Caramel Popsicle-a simple custard made with milk and sugar is the base for this sweet summer treat!
Did you know June is National Dairy Month? My kids go through at least a gallon of milk a day. I always tease them: we should just get a few cows and put them in the back yard. It’s not realistic, I know. We can’t have hooved animals where we live anyway. More than that, it’s a lot of work to raise dairy cows. A Lot. Unlike any other farming, it’s a daily chore. The cows have to be milked every day. There’s no lazy Saturday or Sunday mornings. The cows are waiting. Reading through The Dairy Good Cookbook brought so many memories back for me. You see, my Grandparents had a dairy farm.
I remember visiting as a kid, getting up before the sun, the cows were there, ready and waiting. Breakfast happened after the cows were tended to. Dairy farming isn’t just cows, there are also the crops, hay, corn, and rotating the pastures. 200 acres is a lot to keep up with. Oh, and it was freezing cold in the winter and hot in the summer. With 40 milking cows, and 25-30 calfs and heifers, there was constantly work to be done. This is my dad back in 1950. My family had the black and white cows, Holsteins. Dairy farming is more than just one person working the farm. It takes a family. The kids will help out before school and after. Spouses work side by side. It’s 365 days a year focused on the cows and the milk they produce. As Julie Lourenzo of Sliver Streams Jerseys farm in Tillamook, Oregon writes in The Dairy Good Cookbook, “The kids always have chores to do, they may not like them, but they do them anyway.” She and husband Shannon “plan their whole day around what each of them are doing on the farm.” Flipping through the pages, the gorgeous photography,
the family stories, the love of the land, the cows, the products they produce…and the recipes! It’s not just a cookbook, but also a book to read. Milk is just the start: Cheese, Butter, Yogurt, Cream, Sour Cream, Cottage Cheese, Cream Cheese (I can’t imagine eating a bagel without it!) oh, and Ice Cream. We have it all because of these dedicated farmers. the family stories, the love of the land, the cows, the products they produce…and the recipes! It’s not just a cookbook, but also a book to read. Milk is just the start: Cheese, Butter, Yogurt, Cream, Sour Cream, Cottage Cheese, Cream Cheese (I can’t imagine eating a bagel without it!) oh, and Ice Cream. We have it all because of these dedicated farmers. The Dairy Good Cookbook: Everyday Comfort Food from America’s Dairy Farm Families features over 100 recipes created by and for America’s 47,000 dairy farm families. From Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner, there are also Snacks, Desserts, and Holiday recipes. I can’t wait to make the Fresh Berry Stuffed French Toast with a Vanilla Yogurt Sauce and I know my kids will love the Slow Cooked Beef Stroganoff. Since it’s almost summer (it really feels like it is summer!) I thought I’d share a popsicle recipe from this cookbook. Simple to make, the creamy milk mixture is swirled with caramel sauce.
When cooking your milk mixture, you know it’s ready when it sticks to a wooden spoon. To make transferring your swirled mixture to popsicle molds, I prefer using a plastic bag.
Then cut the corner.
So much easier than trying to spoon it into those tiny openings. Add your popsicle stick, freeze then enjoy on a hot day.
Connect with Chocolate, Chocolate and More! Facebook | Twitter | Google+ | Pinterest | instagram
This Caramel Popsicle Recipe appears as Caramelicious Milksicles in The Dairy Good Cookbook on page 124.
Caramel Popsicle Recipe
Ingredients
- 1/3 cup sugar
- 2 tablespoons cornstarch
- 1 1/2 cups milk
- 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 1/3 cup caramel ice cream topping, room temperature
Instructions
- Combine sugar and cornstarch in a medium saucepan. Over low heat, whisk in milk until combined. Increase heat to medium-high and bring mixture to a boil. Lower heat and simmer for about 2 minutes, until thickened.
- Remove from heat and stir in vanilla.
- Transfer to a shallow container or bowl. Cover and chill in the refrigerator for 40 minutes to cool.
- Add caramel topping, placing spoonfuls on top of chilled milk mixture, then lightly swirling with a knife.
- Transfer swirled mixture to popsicle molds and freeze until firm, 4-6 hours or overnight.
Notes
This Caramel Popsicle Recipe appears as Caramelicious Milksicles in The Dairy Good Cookbook on page 124.
You can find The Dairy Good Cookbook wherever books and e-books are sold – Amazon, Barnes and Noble and Indie Bound.
This recipe is used with permission from The Dairy Good Cookbook, Andrews McMeel Publishing, LLC.
This article is sponsored by Dairy Good. The opinions and text are my own.
Through The Dairy Good Cookbook, dairy farmers share their secret (and not so secret) stories, traditions, and family recipes that have been passed down through generations. For a chance to win a copy of The Dairy Good Cookbook and a $75 gift card, share a recipe or dish that celebrates your love of dairy (meaning that the recipe or dish must include cow’s milk, cheese and/or yogurt) as well as a story of how that recipe or dish has been passed down through the generations in your family, or is tied to a special tradition or occasion meaningful to you.
Entry Instructions:
You may receive (1) total entry by selecting from the following entry methods:
1. Leave a comment in response to the sweepstakes prompt on this post
2. Tweet (public message) about this promotion; including exactly the following unique term in your tweet message: “#SweepstakesEntry”; and leave the URL to that tweet in a comment on this post
3. Blog about this promotion, including a disclosure that you are receiving a sweepstakes entry in exchange for writing the blog post, and leave the URL to that post in a comment on this post
4. For those with no Twitter or blog, read the official rules to learn about an alternate form of entry.
This giveaway is open to US Residents age 18 or older (or nineteen (19) years of age or older in Alabama and Nebraska). Winners will be selected via random draw, and will be notified by e-mail. The notification email will come directly from BlogHer via the sweeps@blogher email address. You will have 2 business days to respond; otherwise a new winner will be selected.
The Official Rules are available here.
This sweepstakes runs from 6/2/2015 – 6/30/2015
Be sure to visit The Dairy Good Cookbook’s brand page on BlogHer.com where you can read other bloggers’ posts!
Ellie Wright says
For every special occasion my family requests my mini chocolate cheesecakes with cherries. I taught my daughter-in-law how to make them and now her family requests them also.
Thomas Murphy says
We love to make cheesecake and the recipe has been passed down from my great grand mother through the generations.
Rebec ca Graham says
Mac and cheese is recipe we all love and will be enjoyed by my children and their children.
joe gersch says
my favorite dairy recipe that is passed down from my family is my grandma’s creamy cottage cheese and we make this every fourth of July for breakfast
Tamara says
Creamy chicken tortilla soup is a favorite in my family. It actually didn’t get passed down, but rather passed up. (My parents started making it after they tasted mine!)
Tamara says
Tweeted! https://twitter.com/pixel_berry_pie/status/615555213181743105
erica best says
We love to make homemade cheesecake my grandmother used to make and pass it on to us
Francine Anchondo says
My cajun chicken pasta is my favorite and it started with me and will definitely be handed down
Ed says
Mom;s Sweet Vidalia Onion Pie causes awe in its tasters!
melissa Resnick says
my kids fav recipe is a taco dip that they love to eat as a meal, its made with cottage cheese and cream cheese
Kristen says
I made a cherry cheese pie one year for Thanksgiving….now it is a must-have at all family gatherings & friends’ potlucks.
Kristen says
tweeted
https://twitter.com/rubylorikeet/status/615708875258380288
Tabathia B says
It’s always tradition for thanksgiving for my grandmother to prepare homemade macaroni and cheese using different cheeses shredded and grated and milk
tbarrettno1 at gmail dot com
Tabathia B says
https://twitter.com/ChelleB36/status/615724799973814272
tbarrettno1 at gmail dot com
Bert Ruiz says
One of our family’s favorite recipes is great-grandma’s champurrado (mexican hot chocolate). It’s tradition to drink it during Christmas time
Bert Ruiz says
tweeted https://twitter.com/iamdadtastic/status/615801008371838976
Amy Smeltzer says
I like when mom makes lasagna or spaghetti with hot Italian sausage links
tiffany lane says
I love to make Lasanga for my family and I use lots of cheese
Denise L says
My son’s favorite food is mac & cheese. I found a recipe for mac & cheese & chicken muffins that I modified to make into JUST mac & cheese. Very simple, very delicious, and according to my son “even better than Applebees!” Here it is – 8 oz macaroni cooked and drained, 1 T butter melted, whisk in 1 T flour and a 1 t. salt. Cook 1 min. Whisk in 1.5 cups of whole milk, bring to boil and simmer 3 minutes. Turn off heat and mix in 1 cup of shredded or cubed white cheddar and .25 cup of shredded parm. I like to add steamed broccoli but it’s perfect without it too.
Denise L says
tweeted – https://twitter.com/dmarie824/status/615933916684267520