Ice candy/Ice lollies/Popsicle without a stick
Here in Brazil we have this frozen treat that has many names, I know it as Chup-chup, but is also known as brazinha and sacole. It is wonderful in the summer and in other hot days. When young when I had some pocket money I would buy one outside my school or when I lived with my father on the way back from school. It was cheap, 25 cents each. After a certain point that I can't remember I couldn't find anyplace that sold it. One my mother's boyfriend's mother used to make them and when we visit we could have some.
Fast forward several years, around 6 years ago, I learned how to make ice cream at home using some purposely made ingredients. I decided to make this ice cream treat that was sold in a thick plastic bag. I failed to bag the ice cream into these ice candy bags that I bought in a store near where I lived then. After putting the ice cream in the tub that we had lying around from past ice creams I was hit with the idea of making the ice candy.
So I went online and looked for recipes, by then I didn't find that many and they didn't agree in some ingredients. After all it is all home made, as the stuff that I used to buy as a kid. Therefore I had to pick and choose methods until I got my own personal recipe, we ate a lot of ice candy during those weeks of trial. No one complained and we all liked it. I was and still am very picky over it, I didn't like one recipe I wouldn't repeat it. It was how I decided to not use fresh fruits. The lime one, my favorite flavor, felt like there was something sticking on my throat, as it did when I bought them as a kid.
Settled in using instant juice powers I went to the large grocery store that was also very near my place back then and purchased several flavors of different brands until I found what I thought that were the best. Funnily enough, I used three different brands as one brand had a better specific flavor than the others.
The fruit flavors were water based, very refreshing and in some cases felt like biting on a piece of the chilled fruit. The there were the milk based flavors, the always popular here in Brazil coconut, another favorite peanut, then the newer favorites of sweet condensed milk and one based of a very famous petit suisse/yogurt like strawberry flavored product. These last two ones often sold out.
After my experiments I began selling the candies in local anime conventions, for a while it went very well, then I moved to another place and couldn't sell them anymore. Some days I would make between 100 to 150 bucks. My first time selling the ice candies had me selling out my entire of stock of 150 candies in the first day of the event, I had to make another batch of 150 to sell in the second day and I almost sold it out as well.
I had a couple more events where I sold out, a few where I didn't and saw which flavors always sold out. Anyway, after I moved I had a lot of leftover ingredient stock. To not lose it I had to make the candy for my family to enjoy. Nowadays I make them on the occasion, the fridge here is small and freezer doesn't have much space in it for me to make it regularly. So I can't try selling it in my current place, it is a closed community and it has plenty of kids, alas there is no space and my attempt of making here to sell ended not being worth the effort.
Now I will cut this backstory and go to the part that most of you are likely waiting for, the recipe itself.
Ingredients: This is for a single flavor batch, it makes around 15 to 23 candies depending of the size of the bags
Water based flavors
1 and 1/2 liters of water
2 envelops/sachets of instant juice power, Tang is a good one for this, use more sachets if needed, you need 2 liters worth of instant powder
200 grams of regular granulated sugar, I never used any other sugar for this recipe nor other sweeteners, if you desired a diet/light option you will need to experiment
Milk based flavors
1 liter of milk, I use full fat but skimmed or low fat can be used
500ml of water, in order to keep the price low I use this amount of water, however you can replace it with milk
100 grams of grated coconut or unsalted roasted peanuts, I suppose that other nuts can be used although I never used anything save the listed two
250 grams of sugar, as the coconut and peanuts aren't sweetened you need the extra sugar
Specialty milk flavors
The sweet condensed milk flavor and the danoninho flavor require unique ingredients, the danoninho requires 2,5 grams of citric acid added to the strawberry Tang to give the right flavor. The condensed milk flavor I use flavoring powder for ice cream making. Here in Brazil we have these flavorings and other ingredients to make ice cream that are used in the professional level that we can purchase to make nearly professional level ice cream at home.
I omitted from the recipe a ingredient that I don't know the name in English or even if it is sold outside South America, we call it Liga Neutra. its job is to prevent larger ice crystal from forming on ice cream and Popsicles. It can be removed without extreme differences, I just prefer using it to make the candy softer when biting into.
The flavoring powder was something that I found later when making the ice candies, one sweet condensed milk Popsicle that I had one day from a local big name brand had it listed as 'powdered sweet condense milk' and I decided to make that flavor for my own ice candies. So I purchased the flavoring, the taste was the same from the ice pop that I had and I knew that I was in the right track.
Anyway, if you can find the powdered ice cream flavorings I advise using it. If not, well I suppose that you can use regular sweet condensed milk, cut back a bit of the sugar and test the recipe out.
Because one can of the SCM costs around 5 bucks a piece I used the much cheaper flavoring, I still use it when making it for my own consumption, so it isn't something there just to cut costs down for increased profits.
Directions
Water base
In a large bowl, jar, jug or cooking pot, add all the ingredients. With a immersion blender mix everything until the sugar and powdered juice are fully dissolved. With a funnel and a measuring cup fill the ice candy bags and close the bags. The bags that I use are the common, everyday and cheap kind, the traditional kind for the candy here. It requires to tie the end to close it, it takes some practice and nails of small length to tie easily. God knows that doing so after I trim my nails is a pain.
Put in your freezer overnight and they are ready to enjoy the next day.
Milk base
Alright, this one is tricky and far more time consuming. For the coconut and peanut flavors you just have to put everything on the listed vessels and blend with the immersion blender, or blend everything on a regular blender. The peanuts won't fully blend and you will have some small pieces left over, that is OK and very much desired. The coconut won't disappear either and again this is OK. You want to feel the bits of coconut or peanut when you eat the candy.
This is where the similarities to the water base end.
After blending you place the mixture on a jar or jug with lids and store the mixture in the refrigerator for at the very least 2 days. I leave my mixture resting for a full week, back in the day I liked knowing about conventions ahead of time because of these two flavors. The time resting allow the sweet milk to draw out the flavors from the coconut or peanuts, and it also allowed the coconut or peanut pieces to soak in the sweet milk. I believe that the extra time allows for a much tastier final product.
However you can instead cook the mix to try to speed up the soaking process. You do need to add some extra water or milk after it cools down to counter evaporation. I sometimes did the cook of the mix and even then left it resting for a week to get even more flavor. Some recipes of the cooked style ask for somewhere between 3 tablespoons to 1 cup of cornstarch to make a thin porridge out of it before bagging and freezing. Personally I tried it out and saw no real change to the final result. Maybe it gets some creaminess or richness, or just stomach filling property. I am listing this as a option for you to decide on. My personal recipe is that, personal, you might find that you prefer to change something to better suit your tastes.
Back to the guide, after the resting period or cooking, let the mix reach room temperature and bag them for freezing.
Notes:
My listed amounts as mentioned before make around 20 units when I use a 10 cm by 2 cm bag, averaging around 21 units. The amount varies based on how much you fill each bag as well the capacity of said bags.
When I sold these candies I sold them for 1 buck, the cost back then for each candy was around 20 cents. It yields a good amount of profit, but since you likely doesn't consider the water, power and personal labor costs, the profit might be somewhat smaller. If you make these to sell your profit might not be the same, as well the costs. Based on where you live and how much you pay for the ingredients.
Fresh fruits can be used to make these candies. As I mentioned before, I found that the fresh fruit left a bitter taste in my mouth as well the feeling of mucus left clinging on my throat. Still if you want to make them with fresh fruit do try and find out if you find issues on it or not. Depending on how soon you will eat through a batch some of those effects might not show up. After all this recipe allows you to make a much healthier snack for yourself and your family, since you will know what is in there as well how much sugar is in it. Not counting no preservatives and stuff, outside the ones in the instant juice if you use it.
A somewhat popular flavor is cookie, we have a type of cookie called "Maizena", that is blended in place of the coconut or peanut to make this flavor. So you can try making a cookie flavored one as long you don't use a sandwich style cookie like Oreo and the like.
I also used concentrated fruit syrup to flavors some recipes, black currant was the one that I used the most. You do need the listed sugar when using even the sweetened syrup as the freezing process makes the mix taste less sweet, plus the sugar helps making the candy feel less like ice and softer.
For anyone curious, my list of main flavors was:
Orange, apple, pineapple, lime, guarana, danoninho/strawberry, coconut, peanut and sweet condensed milk.
Some flavors were tested and removed before I kept that list of flavors, sometimes I made for personal consumptions:
Cookie, tangerine, black currant and chocolate.
You can use this recipe to make regular Popsicles/ice pops if you have the mold for it.
I hope that you like this recipe if you use it. My family and I do like it. And if you decide to make it to sell I wish you good luck and I hope that it helps you to bring in some money.