How to Make Lemonade: 4 Tasty Twists to Sip on This Summer

When you know how to make lemonade at home, you'll never go back to the sad store-bought stuff.

How To Make Lemonade

Skip the store-bought sugary junk this summer and learn how to make lemonade without the sticky syrups and artificial ingredients.

All you’ll need is a fruit basket full of lemons, organic cane sugar, and filtered water to enjoy a homemade glass of lemonade. Plus, we’re showing you how to spice up your lemonade with fun flavors like lavender and thyme! Pack this lemonade up to go, set out a checkered blanket and serve it up with our easy curry chicken salad sandwiches and three-berry cobbler for the best picnic of your life.

How To Make Lemonade

Sourcing Ingredients

The key to the perfect glass of homemade lemonade is using ripe, juicy lemons. Meyer lemons, assumed to be a hybrid of lemons and mandarins (or oranges), are our favorite to use since they are naturally sweeter. They lack the strong acidity of traditional lemons and instead only have a slight tartness allowing this recipe to use a bit less sweetener.

Meyer lemons can usually be found year round in grocery stores but they peak during late winter to spring. Meyer lemons ripen and spoil more quickly than regular lemons so when shopping for them, look for a firm outer peel with bright shiny skin.

The farmers market is the perfect place to pick up your ingredients for this lemonade. You can find locally grown Meyer lemons (or any other kind of lemons, or limes) which will be freshly picked and perfect for lemonade. The farmers market is also the place to go when searching for culinary lavender as you can likely find at least one farmer who grows lavender. Confirm with the farmer that the lavender is indeed the culinary variety.

While you’re at the farmers market, you may as well pick some fresh ingredients to make these peak summer recipes: Garlic-Lemon Butter Bean Dip, this bright and fresh Cherry Tomato Salad with Burrata & Pesto, sweet and savory Melon & Fig Salad with Basil Cream, Fresh Strawberry & Spinach Salad, Grilled Salmon Potatoes & Asparagus Salad, and a fan favorite Panna Cotta Pie with fresh berries.

Health Benefits

Lemons are chock full of vitamin C, an essential water soluble nutrient which helps our bodies in many ways. As a result of their high vitamin C content, lemons are an antioxidant food. The antioxidants in lemons help neutralize free radicals in the bodies, which can help to ward off inflammation and may even help those suffering from rheumatoid arthritis.

Lemons also aid digestion by increasing movement within the digestive tract. The lemon’s acidity also has detoxifying effects on the body helping to keep the good in and the bad out.

Sugar-Free Lemonade

For a white-sugar-free variety, try agave or stevia to sweeten this up. The general rule for substituting agave for cane sugar is ⅔ cup of agave to 1 cup of cane sugar. If you choose stevia, then only use 1 teaspoon to substitute 1 cup of sugar.

Tips

Opt for heavier lemons with thinner skins since they will yield more juice. (Looking for heavy fruit in general is always a good idea, like when searching for perfectly ripe peaches to grill up for this smokey dessert.) Before juicing, roll the lemon on a hard surface (like the kitchen table or counter) and press down on it with your palm as you do so. This will help release the juices from the membranes giving you more liquid to use in the lemonade.

Make your lemonade fancier by garnishing it with a lemon peel. Before juicing, peel the outer skin of the lemon using a vegetable peeler until it’s a long curly lemon. Garnish each glass with a lemon peel.

How To Make Lemonade

If you use regular lemons instead of Meyer, you may need to add in a few more tablespoons of sweetener. Simply add one tablespoon at a time to sweeten to taste.

How To Make Lemonade
0 Prep
10 min. Cook
10 min. Total
1 Servings

Ingredients

Lemonade Ingredients

Preparation

  1. Heat 1 cup of filtered water and cane sugar over medium-high heat in a large pot. Let simmer and whisk until sugar has dissolved. Remove from heat.
  2. Using a lemon juicer, juice the lemons until you have 1 ¼ cups lemon juice. Pour into a pitcher and add the sugar water and stir well. Add the remaining 2 cups of chilled filtered water and stir again.
  3. Serve lemonade over ice or chill in the fridge until ready to serve!
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