in a long time, you need a blanket on your bed.” – Carrie Bradshaw
  3. “Autumn… the year’s last, loveliest smile.” – William Cullen Bryant
  4. “And the sun took a step back, the leaves lulled themselves to sleep and autumn was awakened.” – Raquel Franco
  5. “August rain: the best of the summer gone, and the new fall not yet born. The odd uneven time.” – Sylvia Plath

Fall quotes about natural beauty

  1. “Winter is an etching, spring a watercolor, summer an oil painting, and autumn a mosaic of them all.” – Stanley Horowitz
  2. “Why, it’s the climax of the year,—The highest time of living!—Till naturally its bursting cheer. Just melts into Thanksgiving.” – Perry Laurence Dunbar
  3. “Listen! The wind is rising, and the air is wild with leaves, we have had our summer evenings, now for October eves.” – Humbert Wolfe
  4. “It was a beautiful, bright autumn day, with air like cider and a sky so blue you could drown in it.” – Diana Gabaldon
  5. “October’s poplars are flaming torches lighting the way to winter.” – Nova S. Blair
  6. “Her pleasure in the walk must arise from the exercise and the day, from the view of the last smiles of the year upon the tawny leaves and withered hedges, and from repeating to herself some few of the thousand poetical descriptions extant of autumn, that season of peculiar and inexhaustible influence on the mind of taste and tenderness , that season which has drawn from every poet worthy of being read some attempt at description, or some lines of feeling.” – Jane Austen
Amazing in nature, beautiful waterfall at colorful autumn forest
  1. “But when fall comes, kicking summer out on its treacherous ass as it always does one day sometime after the midpoint of September, it stays awhile like an old friend that you have missed. It settles in the way an old friend will settle into your favorite chair and take out his pipe and light it and then fill the afternoon with stories of places he has been and things he has done since last he saw you.” – Stephen King
  2. “The little flowers of yesterday. Have all forgotten May. The last gold leaf turned to brown. The last bright day is grey. The cold of winter comes space. And you have gone away.” – Langston Hughes
  3. “Autumn seemed to arrive suddenly that year. The morning of the first September was crisp and golden as an apple.” – J.K. Rowling
  4. “I’m so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers.” – L.M. Montgomery
  5. “And all at once, summer collapsed into fall.” – Oscar Wilde
  6. “I love the autumn — that melancholy season that suits memories so well. When the trees have lost their leaves, when the sky at sunset still preserves the russet hue that fills with gold the withered grass, it is sweet to watch the final fading of the fires that until recently burnt within you.” – Gustave Flaubert
  7. “No spring nor summer beauty hath such grace as I have seen in one autumnal face.” – John Donne
  8. “Autumn colors remind us we are all one dancing in the wind.” – Lorin Morgan-Richards
An animated ad for 1800flowers.com's fall collection
  1. “Another fall, another turned page.” – Wallace Stegner
  2. “The heat of autumn is different from the heat of summer. One ripens apples, the other turns them to cider.” – Jane Hirshfield
  3. “Delicious autumn! My very soul is wedded to it, and if I were a bird I would fly about the Earth seeking the successive autumns.” – George Eliot
  4. “Autumn burned brightly, a running flame through the mountains, a torch flung to the trees.” – Faith Baldwin
  5. “He found himself wondering at times, especially in the autumn, about the wild lands, and strange visions of mountains that he had never seen came into his dreams.” – J. R. R. Tolkien
  6. “The garden of love is green without limit and yields many fruits other than sorrow or joy. Love is beyond either condition: without spring, without autumn, it is always fresh.” – Rumi
  7. “And all the lives we ever lived and all the lives to be are full of trees and changing leaves.” – Virginia Woolf
A photo of loving fall at a pond with fall foliage and swans.
  1. “November is the pearl-grey month, the changeling between warm crimson October and cold white December, the month when the leaves fall in slow drifting whirls, and the shapes of the trees are revealed, when the earth imperceptibly wakes, and stretches her bare limbs and displays her stubborn unconquerable strength before she settles uneasily into winter. November is secret and silent.” – Alison Uttley
  2. “The leaves are changing; I feel poetry in the air.” – Laura Jaworski
  3. “Fall has always been my favorite season. The time when everything bursts with its last beauty, as if nature had been saving up all year for the grand finale.” – Lauren Destefano
  4. “I am such an autumn person. Give me a quiet, cozy spot with a simple view of gorgeous trees with colorful leaves on a crisp September day, fuzzy socks, a warm drink, and a good book and I will be in all my glory.” – McKenna Kaelin
  5. “That country where it is always turning late in the year. That country where the hills are fog and the rivers are mist; where noons go quickly, dusks and twilights linger, and midnights stay. That country composed in the main of cellars, sub-cellars, coal-bins, closets, attics, and pantries faced away from the sun. That country whose people are autumn people, thinking only autumn thoughts. Whose people passing at night on the empty walks sound like rain.” – Ray Bradbury

Fall quotes about renewal

  1. “Only lovers / see the fall / a signal end to endings / a gruffish gesture alerting / those who will not be alarmed / that we begin to stop / in order simply / to begin / again.” –Maya Angelou
  2. “Notice that autumn is more the season of the soul than of nature.” – Friedrich Nietzsche
  3. “I cannot endure to waste anything as precious as autumn sunshine by staying in the house. So I spend almost all the daylight hours in the open air.” – Nathaniel Hawthorne
  4. “Aprils have never meant much to me, autumns seem that season of beginning, spring.” – Truman Capote
Happy excited young woman under leaves fall
  1. “Spring passes and one remembers one’s innocence. Summer passes and one remembers one’s exuberance. Autumn passes and one remembers one’s reverence. Winter passes and one remembers one’s perseverance.” – Yoko Ono
  2. “Of all the seasons, autumn offers the most to man and requires the least of him.” – Hal Borland
  3. “Wild is the music of the autumnal winds amongst the faded woods.” – William Wordsworth
  4. “A wind has blown the rain away and blown the sky away and all the leaves away, and the trees stand. I think, I too, have known autumn too long.” – e.e. cummings
  5. “I can smell autumn dancing in the breeze. The sweet chill of pumpkin, and crisp sunburnt leaves.” – Ann Drake
  6. “Autumn leaves are falling, filling up the streets; golden colors on the lawn, nature’s trick or treat!” – Rusty Fischer
  7. “Autumn is the hardest season. The leaves are all falling, and they’re falling like they’re falling in love with the ground.” – Andrea Gibson
  8. “The bright summer had passed away, and gorgeous autumn was flinging its rainbow-tints of beauty on hill and dale.” – Cornelia Tuthill
  9. “I loved autumn, the season of the year that God seemed to have put there just for the beauty of it.” – Lee Maynard
  10. “Life starts all over again when it gets crisp in the fall.” – F. Scott Fitzgerald
  11. “Autumn is the mellower season, and what we lose in flowers we more than gain in fruits.” – Samuel Butler
  12. “There is something so special in the early leaves drifting from the trees — as if we are all to be allowed a chance to peel, to refresh, to start again.” – Ruth Ahmed
  13. “There was a hint of spring in her sole green eyes, something summery in her complexion, and a rich autumn ripeness in her walk.” – Toni Morrison

Loving Fall: Why It’s More than Autumn Leaves and Cooler Temperatures

The series “What I Love About Fall” captures passions for the season from people of all walks of life. In this article, writer Joanne Camas explores the myriad reasons people are loving fall.

Why We’re Loving Fall

Fall signals a welcome return to routine after a casual summer. It’s a chance to enjoy changes in the weather, seasonal day trips, and autumnal treats. It’s also the start of a slow easing into the holidays. The pumpkin obsessed — a rapidly growing breed — keep a watchful eye on specialty coffees and cookies, of course. Artists and writers draw inspiration from the changing seasons. In fact, autumn is a favorite time of year for many of us.

Loving fall family traditions

loving fall with girls running in a fall field
Photo by Jacqueline deMontravel

For Alvernia Fernandez Silva, fall is a go-with-the-flow season. “We are pretty spontaneous,” she explains. “We do love going to the pumpkin patches and doing corn mazes, and football season in our home is super huge.”

Of course, with four young children, family activities take center stage. “We love decorating for fall,” Fernandez Silva says, “and the kids look forward to the pumpkin patches, carving pumpkins, and dressing up for Halloween.” Costumes might be a problem this year, though: “We are still deciding on costumes for the two older ones, but my two toddlers both want to be Snow White!” The whole family goes trick-or-treating, and when they get home, they all greet the costumed kids who come to their house and give them Halloween candy.

Some family activities have become traditions — going to the pumpkin patch to choose their pumpkins and enjoying all the activities there, then watching as their pumpkins turn into cool carved characters — but this year Fernandez Silva plans to add a couple of twists: “I would love to go apple picking as a family, and I’d like to try some new fall crafts.”

Creating a sense of comfort

loving fall with person holding bouquet of sunflowers and mums
Photo by Jacqueline deMontravel

Alice Lewis brings seasonal experiences into people’s homes live through her business Alice’s Table, which 1-800-FLOWERS.COM, Inc., acquired in January 2022. And, at the risk of breaking an entertaining code of ethics, she’s willing to admit that fall is, in fact, her favorite season.

“I love the transition from summer to fall — the coming together that fall has always meant,” she says. Gathering family and friends for a weekend or the upcoming holidays at her New England home is an important part of her life. For Lewis, autumn also brings back memories of apple picking, which she does faithfully every year, and the apple and cranberry crisp she bakes later.

Cooking is a big part of autumn for Lewis, who says she’s happy to get back into her kitchen after a summer of grilling. Football and slow-cooked comfort food, such as chili or beef stew, make her Sunday. “My current favorite is barbecue-pulled-pork-stuffed sweet potatoes,” she says with a grin.

When she’s creating online experiences for customers, she makes sure to feature fall flowers. “There’s an abundance of flowers ready for the picking,” she says. “Sunflowershydrangeas, dahlias…I’m a sucker for dahlias! They are so short-lived but have an amazing variety of colors, shapes, and sizes.”

Lewis adds, “I typically encourage people to bring a harvest mentality to floral arrangements. Apples, dried corn… Be creative about what you use in the fall season.” For her part, with people starting to decorate their homes again, she offers classes on making a fall wreath and a pumpkin arrangement through Alice’s Table. “Fall is a crazy time for us!”

Falling into football season

John Casey, a writer based in New York, is also happy when fall rolls around. The Pittsburgh Steelers superfan says he eagerly counts the days until the start of football season. “Fall is the time of year when my Sunday afternoons are booked long in advance,” he explains. And when he says “booked,” he means booked. “Paul McCartney, the Rolling Stones, R.E.M., and Coldplay could all be performing in a concert outside my door on any given crisp, fall Sunday afternoon, but nothing will take me away from my television, watching the Steelers.”

Of course, such commitment to a fall sport means forgoing other traditional fall activities — and that can leave his family and friends scratching their heads. “It’s hard for people to understand the fierce loyalty I have to the team, and why there are no weekend getaways to watch the leaves turn, for example, in upstate New York during the fall,” Casey says. “Those escapes can only occur if the Steelers are on Monday Night Football. Bottom line: The Steelers have owned my falls for over 40 years.”


Fall gift ideas


Celebrating a bountiful harvest

As founder of Renee’s Garden, a seed company that introduces international specialty vegetables and herbs to home gardeners and restaurants, Renee Shepherd can often be found somewhere between her trial garden and speaking engagements around the country.

She views autumn as a second-chance season, one in which you can sneak in hardy crops before the first frost. “The cooler weather slows down the harvest,” she explains, “and you can plant fast-growing, healthy greens like spinach, bok choy, tatsoi, lettuce, and cilantro. You have the luxury of having plenty of produce to enjoy throughout the fall.”

loving fall with pumpkin patch for an autumn day in New England
Photo by Jacqueline deMontravel

“A fall garden is a pleasure,” says Shepherd of Felton, California. “The rewards of gardening come now — it’s a feeling of bounty.” She looks forward to freezing and canning surplus vegetables. “If you freeze tomatoes whole, then the skin comes off and you can make delicious winter sauce,” she says, “or slice them in half and bag them for the freezer.” Peppers are another reliable bumper crop.

Autumn is also the perfect time to clean up and mulch. Shepherd suggests planting a cover crop to nourish the soil and provide shelter for wildlife. She also enjoys planting garlic, saffron (crocus bulbs), and daffodils and tulips in the fall as a friendly nod to spring.

Fire-pit pie parties

loving fall with baked apple pie

For Jackie Rupp of Philadelphia, autumn means whipping out her apron and dusting off the pie plates…all in the name of building community. “Pre-pandemic, I moved to a new neighborhood and wanted to get to know people, so I decided to host some neighborhood dessert swaps where I could make new friends,” she explains.

“My favorite was our pie party, when I hosted a group of about a dozen ladies, most of whom I’d never met before,” Rupp says. “We were grateful to have an evening to ourselves where we could sit around with the smells of cinnamon and cloves in the air and enjoy conversations while eating copious and absurd amounts of pie. (We also learned that wine goes amazing with pies, by the way…”)

Rupp is eyeing the cooler fall evenings for another pie party, “this time outside, around our firepit,” she says. “It’ll be BYOB (bring your own blanket), and I picture us sipping warmed spiked…I mean spiced apple cider and digging into some more delicious pies.”

Loving fall for picture-perfect days

“Autumn is a fabulous season because of the color of the leaves and plants, the world all around me,” says photographer Denise Maccaferri of Plymouth, Massachusetts. And the alignment of the stars helps her take full advantage of fall: “The sun is lower, and early in the morning it’s the perfect light for taking photos,” she explains. “In the fall, I find myself driving around a lot more, just looking for the perfect picture.”

A photo of loving fall at a pond with fall foliage and swans.
Photo by Denise Maccaferri

One distinctly local favorite for Maccaferri is the cranberry harvest. She loves the warm red and yellow colors, and has recently started using drone photography to capture the floating cranberries being corralled and scooped onto trucks. “It’s best from the air,” she explains, “but I do like to take closeups of the workers, too.”

Fall Table Decorating Ideas

Your tabletop is a blank canvas. Your choice of fabrics, flowers, and candles, the layering of colors and textures, and adding personal touches all play a part in the delight and ambience that a beautifully designed table brings to any occasion. Go as big or as simple as you want. It’s one of my favorite elements of entertaining!

Here are a few easy, creative, and inexpensive fall table decorating ideas that I hope will provide some inspiration to get you started on your tablescape art.

fall table decorating ideas with fall tablescape

I am a big believer in reusing/recycling, so I have pieces that I keep and use in different ways each season. Here, I reused my 1-800-Flowers decorative pumpkin from a few years ago, filling it with flowers, grasses, peppers, and succulents in a farm fresh palette.

fall table decorating ideas with fall table setting

I find these little berry baskets to be the perfect size to use as multiples, as I did on the dining table, or to add just the right festive touch on the dessert or buffet table.

fall table decorating ideas with floral foam

Just line the basket with a small dish, bowl, or can. Cut a piece of floral foam to size and thoroughly soak the foam before placing it in the dish. The foam will make it very easy to create your piece, as it holds each insertion in place and provides hydration to keep your flowers fresh.

Keeping it green and lean

fall table decorating ideas with millet plants

Decorate your fall table with plants! They are affordable and have the added benefit of naturally cleaning the air in your home. The millet plants I picked up at Smile Farms are a bit taller than normal for a centerpiece, but they still work. (I find that everything gets moved around once the food starts getting placed on the table anyway.)

Having small unexpected accents, such as the green apple candles and fresh-cut succulents, on each plate can complete your look and keep your fall table decorated and festive even after all the food has been served.

fall table decorating ideas with potten succulents

You can also use small potted succulents as individual place cards that double as a take-home gift.

Forage around

fall table decorating ideas with a votive candle

Don’t be afraid to do a little foraging in your garden (or your neighbor’s — with permission, of course!). I live by the beach, so my garden is full of ornamental beach grasses and millet. And falling leaves are everywhere! This time of year offers an abundance of beautiful branches, berries, and grasses.

fall table decorating ideas with a spring of millet and fresh artichoke

Keep it simple and natural by adding an LED votive candle to the center of a fresh artichoke and place a single stem of millet and a sprig fall foliage on each plate.

Interested in learning more about decorating with fall flowers? Sign up for a workshop with Alice’s Table to discover the joys of creating your own floral arrangements!

13 Fall Date Ideas to Heighten the Romance

Looking for a way to refresh your love life this autumn? Don’t “fall” into tired tropes! While apple picking and hay rides have their place, there’s a world of creative — and romantic — fall date ideas out there just waiting to be explored.

If you need some inspiration, here are 13 activities that will bring you and your special someone closer together.

1. Take part in a (virtual) workshop

If the weather’s too chilly to venture outdoors, you can learn a new skill from the comfort of your home by taking a virtual workshop from Alice’s Table. These pre-scheduled events follow the themes of the season; fall offerings, for example, range from making an “autumn sunset” floral arrangement to setting up a charcuterie board with seasonal foods to mixing spooky Halloween cocktails. Before each event, you’ll be mailed a package of supplies to ensure a seamless creative experience as you follow along with your expert host.

fall date ideas with couple cooking together
Photo courtesy of Alice’s Table

2. Enjoy a thrifted night on the town

Set a spending limit and hit up your favorite thrift store together. The goal? Buy each other outfits and accessories for an evening out — the crazier, the better! Once you’ve put on your new threads, go on a date to show them off. Make the evening even more fun by booking reservations at a high-end restaurant and noting how many other diners give your attire the side eye or the thumbs up

3. Experiment with local, seasonal ingredients

If the weather’s still pleasant, make a date out of a trip to the farmers market to buy produce and other ingredients you rarely reach for. Then, use your joint creativity to turn them into a home-cooked dinner.

fall date ideas with couple cooking together

Market not in season? Go online and purchase hard-to-find foods, such as a classic charcuterie collection with delicacies from around the world or an assortment of gourmet goodies with a bottle of cabernet sauvignon. Or, skip the cooking altogether and opt for comforting pre-made meals, such as chicken Wellington or lobster pot pie.

4. Become a sommelier at home

Forget visiting overpriced wineries this fall and create an intimate wine tasting experience at home instead. Many couples use a home tasting as an excuse to try bottles they’d never splurge on otherwise. You can’t go wrong with a rosé or reserve pinot noir, and pairing a bottle of wine with chocolate truffles will surely serve to expedite the romance. For fun, consider opening a variety of wines at different price points for a blind taste test to see if your palate can tell the difference.

5. Take a local food tour

Explore your own city like a tourist and discover the culinary delights it has to offer by booking a local food or beer tour. If you want to involve others, invite some couples along and book a beer trolley. It’s the chilliest (and safest) way to travel!

6. Go dancing (and not at a club)

Find a local event for an evening of dancing. Options abound in the fall for square dancing, swing, ballroom, and more! If you have two left feet, consider committing to a series of classes so you can show off your newfound skills on a future date.

fall date ideas with volunteering at animal shelter

7. Volunteer at a local animal shelter

If the two of you long to spend time with furry friends, a great idea for a fall date is a volunteer day at an animal shelter. Come with a willingness to get your hands dirty, and you’ll get rewarded with plenty of cuddle time. Further boost your impact by bringing treats or toys for the future adoptees.

8. Roll up some raw fish

Have you always wanted to try your hand at making sushi? Now’s your chance! Before you do, though, make sure you set yourselves up for success by investing in top-tier ingredients for your culinary experimentation, such as wild ahi tunaAtlantic sea scallopsAlaskan halibut, or ikura (wild salmon eggs). Or take a shortcut and get yourself a poke kit. You’ll spend less time preparing the food and more time enjoying each other’s company (wink, wink).

9. Hop on a plane (or bus…or train) going anywhere

If you have a few days to spare, consider packing an overnight bag, heading to the nearest transportation hub, and booking tickets for wherever you feel inspired to go in that moment. Keep things open ended, and you might be amazed at the adventures that await you. This level of spontaneity can be especially fun if you both are Type A planners.

10. Enjoy some low-stakes gambling

Bring the thrill of a night at the casino into your home with some poker and other card games. You can choose the stakes — a week’s worth of the other person’s household duties, for instance — to create some friendly competition between the two of you.

fall date ideas with home spa day

11. Indulge in a home spa day

Give each other the gift of personal pampering with a home spa day. Splurge on luxury products, such as cozy spa robes, candles, and a luxurious spa set, to inspire the indulgence — and the romance.

12. Pull out your childhood photo albums

No matter how long you’ve been together, you are sure to have some childhood stories you haven’t shared. Pour a glass of wine and get out some old family photo albums for a cozy evening of reminiscing about the time before you met. We bet you’ll come across some forgotten tales to bond over.

13. Spend a night away, but make it local

There’s no reason to travel far when you’re just trying to get away from home. Rekindle the spark in your relationship with a romantic stay at a local bed and breakfast or trendy hotel. Give yourselves permission to spend the whole day relaxing and reconnecting, and you’ll come away from the staycation feeling a stronger sense of attraction to each other than ever.


An animated ad for 1800flowers.com's fall collection

Bringing the Outside In: How to Decorate for Fall With Shabby Chic® Founder Rachel Ashwell

Rachel Ashwell is relieved summer is over and fall has arrived. “Fall followed by winter are my favorite seasons of the year,” Ashwell says. “I’m thrilled the day after Labor Day.” She loves the cooler weather, the crunch of leaves under her feet, and finds fall to be a time when the hustle and bustle of summer quiets down. The British-born Ashwell likes to live by the rhythm of natural light, and as the days get shorter, the opportunity to go inward and reflect suits her temperament just fine.

Fall home decor

It’s also a time for a fresh start, when structure reasserts itself and we resume our regular lives and routines, she says, and that can start with home décor. “The fall gives you the inspiration to add a layer of a warmer, kind of smokier palette.”

When you have an intimate setting, it inspires meaningful, authentic, and interesting conversation.

Rachel Ashwell

Her classic Shabby Chic® shades of pastel pinks, blues, and greens go from lighter hues to jewel tones like raspberry, plum, violet, teal, and sage. “So the palette stays in the same lane,” she says. At home, she adds a layer back to her windows, whether with velvet puddling curtains (very English) or muted floral window treatments. She pulls out the winter slipcovers and stacks her favorite cashmere and faux fur throws. “It’s both a functional and an aesthetic change,” she says.

That goes for bedding, too. Layering comforters and duvets is a practical and pleasing way to spruce and can help save a little on the heating bill as well. Lighting can be a cozy, too. “I’m big on having lamps around that give a beautiful romantic light. I buy bulbs in the 15 to 40 watt range for my lamps, unless they’re for reading. I’m very much about where practical meets aesthetic in a mood.”

Fall floral design at home

Decorating with flowers in the fall gets a little trickier, as the season is not exactly blooming season. “Obviously, in fall, we think of oranges and greens, but that’s not my palette,” Ashwell says. So, she brings in a lot of dried, smoky-colored hydrangea. Just be sure to toss dried flowers after a while, she says, adding, “There’s nothing worse going into someone’s home and seeing dusty, old dried flowers that have been in a vase for five years.”

Ashwell is also a huge fan of fake flowers. Yes, fake. She even designs a line of them. “I consider fake flowers to be forever flowers,” she says. “You can bring in the flowers you love all year round, which is especially helpful in these seasons where color and availability are more restrictive.”

A rose is a rose…

The supermarket doesn’t take the place of a garden, but it can fill in with roses. Of course, Ashwell loves garden roses way more than a hothouse variety, but if that’s all she can find, “I just cut the stems and remove all the leaves of six hothouse roses so that all you see is a jar or vase of blossoms. Sometimes, they do open quite beautifully. I don’t poo-poo them.”

The same goes for carnations; though she doesn’t go for the red varietals, she loves the white, minus the greenery. “It’s all about the vase filled with buds.”

Decorating the table for fall gatherings

Ashwell also sees the fall as an opportunity for gathering close family and friends, “to talk about what the summer was, what the fall opportunities are, what your fall intentions are.” She prefers gathering six or eight people, not 50, so guests can really talk and share. “When you have that intimate setting, it inspires meaningful, authentic, and interesting conversation.” She will often have a theme, game, or question for guests to inspire and act as an ice-breaker.

To create an intimate setting, Ashwell relies on her cherished items to evoke abundance. When she has a small dinner party, she places fabric runners in her fall palette of smoky jewel tones on the length and width of the table, sets places often with placemats she has designed, and stacks vintage plates on a side table along with a basket filled with extra napkins. “I let my extra vintage dinnerware be part of the décor without the table itself having to be more than what’s needed.” A practical tip? Ashwell suggests using vintage pieces as décor and chargers but serving food on plain white plates.

decorating for fall with fall tablescape
decorating for fall with fall place setting

Layering — whether vintage or new plates, or runners and placemats on a previously loved painted or pine table — is part of Ashwell’s mix-and-match philosophy. So, if you lose a couple of napkins or chip a plate, it’s OK — just create a varied collection. “It’s beautiful and practical,” she says, another pillar of her style.

Avoiding holiday clichés

Palette is important to Ashwell, and a way to avoid holiday decorating clichés. “Pumpkins don’t have to be orange,” she says. So, instead of opting for an orange and black Halloween, try silvers and pinks. “Stay in tradition of elements but be flexible in the palette.”

Fall allows you to be part of the outside. For me, it’s experiencing what this transitional season is all about.

Rachel Ashwell

Fall activities and date ideas

The fall is a time for walking outside in nature, Ashwell believes. Collecting branches, berries, and foliage — she likes to bring inside what’s outdoors and use it as décor — finding naturally dried hydrangea clinging to their stalks, and pruning a garden are all activities to do with someone, as is scouring flea markets and vintage shops for antique China and slightly worn vases. Sharing activities are part of getting to know and connecting with others. So, friends and family members, or even romantic dates, might be inspired by these outings, whether you are preparing to decorate for a gathering or not. “Having a backdrop of a common interest takes the walls down a little bit,” she says.

Looking forward to cozy time in fall

“From a comfort standpoint, it’s a cozier time to go on dates in general. Bring out the shawls, light a fire, go into a local pub…there’s just something a bit more romantic about a fall date than a summer date,” she says. And since Ashwell likes to focus inward, the season’s coziness is the perfect ambiance for also being creative, and that’s what she looks forward to the most. “All that outward energy that’s been expanded upon and let go of in summer now can come down to landing and be articulated, manifested, and communicated in a structured way.”

Bringing the indoors out

The cooler vibe of fall doesn’t mean staying inside, Ashwell urges. She likes to bring the indoors out, say, gathering on a screen porch with friends. With her beloved throws, “lots of lovely candlelight,” or perhaps a fire, she creates a beautiful and comfortable environment to reconnect with herself and others. “Fall allows you to be part of the outside. For me, it’s experiencing what this transitional season is all about.”

Why Fall Birthdays Are the Best

Autumn is many people’s favorite time of year, and there are lots of good reasons for that. The weather is pleasantly cool, with crisp nights that make us want to get cozy with a favorite cardigan and warm apple cider. It’s the return of baking season, which means the aromas of cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves are everywhere you turn. People are arriving back from their summer vacations, and the time feels right to reunite with friends. All that, and more, makes autumn an awesome season for celebrating a birthday with these fall birthday party ideas.

jessie williams headshot

Think boozy hot chocolate, an apple cider bar, s’mores, and flannel blankets.

jessie williams

Founder, WE Events

“Fall is my favorite time of year in Chicago,” exclaims Jessie Williams, founder of WE Events, a party and event planning service. “The leaves are changing colors, the temps are getting more manageable, and kids are back in school.”

Whether you’re planning to host an autumn birthday party for an adult or child, you have as many themes to choose from as there are leaves on the ground.

4 fabulous fall birthday party ideas

Autumn birthdays fall into that perfect sweet spot on the calendar. This time of year offers the flexibility of hosting either an indoor or outdoor party, along with plenty of easy ways to embrace the season.

1. Make it all about them

“To make a fall party extra special, customize,” Williams says. “Use items that go with your theme and add names or nicknames to those items. Think blankets for a bonfire party or mugs for a camping party.”

fall birthday party ideas with fall dessert table

2. Add an awe-inspiring autumn treats table

A show-stopping food table can set the tone for the rest of the party. Whether it’s a snack buffet or dessert bar, this stylish self-serve station can be decked out for the season with wooden crates and other warm, rustic touches. One idea is a DIY apple cider bar chock full of toppings, such as cinnamon sticks, cocoa powder, and whipped cream.

The finishing touch? Plenty of fall decor. Tablescapes are extra easy for fall, with gorgeous natural options everywhere you look. “Use gourds, pumpkins, apples with fall leaves, and fall floral to decorate the table,” Williams says.

3. Decorate with seasonal florals and shades

Think about the colors of fall: oranges, reds, browns. With that in mind, Williams suggests supplying a captivating printed photo backdrop, with designs ranging from rustic wood or a fall scene with blankets, sunflowers, and hay bales.

Balloon sculptures are also a popular budget-friendly way to make a big impression. For a retro fall camp-out vibe, opt for muted shades of moss green, beige, and rust tone balloons accented with natural dried flower arrangements of pampas grass, wheat, and thistle.

4. Be mindful of fall’s wild weather

Planning parties in the Windy City, Williams knows all about preparing for the unpredictable autumn weather. “Wind and rain can very quickly ruin a party. When planning any outside party, it’s always best to have a backup plan.” She suggests considering renting tents or heaters, or selecting a venue that has an interior option if needed.

“I like to always bring tablecloth weights and, if setting up a tablescape with paper plates, have something heavy to place on each plate, such as a custom “place card,” so they don’t blow away,” Williams says. “My favorites for fall are pumpkins or apples with each guest’s name on them.”

Trick or treat yourself to a Halloween-themed party

Fall is associated with Halloween, so why not lean into that connection for an October birthday? You have so many options when you embrace this theme, the most obvious of which is a costume party.

This can translate to a lavish masquerade ball for adults; for kids, make it a fun DIY costume contest. A gorgeous Día de los Muertos-inspired dinner party, complete with tamales, sugar skulls, and hibiscus tea, can work for all ages. Create a makeup station to give everyone traditional calaveras skull faces, which will make for instant photo ops.

Another kid-centric idea is to create your own backyard pumpkin patch, far away from the swarming crowds at the local farm. Here you can set up outdoor pumpkin painting stations and a scarecrow stuffing area replete with old clothes, hay, and silly accessories.

fall birthday party ideas with halloween birthday party

One of the favorite parties Williams has planned was actually not for a client but for her daughter and their neighbors. “We hosted a ‘ghost hunt,’ where I put candy and trinkets inside plastic eggs that I wrapped in tissues with ghost faces drawn on them. I hid them throughout our yard and the neighbor’s yard,” she says. “The house was already decorated for Halloween, so no extra decorating work was needed. Even the older kids had a blast finding the ‘ghosts.'”

Williams points out a wonderful fall party perk: If you decorate for Halloween, or even just the autumn season, your party decorating is nearly done. Just add a few birthday elements to make it feel extra special for the guest of honor.



Fuel your November celebration with the spirit of Friendsgiving

November birthdays can present a planning challenge, as they fall during a time when most people’s attention is on Thanksgiving and prepping for the holidays. If you’re planning a large get-together for friends or classmates, consider holding the birthday party earlier in the month, when the weather may be warmer and schedules less chaotic. Play with a fall clothing theme, such as everyone comes wearing their favorite flannel or a sweater-weather ugly sweater. And don’t forget: Your party should be not just for the guest of honor but the senses as well. With the lovely smells of fall filling the air, this is definitely the time to bust out the pumpkin spice candles.

Williams suggests considering a philanthropic option to infuse your party with the spirit of gratitude that is so prevalent during the season. “Consider encouraging guests to bring an item to donate to a charity.” This could be anything from books for a children’s hospital library to dog toys for an animal rescue. For an adult Friendsgiving birthday party, this can take the emphasis away from presents and make it more about coming together and helping out a cause everyone can feel good about.

4 fun fall birthday ideas & themes for kids

1. Football party

Fall means football time. If you have a little fan of the game, you can create a miniature-sized tailgate party, complete with smaller versions of classic parking lot games, such as cornhole or ladder ball.

2. Scary movie night

Gather up those blankets and pillows, set up a projector screen, and play some slightly spine-tingling classics.

3. Classic country fair

Give guests bandanas, set up classic carnival games, such as ring toss and milk bottle knockdown, and serve corn dogs and funnel cake.

4. DIY party

Whether your guests are decorating candied apples, making mini-wreaths, decorating cookies, or trying their hand at some autumn-scented soap making, fall-themed crafts can keep everyone entertained.

4 fabulous fall birthday themes for adults

1. Hoedown party

Williams suggests renting a backyard mechanical bull, using mason jars to hold floral arrangements, and adding extra seating with hay bales. Ask everyone to come in their best rodeo attire, such as cowboy boots, a long-sleeve button-up, jeans, and a leather belt with a big, ol’ belt buckle.

2. Backyard bonfire

“Think boozy hot chocolate,” Williams says, “an apple cider bar, s’mores, and flannel blankets.” Add a lush fall soundtrack and a few conversation games, such as “Two truths and a lie” or “Would you rather.”

fall birthday party ideas with oktoberfest party

3. Oktoberfest party

Create a backyard biergarten with a sampling of fall beers and classic German cuisine, including sausages and fresh-baked pretzels. As a bonus, ask guests to dress in traditional Bavarian garb.

4. Seasonal harvest sampling

Embrace all the flavors of the harvest with a dinner filled with fall’s favorites, including Brussels sprouts, squash, sweet potatoes, and pumpkin. Put a comfort food fall twist on the traditional charcuterie board with a hearty and homey baked potato board, complete with a host of favorite toppings. Or go all in on a single flavor, with a menu that includes pumpkin hummus, pumpkin salad, pumpkin soup, and pumpkin ravioli.

Toronto Baker Dishes on Her Favorite Fall Flavors

fall flavors with Fran Murray relaxing on the couch

“I don’t know if it’s the crisp breeze or the changing leaves, but I just feel so alive in the fall,” says Food Network contestant and baking entrepreneur Fran Murray. This 41-year-old mother of four is simply mad about autumn — it’s the season in which she got married, and it’s her favorite time of year to bake.

She says fall has the “perfect weather for taking walks in cozy sweaters.” It’s also when Murray infuses her work in the kitchen with many of her favorite fall flavors. “I’ve had an obsession with warm spices for as long as I can remember,” Murray explains, “so baking in the fall brings me so much joy.”

Murray, who resides in Toronto, finds it particularly rewarding to share what she whips up as displays of affection to her friends and family. “I take baking as a catalyst to infuse love and encouragement in the hearts of the folks that I encounter.”

That sentiment goes back to her earliest childhood memories of being in the kitchen with her mother in Jamaica. There, she would watch as her mom made batches of Jamaican black cake, a rich fruit dessert filled with raisins, prunes, and currants, and soaked in dark rum and red wine — for months (!) — before being eaten.

“I can still recall the smells of that cake, and the happiness that it brought to folks in the community was just amazing,” Murray says. “That’s what stuck with me — that baking isn’t just the mechanical part or a skill set but the love in a product you can share with others.”

Use that herb harvest in your baking

One of the highlights of the fall for Murray is being able to include her herb harvest from the summer in her baking. While locally grown and fresh herbs are still available, fall is a great time to freeze herbs in individual serving sizes for use in cooking and baking throughout the colder months. With the last of the harvest you don’t freeze, Murray suggests incorporating herbs like basil and thyme into shortbread and amaretti cookies to add new flavors to these classic desserts.

The fall flavor trifecta: cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves

Warm spices epitomize the scents and tastes of fall. Cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves are three of the most beloved spices of the season. “They just hit the taste buds differently. They make you feel cozy inside,” Murray says. “It’s like they give you a warm hug.”

fall flavors with Fran Murray sifting

Murray recommends doubling, and sometimes even tripling, the cinnamon in typical fall baking recipes. “Don’t be afraid to add warm spices to all your desserts,” she says.

Just a reminder, though: Don’t skip the cloves. Although they may not be as widely used as cinnamon, they are an essential part of fall flavoring. “Anytime you use cinnamon, add an eighth of the amount of cloves,” Murray says. “A little goes a long, long way, and you will notice the difference.”

Spice things up this fall

For simple desserts that need a little something extra, such as sugar cookies or vanilla cupcakes, Murray has a quick and easy flavor booster: simple syrup. Boil up a batch (one part sugar, one part water) and keep it in the fridge so you always have some on hand when the need arises. (It’s also an essential ingredient in many cocktails.) “Add some cinnamon, some nutmeg, a little clove, and some lemon zest to that simple syrup, and then just baste it onto a dessert to infuse all that delicious flavor.”

Fruity fall goodness

Fall is all about the fruit, right? Apple picking, cranberry stringing…and did you know pumpkin is actually a fruit??? Poaching or grilling apples and pears makes for an easy dessert that Murray seasons with those beloved warm spices. She also delights in pairing them with citrus zests. “My family thinks I’m crazy, but whenever they reach for a citrus fruit, I’m like, ‘Wait, I have to zest it first!'”

She freezes the zests of limes, lemons, and oranges in little baggies that she’ll use throughout the fall in cakes, pies, sugar cookies, shortbread, and cupcakes. “Add orange zest to your pumpkin latte — it’s insane what’s going to happen to your taste buds.”


An animated ad for 1800flowers.com's fall collection

Chocolate never goes out of season

One of Murray’s favorite staples for fall baking is chocolate, but you might be surprised how she uses it. “Chocolate pairs with everything in the fall,” she says. “When I bake my apple pies (obviously adding my double dose of nutmeg and cinnamon!), I pour chocolate syrup over them.” She says the sweetness from the apples mixed with the autumnal warm spices marries with the rich chocolate to create the perfect flavor union.

It’s that kind of experimentation that Murray says makes fall baking so much fun. “Use traditional desserts and add your own twist to them. I always say, you don’t have to be a master chef to whip up yumminess and release your creativity.”

What I Love About Fall: It’s Back to Baking Season

For our “What I Love About Fall” series, we asked people of all walks of life to share personal stories that illustrate why they’re passionate about autumn. In this installment, writer and baking enthusiast Jackie Rupp recounts a neighborhood pie party she once hosted this time of year.

My oven stays off during the summer, when I focus more on grilling and lighter meals. With cooler temperatures arriving here in my hometown of Philadelphia, I’m getting ready to once again fire up the oven and get creative with some fall baking.

Fall is a great time to start exploring new baking recipes before the rush of the holiday season begins. I love making cakes, pies, and cookies, and I am starting to challenge myself by experimenting with baked vegan desserts (chocolatey vegan brownies, anyone?). But the best part to me is sharing and gifting my baked creations.

An animated ad for 1800flowers.com's fall collection

Neighborhood pie party

Pre-pandemic, I moved to a new neighborhood and wanted to get to know more people in my area. I decided it would be fun to host some neighborhood dessert swaps, during which I could meet new people and make new friends. I created events on my neighborhood groups on social media and got a great response. Who doesn’t like baked goods, right?

My favorite event was our pie party. I hosted a group of about a dozen women, most of whom I’d never met before. I couldn’t believe how generous everyone was with their time and energy. My entire kitchen island was covered with pies of all kinds: apple, cherry, lemon, pecan. We didn’t know what to slice into first. (We also learned that wine goes amazing with pies, by the way, so don’t be afraid to pair yours with a glass of white or red, or even a little bit of bubbly.)

what i love about fall with pie party

The funniest part of the evening was when one woman, who did not have time to bake, confessed to picking up a store-bought pie on her way over. That led to several other guests making confessions of their own: “Yep, my pie was store bought, too.” It was nice to realize that I’m not the only one that sometimes has grander baking plans than my schedule allows me to pull off.

No one cared, of course.

We were all grateful to just have an evening to ourselves, where we could sit around with the smells of cinnamon and clove in the air and enjoy conversations while eating absurd amounts of pie. We had so many leftovers, but that was our goal. We divvied up all the pieces into slices, and everyone got to take home several varieties.

An apple pie inspired by a Philly institution

One of my favorites was my French apple pie à la mode inspired by our hometown Tastykake brand. For those not familiar with this local favorite, it comes in little rectangular pie tins and is ubiquitous at convenience stores here in Philly. It’s your standard apple pie but with a generous amount of raisins added in. As a kid, this felt so exotic to me. I thought this must be how the royals in the French court ate their apple pie. I have no idea of the exact lineage, but where the pie goes from good to great is the addition of a crunchy vanilla icing layer on top.

To achieve this icing on a full-sized pie, I used a simple sugar cookie glaze. It’s just a mixture of milk and powdered sugar to which I add a tiny drop of vanilla. Essentially, you can use any of your favorite cookie glaze recipes. You can even spice it up for fall by adding nutmeg, cinnamon, or a little orange flavor.

what I love about fall with French apple pie a la mode

The key to icing the pie is doing it only once it is completely cooled. Although I do love my hot apple pie, this icing won’t hold up to that type of heat. It’s super easy to get the right consistency: If it’s too runny, just add more sugar or thin it out with warm water.

This year, I’m thinking of hosting another pie party, this time outside, around our firepit. It’ll be BYOB (bring your own…blanket), and I picture us sipping warmed spiked…I mean spiced apple cider and digging into some more delicious pies.

Is it fall yet? Because I’m ready to bake.

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