Your kids will love these ice popsicles. Creamy frozen cream cheese with a crumbly coating. Bring on the sunshine!
- Preparation Time
- 20 min
- Cooking Time
- 0
- Cooling Time
- 0
- Skill Level
- Easy
- Serving Size
- 6
Ingredients
- 6 Petits Suisses
- 5 tbsp acacia honey
- 15 g Koko Krunch®
- apricot sauce (or any dessert sauce) to serve
Instructions
- Pour the Petits Suisses into a salad bowl, add the honey and whisk them together.
- Clean the Petits Suisses pots or ramekins.
- Pour the crushed Koko Krunch® at the bottom of the pots.
- Add on top of it the Petit Suisse crème.
- Pat the pots to remove any air and make the Koko Krunch® stick to the crème.
- Put sticks in the centre and place the pots in the freezer for 12 hours.
- To remove the popsicles, pour some hot water around the pots and pull them using the sticks.
- Enjoy those popsicles with apricot sauce or any dessert sauce.
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As well as being a healthy choice for people who want to reduce the amount of gluten in their diet, or have coeliac disease or a gluten intolerance, Gluten Free Corn Flakes are fortified with B-vitamins, folic acid and iron
It’s too early to say. The science in this area is still emerging. There is evidence that low GI foods take longer to digest and help you feel satisfied for longer, but none that you’ll eat fewer calories at the next meal.
Not yet, but we will keep listening and responding to people’s needs.
The serving sizes mentioned on breakfast cereals can slightly differ, mainly due to differences in product density. Beyond its nutrients density, it’s also important for the portion size to suit the average cereal bowl. Some types of breakfast cereals, such as mueslis or granolas, are denser than traditional flakes; so a 30 g serving could look tiny and unrealistic in a bowl – that's why we use 45 g as a reference. These different serving sizes have been defined by the European cereals trade association and consistently applied by all industry members in Europe.
No. Even though some foods made with whole grain have a high GI, you can still benefit by including them in a healthy, balanced diet. Eating lots of whole grain can be good for the heart, even if the GI of the food is high. The whole population can benefit from eating more whole grain; the effect of low GI foods is still not clear.