Okay, back to ice cream. When he was almost 2 years old, his grandfather gave him some ice cream. He scooped a little bit on a spoon and DN had a little taste. He spat it out straight away (I think he didn't like that it was cold) but a minute later, the area around his mouth burst into red rashes. Oh dear!
For the past 2 months, I'd been searching high and low for ice lolly molds. NTUC, Cold Storage, United Square, Phoon Huat... but no luck. Finally I called Howard's Storage World and hooray! They had a set there for $11. But because I'm such a lazy bum, I didn't go down to Parkway Parade or Harbourfront. In the end, I still got my ice lolly molds, and for only $3.90 at Ikea. Woot! (It's good to be a lazy bum!) And it was DN who found the molds... at the outdoor furniture section, go figure!
So last weekend, I decided to make some safe, milk-free ice cream (or ice lollies rather) for DN. Because I was going to mix fruit and juice together, I needed my blender. I bought some mangosteen juice and soya milk (er yes, I tried to make soya ice cream) and used some leftover fruit I had in the fridge. You can also make juice lollies if you want, just pour juice into the molds, easy peasy. Many recipes I found online suggest mixing yoghurt in for the creamy taste but of course, DN can't take that, so his were just pure fruit and juice.
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It was DN's FIRST ice cream and he absolutely LOVED it! He finished the entire lolly and has been bugging us for lollies morning, noon and night. I think the next time, I'll try a pure fruit lolly, no juice. That probably wouldn't melt so quickly and turn my son into a sticky, walking, talking mess!
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I think I'll try mango-banana-dragonfruit ice lollies next. If you're adventurous enough, you can try mixing some spinach (the salad kind, not the eng chye kind!) into the mix. The sweetness of the fruit should mask the vege taste and it's a way of sneaking vege into your toddler's diet. Oooh, sneaky sneaky. But it works, I read it online somewhere...
I wish I could do something about the colour though. It looks like cement!