The first time I made this, I poured the yogurt too thin on one side of the pan and thick on the other. The thin end froze thirty minutes faster and turned almost brittle, while the thick end stayed a little soft in the middle even after three hours. Now I run an offset spatula corner to corner before it goes in the freezer, and I don’t skip that step anymore.
That’s really the whole trick to frozen yogurt bark. Yogurt, fruit, granola, freezer. Five minutes of actual work and then you wait.
Why This Works
Full-fat yogurt is not optional here, and I mean that. Regular yogurt carries more water than full-fat or Greek yogurt, and water is exactly what turns into hard ice shards in the freezer. Yogurt is mostly water, and when water freezes it forms ice crystals — the less fat in the mix, the bigger and crunchier those crystals get. Swap in a low-fat tub because it’s what’s in your fridge and you’ll end up snapping off a piece that tastes more like a flavored ice cube than a creamy bark.
Fat gets in the way of those crystals forming into big sheets, so the bark stays soft enough to bite instead of cracking your tooth. That’s also why this never turns out quite as creamy if you use flavored, watery yogurt instead of a thick tub.
Ingredients
- 2 cups whole milk vanilla yogurt
- ½ cup strawberries, diced
- ¼ cup blueberries
- ¼ cup granola
Instructions
- Line a rimmed quarter sheet pan with wax or parchment paper.
- Pour the yogurt onto the prepared pan and spread it out evenly so it fills the pan in a thin, even layer. Corner to corner, no thick pockets.
- Scatter the strawberries, blueberries, and granola over the top.
- Freeze until firm, about 3 hours. Don’t rush this part.
- Cut into 12-15 pieces and eat cold, straight from the freezer.
- Keep any leftovers in the freezer, not the fridge.
Prep Time: 10 minutes Freezer Time: 3 hours Total Time: 3 hours 10 minutes Servings: 12 Equipment: Aluminum sheet pan
Tips
- Use full-fat yogurt, not low-fat. This is the one non-negotiable ingredient swap in the whole recipe, and skipping it is the number one reason people end up with an icy bark instead of a creamy one.
- Pat wet berries dry before scattering them on. A damp strawberry bleeds a little into the yogurt as it sits, and that extra moisture is one more thing pushing you toward an icier texture.
- Press the toppings down slightly once they’re on. Granola especially likes to roll right off if you just sprinkle it on top and walk away.
Variations
Swap the berries for diced mango and a handful of toasted coconut if you want something that leans more tropical. Skip chocolate chips as a topping, though — I tried it once and they froze rock-hard and cracked the bark into odd, uneven shapes when I cut it. Chopped nuts hold up much better if you want some crunch beyond the granola.
Make-Ahead
This is a freezer-only situation. You can’t make the yogurt layer ahead and hold it in the fridge overnight before topping it — it never firms up the same way, and the toppings just slide around on soft yogurt instead of setting into it. Make it, top it, freeze it, all in one go.
FAQ
Can I use Greek yogurt instead of regular yogurt? Yes, and it’s actually the better choice. Greek yogurt is strained, so it starts out with less water than regular yogurt, which means less ice-crystal formation once it hits the freezer.
How long does frozen yogurt bark last? Up to 3 months in the freezer if it’s wrapped well, though I think it’s best within the first month or so before the texture starts to dull slightly.
Why is my yogurt bark icy? Almost always the yogurt. Low-fat or watery yogurt has more moisture to freeze into hard crystals. Full-fat, thick yogurt is the fix.
Can I make this dairy-free? Use a thick, unsweetened dairy-free yogurt alternative in the same 2-cup amount. The lower-fat versions of dairy-free yogurt will run into the same icy-texture problem as low-fat dairy yogurt does.
Closing Thoughts
I like breaking this into smaller pieces and keeping a bag of it in the freezer door for whenever I want something cold after dinner — it works almost like frozen fruit snacks that way, grab a piece and go. If you’ve got kids, letting them pick their own toppings before it goes into the freezer turns this into more of an activity than a recipe.
Author Bio
Kima tests and develops recipes for Kima Recipe, with a focus on quick, no-bake treats that hold up in a real home freezer, not just a photo shoot.

Frozen Yogurt Bark
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Line a rimmed quarter sheet pan with wax paper or parchment paper.
- Pour the vanilla yogurt onto the prepared sheet pan.
- Use a spatula to spread the yogurt into an even layer so that it fills the shape of the pan.
- Evenly scatter the diced strawberries, blueberries, and granola over the yogurt.
- Place the sheet pan in the freezer for about 3 hours, or until the yogurt is completely firm.
- Remove the frozen yogurt from the pan and break or cut it into 12 to 15 irregular pieces.
- Serve immediately while frozen and store any remaining pieces in the freezer.









