Watermelon Mezcal Cocktail — delightful served on skewers or blended frozen. This recipe gives you two ways to enjoy watermelon mezcalitas using the same simple base: boozy, bright and beautiful. The natural sweetness of watermelon pairs perfectly with a smoky mezcal and a spicy rim for a refreshing, creative cocktail or party snack.
Why You’ll Love Watermelon Mezcal Cocktail
These watermelon mezcal bites and blended mezcalitas are visually stunning and full of flavor. They are versatile — prepare them as chamoy- and Tajín-coated skewers for a fun appetizer or soak and blend the same fruit into a frozen mezcalita. The combination of sweet watermelon, bright citrus, smooth agave, and smoky mezcal creates a balanced cocktail. A spicy, tangy rim adds contrast and makes each bite or sip memorable.

How To Prepare Watermelon Mezcal Cocktail
This method outlines both preparations: skewered watermelon and frozen mezcalita. Prep time is short, but soaking and freezing steps take a few hours to develop flavor.
- Step 1: Cube the watermelon into roughly 1-inch squares. Reserve any trimmings and chop them roughly for blending later.
- Step 2: Place the chopped trimmings in a freezer bag and freeze for about 4 hours so they become firm for blending into a frozen cocktail.
- Step 3: In a bowl or measuring cup, whisk together agave syrup, water, freshly squeezed lemon juice, freshly squeezed orange juice and mezcal until combined. Taste and adjust sweetness or mezcal to your preference.
- Step 4: Add the watermelon cubes to the mezcal-citrus mixture and refrigerate to soak for 4–5 hours. This allows the mezcal to infuse into the fruit and the citrus to brighten the flavor.
- Step 5: For skewers: remove soaked cubes, coat them lightly with chamoy, then sprinkle with Tajín (or your preferred spicy-salty seasoning), and thread them onto skewers. Serve chilled as an eye-catching appetizer or cocktail accompaniment.
- Step 6: For frozen mezcalitas: combine the frozen chopped watermelon with the soaked cubes and the remaining soaking liquid in a blender with plenty of ice. Blend until smooth and slushy. Rim your glass with chamoy and Tajín if desired, pour the frozen mezcalita, garnish and enjoy.
Substitutions and Variations
- Alcohol swap: Substitute mezcal with tequila, vodka or gin depending on the flavor profile you want — mezcal gives smoke, tequila offers a clean agave note, vodka keeps it neutral and gin adds botanical complexity.
- Fruit swap: Use other firm, juicy fruits instead of watermelon: strawberries, grapes, or mandarins work well. Adjust soaking and freezing times for different textures.
- Sweetener: Swap agave for honey, simple syrup or maple syrup to change sweetness depth and flavor.
- Rim and garnish: Replace chamoy and Tajín with chili-lime salt, sugar and lime zest, or a flavored salt to suit your taste.
- Non-alcoholic version: Omit the mezcal and increase citrus and a splash of sparkling water or a non-alcoholic spirit for a refreshing mocktail.

Chef Nadia’s Tip
If you only make the skewered watermelon, reserve the mezcal-citrus soaking liquid. You can use it to soak more fruit, splash over grilled fruit, or blend with frozen watermelon to make a mezcalita.

Common Questions
Yes. Tequila is a great alternative and will create a brighter agave-forward drink. Mezcal adds smoke; tequila keeps it cleaner and more traditional.
Absolutely. Strawberries, grapes, and mandarins make excellent swaps — just adjust soaking times and blending proportions for sweetness and texture.
Yes. Honey will add a floral richness; simple syrup is more neutral, and maple syrup will impart a deeper flavor.
Chamoy and Tajín give tangy, spicy, sweet and salty notes. You can also use chili-lime salt, coarse sugar, or flavored salts depending on whether you want spicy, sweet or citrusy accents.
Ingredients
- 2 small watermelons
- 4 lemons, juiced
- 1/3 cup agave syrup (or honey)
- 2 oranges, juiced
- 1/3 cup water
- 1/2 cup mezcal (more to taste)
- Tajín or chili-lime salt, for rim
- Chamoy, for rim
Instructions
- Cube watermelon into 1-inch squares. Save trimmings and chop roughly for blending.
- Freeze the roughly chopped trimmings in a freezer bag for about 4 hours so they firm up for the frozen mezcalita.
- Whisk together agave, water, lemon juice, orange juice and mezcal. Adjust sweetness or mezcal to taste.
- Place the watermelon cubes in the mezcal-citrus mixture and refrigerate for 4–5 hours to soak.
- For skewers: coat the soaked cubes with chamoy, sprinkle with Tajín, and thread onto skewers for serving.
- For frozen mezcalitas: blend the frozen chopped watermelon with the soaked cubes and the soaking liquid plus ice until smooth. Rim glasses, pour and serve immediately.
Nutrition
Calories: 862 kcal. Note: Nutrition information is an approximation and will vary depending on exact ingredients and serving sizes.
Additional Info
Course: Drinks — Cuisine: Mexican-style. Keywords: cocktail, mezcal, mezcalita, watermelon, easy cocktail.
Tag your creations on social media to share variations and photos — it’s a festive, crowd-pleasing cocktail for summer gatherings.