Kid loving Healthy Creamsicles made with just 4 ingredients and done in 5 minutes (before freezing)!
We will often do strawberry or blueberry flavours with yogurt or whipping cream to create a berries and cream flavour that is wildly popular as well.
Ingredients
4 large oranges (Navel, Blue Jay or Cara Cara), peel removed
2 tsp vanilla paste or extract, divided
1 cup thick plain Greek Yogurt
1 tsp honey*, optional (do not use with children below the age of 1)
Instructions
Place oranges and 1 tsp of the vanilla into a blender. Blend on high speed until smooth.
In a small bowl whisk together yogurt, the remaining 1 tsp vanilla, and honey (if using).
Pour orange mixture into popsicle moulds, distributing evenly so that the moulds fill about a third of the way. Pour yogurt mixture on top of orange mixture to the popsicle mould fill line.
Using a chopstick or a butter knife, dip into each mould and mix slightly to push orange mixture up around the edges.
Cover popsicle mould and insert popsicle sticks. Freeze for at least 6 hours, preferably overnight.
Recipe Notes * if your child is below the age of 1 no sweetener is required. Skip or replace with maple syrup.
(Source: mykitchenlove.com)
17 Facts about the Creamsicle You Never Imagined Were True
By Patrick Limdico|foodtruckempire.com
Part of the original Popsicle Brand, the Creamsicle is one of four related products, which includes the Fudgsicle and the Yosicle. These treats contain fudge and yogurt respectively. The original Popsicle has been around since 1905, but didn’t get a rebrand until 1922. The Creamsicle was born in the late 1930s, along with the Fudgsicle, originally named the Fudgicle. The Creamsicle remains a favorite for its creamy consistency and delicious flavor today. Nearly 100 years old, here are some amazing facts about the famous Creamsicle that are hard to believe. But they are true! Stick around until the end of the article and we’ll test your knowledge of the timeless frozen dessert.
Table of Contents
What is a Creamsicle?
Creamsicle packaging.
1. A combination of frozen orange juice encasing a center made from lush vanilla ice cream, the Creamsicle is one of America’s most cherished summer memories for almost 100 years.
2. Originally only available in orange, the Creamsicle later expanded to include orange, raspberry, blueberry, and a variety of other popular flavors. A sugar-free option was even added much to the dismay of many suburban youth.
What ingredients are in a Creamsicle? The Original Cream Bars. 3. The ingredients in the Creamsicle are very simple. A lolly made of vanilla ice cream is first frozen around a stick. After the lolly is coated in semi-frozen juice of different flavors. Then the product remains frozen until it’s unwrapped and enjoyed.
When was it invented? 4. The original “Eppsicle” was invented in 1905 by Francis William “Frank” Epperson, from Oakland California, when he was just 11 years old. The accidental founder of the “ice lolly”, Epperson began selling them as “Popsicles” commercially in 1922.
5. The Creamsicle came along later, after Epperson sold the rights to the Popsicle brand to the Joe Lowe Company in 1925. The product was described as a new variety of Popsicle with an ice cream center. More than 15 years later, the company introduced their new Creamsicle brand to the world. What is a Dreamsicle? Life is but a Dreamsicle. 6. The Dreamsicle is another brand that came along after the debut of the Creamsicle. The product was similar in form and design with the same frozen juice coating the outside of the soft center. The name was glaringly similar as well. What’s the difference between Dreamsicle and Creamsicle?
7. While they may have been seen as interchangeable at the time, the Creamsicle and Dreamsicle are actually quite different. The Creamsicle uses frozen ice cream as its center while the Dreamsicle used frozen ice-milk.
8. Once an opposing brand to the Creamsicle, the Dreamsicle has long since disappeared from our ice cream coolers. The dessert never reached the heights of the Creamsicle.
9. The “Dreamsicle” trademark is now owned by Tish & Snooky’s Manic Panic of New York City, but is not actually an ice lolly anymore. Now, Dreamsicle is a creamy, pastel orange hair dye with warm undertones in their Creamtones Perfect Pastels collection. Who knew?
How many Creamsicle flavors are there? Orange, raspberry and blueberry flavors. The sugar-free Creamsicle. 10. Creamsicle flavors today include Orange, Raspberry, and Blueberry, which can be bought together in boxes of 12 or individually in ice cream coolers all over America. 11. Past flavors have included lime, grape, cherry, wild berries, and mixed berries. While not as popular, these pops are still available in select stores nationwide during the summer. 12. The Creamsicle also includes new varieties, including the “100-calorie” bars, low-fat pops, No Added Sugar Bars, and sugar-free pops. There speculation that an organic option could also be released in the near future.
13. With only 100 calories per serving, the Creamsicle is a delicious dessert you can eat after dinner without that guilty feeling. Compare this to dessert alternatives like an average size brownie that comes in at 132 calories. This is a lower calorie option than many other desserts.
Historical facts about the Creamsicle. Where it all began. 14. The Creamsicle was not an invention of Epperson, but of the Joe Lowe Company, who first had the idea of coating an ice cream with the Popsicle flavors and putting it on a stick. 15. The Creamsicle trademark was bought out by Good Humor-Breyers in 1989, who also held the rights to the Popsicle and Fudgsicle, originally sold as the “Fudgicle”. 16. Good Humor-Breyers was bought out by British-Dutch consumer goods giant Unilever, who issued notices to a number of consumer outlets and websites in 2010 to stop using the “Popsicle” trademark in their business, recommending they use a more generic term, such as “ice pops”.
When is Creamsicle day? Happy National Creamsicle Day! 17. National Creamsicle Day is held annually in the United States on August 14. It makes for a great excuse to eat the ice cream Creamsicle and enjoy this traditional summer treat.
(Source: foodtruckempire.com)
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