Foley school bakes thousands of Christmas treats for fundraiser

Fifth-grader Marisa Spiczka puts a pan of raspberry thumbprint cookies on a rack. (Photo by Dianne Towalski / The Visitor)
Fifth-grader Marisa Spiczka puts a pan of raspberry thumbprint cookies on a rack. (Photo by Dianne Towalski / The Visitor)

For more than 20 years, St. John’s Area School in Foley has carried on the tradition of baking, packaging and selling homemade

Christmas treats each December. This fundraiser is one of three the school does each year, and it raises about $10,000 toward its annual operating budget.

Using ingredients — including 179 pounds of butter, 70 pounds of chocolate chips and 96 pounds of peanut butter — a group of between 75 and 100 volunteers bakes 3,000 dozen confections in one week. That’s about 36,000 cookies and candies, ranging from peanut butter blossoms to fudge with or without nuts to traditional cutout cookies, date balls, tea cakes and more.

Gabby Orton, a fifth-grader at St. John's Area School in Foley, lines up scoops of dough on a pan for the school's annual cookie fundraiser Nov. 29. (Photo by Dianne Towalski / The Visitor)
Gabby Orton, a fifth-grader at St. John’s Area School in Foley, lines up scoops of dough on a pan for the school’s annual cookie fundraiser Nov. 29. (Photo by Dianne Towalski / The Visitor)

During the week, students in grades five and six go to the lunchroom, which doubles as Santa’s bakeshop, for an hour on each of two days. Bakers and packaging volunteers work shifts between 1 p.m. and 9 p.m. on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. More help will be on hand for distribution this year on Saturday, Dec. 3. They don’t bake on Wednesday because of scheduled religious education programs.

One of the best parts besides the heavenly smell, said Christine Friederichs, principal of the school, is the sense of community it creates from start to finish.

Custodian Eric Novak helps cut coconut cranberry bars, a new treat offered this year. (Photo by Dianne Towalski / The Visitor)
Custodian Eric Novak helps cut coconut cranberry bars, a new treat offered this year. (Photo by Dianne Towalski / The Visitor)

“Everyone gets involved, from our families to our staff, to our students and past students, to their families and beyond,” she said. “Students from years ago wait for this time of year to be able to come back and help during this week because they remember doing it when they were a student here. It’s tradition.”

Author: The Visitor

The Visitor is the official newpaper for the Diocese of Saint Cloud.

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