About These Recipes
Six homemade electrolyte drinks built from real, whole-food ingredients. Cheaper than commercial sports drinks, no artificial colors or sweeteners, and you control the sodium. Best paired with the water intake ranges and the recommended-intake calculator. Always coordinate with your doctor if you have kidney disease, heart conditions or are on BP / diuretic medication — see disclaimer.
Six Homemade Drinks
Tap any recipe to see ingredients, steps and the per-serving electrolyte profile.
Classic Lemonade Everyday
The easiest entry-level electrolyte drink. Lemons bring vitamin C and a little potassium, the pinch of salt does the heavy lifting on sodium, and honey supplies fast-energy carbs that help the gut absorb the electrolytes.
- Juice of 2 fresh lemons (about ¼ cup)
- 500 mL cold filtered water
- ¼ tsp fine sea salt (or pink Himalayan)
- 1–2 tbsp honey or maple syrup (to taste)
- Ice cubes
- Juice the lemons; strain out seeds.
- Combine juice, water, salt and sweetener in a pitcher.
- Stir vigorously until the salt and honey dissolve completely.
- Pour over ice and serve.
Coconut Water Boost Post-workout
Coconut water is naturally rich in potassium but light on sodium — a pinch of salt and a squeeze of lime fixes that and gives you a balanced post-workout rehydration drink with no added sugar.
- 500 mL unsweetened coconut water (read the label — many brands add sugar)
- Juice of 1 fresh lime
- Pinch of pink Himalayan salt (≈ ⅛ tsp)
- Optional: 1 tsp honey for events > 60 min
- Pour coconut water into a glass or shaker.
- Add lime juice and salt.
- Stir or shake until salt dissolves.
- Drink chilled within 30 minutes of finishing your workout.
Watermelon Mint Refreshing
Watermelon is 92% water and the only common food source of L-citrulline — an amino acid that small studies link to reduced muscle soreness. Cooling mint and a touch of salt round it out.
- 2 cups seedless watermelon, cubed
- 1 cup cold water
- ⅛ tsp fine sea salt
- Juice of 1 lime
- 4–5 fresh mint leaves, plus more to garnish
- Blend watermelon, water and lime juice until smooth.
- Strain through a mesh sieve if you prefer a clear drink (optional).
- Stir in salt and torn mint leaves.
- Serve very cold, garnished with a sprig of mint.
Orange Ginger Anti-inflammatory
A warming, immune-supportive drink. Fresh ginger contributes gingerols — compounds with RCT-supported anti-inflammatory and anti-nausea effects (see also UC17 Spices & Herbs). Oranges add real vitamin C and a substantial potassium hit.
- Juice of 2 medium oranges (about ¾ cup)
- 1-inch piece of fresh ginger, grated and pressed for juice
- ¼ tsp fine sea salt
- 250 mL still or sparkling water
- Optional: 1 tsp honey
- Squeeze orange juice and pour into a glass.
- Grate the ginger, then press the pulp through a fine sieve to extract the juice.
- Stir in salt, water and optional honey.
- Serve over ice — or warm gently for a winter-evening version.
Apple Cider Vinegar Gut health
Raw, unfiltered apple cider vinegar contains live Acetobacter cultures (the "mother") and acetic acid. Limited evidence suggests 1–2 tbsp before meals modestly blunts post-meal glucose spikes. See also UC19 Fermented Foods.
- 1–2 tbsp raw apple cider vinegar with mother
- 500 mL water (cold or room temperature)
- ¼ tsp fine sea salt
- 1 tsp honey or maple syrup
- Juice of ½ lemon
- Add all ingredients to a tall glass.
- Stir until salt and honey dissolve fully.
- Drink through a straw to protect tooth enamel.
- Rinse your mouth with plain water afterward.
Always Dilute
Undiluted ACV erodes tooth enamel and can damage the esophagus. Skip this drink entirely if you have GERD / reflux, an active ulcer, or are on potassium-sparing diuretics. Stop immediately if you experience throat irritation. Limit to once daily.
Banana Smoothie High potassium
The heaviest of the six and the highest in potassium — perfect for athletes battling leg cramps, low-energy days, or as a pre-workout 30–60 minutes out. The peanut butter is optional but adds a little fat and protein for steadier energy.
- 1 large ripe banana
- 250 mL unsweetened coconut water (or milk of choice)
- ¼ tsp fine sea salt
- 1 tsp natural peanut butter (optional)
- 1 cup ice cubes
- Slice the banana into chunks.
- Combine all ingredients in a blender.
- Blend on high until completely smooth (about 30 seconds).
- Pour into a tall glass and drink immediately for best texture.
Storage & Make-Ahead
All six recipes are best fresh — within 24 hours, refrigerated, in a sealed glass container. Watermelon Mint separates quickly and benefits from a shake. The ACV drink should always be made just before drinking — the sweetener attracts the live cultures to settle.
The Science of Electrolytes
Why these minerals matter, when you actually need an electrolyte drink, and the safety thresholds.
The Four Key Electrolytes
Electrolytes are minerals that carry an electric charge when dissolved in body fluid. They run every nerve impulse, every muscle contraction, and keep fluid balance between cells stable. Four matter most for everyday hydration:
Na Sodium
Daily: 1,500–2,300 mg adults; up to 5,000 mg endurance athletes.
Lost in sweat: 300–800 mg per litre (very individual — "salty sweater" testing is real).
Function: Nerve impulse, muscle contraction, fluid balance, blood pressure.
Food sources: Table salt, olives, pickles, bone broth, sea vegetables, fermented foods.
K Potassium
Daily: 3,500–4,700 mg. Most adults under-consume.
Lost in sweat: ~200 mg per litre (less than sodium).
Function: Counterbalances sodium for blood-pressure regulation, heart rhythm, muscle function.
Food sources: Banana, sweet potato, coconut water, white beans, spinach, avocado, prunes.
Mg Magnesium
Daily: 320 mg women / 420 mg men.
Lost in sweat: Small (5–15 mg per litre).
Function: Muscle relaxation (counterpart to calcium contraction), nerve signalling, sleep, > 300 enzyme reactions.
Food sources: Pumpkin seeds (best plant Mg), almonds, dark chocolate, leafy greens, oats, quinoa.
Ca Calcium
Daily: 1,000–1,200 mg.
Lost in sweat: Minor (25–60 mg per litre).
Function: Muscle contraction (paired with Mg relaxation), nerve signalling, blood clotting, bone health.
Food sources: Dairy, sesame seeds, sardines with bones, kale, fortified plant milks, tofu.
When to Drink Electrolyte Drinks
Most people on a normal balanced diet do not need daily electrolyte drinks — over-consumption of sodium is the more common Western problem. Reach for these recipes in specific situations:
Tip: See UC14 Water Min/Max for your age-and-sex baseline daily water target, and UC15 Recommended Intake for the activity-and-climate adjustments. Electrolyte drinks supplement that baseline; they don't replace it.
Signs of Imbalance + Safety
Common symptoms of electrolyte imbalance:
Safety — Talk to Your Doctor First If…
The 30-Second Rule of Thumb
For everyday athletes: 1 g sodium + 200 mg potassium per litre of drink is roughly the sweet spot for most exercise-related rehydration. That's about ½ teaspoon of salt and a banana's worth of potassium in 1 L of water — every recipe on this page hits or exceeds the sodium target. For elite endurance work, expect to need 2× this.