A Smoothie That Tastes Like a Milkshake (& Is Acceptable to Eat for Breakfast)

By Emily Vikre

Each Thursday, Emily Vikre (a.k.a. fiveandspice) will be sharing a new way to love breakfast—because breakfast isn’t just the most important meal of the day. It’s also the most awesome.

Today: Make this roasted cherry smoothie when what you really want is a milkshake but it’s only 10 A.M. and you’re out of ice cream.

These smoothies are inspired by a milkshake. Then again, how many smoothies aren’t born out of the desire for a milkshake? I suppose the ones with kale and parsley and spirulina. But all the other ones, all the smoothies with something fruity and something creamy in them, they all have secret—or not so secret—milkshake aspirations. So, why not just own it, right?

More: How to make a great smoothie without a recipe

I want to have a milkshake for breakfast. It would be the ultimate way to fuel my day…and then crash hard an hour later. A voice in my mind that sounds suspiciously like my mother, or disconcertingly like me now that I am a mother, chides me, warning that milkshakes are not an every day food and most certainly not a breakfast food.

At least not on a Thursday.

More: 5 links to read before making smoothies

There are two options: Either, tell the niggling, chiding voice that ice cream contains dairy and usually eggs and therefore it should be a breakfast food so there…or make a smoothie. A smoothie can hit all the same sweet, icy, creamy, indulgent feeling notes with a little less sugar and cream. So everyone is (at least relatively) happy.

More: A morning smoothie for your sweet tooth

More: 1 quart of coconut water, 5 green smoothies

I had some cherries that I had bought a week ago and then—I know not how because this is practically a crime—I forgot about them. I rediscovered them just before they went bad, so I needed a way to use them up. A few days before all that, I had caught a glimpse of a grilled cherry milkshake somewhere, but I mis-remembered it as a roasted cherry milkshake and thought that would be a good way to save my cherries. A quick blast in a hot oven along with a dusting of sugar, a stick of cinnamon, and a woody star anise did the trick. I almost ate all of the cherries right then and there because who can resist soft, bursting, pie-filling-like cherries?

More: Why this is the only milkshake I like

But I saved a few and tucked them in the refrigerator to use later in a milkshake (because we were out of ice cream that evening). The next morning, I decided I couldn’t wait, so rather than using ice cream, I put yogurt (plus a splash of vanilla, and fresh lime juice) into the blender with the cherries. Out came a summery breakfast that more than satisfied my milkshake urges, my responsible mother voice, and my appetite. Win-win-win.

More: Avocado citrus breakfast shake

Spiced Roasted Cherry Smoothie

Serves 1 to 2

For the smoothie:

1 cup roasted cherries with juices (below)
1 cup Greek yogurt, preferably full fat
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon fresh lime juice
1 cup ice cubes

  1. Add all the ingredients to a blender and blend until smooth. Pour into a cup (or a couple of cups) and serve!

For the roasted cherries:

1 pound fresh sweet cherries
3 tablespoons sugar
1 star anise
1 cinnamon stick
2 tablespoons water

  1. Wash the cherries and remove their stems but leave the pits in for roasting, as this will give them a fuller flavor. Heat your oven to 400° F. Toss the cherries with the sugar and spices, spread them in a thick layer in a baking dish, and sprinkle the water over top.

  2. Bake in the oven until soft and bubbling, around 20 to 30 minutes. Remove and allow to cool to room temperature, then remove and discard the pit from each cherry. Store the pitted cherries and their juices in an airtight container in the fridge until you’re ready to use them. They should keep for 4 to 5 days, at least.

Photos by Emily Vikre.