This show-stopping appetizer or table centerpiece offers a festive way to balance out the rich holiday fare – and the kids will love helping you make it too! The following "recipe" is a helpful guide, but feel free to vary the fruit according to what you enjoy.
25 bamboo skewers any size works, but we used the 12" skewers and feel they work best for both decoration and eating
Ingredients
1pear, cut in half vertically
1tablespoonvanilla icing, or craft glue per preference
Optionaldecorations for the pear "body": a piece of candy corn for the nose, pretzel sticks for legs, pecans for feet, and a pair of candy eyes
3clementines, peeled and segmented (for a total of about 25 segments)
25green grapes
25red grapes
25blackberries
25blueberries
25pineapple chunks, about 1-inch squares
25cantaloupe balls from 1 fresh cantaloupe
Instructions
Make the body of the turkey: With the flat side down and the narrow end of the pear acting as the "head," use a dot of vanilla icing (or craft glue) to stick on the eyes and nose. Set aside to dry.
Make the feathers: Arrange your ingredients in an assembly line to build the skewers. Start by skewering one clementine, moving it to about 2 inches from the blunt base of the skewer. Add a green grape and red grape. (I skewer them vertically.) Next, add a blackberry, a blueberry, a pineapple chunk, and a melon ball. Repeat to make 25 skewers.
Assemble the turkey: Find the halfway point (from top to bottom) of the pear body, and stick one skewer in each side. These will be your base skewers, from which you will build up.
Continue adding skewers until you fill in the sides and top of the pear, like feathers. You will need to layer some on top of one another and can tuck some skewers in without actually spearing the pear. It will start to feel crowded, but the visual is nice when the skewers are close together. (That said, if you can't get them all in, reserve some to add later or serve on the side of the platter.)
Place two pretzel sticks at the bottom of the pear to look like legs. These don't need to be pushed into the pear. The pear can sit on top of the edge of the pretzels. You can also break the pretzels to make them shorter, if needed.
Angle a pecan out from the bottom of each pretzel stick to look like feet.
Gobble, gobble!!
Notes
*Buying whole fruit is less expensive and oftentimes tastes much fresher. However, cut fruit can be a time-saver. Choose whichever option suits your needs better. For your reference and comparison, we used fresh fruit that we peeled and cut ourselves in the above photos.