0 0
Refreshing Strawberry-Papaya Smoothie Delight

Share it on your social network:

Or you can just copy and share this url

Ingredients

Adjust Servings:
3/4 cup papaya, peeled, seeded, and chopped
1/2 cup fresh strawberries
1/2 cup milk (or soy or almond milk)
1/2 cup plain yogurt
1 tablespoon honey
3 large ice cubes
papayas (to garnish) or strawberry slices (to garnish)
of fresh mint (to garnish)

Nutritional information

143.2
Calories
40 g
Calories From Fat
4.5 g
Total Fat
2.7 g
Saturated Fat
16.5 mg
Cholesterol
64.2 mg
Sodium
23 g
Carbs
1.7 g
Dietary Fiber
17.5 g
Sugars
4.7 g
Protein
645g
Serving Size

Bookmark this recipe

You need to login or register to bookmark/favorite this content.

Refreshing Strawberry-Papaya Smoothie Delight

Features:
    Cuisine:

    Nice way to enjoy English crumpets. If you're from a country where they're not widely available do yourself a favour and make some from scratch, there are plenty of recipes on RecipeZaar for them. This recipe really works a lot better using natural cheese rather than processed cheese.

    • 30 min
    • Serves 2
    • Easy

    Ingredients

    Directions

    Share

    Strawberry-Papaya Shake,A great day starter from BH&G! Papaya Tips: Choose papayas that are partly yellow and feel slightly soft when pressed. The skin should be smooth and free from bruises or very soft spots. A firm, unripe papaya can be ripened at room temperature for 3 to 5 days until mostly yellow to yellowish orange in color. Store a ripe papaya in a paper or plastic bag in the refrigerator for up to 1 week. English, Australian, Caribbean, Italian, Native American, Southern USA, Mexican, Spanish catagories. “Doubtless God could have made a better berry, but doubtless God never did.” (Dr. William Butler, 17th Century English Writer) Dr. Butler is referring to the strawberry. Strawberries are the best of the berries. The delicate heart-shaped berry has always connoted purity, passion and healing. It has been used in stories, literature and paintings through the ages. In Othello, Shakespeare decorated Desdemonda’s handkerchief with symbolic strawberries. Madame Tallien, a prominent figure at the court of the Emperor Napoleon, was famous for bathing in the juice of fresh strawberries. She used 22 pounds per basin, needless to say, she did not bathe daily. In parts of Bavaria, country folk still practice the annual rite each spring of tying small baskets of wild strawberries to the horns of their cattle as an offering to elves. They believe that the elves, who are passionately fond of strawberries, will help to produce healthy calves and abundance of milk in return. The American Indians were already eating strawberries when the Colonists arrived. The crushed berries were mixed with cornmeal and baked into strawberry bread. After trying this bread, Colonists developed their own version of the recipe and Strawberry Shortcake was created. In Greek and Roman times, the strawberry was a wild plant. The English “strawberry” comes from the Anglo-Saxon “streoberie” not spelled in the modern fashion until 1538. The first documented botanical illustration of a strawberry plant appeared as a figure in Herbaries in 1454. In 1780, the first strawberry hybrid “Hudson” was developed in the United States. Legend has it that if you break a double strawberry in half and share it with a member of the opposite sex, you will fall in love with each other. The strawberry was a symbol for Venus, the Goddess of Love, because of its heart shapes and red color. Queen Anne Boleyn, the second wife of Henry VIII had a strawberry shaped birthmark on her neck, which some claimed proved she was a witch. To symbolize perfection and righteousness, medieval stone masons carved strawberry designs on altars and around the tops of pillars in churches and cathedrals. The wide distribution of wild strawberries is largely from seeds sown by birds. It seems that when birds eat the wild berries the seeds pass through them intact and in reasonably good condition. The germinating seeds respond to light rather than moisture and therefore need no covering of earth to start growing. Medicinal Uses The strawberry, a member of the rose family, is unique in that it is the only fruit with seeds on the outside rather than the inside. Many medicinal uses were claimed for the wild strawberry, its leaves and root. The ancient Romans believed that the berries alleviated symptoms of melancholy, fainting, all inflammations, fevers, throat infections, kidney stones, halitosis, attacks of gout, and diseases of the blood, liver and spleen.,I also had a very ripe piece of papaya left so I made this shake. My berries were also frozen so I skipped the ice like another reviewer said. I loved the flavors of papaya and strawberry together. Thanks for sharing. Made for ZWT7-Pacific Islands.


    Discover ground-breaking new supplements!    SHOP & SAVE


     

    Steps

    1
    Done

    Combine Papaya, Strawberries, Milk, Yogurt, and Honey in a Blender. Cover and Blend Until Smooth.

    2
    Done

    With the Blender Running, Add Ice Cubes, One at a Time, Through the Opening in the Lid, Until Ice Is Crushed and Mixture Is Smooth.

    3
    Done

    Pour Into 2 Tall Glasses.

    4
    Done

    Garnish With Papaya or Strawberry Slices and Mint, If Desired.

    5
    Done

    Serve Immediately.

    6
    Done

    Makes 2 Servings.

    Avatar Of Harper Wilson

    Harper Wilson

    Coffee aficionado brewing up the perfect cup of java with care and precision.

    Recipe Reviews

    There are no reviews for this recipe yet, use a form below to write your review
    Featured Image
    previous
    Most Delicious Chicken Wings
    My Easy Cure To An Oncoming Cough And Cold
    next
    My Easy Cure To An Oncoming Cough And Cold
    Featured Image
    previous
    Most Delicious Chicken Wings
    My Easy Cure To An Oncoming Cough And Cold
    next
    My Easy Cure To An Oncoming Cough And Cold

    Add Your Comment

    seventeen + nine =