Chill Out This Summer With a Lavender Lemonade

Lily Diamond
Lily Diamond

Lavender oil has infinite uses and yet lavender buds are underutilized in the kitchen. Thanks to the Kale & Caramel cookbook ($13) by Lily Diamond, here's an easy way to make use of them: a lavender lemonade, sweetened with honey. I envision this drink tasting floral and as relaxing as vacation. I personally can't wait to try it spiked with St. Germain and blended up into an icy slushie. Let the chilling begin.

Lily Diamond

Lavender Honey Lemonade

Cook Time15 to 20 minutes
YieldServes 2 to 4

From Kale & Caramel by Lily Diamond

INGREDIENTS

    • 2 teaspoons dried edible lavender buds
    • 4 cups water
    • 2 large lemons, juiced (about 1⁄4 cup plus 2 tablespoons juice)
    • 5 to 6 tablespoons honey or sweetener of choice, or to taste
    • Ice cubes, for serving

    INSTRUCTIONS

    1. Place the lavender buds in a reusable or disposable tea bag or cheesecloth pouch and seal. Bring the water to a boil. Add the sealed bag of lavender. Steep for 10 to 15 minutes, then remove the sachet. Cool completely.

    2. Combine the lemon juice, chilled lavender water, and honey. The steeped lavender water will turn an extraordinary shade of pink! Stir or shake to combine, and serve over ice.

    Notes

    When I was young, my mother doused us both liberally with lavender, when I was sick, when we traveled, when I had bad dreams: It’s the singular scent that most invokes the memory of motherly caretaking in my mind. But as much as lavender helped me heal numerous ailments, its mellow waft made me overwhelmingly melancholy after my mother died. I turned to other scents and memories, waiting for the moment when lavender’s aroma would not sting my heart. My return to lavender has been gradual, a subtle reckoning with memory and a reclaiming of a remedy as my own. In the alchemy of time, scents and flavors recovered their initial meaning, unwinding the trauma they took on in loss and grief. Lavender, eventually, became a tonic for ease once again. Tasting it, smelling it, drinking it, I was stronger knowing it held the specific healing powers my mother once taught me. Now, lavender is a reminder of sweet grace on street corners, of the beauty that can thrive in the heat of an urban Summer, of transformation through scent and memory. So, while lavender is elegant in taste and potent in herbal qualities, it is for me an avenue of individuation — a route to becoming the healer that once healed me. In liquid form, it’s the perfect refresher on a hot Summer day or a mellow Spring morning. Drink and feel vitality, possibility, ease.