Boston Herald

Get your party started!

Tips to make your holiday bash fun and easy

- By GRETTA MONAHAN

The holiday season seems to happen earlier and earlier every year, but now with Halloween behind us, it’s officially time to dive in. This year I’ve sworn to make the holidays as stressfree and enjoyable as possible, while still doing everything I can to open my house up to family and friends and celebrate the season in style. So with that mission in mind, I’m embracing a few ideas in holiday entertaini­ng that will take the pressure off, but also make it super fun.

Make it a potluck: To ease the stress of making a fourcourse meal that appeals to all of your guests, a potluck ensures that the food is neverendin­g (with every new guest arrival, a new dish shows up!) and the menu’s diverse enough that everyone’s sure to love something.

Health-ify the traditiona­l cocktail party: Give your guests (and their bodies!) a break from the constant deluge of overindulg­ence that happens straight through the holiday season. Serve them one easy and healthy holidaythe­med cocktail (like the lowcalorie Golden Apple — equal parts vodka and Calvados, topped with sparkling cider and an apple slice), along with almosteffo­rtlesstoma­ke light snacks such as sushigrade tuna slices with wasabi and ginger on cucumber slices. Guests — and their waistlines and cholestero­l levels — will thank you. Find plenty of great light and festive recipes at www.health.com.

Use sites and apps to stay organized: Don’t get me wrong, paper invites are charming and personal, and definitely have their place with more formal events. But no matter how big your shindig is, sites and/or social media (Evite, Facebook, Paperless Post, etc.) will help you stay infinitely more organized than paper, as you try to remember everyone you want to invite and keep up with who can and cannot attend. No more stressing about being short on food, or embarrassm­ent from accidental­ly leaving anyone out of the plans.

Make decorating easy: Scent and color are two of the highestimp­act, easytoempl­oy elements in setting the scene for guests to feel at home and in the holiday spirit. Scatter big bowls of cinnamon sticks and scented pinecones around the house, and suddenly it doesn’t matter if you haven’t spent a fortune on the rest of the decor. For other decoration­s, keep it all cohesive by choosing a main color and some accent colors that pair nicely. For Thanksgivi­ng, it could be a traditiona­l mix of brown shades, but muted yellows and oranges are just as appropriat­e and pretty. Red is the gotohue for Christmas, of course, or go for something elegant, like champagne and white. For New Year’s? Sky’s the limit: royal blue with white; hot violet with black; or metallics — whatever makes you feel excited to be the host/ess with the mostest.

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