Homemade Strawberry Lemonade

The Best Homemade Strawberry Lemonade You’ll Ever Make

You know those strawberries sitting on your counter right now? The ones that are just past their prime… a little soft, slightly wrinkled, starting to give you that look? Don’t throw them out. And please, please don’t reach for a bottle of that neon-pink impostor at the grocery store. Make this instead. Real strawberries. Fresh lemons. Sugar. Water. That’s it. Ten minutes of actual work, thirty minutes of chilling, and you’ve got something so good you’ll feel slightly smug about it. Which, honestly, you deserve.

Homemade Strawberry Lemonade

Bottled strawberry lemonade is one of those drinks that always disappoints. Too sweet, too pink, more “strawberry flavoring” than strawberry. The homemade version is shockingly easy and tastes like an actual fruit. Once you make it, you’ll wonder why you ever paid for the bottled stuff.

The One Trick That Makes It Beautiful

Before you do anything else, you’re going to make a quick strawberry simple syrup. Five extra minutes. I know, I know. But this is what turns cloudy, fruit-bit lemonade into that gorgeous ruby-red version that looks like it came from a café. It concentrates the flavor, pulls out all that gorgeous color, and makes everything silky and balanced.

Worth every second. Promise.

What You’ll Need

Short list. Every ingredient is pulling its weight.

Fresh Strawberries

About a pound, or three heaping cups. The ones that are slightly soft and very ripe are perfect here. They release more juice and have the deepest flavor. Don’t waste pretty strawberries on this. Save those for the garnish.

Fresh Lemons

You’ll need about a cup of fresh-squeezed lemon juice, which is roughly six to eight medium lemons. Bottled lemon juice works in a pinch, but the flavor isn’t the same. Lemons left at room temperature for an hour and rolled firmly on the counter give up the most juice.

Sugar

Plain granulated sugar. Three-quarters of a cup to start, with room to adjust. Strawberries vary in sweetness depending on the season, and lemons vary in sourness, so taste the finished lemonade and add more if needed.

Cold Water

Four cups, plus ice. Filtered tastes best if you have it, but tap water is fine.

How to Make Strawberry Lemonade

1. Make the Strawberry Simple Syrup

Hull and roughly chop the strawberries. Add them to a small saucepan with the sugar and a quarter cup of water. Bring to a gentle simmer over medium heat and cook for about five minutes, mashing the berries with the back of a spoon as they soften.

This is the step that releases all that beautiful red color and concentrates the strawberry flavor. The mixture should look like a chunky, glossy syrup by the end.

2. Strain (or Don’t)

Pour the strawberry syrup through a fine-mesh strainer into a heatproof bowl or large measuring cup, pressing on the solids to squeeze out every last drop. You’ll end up with about a cup of vibrant pink-red liquid.

If you like a more rustic, fruit-flecked lemonade, skip the strainer and just give the syrup a quick blend with an immersion blender. Either approach works. It depends on whether you want clear or fruity.

3. Juice the Lemons

Roll the lemons firmly on the counter, then cut and juice them. A handheld citrus press is fastest, but the cup-side of a fork twisted into a halved lemon does the job too. Strain out the seeds and any large pulp.

4. Combine Everything

In a large pitcher, combine the strawberry syrup, lemon juice, and four cups of cold water. Stir well. Taste. If it’s too tart, add another tablespoon of sugar (stir until dissolved). If it’s too sweet, add another splash of lemon juice. This is your moment to make it yours.

5. Chill, Then Serve Over Ice

Refrigerate the pitcher for at least 30 minutes to let everything come together and chill thoroughly. Serve in tall glasses over plenty of ice. Garnish each with a strawberry slice and a thin lemon round on the rim if you’re feeling fancy.

Make It Your Own

This recipe loves a little improvisation. A few favorites:

  • Sparkling version: Replace half the still water with cold sparkling water or club soda right before serving.
  • Herb-infused: Add a small handful of fresh basil or mint to the syrup while it simmers, then strain.
  • Frozen version: Blend the finished lemonade with extra ice until slushy. Tastes like the world’s best summer treat.
  • Pink lemonade extender: Save the strained strawberry pulp. It’s wonderful stirred into yogurt or spooned over ice cream.
  • Grown-up version: Add a splash of vodka, gin, or sparkling wine. You know your crowd.

How Long It Keeps

The finished lemonade is best within two days, though it’ll hold up for three or four in the fridge. The flavor stays bright; the color may darken slightly. The strawberry syrup on its own keeps for about a week refrigerated, so you can make a double batch of syrup and turn it into fresh lemonade for several days running.

Homemade Strawberry Lemonade
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Homemade Strawberry Lemonade

Real strawberries, fresh lemons, a little sugar, and ice. That's it. This is the drink that makes a hot afternoon feel like vacation. It costs about a dollar a glass to make, beats the bottled version in every possible way, and uses up those slightly tired strawberries sitting on your counter giving you the look.
Prep Time10 minutes
Cook Time5 minutes
Chill Time30 minutes
Total Time45 minutes
Course: Beverages, Drinks
Cuisine: American
Servings: 6 cups
Calories: 131kcal

Ingredients

  • 1 pound fresh strawberries hulled (about 3 heaping cups)
  • 3/4 cup granulated sugar adjust to taste
  • 1/4 cup water for syrup
  • 1 cup fresh lemon juice 6–8 lemons
  • 4 cups cold water
  • Ice sliced strawberries, and lemon rounds for serving

Instructions

  • Combine strawberries, sugar, and 1/4 cup water in a saucepan. Simmer over medium heat for 5 minutes, mashing berries as they soften.
  • Strain through a fine-mesh sieve, pressing to extract all the liquid. (Or skip straining for a rustic version.)
  • Juice the lemons and strain out seeds.
  • In a large pitcher, combine strawberry syrup, lemon juice, and 4 cups cold water. Stir well.
  • Taste and adjust sugar or lemon as needed.
  • Chill at least 30 minutes. Serve over ice with fresh garnishes.

Notes

Ingredient tips:
  • The softest, ripest strawberries work best here. They release more juice and have the deepest flavor. Save the pretty ones for garnish.
  • Let lemons sit at room temperature for an hour and roll them firmly before juicing. You'll get noticeably more juice out of each one.
  • Bottled lemon juice works in a pinch, but fresh is noticeably better.
Variations:
  • Sparkling: Replace half the still water with cold club soda right before serving.
  • Herb-infused: Add a small handful of fresh mint or basil to the syrup while it simmers, then strain.
  • Frozen slushy: Blend the finished lemonade with extra ice until slushy.
  • Grown-up version: Add a splash of vodka, gin, or sparkling wine.
Don't waste the pulp: The strained strawberry solids are wonderful stirred into yogurt or spooned over ice cream.
Storage: Best within 2 days; holds up for 3–4 days refrigerated. The strawberry syrup alone keeps up to 1 week in the fridge. Make a double batch and mix fresh lemonade all week long.

Nutrition

Calories: 131kcal | Carbohydrates: 34g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 0.4g | Saturated Fat: 0.03g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Sodium: 5mg | Potassium: 235mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 30g | Vitamin A: 12IU | Vitamin C: 60mg | Calcium: 18mg | Iron: 0.4mg

Question: What’s your secret ingredient for the best homemade lemonade? A splash of vanilla? A few crushed berries? Share your tricks in the comments below.


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