Kitchen Tips How To Make 5 Different Kid-Friendly Energy Balls From One Easy Formula Have a ball! By Sue Honkamp Published on August 14, 2021 Close Photo: Brie Passano For a fun after-school or lunch-box snack, make energy balls for — and with — your kids using this easy formula. Invite older children to measure the ingredients, and let little ones shape and roll the balls with just-washed hands. Formula for Easy Energy Bites Makes 10 to 16 balls or bites. All You Need: 1 cup base ingredient, such as almond flour, crushed graham crackers, rolled oats, crisp rice cereal, or 2 cups popped popcorn½ cup healthy fat, such as almond, peanut, cashew, or sunflower seed butter⅓ cup sweetener, such as chopped pitted dates, honey, or maple syrup⅓ cup mix-ins, such as shredded carrots, chopped mini marshmallows, dried fruit, or flaxseed mealCoating, such as shredded coconut, mini chocolate chips, crushed or chopped dried fruit, or sprinkles All You Do: Stir together base ingredient, healthy fat, sweetener, and mix-ins in a bowl. Chill 10 to 15 minutes for easier shaping.Shape into 1 1/2- to 2-inch balls, then roll in coating. (Energy balls can be kept at room temperature 1 day or chilled in an airtight container up to 3 days.) 5 Kid-Friendly Energy Ball Variations 01 of 06 Birthday Bites Brie Passano For this cherry version, use popcorn, sunflower seed butter, honey, and flaxseeds, then roll in multi-color candy sprinkles 02 of 06 Carrot Cake Bites Brie Passano Use almond flour, almond butter, chopped pitted dates and shredded carrots, and roll in sweetened shredded coconut. 03 of 06 S'mores Bites Brie Passano Use crushed graham crackers, peanut butter, honey, and chopped mini marshmallows, and roll in mini chocolate chips. 04 of 06 Cherry-Oat Bites Brie Passano Use rolled oats, cashew butter, maple syrup, and dried cherries, and roll in chopped dried cherries. 05 of 06 PB&J Bites Brie Passano Use crisp rice cereal, natural peanut butter, maple syrup, and crumbled freeze-dried strawberries, and roll in crushed freeze-dried strawberries. Related 19 Homemade Snacks for School 14 Easy, Healthy Snacks Kids Can Make Browse All Kid-Friendly Snack Ideas 06 of 06 About Sue Honkamp Real Food 4 Kids As the founder of Real Food 4 Kids, this Iowa culinary instructor and mother of four teaches children and teens about food and cooking through hands-on and virtual classes. Learn more at realfood4kids.com. This article originally appeared in the August/September 2021 issue of Allrecipes Magazine. Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit