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Blend up a healthy smoothie for breakfast, indulgent snack

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This Strawberry-banana Smoothie contains plenty of fruit and gets a boost in creaminess with non-fat buttermilk.

  • **FOR USE WITH AP LIFESTYLES**  A Blueberry-pomegranate Smoothie is seen in this Sunday March 29, 2009 photo. This Blueberry-pomegranate Smoothie is packed with anti-oxidants and has a color and taste that you are not soon to forget. (AP Photo/Larry Crowe)

Frosty, dessertlike and packed with delicious, nutritional ingredients, it's no wonder fruit smoothies are so popular.

What's particularly nice about smoothies is that they are fast and easy to make, and indulgent without being loaded with fat and calories. Plus, the only equipment you need is a blender.

Of course, a smoothie is only as healthy and tasty as the ingredients you put in it. So avoid dumping in sugar or thickening with full-fat dairy products. There are easy, healthy alternatives.

To give a fruit smoothie its icy, thick consistency, use crushed ice or frozen fruit as the base. The advantage of ice is that you add volume and texture without calories. The downside is that your smoothie can become watery as the ice melts.

Thickening with frozen fruit adds calories, but also plenty of vitamins, fiber and anti-oxidants.

For convenience, wash, cut and freeze fruits such as melons, stone fruits and berries when they are in season so you have them on hand when smoothie inspiration hits.

Peeled and cut tropical fruits, such as bananas, pineapples and mangoes, also are great ingredients to keep in the freezer.

For greater convenience, use store-bought frozen fruits, such as berries, cherries and peaches.

These usually are an excellent value and good enough quality for blending into smoothies.

Be sure to buy individually quick-frozen fruits rather than those frozen in blocks of sugary liquid. They are healthier and much easier to toss into the blender.

Many fruit smoothies also contain milk or frozen yogurt to give them a thick, creamy, milkshakelike texture. These two smoothie recipes go a little out of the box by using nonfat buttermilk to add a rich-tasting, pleasant tang.

The strawberry-banana smoothie uses frozen berries and fresh bananas, which add additional creaminess. Anti-oxidant-rich blueberries and pomegranate juice make a shocking purple smoothie that's as healthy as it is flavorful.

Use leftover buttermilk to make dressings, marinades or as a healthy ingredient in baked goods, such as biscuits and cakes.

Consider the salt in these recipes optional. Just a pinch heightens the flavors of the fruit without adding much sodium.

Strawberry-Banana Smoothie

Start to finish: 5 minutes

1 1/2 cups unsweetened frozen strawberries

2 small bananas, broken into chunks

1/2 cup nonfat buttermilk

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Pinch salt

Directions:

In a blender, combine all ingredients and blend until smooth.

Servings: 2

Per serving: 158 calories; 4 calories from fat; 0 g fat (0 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 1 mg cholesterol; 37 g carbohydrate; 4 g protein; 5 g fiber; 327 mg sodium.

/life

1 comment:

  • avatar MikeDV (5) posts 6:02 pm

    Delicious!!

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