
Ingredients
- 1 cup Strawberries
- 60 ml Fresh Lemon Juice
- 15 ml Simple Syrup
- 150 ml Cold Water
- 1 cup Ice
- Strawberry
Instructions
- Blend everything until slushy.
- Pour into a chilled hurricane glass.
- Garnish with a fresh strawberry.
Notes
Estimated Nutrition:
Where it came from
The Frozen Strawberry Lemonade is a 2000s American fast-casual drink-menu mocktail, popularised by chains like Cheesecake Factory and Olive Garden as a non-alcoholic option that holds up against the cocktail list. Built around fresh strawberries (or frozen), fresh lemon juice and a slushy ice base, the drink delivers a virgin slushy in any glass shape that fits.
It sits in the blended-fruit mocktail family with the Frozen Mango Margarita Mocktail, the Frozen Pineapple Cooler and the Frozen Strawberry Daiquiri Mocktail. All four lean on a blender base and a fruit-forward profile for the cocktail character. The Strawberry Lemonade separates itself with the lemon-only acid base, which keeps the drink in lemonade territory rather than crossing into margarita or daiquiri styles.
Best served at a summer barbeque, a kids' birthday party, a poolside lunch or any setting that calls for a non-alcoholic slushy with adult appeal. The build is forgiving and scales easily; the technique is in the blend ratio of fruit to ice.
What it tastes like
Sweet ripe strawberry up front, sharp lemon acid through the middle, sweet finish from the simple syrup. The combination is summery and direct; no herb or floral notes, just fruit and acid in a clean balance. The slushy texture rounds out the flavour and gives the drink a body that ordinary lemonade does not have.
Zero ABV. The drink is built to feel like a real bar slushy; the texture and the fruit-forward profile deliver the cocktail experience without the alcohol, which is the whole point of a virgin slushy.
The technique
Combine one cup of strawberries (fresh or frozen), sixty millilitres of fresh lemon juice, fifteen millilitres of simple syrup, one hundred fifty millilitres of cold water and one cup of ice in a blender. Blend on high for thirty seconds until slushy. Pour into a chilled hurricane glass or a tall Collins glass. Garnish with a fresh strawberry on the rim and a long straw.
The water-to-ice ratio is the technique. Less water gives a thicker slushy that holds shape; more water gives a drinkable slush that flows through a straw. The standard ratio in the recipe gives a balanced texture. Use frozen strawberries for a thicker slush without diluting the flavour; reduce the ice to half a cup if using frozen.
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Ingredient Spotlight
The bottles that make or break this drink.
The strawberries
- Use
- One cup of fresh ripe strawberries, hulled.
- Skip
- Strawberries in syrup, which add a tinned-fruit note.
- Why
- Fresh ripe strawberries deliver the best flavour and a clean visual; the natural sugar carries the drink. Strawberries in syrup are pre-sweetened and read cheap; frozen strawberries work too, but slightly tartar than fresh in season.
The fresh lemon juice
- Use
- Freshly squeezed lemon juice from two medium lemons.
- Skip
- Bottled lemon juice or pre-mixed lemonade base.
- Why
- Fresh lemon is the load-bearing acid that defines the drink as lemonade rather than fruit slushy. Bottled lemon juice is dull and pre-mixed lemonade is overly sweet, both of which break the build.
The simple syrup
- Use
- Equal parts caster sugar and water, dissolved cold.
- Skip
- Honey or maple syrup, which add competing flavours.
- Why
- Simple syrup is neutral sweetness; honey and maple add character that does not match the lemon-strawberry profile. Use just enough to balance the lemon acid; the strawberries provide most of the sweetness.
Three Variations
Three real ways bartenders riff on this drink. Same idea, three different jackets.
The standard build
- Frozen Strawberry Lemonade, slushy
- One cup strawberries, sixty millilitres lemon juice, fifteen millilitres simple syrup, one hundred fifty millilitres water, one cup ice; blended slushy, served in a hurricane glass.
The mint build
- Frozen Strawberry Mint Lemonade
- Add five mint leaves to the blender. Adds a herbaceous lift; works well in summer when garden mint is in season.
The boozy build
- Frozen Strawberry Lemonade Vodka Slush
- Add forty-five millilitres of vodka or white rum to the blender. Crosses the drink from mocktail to cocktail; the build is otherwise identical.
What if I don't have…
Quick substitutions for when the bottle shop is closed.
Frozen strawberries (reduce ice to half a cup) or frozen raspberries. Different fruit profile but holds the blender-fruit idea.
Bottled lemon juice as a last resort, or a mix of lemon and lime. The drink reads slightly less bright.
Caster sugar dissolved in a small amount of warm water, or honey syrup. Adjust to taste.
A tall Collins glass or a pint mason jar. Both work for a slushy mocktail.
Frequently Asked Questions
Direct answers to what people search for after Googling this drink.
What is in a Frozen Strawberry Lemonade Mocktail?
One cup of strawberries (fresh or frozen), sixty millilitres of fresh lemon juice, fifteen millilitres of simple syrup, one hundred fifty millilitres of cold water and one cup of ice, blended slushy and served in a hurricane glass with a fresh strawberry garnish.
Should I use fresh or frozen strawberries?
Either works. Fresh strawberries in season give the brightest flavour; frozen strawberries are convenient and give a thicker slush (reduce the ice to half a cup if using frozen). Both deliver the standard build.
How sweet is the drink?
Moderately sweet. The strawberries are the natural sugar source; the simple syrup adds a small lift. The lemon acid keeps the drink from going syrupy; the slushy ice rounds out the finish.
What does it taste like?
Sweet ripe strawberry up front, sharp lemon through the middle, sweet finish from the simple syrup. The combination is summery and direct; the slushy texture rounds out the flavour.
Can I make a pitcher version?
Yes. Multiply by four: four cups strawberries, two hundred forty millilitres lemon juice, sixty millilitres simple syrup, six hundred millilitres water, four cups ice; blend in batches and pour into chilled glasses. Serve immediately so the slush holds.
Can I use lemonade instead of lemon juice?
Yes, but reduce the simple syrup to zero. Lemonade is pre-sweetened, so adding more syrup will tip the drink into syrupy territory. Use one hundred fifty millilitres of lemonade to replace the lemon juice and the water; adjust the simple syrup to taste.
Is this drink kid-friendly?
Yes. The Frozen Strawberry Lemonade is one of the most popular kid-friendly mocktails on restaurant menus; the strawberry-lemonade flavour is a familiar kid combination, and the slushy texture has play-value.
What other mocktails are similar?
A Frozen Mango Margarita Mocktail, a Frozen Pineapple Cooler, a Strawberry Daiquiri Mocktail and a Watermelon Slush. All four sit in the blender-mocktail family.
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