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Naturally Green Foods for St. Patrick’s Day

Green food coloring? Skip it! We want to show you how to enjoy St. Patrick’s Day with naturally green foods.

You already know how we feel about cake (yum!) and about artificial food colorings (boo!), and about how we made it through Halloween without food coloring. So you can imagine how we feel as St. Patrick’s Day draws closer and we are seeing neon-green cupcakes and frosted cookies everywhere we go. People, you don’t have to go there! You can serve naturally green foods and you’ll still have yummy food and happy kids.

Finding naturally green food for St. Patrick’s Day main courses shouldn’t be too much of a challenge. You’ll want to feature plenty of naturally bright greens, from broccoli to fresh sugar snap peas. And you can probably work in some spinach as in these spinach mint pancakes:

naturally green foods

Green Food for Dessert?

For your dessert course, going “green” gets a little more challenging, but it’s not insurmountable. For example, you can make your own green food coloring using a little bit of spinach. Simply take a large handful of fresh spinach leaves and bring them to a boil with about 3/4 cup of water in a small saucepan. Let the whole thing simmer for about ten minutes, then cool. Drain out the water and squeeze the spinach to get as much of the concentrated juice as possible. Then add a few drops of the “green juice” as a replacement for the food coloring in your frosting recipe. The frosting may taste a little leaf-y to those with discriminating palates, but trust us, the kids on whom we tested this did not express any hesitation.

If you want to go for something even more spinach-y, check out this Green Cake made with rainbow chard.  It’s really that green! And you really don’t taste the chard!

Another way to get green frosting? Avocados. That’s right – and in fact, if you Google “avocado buttercream” you’ll find more than 1,500 results. The high(er) fat content in avocados makes this frosting deliciously rich without as much butter.

We’ve got a great roundup of more green foods here.

And last but not least, don’t forget that there’s no law saying that your kid’s St. Patrick’s day dessert has to be green. If you want to stay away from frosting, simply bake a batch of sugar cookies and cut them with a shamrock-shaped cookie cutter. A natural St. Patrick’s Day dessert – and you probably won’t hear too many complaints from the peanut gallery either.

Now go forth and eat!

Slainte! (literally, “health”)

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