Monkey’s Lunch Eskimo Pies

March 16, 2013 in Frozen Treats, Nut-Free Baking, Treats

Monkey's Lunch Eskimo Pies - 4 Ingredients, Gluten-Free, Dairy-Free, Refined Sugar-Free | The Paleo MomThese “ice cream” bars are so ridiculously simple to make (how much simpler can you get than four ingredients and a popsicle mold!?!) and so ridiculously delicious, it feels like cheating.  The secret is to use very ripe bananas, both for the sweetness they provide and the texture.  When combined with smooth almond butter, they make for a completely creamy ice cream-esque inside to these treats.

You could totally make these nut-free by substituting sunflower seed butter or tahini or a mix for the almond butter (I don’t  know if coconut butter would work texture wise, but I bet it would be super tasty too!).  And really, you could use any nut butter you want.  I just like the almond-banana combo (reminds me of peanut butter and banana sandwiches when I was growing up).

I keep the banana-almond popsicles in my freezer and then we dip in magic shell right when we’re ready to eat.  As a fun variation, you could immediately roll the popsicle in chopped nuts before the magic shell completely hardens.

I use classic cylindrical popsicle molds that I bought years ago (can’t remember what store).  They are similar to these Kidco popsicle molds.  However, if I was going to buy new molds (which I may do because I can’t be 100% certain that mine are BPA-free), I would either buy ones with a spout for drinking the melted liquid like these Danesco ones or buy these super cool Norpro Silicone Ice Pop Molds that are more like otter pops (or freezies if you’re Canadian), although something like these Tovolo molds would be a more usual shape for Eskimo Pies (yeah, on second thought those Norpro ones might be a bit awkward for this recipe.  I still think they’re cool though) .

This recipe makes 10 ¼-cup sized popsicles (1 full mold and then two extra popsicles).  My kids can’t get enough of them.

Monkey's Lunch Eskimo Pies - 4 Ingredients, Gluten-Free, Dairy-Free, Refined Sugar-Free | The Paleo Mom

Ingredients (Banana-Almond “Ice Cream”):

  • 3 ridiculously ripe (like you’re about to throw them out ripe) bananas
  • 3/4 cup smooth almond butter
  1. For best consistency, blend bananas and almond butter together with an immersion blender.  For more fun with your kids, mash it all together with a fork until it’s as smooth as you can get it.
  2. Spoon into popsicle molds.  Stick in the sticks and put it in the freezer until frozen (about 3-4 hours)

Ingredients (Chocolate Magic Shell):

  1.  Melt chocolate and coconut oil in a small saucepot over low heat or in the microwave on medium power.  Stir well.  Let cool (depending on your room temperature, it may stay liquidy).
  2. Store in a glass mason jar at room temperature (it will keep for up to several months).

Assembly:

  1. If your magic shell solidified during storage, gently reheat (about 30 seconds in the microwave is perfect in my house).
  2. Remove a popsicle from the mold (running hot water on the outside is helpful with this).
  3. Dip the popsicle in the magic shell.  Remove and hold over the magic shell while it drips (or immediately roll is some chopped nuts).  For a thicker chocolate shell, redip after the first dip solidifies.  Enjoy immediately!

Monkey's Lunch Eskimo Pies - 4 Ingredients, Gluten-Free, Dairy-Free, Refined Sugar-Free | The Paleo Mom

 

Nut-Free Paleo Chewy Granola Bars

February 16, 2013 in Nut-Free Baking, Snack Bars, Snacks

Nut-Free Paleo Chewy Granola Bars | The Paleo MomAsk and ye shall receive.  Well, if you’re my sister-in-law–who e-mailed me a couple of weeks ago with a plea for help.  She needed a granola bar recipe that was gluten-free, nut-free, and dairy-free to go to a nut-free school with her daughters and accommodate her daughters’ food sensitivities.  (Clearly, any recipe I come up with will be grain-free too.)  Oh, and her kids don’t like dates or raisins.  Did I have anything that would work?  Erm.

So, I set to work and came up with this recipe.  Given how quickly each iteration of this recipe was devoured, they’re obviously kid-approved.   Inspiration comes from many places for me (pleas for help being one of them). I’ve actually had many requests for more nut-free treats like these, either for those of you with nut allergies or for those of you with kids who go to nut-free school or classrooms.  So, it’s good to get the occasional motivation to create something new like this.  And, while I can’t develop brand new recipes for every special request, I guess if you’re related to me, you can go ahead and make elaborate recipe requests.  ;)

If you want to change up the flavors here, you could use your favorite dried fruit or add some fun spices.  But, I do have to warn you that my husband used the P-word to describe these (Perfect).

I cut these into 16 squares.  If you want to cut into rectangles to be more granola-bar like, if would make about 10.

Ingredients:

  1. Grease a 9″x9″ pan with coconut oil or palm shortening.  Preheat oven to 350F.
  2. Coconut flakes should be chopped to the size of large flakes of oatmeal. Pepitas should be chopped to roughly the size of sunflower seeds.  Apricots and cranberries should be chopped to the size of raisins or slightly smaller.
  3.  Optional:  toast chopped flaked coconut in a skillet over medium-high heat for 6-7 minutes, until lightly browned.
  4.  Blend eggs, honey, salt and cinnamon to completely combine (about 20 seconds).
  5.  Combine all the dry ingredients.  Pour blended eggs over and mix to fully combine.  Pour into pan and press down evenly.
  6.  Bake for 18 minutes.  Let cool completely then cut into bars or squares.

Nut-Free Paleo Chewy Granola Bars | The Paleo Mom

TPV Episode 25 Show Notes: Let’s Hear it From the Boys

February 8, 2013 in Practical Tips, Practical Tips, Show Notes

Our twenty-fifth show!
Ep. 25: Let’s Hear it From the Boys

In this episode, Stacy and Sarah invite actual boys on the podcast! We’re joined by Stacy’s seven-year-old, Cole, plus the amazing Joshua of Slim Palate and the entire Hulet family (Jen, Ben, and their boys Oscar and Linus) of The Urban Poser to discuss how to be a real food kid in a processed food world. This one is quite the show! The kids, Cole, Oscar and Linus spend the first half being adorable, then, after they head to bed, the adults talk about defending their choices and affirming the healthiness of paleo kids.

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The Paleo View (TPV), Episode 25: Let’s Hear it From the Boys

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Celebrating Another Milestone with My Oldest Daughter

December 6, 2012 in 2012

Many of you will recall from various posts in the past that my oldest daughter doesn’t like to eat meat (see Challenge #2: My Kids, Why I Cater To My Kids, Challenge #2 Update: My Still Spirited but Much Healthier Kids).  Through a series of events (sensory issues, severe reflux, undiagnosed gluten intolerance, being on doctor’s orders to fatten her up because she was so dangerously thin at 1-year old, catering to her desire for soft foods just to get her to eat), my daughter never really developed the jaw strength or muscle coordination to chew meat properly.  We’ve been working on this slowly over the last year of eating paleo in our home.

We changed our strategy in the early part of this year (see Towing a Harder Line with My Kids).  We went from completely catering to my daughter’s food preferences to feeding her a meal that was much closer to what the rest of the family was eating (I always make sure to have fruit and vegetables on her plate that she likes).  And, we started making it a rule that she had to eat a reasonable amount of meat at every meal (well, eggs at breakfast and something like 1-2oz of meat at other meals).

I go to great efforts to make delicious food, to keep my daughter’s flavor preferences in mind, to remember that chewing is hard for her, that food texture can be overwhelming for her.  Even still, we have generally found that most meals were a battle, the intensity of which varied depending on the meal, how tired my daughter was, how stressed my husband I were, and whether or not we had any bribery power on that specific day.  We have seen slow (S-L-O-W) improvement though.  My daughter went from only eating Paleo Chicken Fingers and maybe some types of fish with minimal harassing (it still would take her an hour to slowly pick at it before she had eaten it all) to the huge milestone we hit just this week.  My daughter announced that she likes steak!

Yesterday was leftover night in our home.  I asked my daughter if she would prefer leftover Paleo Chicken Fingers or leftover Simple Broiled Pork ChopsShe chose pork chop!   It still takes her a long time to eat and she still needs some gentle reminders to take another bite (and another and another), but  we haven’t had a battle over dinner in over a week.  A whole week!  Best of all, she is finally getting at least some enjoyment out of foods that require chewing!

Getting my daughter to eat quality proteins has helped in many other ways too.  She is stronger, has more energy, sleeps better, behaves better (this all may be related to getting gluten and most dairy out of her diet as well, although we successfully went gluten free a couple of months before implementing the “meat-eating plan”).  I often lament not knowing any better when she was born, when we started her on rice cereal and she became chronically constipated, when I didn’t look at my diet when she was extremely colicky (for a whole year!) and would projectile spit-up (and continued to spit-up until she was over 3-years old!), when she didn’t start sleeping through the night until she was 3.5-years old and when she started having tantrums at 9 months old.  I don’t know how much might have been different if I had had a better diet through pregnancy and nursing and fed her better foods in those early years.  Mommy guilt is tough to get over, but I do try not to think about that too much.  Instead, I try to appreciate just how far we’ve come and be thankful that I did figure it out when I did.  Vive la paleo!