Category Archives: Babies & Kids

Love Potion

It’s got a nice ring to it, doesn’t it? Love Potion. This is a fun milkshake you can make for your kids or your significant other for Valentine’s Day. You can’t really tell from the picture, but it’s a two-tone milkshake. You need strawberry ice cream and vanilla ice cream to make milkshakes out of each flavor. Make one thicker than the other and fill your glass alternating the flavors. That’s it!

You will get a delicate pink tone swirled in with the white from the vanilla shake, but you won’t get really defined layers here, unless you want to try mixing strawberry or raspberry sherbet in instead of strawberry milkshake. Give it a quick go in your blender with a bit of milk (or water to keep the vibrant color.) Either way, make sure one flavor is thicker than the other so you can more or less layer them. The recipes we used are for one serving, so you can easily double or multiply them to make more.

Helga

Love Potion

Love Potion

Basic Vanilla Milkshake

Recipe by Bobby Flay
Serves 1

Ingredients
1/3 cup whole milk
10 ounces premium vanilla ice cream (about 1 3/4 cups, packed)

Directions

  1. In a blender, combine the milk and ice cream and blend until smooth. Serve immediately.

Strawberry Milkshake

Recipe by Bobby Flay
Serves 1

Ingredients
1/3 cup whole milk (if you want this flavor to have a thinner consistency add more milk)
10 ounces strawberry ice cream (about 1 3/4 cups, packed)

Directions

1. In a blender, combine the milk and ice cream and blend until smooth. Serve immediately.

Love Potion Assembly

  1. Alternate vanilla and strawberry milkshakes in a glass, and decorate with whipped cream and heart sprinkles.

Love Potion

Love Potion

© 2013, The Foodies' Kitchen. All rights reserved.

Children’s Day! – Blog Love

Children’s Day is celebrated globally, different countries have different dates to honor children on a special day.  Guatemala celebrates Children’s Day on October 1st, usually family members make the little persons in their lives feel celebrated by giving them a special treat, going on a special outing or making them a special meal, and at school  they have a fun filled day with activities and goodies.

I’m sad that this year Kristen won’t be able to celebrate Children’s Day at school because she got sick, but we will try to make her feel special with homemade treats… and we’ll probably have a Disney Princess movie marathon.

Here are some ideas (a lot of them are quick!) you can try at home to celebrate your child:

Goldfish Pizzas
at Pepperidge Farm

Nerds Cupcakes
by Mom’s Crazy Cooking
 

Mini Corn Dog Muffins
by Happy Good Time

Magic Potion
by Mrs. Happy Homemaker

(it changes color as the ice melts!)

Chocolate Covered Bananas
by Martha Stewart

Cupcake Fondue
by Oh Sweet Babies

© 2012 – 2013, The Foodies' Kitchen. All rights reserved.

Toddlers: Whole Milk vs. Skim Milk

About a year ago, during Kristen’s routine checkup at the pediatrician we discussed her diet and I asked him if I should continue giving her the fortified whole milk she had been drinking since she was 1 year old. In Guatemala almost everyone gives their children powdered milk from a well-known brand, which is fortified with vitamins, probiotics… and a whole lot of fat. (It has 5.9 gms of saturated fat, and 20 gms of total fat, according to the label).

Since Kristen is not a picky eater, and her daily diet is pretty well balanced she doesn’t need all that extra fat from whole milk, so the doctor suggested that we start offering her the skim milk my husband and I drink.  She liked it better than the other one, and has been drinking it ever since.

A few weeks ago, we had dinner with friends (Hi, Samas!) who have two older kids, and they told us about how they switched their children’s milk from whole to skimmed, because a nutritionist advised them to do so, and explained that whole milk was even considered bad kids (in the long run) and that all parents should start making the switch at around 3 years of age. Had they known this they would have made the switch years ago.

I decided to investigate and here’s what I found:

Because obesity is a risk factor for heart disease and often is accompanied by cholesterol problems, the pediatrics academy now recommends low-fat milk (no more than 2 percent fat) for 1-year-olds for whom weight or obesity is a concern. That new advice is aimed at 1-year-olds who are already overweight, have overweight parents, or have a family history of heart problems. Very young children are increasingly getting fats from sources other than milk.

As babies turn into toddlers, they don’t need the fat contained in whole milk. However, the decision to make the switch depends greatly in the toddler’s nutrition and overall health. If they are picky eaters, and you have trouble getting them to eat a variety of foods, then you have to wait to make the switch. Those kids will benefit from the extra calories they get from whole milk.

If your toddler has an overall balanced diet, then switching to 2% milk is fine. Low-fat and whole milk have equal amounts of vitamins and minerals. In fact, an 8-ounce glass of low-fat milk contains more protein than an 8-ounce glass of whole milk (10 grams versus 8 grams). Whole milk contains 3.5 to 4 percent fat, and this extra fat is primarily saturated fat, which your toddler can do without.

A quick comparison of milk nutrition labels (per 8 ounce serving) shows that there really is an important difference:

  • Whole Milk – 150 Calories – 8g Fat
  • 2% Milk – 120 Calories – 4.5g Fat (Reduced fat milk)
  • 1% Milk – 100 Calories – 2.5g Fat (Low-fat milk)
  • Skim Milk – 80 Calories – 0g Fat (Nonfat milk)

But your growing toddler still needs fat in his diet.  Healthy fats are a necessary component of the vital tissues  – especially the brain and central nervous system  – that are growing so fast in your toddler. So, when you switch to 2% milk, you must add other healthy fats to your toddler’s diet.  Try avocado, peanut butter, almond butter, olive oil, salmon. (be aware of food allergies, of course)

As a general guide, remember that:

  • No cow’s milk before age one (because of allergies)
  • Whole milk until two
  • Nonfat or low-fat after that

Making the switch at an early age is much easier than doing it when your child is older, when they are more likely to notice and be resistant to switching to low fat milk. Still, even with your younger child, you can make a gradual switch, going first to 2% Milk and then later switching again, this time to 1% Milk or Skim Milk.

Sources: 
Parenting
Pediatrics Guide in About.com
US News / Health

Photo borrowed from Bizmology

© 2012 – 2013, The Foodies' Kitchen. All rights reserved.