Kid-friendly Southern Blackberry Limeade Recipe - Sticky Fingers Cooking
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Recipe: Southern Blackberry Limeade

Recipe: Southern Blackberry Limeade

Southern Blackberry Limeade

by Dylan Sabuco
Photo by Fortyforks/Shutterstock.com
prep time
5 minutes
cook time
makes
4-6 servings

Fun Food Story

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Southern Blackberry Limeade

Southern Blackberry Limeade is a pinnacle of Southern refreshment, beautifully melding the tartness of fresh limes with the sweetness of summery blackberries—an excellent choice for a warm porch day!

Happy & Healthy Cooking,

Chef Erin, Food-Geek-in-Chief

Fun-Da-Mentals Kitchen Skills

  • measure :

    to calculate the specific amount of an ingredient required using a measuring tool (like measuring cups or spoons).

  • mix :

    to thoroughly combine two or more ingredients until uniform in texture.

  • pour :

    to cause liquid, granules, or powder to stream from one container into another.

  • smash :

    to break up food into smaller pieces or squash food to flatten or soften it.

Equipment Checklist

  • Pitcher
  • Dry measuring cups
  • Liquid measuring cup
  • Cutting board
  • Kid-safe knife
  • Citrus juicer (optional)
  • Wooden spoon
scale
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Ingredients

Southern Blackberry Limeade

  • 1 C fresh or frozen blackberries
  • 1/2 C granulated sugar
  • 3 limes
  • 3 C water
  • 2 C ice, optional

Instructions

Southern Blackberry Limeade

1.
measure + smash

Into a large pitcher, measure 1 cup blackberries and 1/2 cup sugar. With a wooden spoon, stir and smash until all the blackberries and sugar are fully smashed and combined.

2.
slice + squeeze

Slice 3 limes in half. Squeeze the juice into the pitcher.

3.
stir + pour

Stir in 3 cups water and 2 cups ice if desired. Then, pour the blackberry limeade into cups. Cheers!

Surprise Ingredient: Blackberry!

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Photo by pavla/Shutterstock.com

Hi! I'm Blackberry!

"I'm kind of sweet, kind of tart, and you can often find me growing along trails. If you pick me while you're out walking or hiking, wait until I'm ripe and watch out for thorns!"

History

  • The blackberry is a plant and an edible fruit from the Rose family. The fruit is a collection of black drupelets. The fruit is juicy, sweet, and slightly tart.
  • The blackberry's origin is unclear, however, they have been eaten for at least 2,500 years. The stomach contents of an Iron Age woman from about 500 BCE, found in a Danish bog, revealed she had recently eaten blackberries and millet (a cereal grain).
  • Ancient and more recent cultures used parts of the blackberry plant and fruit for traditional medicine. The Greeks used them for gout and sore throats. The Romans made tea with the plant's leaves to cure illnesses. They were used in the 18th century to aid in digestion and stomach ailments. Indigenous Americans also found medicinal uses for blackberries.
  • In the Middle Ages, blackberry wines and tonics were seen as more affordable than beer and mead (honey wine). In the 18th and 19th centuries, blackberry cordials, jellies, and jams became popular.
  • The United States has been responsible for the development of some blackberry cultivars and hybrids. The loganberry is an example of a hybrid blackberry and raspberry, accidentally developed in 1881 by James Harvey Logan, a judge and horticulturalist from Santa Cruz, California. 
  • The marionberry is a blackberry cultivar released in 1956 as part of a USDA breeding program with Oregon State University. It was called "marionberry" after Marion County, Oregon, the county in which it was developed. 
  • The largest blackberry producer worldwide is Mexico. The state of Oregon is the top producer in the United States.

Anatomy 

  • The blackberry comes from the Rubus genus and Rosaceae family. Perennial flowering plants in the Rose family include blackberries, dewberries, and raspberries. 
  • The fruit grows on bramble bushes, thorny shrubs that are part of a thicket, or a dense group of bushes or shrubs. Thornless varieties have also been developed. 
  • Botanically, the blackberry is not a berry. Rubus or bramble fruits are aggregate fruits consisting of a collection of drupelets (small, individual drupes, a fleshy fruit with thin skin and a central stone or seed). 
  • One difference between a blackberry and a raspberry is that the blackberry's torus or core stays with the fruit when it is picked. The raspberry's core does not remain, which leaves a hollow core in the fruit when picked.
  • One blackberry species, Rubus armeniacus or "Himalayan" blackberry, was introduced to North America by Luther Burbank in 1885 in Santa Rosa, California. He imported the seeds from India. It was cultivated throughout the US by 1915. However, it soon began to grow uncontrolled and is now considered an invasive species. It is often found growing around lakes and in parks.

How to Pick, Buy, & Eat

  • Blackberries are ready to pick from June through August, depending on where you live. You can tell they are ripe when they are plump and black, not red or purple.
  • In the southern US, they may be ready by early summer or June. In the Pacific Northwest, they ripen by late summer, usually August. In other parts of the country, blackberries are ripe sometime in between.
  • Fresh blackberries are great as a snack whether you buy them from the store or pick them right off the plants! Blackberries are added to jams, jellies, and desserts, like pies, tarts, and crumbles. They can also be added to salads and made into sauces for meats. 

Nutrition

  • Blackberries are a rich source of manganese and vitamins C and K. They are high in fiber, low in sugar, and have very little fat. 
  • The fruit contains omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids. Compounds in blackberries may help prevent inflammation, heart disease, and some cancers.

History of Lemonade!

Photo by JeniFoto/Shutterstock.com
  • Lemonade was probably the first of the fruitades. Egyptians made a drink with lemons and sugar cane called "qatarmizat" in the 11th century. In 1676 a Parisian company was the first to sell lemonade. 
  • Frozen lemonade was first made and sold in the local market in Naples, Italy, in 1840 by Signore DeLucia. His son, Franco, brought it to the United States around 1900. Franco's son, Angelo, produced a machine to create consistent frozen lemonade, and in 1948, Del's Frozen Lemonade was first sold at a stand in Rhode Island.
  • Old-fashioned lemonade, or cloudy lemonade, is made from the juice of freshly squeezed lemons, non-carbonated water, and sugar and is a very popular summer drink in the US and Canada. 
  • Pink lemonade includes other fruit juice, like grape juice, or food coloring to make it pink. Ireland uses brown sugar to sweeten their lemonade and calls it brown lemonade. 
  • Many countries have other varieties, including France, which serves "citron pressé," providing lemon, water, and sweetener to customers who prefer to measure and mix their own lemonade.
  • To get even more flavor from the lemon (or any fruit), you can make a lemon crush by pressing (muddling) pieces of the squeezed, unpeeled lemon (make sure it's been washed!) in the bottom of the glass or pitcher.

  • Limeade is another popular citrus fruit-flavored drink made with lime juice, water, and sugar. Brazilian or Swiss Lemonade is actually a limeade (limonada) made with pieces of unpeeled lime, sugar, water, sweetened condensed milk, and ice cubes.

Let's Learn About the United States!

Photo by JeniFoto/Shutterstock.com (July 4th Picnic)
  • Most of the United States of America (USA) is in North America. It shares its northern border with Canada and its southern border with Mexico. It consists of 50 states, 1 federal district, 5 territories, 9 Minor Outlying Islands, and 326 Indian reservations. 
  • The country's total area is 3,796,742 square miles, globally the third largest after Russia and Canada. The US population is over 333 million, making it the third most populous country in the world, after China and India.
  • The United States of America declared itself an independent nation from Great Britain on July 4, 1776, by issuing the Declaration of Independence.
  • The Revolutionary War between the US and Great Britain was fought from 1775-1783. We only had 13 colonies at that time! On September 9, 1776, the Second Continental Congress met in Philadelphia and declared that the new nation would be called the United States. 
  • The 13 colonies became states after each ratified the constitution of the new United States, with Delaware being the first on December 7, 1787.  
  • The 13 stripes on the US flag represent those first 13 colonies, and the 50 stars represent our 50 states. The red color of the flag symbolizes hardiness and valor, white symbolizes innocence and purity, and blue symbolizes vigilance and justice.
  • Before settling in Washington DC, a federal district, the nation's capital resided in New York City and then Philadelphia for a short time. New York City is the largest city in the US and is considered its financial center. 
  • The US does not have a recognized official language! However, English is effectively the national language. 
  • The American dollar is the national currency. The nickname for a dollar, "buck," comes from colonial times when people traded goods for buckskins!
  • Because the United States is so large, there is a wide variety of climates and types of geography. The Mississippi/Missouri River, running primarily north to south, is the fourth-longest river system in the world. On the east side of the Mississippi are the Appalachian Mountains, the Adirondack Mountains, and the East Coast, next to the Atlantic Ocean. 
  • On the west side of the Mississippi are the flat Great Plains, the Rocky Mountains (or Rockies), and the West Coast, next to the Pacific Ocean, with several more mountain ranges in coastal states, such as the Sierras and the Cascades. Between the coasts and the north and south borders are several forests, lakes (including the Great Lakes), rivers, swamps, deserts, and volcanos. 
  • Several animals are unique to the US, such as the American bison (or American buffalo), the bald eagle, the California condor, the American black bear, the groundhog, the American alligator, and the pronghorn (or American antelope). 
  • The US has 63 national parks. The Great Smoky Mountains, Yellowstone, Yosemite, Zion, and the Grand Canyon, with the Colorado River flowing through it, are among the most well-known and visited.
  • Cuisine in the US was influenced early on by the indigenous people of North America who lived there before Europeans arrived. They introduced beans, corn, potatoes, squash, berries, fish, turkey, venison, dried meats, and more to the new settlers. Other influences include the widely varied foods and dishes of enslaved people from Africa and immigrants from Asia, Europe, Central and South America, and the Pacific Islands. 

What's It Like to Be a Kid in the United States?

  • Education is compulsory in the US, and kids may go to a public or private school or be home-schooled. Most schools do not require students to wear uniforms, but some private schools do. The school year runs from mid-August or the beginning of September to the end of May or the middle of June.
  • Kids generally start school at about five years old in kindergarten or earlier in preschool and continue through 12th grade in high school. After that, many go on to university, community college, or technical school. 
  • Spanish, French, and German are the most popular foreign languages kids learn in US schools. 
  • Kids may participate in many different school and after-school sports, including baseball, soccer, American football, basketball, volleyball, tennis, swimming, and track and field. In grade school, kids may join in playground games like hopscotch, four-square, kickball, tetherball, jump rope, or tag.
  • There are several fun activities that American kids enjoy doing with their friends and families, such as picnicking, hiking, going to the beach or swimming, or going to children's and natural history museums, zoos and wild animal parks, amusement parks, water parks, state parks, or national parks. Popular amusement parks include Disneyland, Disney World, Legoland, Six Flags, and Universal Studios.
  • On Independence Day or the 4th of July, kids enjoy a day off from school, picnicking, and watching fireworks with their families. 
  • Thanksgiving is celebrated on the last Thursday in November when students get 2 to 5 days off school. Christmas, Hanukkah, and Kwanzaa are popular December holidays, and there are 2 or 3 weeks of winter vacation. Easter is celebrated in March, April, or May, and kids enjoy a week of spring recess around that time.  
  • Barbecued hot dogs or hamburgers, watermelon, apple pie, and ice cream are popular kid foods for 4th of July celebrations. Turkey, dressing, green bean casserole, cranberry sauce, and pumpkin pie are traditional Thanksgiving foods. Birthday parties with cake and ice cream are very important celebrations for kids in the United States!

That's Berry Funny

What did one blackberry say to the other blackberry? 

"If you weren't so sweet, we wouldn't be in this jam!"

THYME for a Laugh

What do you call blackberries playing the guitar? 

A jam session!

Lettuce Joke Around

What do you give an injured lime?

Lime-aid!

Lettuce Joke Around

What do you call a blackberry that tells jokes? 

A berry funny fruit!

THYME for a Laugh

What do you get when you cross a brontosaurus with a lime? 

A dino-sour!

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