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Pops!: Icy Treats for Everyone

Pops!: Icy Treats for Everyone
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Pops!: Icy Treats for Everyone

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Description:

Cool + Sweet + Refreshing = Pops!
 
This innovative book gives the ice pop a flavor makeover, providing more than 100 recipes and variations for irresistible concoctions you’ve never tasted before. You’ll also learn fancy
techniques for making whimsical pops that look as fun as they taste. Kids will enjoy the juicy pops and flip over the soda fountain and pudding pops. Grown-up kids will dig the energy-boosting coffee, tea, and healthy energy pops and delight in the sophisticated cocktail pops. And for the do-it-yourselfers, this book provides instructions for making your own pop molds from recycled housewares and even silicone. When it comes to pops, the possibilities are endless—and so much fun!

Product Details:
Author: Krystina Castella
Paperback: 128 pages
Publisher: Quirk Books
Publication Date: May 01, 2008
Language: English
ISBN: 1594742537
Product Length: 6.8 inches
Product Width: 0.47 inches
Product Height: 7.22 inches
Product Weight: 0.81 pounds
Package Length: 7.2 inches
Package Width: 6.6 inches
Package Height: 0.5 inches
Package Weight: 0.65 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 46 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.0 ( 46 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

79 of 82 found the following review helpful:

5A "real" reviewer loves it  Aug 02, 2009
By Karen L. Pancoast "Denver Book Hound"
I agreed with the reviewer who said the long over-the-top reviews looked like a publicist wrote them. However, I bought the book anyway. It truly is as good as I hoped it would be. So far I have made Fresh Fruit bubbly pops, Grape Pops, and Coconut pops. They all turned out as good as the pictures looked in the book. My only complaint is that the recipes make a LOT of "batter". So I have cut them in half so that I have just the right amount to fill my 6 large Tovolo pops (also from Amazon). If you were using the Tupperware pops you would have WAY too much batter. I haven't tried any of the really exotic cocktail pops, just the summery fruity ones. The fruity ones taste a lot fresher than the fruity type pops I bought at the supermarket. I highly recommend this book.

23 of 23 found the following review helpful:

4Delicious Ideas - A lot of special ingredients needed  Aug 25, 2010
By M. Mckibbon-Bell "M.Bell"
Look in your cupboards - do you have ginger juice, pomegranate seeds, fresh apple cider, diced lychee, tangerine juice or Thai coffee powder? If so, then have no fear these recipes are going to delight and amaze you with all kinds of amazing flavor sensations. If your cupboards are more like mine filled with North American "staples" then it's going to take a trip to a grocery store, or a specialty Asian foods store to get stared on some of these pops.
Don't get me wrong, I love this book and I have enjoyed every pop I have made so far, but in the wallet department, some of these recipes are a stretch! Buying specialty ingredients that can go bad also means you will have to be dedicated to finding other uses for them if they are going to spoil, or make another round or two of that same pop. Not every recipe will send you to the store, there are many in the book that will help you use up what's around the house - but like a specialty foods cookbook, this one has many ideas that require unexpected delights.
The author of this book is right it really is for kidults - those adults with nostalgia for their past and a few dollars to invest in their vision. I recommend this book to those of you who are serious about ice pop making and want explore the exotic recipes, and those of you who are just looking for quick ideas for kid summer treats I think should stick to the millions of internet recipes available.

28 of 29 found the following review helpful:

4Good Idea Book  Mar 13, 2010
By KTFaye
I actually purchased this book looking for some recipes for fruit pops for summer--and those we've tried have been good. But the book had a lot of other choices as well, the chapter titles are: Fruit Juice Pops, Healthy Energy Pops, Soda Fountain Pops, Cream & Pudding Pops, Coffee & Tea Pops, and Cocktail pops. So it has a nice selection of things to try beyond the basic fruit juice pop.

So far, we've tried the Root Beer float pops, the Carmel latte pops, and the Thai Iced Coffee Pops. All were yummy and not difficult to make. There are lots of pictures which I always helpful for a recipe book. The book also has a section on how to make your own Popsicle molds, which I haven't tried yet, but it looks like you can be creative with those if you're more craftsy.

The molds I use are also sold by Amazon. They're smaller than standard pops, but that's what I like about them. They don't melt before you can finish them. And since they're silicon, they're easy to unmold. Orka Ice Pop Molds, White Base

56 of 67 found the following review helpful:

1Some okay, most gross, the shill reviews a MESS!  Feb 01, 2011
By LB "Helfenfreude"
So to give a polite summary of what happened below, I'll keep it simple: The author is from SoCal. The reviews that all happpppened to show up in a ridiculously short span of time for a total NICHE item (cmon, a popsicle book just isn't going to be a top seller) also happened to have a few things in common:

*Nearly all were the only review of the people.
*None were Amazon Verified Purchases. (Mine wasn't, either--I checked it out at the library--but I don't write like I'm marketing it either.)
*Nearly all openly list their location as Southern Cali; one who defended the author fiercely in response to criticism MET the author at a SF area "Faire."
*They all use direct marketing quotes FROM the book, they quote chapter summaries, and they ALL are written exactly like persuasive English 101 essays for college courses.

My guess? Her students did it. My hope? They love her. My fear? She asked them to. My 99% certainty? They haven't made a dern THING in this book...

So my own assessment is this: Some of it is ridiculously basic and therefore fine--pomegranate apple, for instance... a couple kinds of juice tossed in Tovolo molds and voila... wow, not exactly mind-blowing.

MOST that are "original" or "creative" are GROSS. Green tea ones were especially wretched. Some made us want to hurl, and we use top notch ingredients. They just don't work.

The reason we even checked it out was we won an also-overhyped product, this frou frou pop mold maker that "ooh aah" you freeze then shove on the counter. It's the Zoku. Anyway, we made some of Zoku's rec'd recipes and also some from here, and reliably, the "cocktail" pops are AWFUL and the only way to get them to somewhat stay bound together is either keep it really weak or use a LOT of sugar, which is icky... the alcohol's sugars just make for meh pops most of the time. Rum works better than most, though, dark rum at least. In any case, we didn't do much with alcohol since neither of us drinks and we didn't want to blow a lot on those little 3oz bottles of kahlua and such.

I can't honestly recommend buying this unless maybe for a doctor's office where the bright colors would be welcome... to get pops to look like this takes a LOT of work, and the ones that turn out good ANYone could just look up online (look up smoothie recipes, find something with different berries and yogurt or whatever you want for your base, and pour it in a mold and voila, a pop... but you don't need this book to tell you that)...

The parts about the molds is interesting enough, I guess, but it feels more like a blog post topic and isn't really thought through in terms of actually explaining how you'd go about approaching the whole "common household items=molds" project. This is the second book of hers I've encountered, ironically, and the first, a cupcake book, was HIDEOUS. In short, I think her recipes were either not accurate to what she actually makes herself or possibly, just possibly, were not tested out very well at all, because the more creative you get with these, the more ridiculous they get, the grosser the textures become, and the more the flavors start clashing, making sweet things have bitter chemical tastes, making things like the tea taste ... curdled or something to that effect, a weird icky done-exactly-as-directed product. I'll stick with my defaults... taking local berries and local (Greek Gods) yogurt... or taking fresh ginger, minced with a garlic press, and Meyer lemons to make ginger lemonade pops, probably my favorite use. It was an interesting experiment, but don't expect your results to match her photos unless you spend a god awful long time letting each layer sit. It'll be a 50c item soon enough, but if you really want to check it out, while I'm not going to stop you, I really do recommend you either get it through your library before committing to buying it or get a second-hand copy to save some trees. I doubt it'll have a second edition, but no need to threaten some beautiful forests for a book that is just... bad. The writing needs about 30 revision sessions of the whole thing... and the recipes need better testing to produce something good and reliable beyond the ones that are so foolproof my niece could do them when she was 7...

14 of 15 found the following review helpful:

1No basics lots of complicated pops  Mar 01, 2011
By R. Misdary "Person"
You won't find any of your favorite pops here. It's many recipes that are labor and ingredient intensive and not highly appealing either. I guess this is perfect for you if you like making complicated things and have an experimental palate. This is a big no for kids.

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