To Achieve Pucker-Worthy Pink Lemonade, You Have To Break The Rules

Minute Maid’s frozen pink lemonade concentrate is good already—but with one little tweak, it’ll rock your world.

I've always been a rule-follower. It's my most boring quality. I'm an eldest child with a pronounced fear of authority and a passion for efficiency, which makes me very good at assembling furniture and avoiding speeding tickets—but not so good at letting my hair down. I don't know why I'm like this, but I think my cautious nature has something to do with the fact that I was raised by a massive troublemaker.

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My mom hates rules. The lady is a total wild card. She's also impatient as hell, which means she drives too fast, cusses constantly, and approaches cooking with a certain "bat out of hell" attitude. Sometimes this spells disaster (undercooked pork loin that tastes like a foot), but sometimes it results in genius hacks that I still use. Today's example: the magic of using less water in your Minute Maid Frozen Pink Lemonade Concentrate.

What is frozen pink lemonade concentrate? It is, quite simply, a sugar-crazed kid's manic dream. It's a cylinder of hot pink sludge that comes in a frozen tube, and it's way tangier than your standard yellow lemonade stand fare. I've definitely scooped it straight out of the container with a spoon, but you're supposed to mix it with water in a big pitcher. This is where we break the rules.

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The guidelines on the lemonade concentrate package recommend mixing one can of concentrate with 52 ounces of water. (The can itself serves as a convenient measuring cup; you're advised to use about 4⅓ cans of water.) But somewhere along the way, my mom reduced the water, using about 3½ cans to increase the concentration of the lemonade and boost the beverage's overall tang.

This was a genius, frankly hedonistic move, and I highly recommend it. Honestly, you can use however much water you want—just taste the lemonade midway through mixing and stop when you're happy with the flavor.

Is this a life-changing hack? Not necessarily. It takes half a second, and it might be obvious to some. But consider this your reminder that you don't always have to follow the rules. You can ignore the instructions on a can of frozen lemonade concentrate. You can spew a string of cusses if it feels good. You can blare The Gap Band at a stoplight in rural Missouri. (Looking at you, Mom.) Just live a little.

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