Learn how to make old fashioned, freshly squeezed homemade lemonade that’ll knock your socks off! It’s super easy. We even include instructions for sugar-free lemonade, honey-based lemonade, as well as how to easily make flavored lemonades all using the same recipe.
There’s nothing quite like a big glass of freshly squeezed homemade lemonade on a hot summer day. It’s the ultimate refreshing beverage. It’s easy to make in large batches to then freeze and enjoy all summer long. Classic old fashioned lemonade is made from freshly squeezed lemon juice and a simple syrup. Some people do simply stir sugar into lemon juice and water to make lemonade, but this can lead to graininess and separation. The best homemade lemonade uses a simple syrup to sweeten. A simply syrup doesn’t separate. We’re even including options for how to make a simple syrup using honey or Stevia.
Simple Syrup:
Simple syrup is used as a sweetener in drinks and baked goods. It is significantly easier to blend a simple syrup with cold drinks than it is to blend in straight sugar.
Homemade lemonade starts by making a simple syrup base. This will allow you to sweeten the lemon juice from your freshly squeezed lemons without any problems getting the sugar to dissolve. The last thing you want is a gritty lemonade or one where the sugar separates and sinks to the bottom.
Lemonade Using Honey:
Dissolve equal parts honey and water in a saucepan over medium-high heat. So, for every 1 cup of honey, use 1 cup of water. This will form a simple syrup using honey, rather than sugar. Then simply mix in equal parts freshly squeezed lemon juice to form a lemonade concentrate.
Sugar-free Lemonade:
For sugar free lemonade, use stevia powder. Stevia is a strong natural sweetener. Dissolve 1/4 cup stevia powder in 2 cups water in a saucepan over medium-high heat. Combine this mixture with 2 cups of freshly squeezed lemon juice to form a lemonade concentrate.
Freshly Squeezed vs. Bottled Lemon Juice:
Freshly squeezed lemon juice has a brighter, cleaner flavor and is strongly preferred for making lemonade. Bottled lemon juice does not taste as fresh and can sometimes have a bitter, chemical taste. Any kind of lemon can be used to make lemonade, including Meyer lemons which have a distinct, sweeter flavor.
Flavored Lemonades:
This recipe teaches you how to make your own plain lemonade, but you can use this same recipe to make a variety of flavors. Want Strawberry Lemonade? Add in a pound of hulled strawberries to your prepared lemonade and blend it in a blender. Raspberry lemonade? Do the same thing! It’s easy to mix and match various fruits and flavor combinations to quench your thirst with this old-fashioned treat.
Adjusting Sweet vs. Sour
Simple syrup has a specific ratio of water to sugar. If you want to adjust the sweetness of this recipe, do not change the ratio of the simple syrup. Rather, you’ll want to adjust the ratio of simple syrup to lemon juice. For a more sour lemonade, use more lemon juice. Alternately, you can also add less simple syrup to your lemon juice. Once you have your lemonade concentrate (the mixture of a simple syrup and lemon juice), you’ll add water to taste. At this point you can then thin out the lemonade as much as you’d like, depending on your own personal taste preferences.
Freezer Instructions:
In this recipe you create a lemonade concentrate by combining a simple syrup with lemon juice. The lemonade concentrate can be frozen for later use. Pour the cooled lemonade concentrate into a gallon-sized ziploc bag and lay flat in the freezer. When ready to serve, thaw, and add water to taste.
If you like this recipe, you may be interested in these other delicious and refreshing cold beverage recipes:
Watch the video below where Rachel will walk you through every step of this recipe. Sometimes it helps to have a visual, and weโve always got you covered with our cooking show. You can find the complete collection of recipes on YouTube, Facebook Watch, or our Facebook Page, or right here on our website with their corresponding recipes.
You forgot to add the asterisk to your notes from the sugar*
For those throwing away lemons, so sad. Wish you all lived near me, I sure could use some. How about donating somewhere or advertising to your family, friends and neighbors that they are available after you get all you need.
I can see this being quite handy this summer for my grand children for whom I want to show how to get away from sugar and still enjoy great food and drinks. Thanks!
Fabulous recipe and a great hit with family and friends, thank you!
I have a tree with heaps of limes can the same recipe be used or do you have one?
How many lemons does it take to make this recipe?
It really depends on your lemons, their size, and how juicy they are.
I too have the problem (?) of too many lemons. On another website I discovered lemons, limes and oranges can all be frozen whole. They will be mushy when thawed, but the juice produced is abundant. You can also zest the frozen fruit (really easy with micro-plane) and either return the whole fruit (minus zest) to the freezer or juice it. No more juicing a mountain of lemons and ending up with a bunch of frozen lemon juice cubes. Saves a bunch of time and I am not throwing out as many lemons.
Great to know. Thanks for that input!
I just processed 4 pints of pure lemon juice in Ball canning jars. Each jar will make 1/2 gallon or more with this recipe and wonโt take up real estate in my freezer. Good for 12 – 18 months!
Thanks, I came on her to get refreshed! Lol, I’ve made many times but never remember ratio,juice,
Sugar, water. My lemon tree probably gets 200 lemons every year. At least it seems like that many,and I try and give away as many as I can because I can only freeze so much. My Son and I were hand juicing them,time consuming! Bought a nice juicer but you can’t put whole citrus in it! Damn! I found an electric juicer at Target for $13 what a life saver. It kills me that they are .89 a piece at the store and I just threw out a bucket full. Anyway Thank you and ill go enjoy a glass of lemonade!
This is a lovely recipe. How long will the lemonade concentrate last if it is bottled in the the fridge?
It should last for at least a couple of weeks.
Add water to taste; makes approx 8 cups. You start out with 2C lemon juice, 2C simple syrup, which leaves 4C of water. Other recipes are calling for a gallon of water. That’s quite a bit of variability. We’re not talking salt & pepper here. “To taste” is a poor choice of measurement when there’s only three ingredients.
I disagree. Some people prefer really sour lemonade (like myself) while others prefer one that is more on the sweet side. The water added is what takes it from one end of the spectrum to the other. To taste becomes an excellent measurement in that regard.
how much will it take to make 3 gallons of this Rachel.
This recipe makes approximately 8 cups and there are 16 cups in 1 gallon.
do you add the lemon juice into the saucepan while it’s still hot or do you do it when it cools down?
I don’t add the lemon juice into the saucepan. I pour the hot simple syrup into a pitcher with lemon juice while it is still hot though.
The Vitamin C in lemons is more quickly destroyed when you heat it. So it is best for nutritional purposes to make the sugar syrup in advance, let it cool to room temp, then juice the lemons and add the cooled syrup. The flavour is the same either way but I thought I would mention this.
A most excellent answer! I like to add less water TO TASTE because I prefer lemonade that makes me “pucker”. lol My kids add more water TO TASTE because they like it less sour. Kind of like lemon bar recipes……some call for 2 TBS of lemon juice while others call for an entire cup. To each his/her own.
Hi Rachel! Just found your site and love it already! For this recipe, if I already have simple syrup in a bottle, would I just use 2 cups? Thanks!
I agree
Gooooooooooooood awsoooooome
About home many cups will this make?
About 8 cups
My mom always made me ice cold lemonade in the summer, and hot syrupy lemonade with honey whenever I got sick ๐
what is the hand held squeezer called
It’s called a reamer. You can buy one here: http://amzn.to/2r2ih5a
I also have this juicer as well: http://amzn.to/2r2gSM8
Neither of those links looks anything like the handy little reamer you use in the video. I like the one you use, because it seems to work well.
Perhaps they’ve stopped selling the one I have ๐