Many fruit popsicles have added sugars. If you are buying your frozen treats, look for those made from 100 percent fruit juice and without sugar or sweeteners added.
Essentially, there are two types of frozen treats to consider: those made with yogurt and those that are strictly fruit.
Utilizing a cup of 100 percent fruit juice, one and a half cups of frozen fruit and three-ounce Dixie cups to hold the mold, the recipe will make eight frozen treats.
Delbridge also suggests Natalie Monson’s recipe for FroYo (Frozen Yogurt) Bites at superhealthykids.com. It will make 10–12 frozen cubes, utilizing only a cup of plain yogurt, a cup of strawberries (for pink) or a cup of blackberries or blueberries (for purple).
“We love yogurt around our house,” Monson writes. “But we don’t love that fruit flavored yogurts are full of sugar, and sometimes my kids don’t like the chunks of fruit in the yogurt. So we came up with these FroYo Bites to make our own fruit-flavored yogurt that is delicious to everyone.
KidsHealth.org offers a recipe for frozen yogurt pops, high in calcium (approximately 262 mg) and coming in at 127 calories each. This recipe is for three to four pops and simple enough that older kids can prepare them on their own.
If you’re looking for fresh fruit pops on a stick, try blending a 20-ounce can of crushed pineapple, one banana, a half-cup of vanilla yogurt, a half-cup of ice and a half-cup of pineapple juice.
Have you made frozen pops? Do you have ideas for a frozen treat that you’d like to pass along? To share, please use the comments section below.