9 Frozen Treats That Make Any Hot Summer Day Feel a Lot Better

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When the day is too hot for baking, the freezer has to carry dessert. This collection focuses on cold treats that cover different summer needs: scoopable ice cream, hand-held popsicles, a fruit-based watermelon dessert, a sandwich-style option, and bite-sized freezer sweets. Most of the recipes rely on creamy bases, fruit, yogurt, or simple molds rather than complicated finishing steps. The result is a short list you can use for pool days, backyard meals, or late-afternoon heat when something cold sounds like the right call.

Cream Cheese Fat Bombs in green and pick on a plate and white board.
Cream Cheese Fat Bombs. Photo credit: Low Carb – No Carb.

Strawberry and Vanilla Ice Cream

Three scoops of strawberry ice cream in a white bowl, with a bowl of frozen strawberries and an ice cream container in the background.
Strawberry and Vanilla Ice Cream. Photo credit: Best Clean Eating.

Built around heavy cream, strawberries, eggs, and vanilla, Strawberry and Vanilla Ice Cream gives you eight servings with a custard-style base. The card lists 30 minutes of prep, 5 minutes of cooking, and 5 hours of chill time before churning. Fresh or frozen berries bring the fruit flavor, while xanthan gum helps the texture stay smooth. Keep this one for afternoons when scoops sound better than another store-bought carton.
Get the Recipe: Strawberry and Vanilla Ice Cream

Frozen Watermelon Dessert

A glass dish filled with pink watermelon mousse, topped with diced watermelon pieces, sits on a white surface next to a striped cloth.
Frozen Watermelon Dessert. Photo credit: Low Carb – No Carb.

With frozen seedless watermelon cubes doing most of the work, Frozen Watermelon Dessert turns two ingredients into six scoopable servings. The recipe uses watermelon and sugar-free condensed milk, then blends them before a 2-hour freezer rest. Since the prep is listed at 15 minutes, it works well when you want something fruit-forward without a long ingredient list. Serve it in small bowls after a hot backyard meal.
Get the Recipe: Frozen Watermelon Dessert

Avocado Popsicles

Avocado Popsicles laered on top of each other.
Avocado Popsicles. Photo credit: Low Carb – No Carb.

Creamy avocado gives Avocado Popsicles a thicker base than fruit-only pops, while lime juice keeps the flavor bright. The recipe makes six servings and uses avocados, sugar alternative, unsweetened almond milk, and an optional low-carb chocolate coating. Prep is listed at 30 minutes, with the freezing step handled afterward in popsicle molds. These are useful when you want a hand-held freezer treat that is richer than juice pops.
Get the Recipe: Avocado Popsicles

Ice Cream Sandwich

Sugar-Free Ice Cream Sandwich layered on top of ech other on ice.
Ice Cream Sandwich. Photo credit: Low Carb – No Carb.

For a freezer dessert that eats like a small bar, Ice Cream Sandwich layers homemade ice cream between low-carb wafers. The recipe makes 16 servings and lists a total time of 5 hours and 35 minutes, including the freeze time. Almond flour, whey protein, butter, heavy cream, eggs, sweetener, and vanilla build the wafers and filling. Keep a batch cut and wrapped for grab-and-go sweets on humid afternoons.
Get the Recipe: Ice Cream Sandwich

Mini Popsicles

Mini Popscicles on a plate with tulips.
Mini Popsicles. Photo credit: Low Carb – No Carb.

Small molds make Mini Popsicles a better fit for quick bites than full-size freezer bars. The card lists 24 servings with 15 minutes of prep and total time, using eggs, heavy cream, sweetener, and vanilla extract. The mixture gets combined, poured into molds, and frozen until firm. These work well for kids, small dessert plates, or anyone who wants a cold treat without committing to a huge serving.
Get the Recipe: Mini Popsicles

Coconut Ice Cream

Keto Coconut Ice Cream inside coconut shells with strawberries around.
Coconut Ice Cream. Photo credit: Low Carb – No Carb.

Coconut milk gives Coconut Ice Cream its main flavor, with whipped cream, sugar substitute, xanthan gum, and glycerin rounding out the base. The recipe card lists eight servings and a 10-minute prep and total time before the machine does the freezing work. It is a good freezer option when you want something creamy without berry or chocolate flavors taking over. Serve scoops plain or beside a low-carb cake slice.
Get the Recipe: Coconut Ice Cream

Eggnog Popsicles

Eggnog Popsicles on ice.
Eggnog Popsicles. Photo credit: Low Carb – No Carb.

A cold take on a holiday drink, Eggnog Popsicles bring eggnog-style flavor into a frozen mold for hot days that need something different. The recipe makes 12 servings and lists 15 minutes of prep, plus 2 hours of additional freezer time. Eggs, heavy cream, allulose sweetener, and vanilla extract form the base. Use these when you want a make-ahead pop with richer flavor than a standard fruit ice.
Get the Recipe: Eggnog Popsicles

Cream Cheese Fat Bombs

Cream Cheese Fat Bombs in green and pick on a plate and white board.
Cream Cheese Fat Bombs. Photo credit: Low Carb – No Carb.

Stashed in silicone forms, Cream Cheese Fat Bombs give you 20 freezer-ready bites from a cream cheese and fat-based mixture. The recipe lists 15 minutes of prep and 1 hour and 15 minutes total, using butter, coconut oil, cream cheese, lemon juice, lemon zest, and sweetener. Because they are bite-sized, they fit well after lunch or between meals when a full bowl of ice cream is more than you need.
Get the Recipe: Cream Cheese Fat Bombs

Skyr Popsicles

Skyr Popsicles on ice.
Skyr Popsicles. Photo credit: Low Carb – No Carb.

For a frozen treat with a yogurt base, Skyr Popsicles combine Skyr yogurt, heavy cream, and sweetener under a sugar-free chocolate coating. The recipe makes 10 servings and lists 6 hours and 15 minutes total, including freezer time. Coconut oil helps the coating set, while wooden sticks make them easy to serve straight from the mold. They are a practical choice when you want something cold with more body than fruit ice.
Get the Recipe: Skyr Popsicles

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