Shopping for BBQ Gear? Start Here!

2,000+ Free Pages

2,000+ Free Pages

YOU ARE HERE >> AmazingRibs » Drinks » Grilled Lemonade, Summer’s Smokiest Beverage

Grilled Lemonade, Summer’s Smokiest Beverage

lemonade stand.

When life gives you lemons and a grill, you make grilled lemonade!

David Rosengarten is a superb chef, a brilliant taster, an entertaining writer, and an inspirational teacher. He is best known for his popular TV programs on The Food Network, where he hosted about 2,500 shows in the 1990s.

rosengarten

I met Rosengarten in Ithaca, NY, where he was working in a wine shop and I was writing about wine and teaching wine part time at Cornell. I hadn’t seen him for several years until one day I got an email from him at my new home in Chicago. He was coming to town to conduct a spectacular gourmet dinner for the benefit of Share Our Strength, an important charity that fights hunger. He wanted to taste the best Chicago Hot Dogs and wanted me to help him find them. The next morning we started at 7 a.m. and hit four classics stands by noon (yes, there are hot dog stands open at 7 a.m. in Chicago). By 2 p.m. he was on a plane back home to NYC. On our drive around town I asked him what he preferred to drink with barbecue and without hesitation he said “lemonade” and that he had a great recipe.

chris lilly

Chris Lilly is one of the best pitmasters in the nation. He is executive Chef of Big Bob Gibson’s in Decatur, AL, owner of more competition trophies than you can count, and an advisor to Kingsford. I met him at the Jack Daniel’s world Championship Invitational Barbecue in 2005. He was a competitor and I was a judge. We hit it off instantly, and our paths have crossed many times since, even at Big Bob Gibson’s. He makes his homemade lemonade by slicing the lemons in half and then he grills the cut side over medium heat until there are grill marks and have a light touch of smoke.

So I combined both recipes.

oxo juicer

For making grilled lemonade, you’ll need a 1 gallon pitcher, and you can squeeze the lemons by hand, but a juicer is more efficient and it will help you get more juice. I have two that I can recommend. The OXO Good Grips Citrus Squeezer (above) is nice because it strains out seeds and pulp, but it requires a bit of hand strength.

norpro

The Norpro Glass Citrus Juicer (above) is inexpensive and really easy to use, but you need a strainer to separate seeds and pulp.

electric juicer

A reader tipped me on the Proctor Silex Alex’s Juicer.

Here’s a video by our friend Jason King.

flames line2
grilled lemonade for lemonade.

Grilled Lemonade Recipe

2.65 from 39 votes
Rate this Recipe
Grilled lemons? Absolutely. Brisk, refreshing lemonade with a smoky flavor.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 5 minutes
Servings: 6 large glasses
Course: Beverage
Cuisine: American
Difficulty: Easy

Ingredients
 
 

  • 1 1/4 cups fresh squeezed lemon juice (about 5 large lemons)
  • 1 cup of granulated sugar (less if you want it more sour)
  • 3 cups warm water

Method
 

  1. Prep. Wash the lemons thoroughly. Cut them in half at the equator and place them in a non-reactive pan. The acidity in the lemons can react with the aluminum or cast iron and discolor both. Don’t lose any juice that leaks.
  2. Fire up. Preheat your grill to medium high, about 325°F (163°C). When it is hot, make sure the grates are really clean. There can be no traces of grease on them.
  3. Cook. Place half the lemons, cut side down on the grill and cook until the surface browns slightly but don’t let them blacken. Remove them and put them back in the pan.
  4. Prep again. Squeeze all the lemon halves into a 1 gallon (3.9 L) pitcher, then add the squeezed lemon halves to the pitcher (you should get about 1/4 cup (60ml) of juice per lemon), add the warm water (warm water helps dissolve the sugar), dump in the sugar, and stir well with a wooden spoon.
  5. Taste for sweetness. Add a little more sugar if you think it’s necessary. Refrigerate for at least an hour. Surprisingly, when lemon juice has had a chance to age an hour or three, the flavors open up, similarly to the way red wine flavors open when aired.
  6. Serve. When ready to serve, stir the lemonade, fill the glasses with ice cubes, and pour.

Video

Tried this recipe?

Let us know how it was!

Related Articles & Posts

Why We Require You To Sign In Before You Can Post Commentsgrouchy?

Before you can post a comment or question you must sign into our commenting partner, Disqus. This is helps make sure everyone hanging around the grill is civil. We do not tolerate nastiness, racism, porn, inappropriate language, or attacks on others. All comments are the property of AmazingRibs.com and we reserve the right to quote them, edit them, delete them, and block people from making future comments.

Please leave comments and questions on the page devoted to the same subject so others can see them and our answers when they are reading about that subject. You must enable JavaScript to use the comments section, and you must accept cookies to post comments. Note that the software that runs Disqus is different from the Pitmaster Club so members need to sign into that separately.

Click to comment or ask a question...
Published On: December 2, 2016
Last Modified On: May 1, 2026

New Recipes, Reviews, and Science Sent To Your Inbox!

Subscribe to receive our FREE weekly newsletter, Smoke Signals, and never miss a new recipe!

New Recipes

Jump To Top

Meet The AmazingRibs.com Team

BBQ Hall of Famer Meathead founded AmazingRibs.com in 2005 to help people master barbecue and grilling. Today he and his team of culinary experts have created a site with more than 2,000 pages of myth-busting, science, recipes, methods, product reviews, and the Pitmaster Club—the world’s largest BBQ association—dedicated to making you a legend.