
Strawberry agua fresca recipe, done in five minutes with three ingredients. I made my first batch on a Saturday morning in late May, after spotting a flat of overripe strawberries marked down at the farmers market. Too soft to eat whole, but too fragrant to leave behind. I made the classic lime version first, liked it, then wondered what lemon would do differently. Turns out: quite a lot. Both versions are here, so you can decide.
Why This Strawberry Agua Fresca Recipe Works
Agua fresca means “fresh water” in Spanish, and that simplicity is the appeal. Blend strawberries with water and a little sweetener, strain if you want, and you have a drink that tastes genuinely of fruit — not of strawberry flavoring. Most recipes online use lime juice only. This one adds a tested lemon variation with specific ratios, plus a sparkling option.
Lime brings brightness with a faint savory edge — that’s the traditional agua de fresa character you’ll find at street markets across Mexico. Lemon is more floral and forward, making the strawberry taste sweeter and more summer-forward. Neither is wrong.
Key Ingredient Notes for the Best Strawberry Agua Fresca
The Strawberry-to-Water Ratio — Why It Matters
Ripe strawberries make a noticeably better drink. Pale, off-season ones produce a thin, watery result that no amount of sugar fixes. Frozen and fully thawed strawberries work well when fresh aren’t available — the texture after blending is nearly identical. Avoid freeze-dried; they absorb water differently and throw off the balance.
One pound (450g) of strawberries to four cups (960ml) of cold water is the standard ratio. Below that, the drink starts tasting like sweetened water. Above it, you’re in smoothie territory. That balance gives you full fruit flavor with a clean, pourable texture.
Lemon vs. Lime: Which Citrus to Use
Lime juice adds brightness with a faint savory edge — classic agua de fresa. For the strawberry lemon agua fresca variation, use two fresh lemons per pound of fruit and reduce the water to three and a half cups. Agave and lemon together can taste slightly off; plain sugar dissolved first in a tablespoon of warm water gives a cleaner result. Add fresh mint to the pitcher when serving — it works better here than with the lime version.
Love this? Try the Strawberry Lemonade Mocktail next — sparkling, batch-ready, and built around the same summer flavors.

What I Learned Testing This Recipe
Four batches, two mistakes. My first batch used granulated sugar added all at once — too sweet, because the strawberries were riper than I expected. Always taste the strawberries first, then start with two tablespoons of sweetener and adjust from there.
Agave syrup dissolved better in cold liquid every time. No graininess, no stirring needed after blending. If you use granulated sugar, dissolve it in two tablespoons of warm water before adding it to the blender — a 30-second simple syrup that makes a real difference in texture.
When you open the blender lid after the first blend, the smell is sharp and green — almost more strawberry leaf than fruit. Normal. Once the remaining water and citrus go in, the sweeter fruit note comes forward. Testing the lemon version took two rounds: one lemon per pound barely registered as tart. Two lemons hit the right balance — bright without being sharp.
Calories in This Strawberry Agua Fresca Recipe
One 8 oz glass runs about 55 to 70 calories depending on sweetener amount. Agave adds slightly more calories than granulated sugar by volume, but most people use less since it tastes sweeter. A sparkling version with plain sparkling water and no added sweetener — just ripe strawberries and lemon juice — can come in under 40 calories. Strawberries also contribute vitamin C and folate regardless of preparation method.
Tips and Variations
Strawberry Lemon Agua Fresca
Use two fresh lemons (about four tablespoons of juice) per pound of strawberries. Blend with three and a half cups of water — the extra lemon juice makes up the volume from the fourth cup. Plain granulated sugar gives a cleaner flavor with lemon than agave does. Add a sprig of fresh mint to the pitcher before serving; it works especially well in this version.
Sparkling Strawberry Agua Fresca
Blend with two cups of water instead of four, then strain. Pour the concentrated base into glasses over ice and top each one with plain sparkling water. Do not add sparkling water to the pitcher — it goes flat fast. No added sweetener is needed if the strawberries are ripe.
Batch Scaling
Double the recipe directly: two pounds of strawberries to eight cups of water. For a party pitcher serving eight to ten, triple it. Refrigerate the base for up to 24 hours in advance and add fresh mint and lemon slices just before serving. Stir the pitcher before pouring — natural separation happens overnight.

Troubleshooting Your Strawberry Agua Fresca Recipe
Too Sweet or Too Tart
Too sweet: add cold water one cup at a time and taste again. A squeeze of extra lime or lemon — half a fruit per batch — adds tartness without changing the strawberry flavor much. Too tart: add one tablespoon of sweetener at a time, stir, and taste. Start small; you can always add more.
Drink Separating in the Pitcher
Normal behavior for any pulp-forward agua fresca. Stir the pitcher before each pour. For a version that stays clear, run it through a fine mesh strainer twice before adding it to the pitcher. A fully strained strawberry agua fresca holds clarity for up to three days refrigerated.
Texture Too Thin or Too Thick
Too thin: on your next batch, macerate the strawberries in one tablespoon of sugar for 15 minutes before blending. This draws out more juice and concentrates the flavor. Too thick: you probably skipped straining. One pass through a fine mesh strainer brings it to the right pourable consistency.
More Fruit Drink Recipes You’ll Love
This strawberry agua fresca recipe is part of the Fruit Drink Recipes hub — the full collection of non-alcoholic fruit-forward drinks on MocktailsDaily.
- Strawberry Lemonade Mocktail — sparkling, batch-ready, same summer vibe
- Dirty Lemonade Soda Recipe — lemon-forward with a creamy, tangy twist
Strawberry Agua Fresca Recipe
Equipment
- Blender (standard or high-powered)
- Fine mesh strainer optional — for a clearer, pulp-free result
- Large pitcher (64 oz or larger)
- Measuring cups and spoons
Ingredients
- 1 lb fresh strawberries hulled and halved; frozen and fully thawed works equally well — drain excess liquid before blending
- 4 cups cold water reduce to 3.5 cups for stronger flavor; use 2 cups for sparkling version base
- 2-3 tbsp agave syrup or 3 tbsp granulated sugar dissolved in 2 tbsp warm water; or 2 tbsp honey; or monkfruit sweetener to taste
- 1 lime, juiced about 2 tbsp; for lemon variation use 2 lemons instead (about 4 tbsp juice)
- 1 pinch salt optional — heightens fruit flavor
Optional Garnish
- 4 lemon or lime wheels garnish
- 4 sprigs fresh mint garnish — works especially well with lemon variation
- 4 fresh strawberries garnish
Instructions
Prepare the Strawberries
- Remove stems and hull from each strawberry, then halve them. Taste one — if they are very ripe and sweet, start with 2 tbsp sweetener; if they taste under-sweet or slightly tart, use 3 tbsp.
- Add the strawberries to a blender with 2 cups of the cold water and the agave (or dissolved sugar). Do not add all the water yet — blending with less water first gives a smoother, more concentrated puree.
Blend and Adjust
- Blend on high for 30 to 45 seconds until completely smooth. The mixture will look thick and bright pink. Open the lid carefully — the smell will be sharp and green at this stage, which is normal.
- Add the lime juice (or lemon juice for the lemon variation) and the remaining 2 cups cold water. Blend for another 10 seconds to combine.
- Taste. If it needs more sweetener, add 1 tsp at a time and blend briefly. If it is too sweet, add a squeeze more citrus or another half cup of water.
Strain and Serve
- Pour through a fine mesh strainer into a large pitcher, pressing gently with a spoon to extract liquid. Skip straining if you prefer more body and texture — both are correct.
- Refrigerate for at least 30 minutes, or serve immediately over ice. Add ice to individual glasses, not the pitcher. Stir the pitcher before each pour. Garnish with a lemon wheel, fresh mint sprig, and a fresh strawberry.
Notes
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between agua fresca and lemonade?
Agua fresca is blended fruit with water and a small amount of sweetener — it’s lighter and more diluted than lemonade. Lemonade concentrates citrus juice with sugar and water. Strawberry agua fresca tastes of whole fruit; lemonade is more tart and citrus-forward.
Can I use frozen strawberries for agua fresca?
Yes. Thaw completely before blending and drain any excess liquid from the bag first. Fully thawed frozen strawberries produce a texture and flavor nearly identical to fresh in the finished drink. Strain after blending for the clearest result.
How long does strawberry agua fresca last in the fridge?
Up to three days in a sealed pitcher or airtight container. The drink separates naturally as it sits — stir before serving. A strained version holds its clarity longer than an unstrained one.
Should I strain strawberry agua fresca?
It depends on texture preference. Straining gives a clearer, lighter drink that pours cleanly and keeps longer without separating. Keeping the pulp adds more body and fiber but requires stirring before every glass. Strain if you want a restaurant-style agua fresca; skip it if you want more texture.
Can I make strawberry agua fresca with lemon instead of lime?
Yes. Use two fresh lemons per pound of strawberries and reduce the water by half a cup to keep the balance right. Lemon makes the drink brighter and more floral than lime. Use plain sugar instead of agave for the cleanest flavor when using lemon.
What sweetener works best for agua fresca?
Agave syrup dissolves cleanly in cold liquid and adds a neutral sweetness. Granulated sugar works but needs to be dissolved in warm water first, or it stays grainy. Honey adds a slight floral note that can compete with the strawberry. Start with two tablespoons of any sweetener and adjust to taste.
Can I make sparkling strawberry agua fresca?
Yes. Blend with two cups of water instead of four, strain, then top each glass with plain sparkling water at serving time. Never add sparkling water to the pitcher — it goes flat immediately. The concentrated base keeps in the fridge for up to three days.
What is the correct water-to-fruit ratio for agua fresca?
One pound (450g) of fruit to four cups (960ml) of water is standard. Below that and the drink tastes watery; above it gets too thick. For a stronger flavor, macerate the fruit in a tablespoon of sugar for 15 minutes before blending.



