Kid-friendly Honey Ice Slushies Recipe - Sticky Fingers Cooking
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Recipe: Honey Ice Slushies

Recipe: Honey Ice Slushies

Honey Ice Slushies

by Erin Fletter
Photo by Victoria Kondysenko/Shutterstock.com
prep time
10 minutes
cook time
makes
4-6 servings

Fun-Da-Mentals Kitchen Skills

  • melt :

    to heat a solid food so it becomes liquid, like butter or chocolate.

  • stir :

    to mix together two or more ingredients with a spoon or spatula, usually in a circle pattern, or figure eight, or in whatever direction you like!

Equipment Checklist

  • Pitcher
  • Liquid measuring cup
  • Measuring spoons
  • Wooden spoon (or immersion blender)
scale
1X
2X
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7X

Ingredients

Honey Ice Slushies

  • 1/2 C honey
  • 1 C hot water
  • 2 C club soda
  • 2 T fresh lemon juice
  • 2 to 3 C ice

Instructions

Honey Ice Slushies

1.
melt + cool + measure

Have your kids stir 1/2 cup honey into 1 cup hot water in a pitcher to melt the honey. Let the honey cool down, then measure and add 2 cups of club soda, 2 tablespoons lemon juice, and 2 to 3 cups of ice.

2.
stir + serve

Stir and serve, or blend with an immersion blender and enjoy!

Surprise Ingredient: Honey!

back to recipe
Photo by Jag_cz/Shutterstock.com

Hi! I'm Honey!

"I'm a golden, thick, naturally sweet liquid made by honeybees! My flavor varies depending on the particular flower nectar that bees carry home to their hive. Did you know I can last indefinitely? That's forever! Try squeezing or dribbling me into tea, on biscuits, toast, or fruit, and add me to desserts."   

  • Honeybees make honey—they are one of the world's insects that makes food people can eat. An average bee makes about one-twelfth of a teaspoon of honey during its whole life.
  • In Spain, an 8,000-year-old cave painting in the Cuevas de la Araña (Spider Caves) depicts a person gathering honey from a beehive. 
  • Egyptian hieroglyphs record the practice of beekeeping in ancient Egypt and honey's use as a sweetener and as a soothing ointment for wounds. Egyptians also buried their dead with honey or used it in mummification.
  • Ancient Greece had its beekeepers, and references to honey also appear in ancient Indian and Israelite texts.
  • Honey has an indefinite shelf life—it can last forever if well stored because it has natural preservatives. It may crystallize eventually, but the crystals will melt if you warm it by putting the jar in a bowl or pot of hot water or in the microwave on low power. 
  • People initially used honey as a culinary sweetener but now recognize it as a healing ingredient in medicinal treatment. For example, honey can help soothe a cough or sore throat and heal burns or cuts on your skin. 
  • Eating local honey, made from bees living in the same area where you live, may help you build up a resistance to pollen, thereby reducing your allergies. However, there is not sufficient evidence for this. 
  • Infants do not yet have any resistance to the bacteria in honey, so keep it out of their diet until they are over one year old. 
  • Honey consists primarily of fructose and other natural sugars and has insignificant amounts of vitamins and minerals, so it is wise to limit your honey intake as you do with other sugars. 
  • Honey soaks up moisture rapidly. To make cake and cookies last longer and retain their moistness, substitute half of the sugar in a recipe with honey.

History of Slushies!

Photo by Elena Veselova/Shutterstock.com
  • A slushy is similar to the Italian granita but has more liquid content. It is made of ice and a sweetened and flavored beverage. It can be carbonated or non-carbonated. 
  • The first carbonated slushy was accidentally made in Kansas by the owner of a Dairy Queen franchise, Omar Knedlik. In the late 1950s, his soda machine gave him problems, so he stored the soda in the freezer. When he took the soda out, it had become slushy, and he sold it to his customers that way. It was a hit, and he named his concoction "Icee" and started the Icee Company. In 1960, the company began mass-producing slushy machines. In 1965, they sold some machines to 7-Eleven, who named their slushies "Slurpees."
  • A slushy does not freeze solid because of the sugar content in it. A slushy machine prevents the water from freezing by continually mixing the sugar and water molecules until they bond.
  • Slushy fruit flavors include cherry, grape, pineapple, strawberry, and watermelon. Soda flavors may be cola, lemon-lime, or orange. Other possible flavors are caramel, chocolate, coffee, and vanilla.

THYME for a Laugh

Why did the lemon stop halfway across the road? 

He ran out of juice!

Lettuce Joke Around

What kind of bee can't be understood? 

A mumble bee!

The Yolk's On You

How do you spell hard water with 3 letters? 

I-C-E.

The Yolk's On You

What do you give an injured lemon?

Lemon-aid!

Lettuce Joke Around

Who is the honeybee’s favorite singer?

Bee-yonce!

THYME for a Laugh

Why do bees have sticky hair?

Because they use a honeycomb!

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