Looking for a fun, healthy and easy activity to keep the kids entertained during the July
holidays? Wayne Blake, Cluster General Manager at ANEW Hotels & Resorts, shares his top five no-bake treats that are kid-approved and easy to make.
Wayne’s top holiday survival tip:
“Don’t overthink it. The best snacks are the ones that get
eaten! Keep it hands-on, a little messy and make them part of the process. Once done, you
might even get five minutes of peace while they snack.”
1. Crispy cornflake & peanut butter clusters
Sweet without being a sugar bomb, these crunchy healthy bites are made for sticky fingers
and are super easy to make.
How to make them: Makes 10-12 clusters
Mix about 250ml cornflakes with 65ml of your favourite peanut butter (smooth or
crunchy) and 30ml of honey.
Scoop the mixture into small cupcake papers and pop into the fridge to firm up. No
cupcake papers? Simply roll into small balls and chill.
Extra: If you have, add a small handful (around 20ml) of chia seeds for a bit of
crunch.
If this is too healthy for your little snack critics, replace the peanut butter with Nutella or
baking chocolate!
2. Bonkers biscuit sandwiches
Dessert sandwiches for kids. No fridge, no bake, just build and munch!
How to make them:
Start with plain biscuits as the base (Marie, Tennis or digestives work well).
Spread with a layer of peanut butter, Nutella, Biscoff Lotus spread, cream cheese or
even ice-cream as the “glue”.
Go absolutely wild with toppings. Choose from:
o Crushed cornflakes
o Broken wafer sticks
o Crushed pretzels
o Mini marshmallows
o Jelly Tots
o Smarties
o Cherries or raspberries
o Colourful sprinkles, coconut or cocoa powder dust
Top with a second biscuit and gently press into a sandwich.
3. Snack bunnies
Double your snack time with art time with these silly, creative bites.
How to make them:
Lay out plain crackers or use left-over crumpets as the body.
Use cream cheese, butter or hummus as the base glue.
Let kids decorate them into silly creatures using ingredients like:
o Sliced olives or blueberries for eyes
o Curled cucumber peel, carrot sticks or chives for tails, tongues or antennae
o Raisins, dried cranberries, sliced banana or tiny gherkin slivers for the body
parts
o A triangle of cheese or salami for wings
Serve on a bed of lettuce for a “grass” effect.
4. Popcorn snowball bites: Makes 12-15 snowball bites
What is the holiday without popcorn. A fun, no-bake treat that’s light, crunchy and simple to make… although a bit messy!
How to make them:
In a large bowl, mix about 750ml plain popped popcorn with 120ml of mini
marshmallows (optional for extra chewiness).
In a small bowl, whisk together either:
o 60ml cream cheese + 2 tablespoons (30ml) honey or
o 100ml Greek yoghurt + 2 tablespoons (30ml) honey
Pour the creamy mixture over the popcorn and gently fold until well coated.
Using clean hands or a small scoop, form bite-sized balls and place them on a tray
lined with baking paper.
Chill in the fridge for 30 minutes to firm up.
Optional: Roll the balls in crushed freeze-dried strawberries, desiccated coconut or coloured
sprinkles for a playful, fun finish.
5. Cheese & crackle pops
A savoury upgrade to fruit skewers, these fun bites hit all the right notes! They are cheesy,
crunchy, and definitely kid approved.
How to make them:
Use long pretzel sticks or toothpicks (trim the sharp edges)
Add alternative layers of cubed of cheese, mini gherkins and mini rice cakes or
popcorn.
Finish with a cherry tomato or olive on top.