Kid-friendly Kid-Made Banana Frozen Yogurt Recipe - Sticky Fingers Cooking
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Recipe: Kid-Made Banana Frozen Yogurt

Recipe: Kid-Made Banana Frozen Yogurt

Kid-Made Banana Frozen Yogurt

by Erin Fletter
Photo by Africa Studio/Adobe Stock
prep time
20 minutes
cook time
makes
4-6 servings

Fun-Da-Mentals Kitchen Skills

  • blend :

    to stir together two or more ingredients until just combined; blending is a gentler process than mixing.

  • chop :

    to cut something into small, rough pieces using a blade.

  • knife skills :

    Bear Claw (growl), Pinch, Plank, and Bridge (look out for trolls)

  • shake :

    to rapidly and vigorously move a covered container filled with food up and down and side to side to combine ingredients and create a different consistency, such as shaking whipped cream to make butter.

Equipment Checklist

  • Cutting board + kid-safe knife
  • Blender (or pitcher + immersion blender)
  • Liquid measuring cup
  • Measuring spoons
  • Clear ziplock bags—1 quart-size + 1 gallon-size per 2-kid team (or 1 snack-size + 1 quart-size per kid)
  • Permanent marker (e.g., 'Sharpie') to mark bags
  • Kid or kitchen scissors
scale
1X
2X
3X
4X
5X
6X
7X

Ingredients

Kid-Made Banana Frozen Yogurt

  • 2 bananas
  • 3 C whole milk vanilla Greek yogurt **(for DAIRY ALLERGY sub dairy-free/nut-free vanilla Greek yogurt)**
  • 1 C of milk **(for DAIRY ALLERGY sub dairy-free/nut-free milk)**
  • 4 T agave nectar/honey/sugar
  • 6 T to 1 1/2 C salt
  • lots of crushed ice

Food Allergen Substitutions

Kid-Made Banana Frozen Yogurt

  • Dairy: Substitute dairy-free/nut-free milk and vanilla Greek yogurt.

Instructions

Kid-Made Banana Frozen Yogurt

1.
chop + measure + blend

Have kids chop up 2 bananas and add them to your blender. Then have kids measure and pour 3 cups of yogurt, 1 cup of milk, 4 tablespoons of agave nectar, add the lid, and blend until smooth.

2.
write names

Have kids write names on their bags (one bag can be shared with 2 kids). For the bag method of FroYo, you will need some good-quality plastic ziplock bags in gallon and quart sizes. Don't use cheap ones that don't have a good seal and might leak.

3.
fill + seal + shake + shake + shake

Have each kid (or kid team) fill their quart bag with a serving size (1/3 to 1/2 cup) each of the blended yogurt mixture, and seal very well. Next, fill the gallon-sized bags half full of crushed ice and add 6 tablespoons of salt. Place the quart bag into the gallon bag with the ice and salt, seal, and have kids shake, shake, shake for up to 10 minutes.

4.
freeze + shake some more

Set the bags to the side to continue to freeze on their own while you make the brownies (see recipe). Then pick them up again before serving and shake some more! Serve when the frozen yogurt reaches the desired texture. If it gets too firm, you can thaw and break it up with your hands until your desired consistency. Take the quart bag out of the gallon bag and wash the saltwater off the quart bag. Snip the corner of the frozen yogurt bag and squeeze on top of a Chocolaty Black Beanie Brownie (see recipe). Enjoy!

Surprise Ingredient: Banana!

back to recipe
Photo by Daria Lixovetckay/Shutterstock.com

Hi! I'm Banana!

“I'm such an 'a-peeling' fruit, I'm just going to have to tell you a little about myself! Bananas are very popular. We're long and curved, and we typically have a yellow outer layer (like some raincoats!) called a peel or skin. After peeling a banana, you can eat it whole; slice it into cereal, salads, or desserts; and mash it and put us on toast or add us to pancake or banana bread batter. Be careful not to throw your banana peel on the floor, or someone might slip on it!"

History

  • The Latin scientific name for banana is "musa sapientum," or "fruit of the wise men."
  • The first recorded mention of bananas is from the 6th century BCE. They were represented in Egyptian hieroglyphs.
  • Bananas may have been Earth's first fruit and the first fruit cultivated by people. The first banana farms were in southeast Asia.
  • The phrase "going bananas" came about because monkeys love bananas!
  • India produces over 26 percent of the world's bananas. In the United States, Hawaii grows the most bananas.
  • There are a few cultures, especially Japan's, where the fiber from the banana plant is used to make fabric and sometimes even paper.
  • The world's record for the longest banana split is 4.97 miles. In March 2017, Innisfail, Australia, residents made it using 40,000 bananas, 660 gallons of ice cream, and 528 gallons of topping. It took hundreds of volunteers 12 hours to prepare the banana split. 
  • People like their bananas! Worldwide we eat more than 100 billion bananas each year! Of those, Americans annually eat about 27 pounds of bananas per person. But we don't eat as many bananas as the Ugandan people. Their average consumption each year is 500 pounds per person!

Anatomy & Etymology

  • What appears to be a banana tree is actually an herbaceous flowering plant (the world's largest). 
  • A banana plant can grow an inch or more while you sleep at night, eventually growing from 10 to 25 feet high.
  • Botanically, a banana is a berry.
  • Since commercially-grown bananas do not contain seeds, you cannot grow a banana from seed unless you can find someone who sells seeds from the wild fruit. Otherwise, new plants are grown from offshoots or suckers of the banana plant.
  • A single banana fruit is called a finger, and a cluster of fruit is called a hand. There are 10 to 20 fingers on each hand.
  • About 75 percent of a banana's weight is water. 
  • Because bananas are less dense than water, they are able to float.
  • Wild banana varieties include bubblegum pink bananas with fuzzy skins, green-and-white striped bananas with orange sherbet-colored flesh, and bananas that taste like strawberries when cooked.
  • The word "banana" may have come from the West African Wolof word "banaana," through late 16th century Portuguese or Spanish. However, it could have come from the Arab word "banan," meaning finger. 

How to Pick, Buy, & Eat

  • Bananas ripen best if growers pick them when they are still green.
  • Don't separate a banana from the bunch if you want it to ripen more quickly. 
  • Putting bananas in a sealed container, like a brown paper bag, will hasten them to ripen, especially if you add another type of fruit to the bag. 
  • You may have noticed that organic bananas often come with plastic wrap around the top stems of a bunch, but you can also wrap yours at home. Tightly wrapped stems will help bananas last three to five days longer. 
  • Try peeling a banana from the bottom up toward the stem to avoid dislodging the stringy vascular tissue running down the length of the fruit inside. Those strings are called "phloem" (pronounced "flom").
  • Banana peels are actually edible if cooked.
  • Once you peel a banana and it comes in contact with air, it can begin to turn brown. Sprinkling lemon or pineapple juice on a cut banana will prevent this.
  • Don't be surprised that the banana peel turns brown or black after being refrigerated—it won't affect the fruit inside. This darkening happens because the cold breaks down the skin's cell walls and causes compounds in it to oxidize.
  • You can put ripe or overripe bananas in the freezer and then add a frozen banana to your blender when making a smoothie instead of ice. You can also insert a popsicle stick into one end of a banana, freeze the banana, then dip the frozen banana in chocolate melted with a little oil. If desired, roll the coated banana in toppings like nuts, coconut flakes, or sprinkles, then refreeze for a chocolaty, nutritious frozen dessert. 

Nutrition

  • Bananas contain vitamin C, potassium, fiber, and vitamin B6.
  • Bananas have 31 percent of the daily value of vitamin B6! This vitamin strengthens your nervous and immune systems. It also is needed for your body to make serotonin, a hormone that elevates mood.   
  • About half of all people allergic to latex may also be allergic to bananas.

 

History of Frozen Yogurt!

Photo by Connect Images - Curated/Shutterstock.com
  • Frozen yogurt, a frozen dairy dessert similar to ice cream, was invented in the 1970s by the H.P. Hood Dairy in Lynnfield, Massachusetts. They called it "frogurt." Today, frozen yogurt is often shortened to "froyo." 
  • National Frozen Yogurt Day is February 6!
  • Like its main ingredient, yogurt, the frozen variety is more tangy than ice cream, and since it is made with milk instead of cream, it is also lower in fat.
  • Frozen yogurt shops are often as popular as ice cream shops, especially when they offer lots of flavors and toppings for kids to create their own fro-yo masterpieces!

The Yolk's On You

How do you make a milkshake?

Give a cow a pogo stick!

That's Berry Funny

What does an invisible man drink?

Evaporated milk!

The Yolk's On You

What do you call a cow that doesn’t give milk?

A milk dud!

The Yolk's On You

What kind of key opens a banana? 

A mon-key!

The Yolk's On You

What would you call two banana skins? 

A pair of slippers.

That's Berry Funny

Why does milk turn into yogurt when you take it to a museum?

Because it becomes cultured!

THYME for a Laugh

What is the only food that you are allowed to play with? 

Yo-Yo Gurt!

THYME for a Laugh

Why are bananas never lonely? 

Because they hang around in bunches!

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