Rose Flavored Ice-Pops

Diana Hardeman Shows How to Make Edible Flower Popsicles

These edible flower popsicles are not only beautiful to look at, but are also edible. Diana Hardeman from the Brit & Co. blog explains how to make these refreshing ice-pops.

You can't just use any kind of flower for this recipe: they have to be edible ones, of course. Some of the prettier flowers that would be ideal for this include fresh roses, fresh carnation, lavender, hibiscus and elderflower.

All you have to do is remove the stems off your dried or fresh flowers, and then let it simmer in a saucepan with some sugar. Once the flower mixture is heated, you let it sit for about an hour and then pour the mixture into the popsicle molds. Then, simply allow the pops to freeze for an hour without the sticks in them, and add some fresh flower petals to the molds then refreeze them with the sticks.

Edible Flower Popsicles
Disruptive innovation opportunity: Creating unique and visually appealing frozen treats by incorporating edible flowers.

Who This Affects Most

Food and Beverage
Disruptive innovation opportunity: Expanding the frozen treat category by offering artisanal flower-infused popsicles.
SCORE
5.7 out of 10
GENDER
30% Men70% Women
MARKETTop markets: North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa
GENERATION
  • Gen Alpha
  • Gen Z (primary audience)
  • Millennial (primary audience)
  • Gen X (primary audience)
POPULARITY
Popularity 73%
Activity 90%
Freshness 8%

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