Get ready for it—Trader Joe’s frozen chocolate-covered strawberries are here and they are absolute awesomeness. Seriously. Okay, so if you’re a fan of the fab chocolate-covered banana slices, you’re in luck. Heck, if you’re not a fan of the chocolate-covered banana slices, you’re still in luck. TJ’s Gone Berry Crazy Dark Chocolate Covered Strawberry Pieces are everything that you imagine they would be. Oh, and sooooooo much more.

Gone are the below chilly outdoor temps and day after day after day of snow. Finally. Now we’re ready for those sweltering summer days. Trader Joe’s wants to cool you down. At least, in a culinary sense.

Okay, okay. We know that there are more than a few frozen treats in the dessert aisle of just about any grocery store. But these precious little drops of sweetness are so much more than your average scoop of ice cream or popsicle. They’re refreshingly rad in a way that you might not even be able to comprehend until you try them.

As if chocolate-covered strawberries weren’t an ideal combination of healthy and…um, not so healthy, already—Trader Joe’s upped the dessert ante and froze them. So go ahead and try to eat just one of these icy little slices of amazing. You won’t stop there.

—Erica Loop

Featured Photo: Grigory_K via Flickr

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The sweltering temps of long sunny days call for a little ice, ice, baby. Keep your kids busy with any number of awesome and icy adventures, from excavating a LEGO mini-fig to stacking cool and colorful cubes. Wander through our flipbook below to find nine awesome ways to help keep it chill.

Slippery Stackers

We think these ice bricks spotted over at Play at Home Mom are pretty sweet. You can freeze almost any size and shape of colored ice (depending on your freezer space, then pull ‘em out and let your kids play away. As the ice melts it becomes slippery and harder to stack, which just adds to the fun. Head over to Play at Home Mom for more ideas on how to use these cool building blocks.

photo: Ashley Kagan via Play at Home Mom

Editor’s Note: Please do not leave kids unattended with adult tools and materials. These activities should be experienced with parental supervision at all times. 

How do you and your family keep it cool? Share with us in the comments.

—Gabby Cullen

Parents, admit the truth: sometimes you scratch your head and wonder who is this creature in your midst, running around in circles chanting undecipherable words? Today you have permission to just go with it. Follow these tips to transform your tiny earthlings into something out-of-this world.

1. Dress to impress. Since technically no one knows what extraterrestrials look like, they could wear anything but we think a nice green onesie would do the trick. Something shiny or silvery works well too. You’ll want a nice pair of shiny sunglasses (get the kind on a band for your on-the-go infants). Tutus and rainbow socks (or suspenders) fit the bill too, and sequins are encouraged.

2. Greetings, Earthlings. Practice your Vulcan salute or other unique hand gestures. The Vulcan salute is done by creating a V shape with your fingers. Press your index and middle finger together and keep them separate from your fourth and pinky fingers, which you also press together. You can also try the “nanoo nanoo” salute of Mork & Mindy fame. Basically, just do a Vulcan salute sideways.

3. Act the part. Everything is new to an alien: this strange new world they are exploring requires only imagination. Take them to the playground and have them explore the foreign landscape. Ask them what their world is like? What color is it, is it dry or hot or icy? Let them draw a picture of it. Then teach your kiddo how to blend in, what proper Earth behavior is, as you go about your day to day tasks like grocery shopping. (Really, it’s a great way to get them to behave!)

4. Eat anything and everything. This is the perfect excuse to rebrand the veggies they keep refusing. Introduce your cuisine with a flourish: broccoli or cauliflower florets from the Black Forest in Germany, harvested by garden gnomes on a Saturday. Would they like arctic ice melt (water) or moon juice (milk) with their sandwich? Your kids will be impressed and you’ll be able to dust it off again for weeks: tendrils of a giant beanstalk grown under watch of a witch (green beans) anyone? This is how Earth grows its food.

What strange, alien-y things has your kiddo done? Share them in the comments below!

feature photo: leafhopper77 via flickr

 

After all the egg nog has been drunk, the carols have been sung and the presents unwrapped you want to keep the festive spirit going, but what to do? Never fear, we have compiled a list of things to do in the District on Christmas day after Santa Claus has already come to town…and eaten all of your cookies.

Photo: Francisco Antunes via Flickr

Memorials & Monuments
Taking the wee ones downtown to see the Washington and Lincoln Memorial can be a bit of a trek. Avoid the crowds this year and head over to them on Christmas day! There’s a plethora of parking close by and all of the daily hubbub of tourists and civil servants will be missing. Enjoy the stillness as you and the tykes take in unobstructed views of the Washington skyline and all the glory of our monuments and memorials, including Mr. Lincoln himself!

Monuments & Memorials
Various locations throughout the city
Open: Dawn-Dusk
Cost: Free
Online: nps.gov/nama

Photo: ktylerconk via Flickr

All Aboard
The U.S. Botanic Gardens might not be the first thing to come to mind but the always-free conservatory with its seasonal plant exhibits and displays pairs nicely with the Garden Railway model train exhibit aptly named ‘Pollination Station’. Blow their minds when you head to the West Gallery to show them the largest indoor decorated tree in the city.

U.S. Botanic Garden
100 Maryland Ave., SW
Christmas Hours: 10 am-5 pm
Cost: Free
Online: usbg.gov

Photo: Washington Harbour

Skate Away
Scoop up the kids and skate the day away at the Washington Harbour ice rink in Georgetown. This rink is even bigger than Rockefeller Center and boasts over 11,000 square feet of icy, skate-tastic fun for the whole family. Little ones can push penguins along to help them stay upright and in skating position while you take in the city’s sights of Roosevelt Island, the Kennedy Center and the Potomac River. The perfect cure for everyone’s cabin fever!

Washington Harbour Ice Rink
3050 K St., NW
Open: Christmas Day 12PM-10PM
Cost: $10/adults; $9/kids; $5/skate rental
Online: washingtonharbour.com

Photo: Mt. Vernon Estate

Presidential Affairs
Get into the olde tyme Christmas spirit at Mt. Vernon for an early-American Christmas. Tiny tykes with their eyes all aglow will enjoy the many themed Christmas trees, chocolate making demonstrations and holiday treats throughout the estate. A special holiday season bonus is the often-closed third floor where Martha Washington lived out her days. It is open this time of year for viewing. Get in while you can! Just be sure to purchase tickets for your visit online before you go as it does tend to sell out.

Mt. Vernon Estate
3200 Mount Vernon Hwy. (Mt. Vernon, Va)
Cost: $17/adults; $8/kids ages 6-11; free/kids under 5
Online: mountvernon.org

Photo: Richard Pyrker via flickr

Seeing Stars
You dashed through the crowds all Christmas season and now you can stop and enjoy the holiday moment and avoid the crowds. Today is the perfect day to take in a movie! Visit the multiplex and see the flick that you and the kiddos have been dying to view but just couldn’t squeeze into the frenzied holiday schedule. Nosh some popcorn with The Good Dinosaur or see the newest battle of the light sabers with Star Wars – The Force Awakens at a theatre near you.

Times and Locations vary per theater.

Do you have any cool plans for Christmas day? Tell us all about them in the comments section below. 

—Victoria Mason

 

Snow may not be in D.C.’s weather forecast for a few months, but it’s definitely on the dessert menu. For an icy treat experience the whole family will love, head to Snocream Shavery, an inconspicuous food bus located in an Annandale, Virginia K-Mart parking lot. The coolest thing since the District saw liquid nitrogen ice cream, this is one sweet spot you’ll want to repeat.

Find It
You’d think that a pimped out antique school bus hawking Taiwanese ice cream would be a cinch to find, but this one is actually easy to miss if you aren’t looking closely. It’s located in a K-Mart strip mall parking lot, but not in front. Drive around to the left side of the center where you’ll likely spot the bus, a handful of cube benches and tables, and a small crowed gathering.

Pick It
A cross between ice cream and shaved ice, this dessert features soft ribbons of flavored “sno,” created by using milk, water, and out-of-the-box natural flavors (think: thai tea, mango, and honeydew). After freezing, a machine shaves ribbon-like bands from the ice into your cup. The one-size option is $7 and comes with two toppings (there’s everything from Fruity Pebbles to grass jelly) and one drizzle of condensed milk, caramel, chocolate, or white chocolate.

Eat It
While you might want one all to yourself, the serving size is large enough for two kiddies to share. How it works: After climbing on the bus, you place your order (note: it’s an extra $1 to mix flavors). You give the friendly staff a name (Starbucks-style) and wait outside the bus near the front-side driver’s window for your name to be called. While there is no seating on the bus, there is some outdoor seating and a bunch of parking if you’d like to sit in the car with the bambinos on a cool night. Bonus: When the sun goes down, fun glow colors are lit and it’s like a party on a bus.

Snocream Shavery
4221 John Marr Dr. (Annandale, Va)
202-656-6144
Online: snocreamcompany.com

Have you been to Snocream yet? Tell us your favorite flavor combinations in the comments below. 

—Ayren Jackson-Cannady

Photos: Ayren Jackson-Cannady

Just in time for the hottest days of summer, Honeymee, a honey themed soft-serve ice cream shop, has opened a new location on Sawtelle in Japantown, one of our favorite cool hoods. It’s the perfect place to take the entire family for a different kind of icy sweet treat. Savor the moment, as summer and your delicious soft serve milk ice cream treat will both bee gone before you know it!

photo credit: courtesy of Honeymee

To Bee or Not To Bee?
This land of milk and honey serves true milk ice cream made from California milk from a family-owned, certified Kosher dairy factory. They’re perfect for your kiddos because they don’t add any artificial colors or flavors, it’s gluten free and the ice cream isn’t too sweet. Their menu is oh-so-simple, but deciding what to get might take you longer than your average bedtime routines. If you bring the whole family, everyone can get something different to share and satisfy that sweet tooth.

photo credit: Judy Park

What to Get
You can experience the “Darling” if you’re down to try the authentic flavor of true milk ice cream and savor the creamy, icy texture as it melts in your mouth. But don’t go to Honeymee without trying the dreamy “Sweetie,” where your milk ice cream is drizzled with 100% natural liquid honey swirls. If you’re really feeling adventurous, get the “Honeymee” with a honeycomb chip. There are just six soft-serve items on the menu, but definitely something for everyone, including chocolate and sweet buns stuffed with ice cream. Recently added are their honey hot/iced tea items (in case we do get that rainy El Nino season they’re promising) and five flavors of honey milk shakes. Everything hits the sweet spot.

photo credit: Judy Park

Queen Bee Treatment
Good and good for you: if you’re into the health benefits of yogurt, Honeymee contends that their deliciousness also increases antioxidant levels along with other anti-bacterial, anti-fungal and anti-viral benefits. So you can feel a little virtuous about this treat…or at least less guilty.  You can even browse through their selection of honey products while you wait. Aside from being totally picture-worthy for your Instagram account, they’re also giving out free ice cream every week to the best IG photo, so don’t leave the hashtag bee-hind. Get a stamp card (you’ll definitely return) and with every 10 stamps you get a free ice cream.

photo credit: Judy Park

Good to Know
Street parking is available, as is 45-minute validated parking in the underground garage inside the Olympic Collection Plaza. For kids with sensory food issues, the honeycomb can feel waxy, so skip it (for them, you’ll definitely want to try it for yourself!). Avoid the crowds by going in the early afternoon before the dinner rush. There’s limited seating, another reason to get there before the crowd swarms in. And keep those diaper wipes on hand because you’ll get plenty of sticky fingers.

Honeymee is new but is taking the city by storm with locations in Koreatown, Buena Park and Rowland Heights, in addition to this newest spot on Sawtelle.

Honeymee Sawtelle
11301 West Olympic Blvd., Suite 104
Japantown
Online: honeymee.com

Let us know what you and your kiddos think of Honeymee. Are you more of a “Sweetie” or a “Darling”?

—Judy Park

If you think you’ve done the La Brea Tar Pits and the Page Museum, think again. The iconic Los Angeles destination has revamped its old theater and is now offering an eye-popping 3-D experience. The whole family will love Titans of the Ice Age, the first film to screen here. It’s a new view of the Ice Age, the tar pits and how this LA treasure can help unlock mysteries of our past, present and future. Put on your 3-D glasses and step back in time.

photo credit: Page Museum

If you’re like us, you didn’t even realize the Page Museum had a theater!  After a complete overhaul, the theater has opened this summer and the first film they’re showing is a thrilling overview of what the ancient history of the area.

Have you ever visited the Tar Pits and left without a real understanding of the place? Titans of the Ice Age will clear things up for you and the littles. First, meet some of the scientist who have dedicated their lives to unearthing this great mystery. You may leave with little paleontologists in the making. Then enter a North America covered in ice 10,000 years before modern civilization. You will be introduced to the harsh conditions of Pleistocene era and the beasts like mammoths, ground sloths, saber Tooth Cats and Dire Wolves that adapted to survive this icy fate—all up close and personal with that 3-D touch.

photo credit: Page Museum

Watch as dire wolves go on the hunt and a pack of saber tooth cats seize the opportunity for some nourishment of their own. The food chain was not the only factor to contend with; learn how many of these beasts were trapped in liquid asphalt or the “tar pits” as we know them, which provides us with so much of the information we have today.

photo credit: Page Museum

If your little explorers are obsessed with what the paleontologist are working on behind the glass at the museum they will gain a bit more insight with this film. Meet Zed, the almost complete Columbian Mammoth whose skull was recently discovered nearly whole—an exciting find. Page Scientists and volunteers sift through fossils daily to recreate these beasts and a piece of their lives.

The Pleistocene wouldn’t be complete without humans. This film provides an opportunity to see how our kind survived these harsh conditions by harnessing fire, hunting mammoths and using every piece of those great beasts to create warm clothing, weapons and other tools for daily living and trade. Humans, climate change (it’s nothing new) and the natural shift of the earth contributed to the end of the Ice Age and the beginning of the Holocene era in which we live today. These great lessons of the past are clues to the changes our planet continues to experience. Everyone will leave the theater with something to chew on.

photo credit: LeTania Kirkland

While you’re here, be sure to explore the rest of the museum…from the hour-long Excavator Tour (where kids can see the work that continues in the pits today) to the Ice Ages Encounter (on Fri.-Sun, which features a life-size adult Saber-toothed Cat puppet and live performance) to rolling down the giant hill, there’s loads of interactive explorations on the site.  When you come, be sure to dress kids in old play clothes; they’ll love to really experience the tar by finding a big stick and poking in the actual puddles of tar that still bubble up all over the park. (And we can tell you from experience, this stuff does not come out in the wash!)

The film is appropriate for kids 2 & up, but Ice Age Encounters is even more realistic and immediate and can frighten kids under 5.

The Page Museum is open daily from 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. The 25 minute film screens multiple times each day. Admission to the museum is $12 for adults, $5 for kids 3-12, and $9 for 13-17 year olds.  Tickets to the 3D Movie Titans of the Ice Age are an additional $3-$5.  However, your NHM membership not only gets you into the Page Museum for free, it also gets you unlimited viewings of the movie!

La Brea Tar Pits and Page Museum
5801 Wilshire Blvd.
323-934-7243
Online: tarpits.org

Have you been to the new show at the Tar Pit Museum?  What’s your favorite part of a visit to this “only in LA” site?  Let us know in the comment section below.

—LeTania Kirkland

Baby, it’s cold outside! But that doesn’t mean you need to stay inside and get stir crazy with your little one. Winterize your baby gear with warm accessories so you can both get some fresh air without freezing those tiny fingers and toes. Scroll down for our picks.

photo: JJ Cole

Snuggle Up for a Stroll
The easiest way to keep your baby warm while walking from here to there? Outfit your stroller with a specially designed sack like the JJ Cole Urban BundleMe. The water-resistant bag will keep your kiddo so warm you may not even have to bother dressing her up in mittens and a coat — as long as she won’t be getting out of the stroller, that is! Also great: It’s machine washable just in case it quickly gets covered with slush from those messy city streets. $49.95 at jjcolecollections.com.

BUY NOW

photo: 7AM Enfant

Kiss Cold Hands Goodbye
Forget leaving your hands exposed to icy air — that stroller bar gets too cold to hold! 7AM Enfant’s genius Stroller Warmuffs attach to the handlebar and allow you to slip your hands inside to keep them warm. We love that you can slip your hands out just as quickly to adjust a hat and shoot a text to the mom you’re on the way to meet, all without a chance of losing your gloves. $38 at giggle.com.

BUY NOW

photo: Jolly Jumper

Cuddle Him With a Carrier Cover
Whether you’re a fan of Ergobaby, Moby or Baby Bjorn, this snuggly fleece-lined cover will fit your carrier. If snow starts falling, never fear, the Jolly Jumper Snuggle Cover is water repellent, too. We also love that there are pockets to keep your hands warm and that it’s machine washable. $26.23 at amazon.com.

BUY NOW

photo: Cozy Cover

Stay Safe & Warm in the Car
Proper car seat safety can be tricky. Experts say not to dress your babies in bulky winter snow suits and coats, but also frown upon some types of warm car seat covers that may hinder car seat straps. The Cozy Cover gets a nod of approval because it adds warmth and protection from snow, but only covers the top of the seat, so it doesn’t interfere with safety. $27.83 at cozy-cover.com.

BUY NOW

How do you keep your baby warm in the winter? Spread the word in the Comments!

— Julie Seguss