Strawberry royal icing tastes just like melted strawberry ice cream, and this strawberry lemonade version is perfect for summer cookies! This icing pairs so well with my strawberry lemonade sugar cookies!

why you’ll love strawberry lemonade royal icing
- This is the base recipe I use for all of my cookie decorating. It’s reliable and delicious!
- This royal icing does not use raw egg whites. It uses meringue powder, which is a shelf stable powdered egg white with a few other ingredients. It usually has a light vanilla flavor. There are many brands, but my favorites are Genie’s Dream, Chefmaster, and Modern Mountain. Use whatever is accessible to you.
- This royal icing tastes delicious, which is rare for royal icing. Royal icing gets a bad rap for being tooth-achingly sweet and rock hard. Thanks to the addition of corn syrup in this recipe, this icing dries with a softer bite. And thanks to the addition of salt, the sweetness is balanced.
- I use freeze dried strawberries to get this beautiful pink color and strawberry flavor that reminds me of melted strawberry ice cream. I get my freeze dried strawberries from Target, Trader Joe’s, or Costco.

ingredients in strawberry lemonade royal icing
- meringue powder– We are using this instead of egg whites. Egg whites, unless pasteurized, can hold harmful bacteria like salmonella. Meringue powder is shelf stable, powdered egg whites and has a light vanilla flavor. Do not substitute for plain powdered egg whites, however, because meringue powder has a few other ingredients and is specifically designed for royal icing and meringues.
- powdered sugar– Icing sugar, powdered sugar, 10x, these are all the same fine powdered sugars. I like to get mine from Costco these days.
- vanilla bean paste– I love Heilala (shop bundles and sales for great deals), The Spice House (you can use my code EMILYLOGGANS for 10% off), and Nielsen-Massey.
- Diamond Crystal kosher salt– This salt is amazing, and I will die on the hill that everyone should be using it. However, if you don’t have it handy, just halve the amount of salt the recipe calls for and use table salt or another fine salt.
- water
- freeze dried strawberries– ground into a powder and sifted
- lemons– just the juice
*You can use my code EMILYLOGGANS for 10% off at The Spice House. I love to get my vanilla extract, almond extract, kosher salt, and spices from there!
supplies needed to make strawberry lemonade royal icing
- stand mixer– you can use a hand mixer, but a stand mixer is preferred here
- paddle attachment– not the whisk attachment
- wire whisk– a balloon whisk to stir the ingredients in the first steps
- spatula– to scrape down the bowl
- food processor– to grind the strawberries into a powder
- fine mesh sieve– to sift the strawberries

how to make strawberry lemonade royal icing
This recipe makes a big batch of royal icing, enough to decorate about 3 dozen cookies. If you have extra icing, you can store it in an airtight container on the counter for a couple weeks, in the fridge for a month, or in the freeze for a few months. If you need less icing and don’t want to make a big batch, the recipe can be easily halved. If you need more, it can be easily doubled, which is what I used to do every week when decorating cookies for clients.
Starting with an optional step that is good practice, but I never do it because I’m lazy. Wipe your bowl, spatula, and paddle attachment down with white vinegar or lemon juice. This is to erase any fat molecules that could be clinging to those surfaces. Fat will interfere with the royal icing and cause it to break down, not dry, and just act weird in general. However, royal icing is tolerant ever so slightly to a *little bit of fat. Meaning, if you just made cookies in the mixer, and everything is still greasy, that’s no good. Wash it again. But, if the bowl is perfectly clean to the naked eye, it’s going to be fine even if there is tiny invisible fat residue, so I never wipe the bowl down. But I’m going to tell you to do it, and do with that what you will.
To the mixing bowl, add the salt, meringue powder, and water (and lemon juice, if you’re using it). Use a wire whisk to combine, making sure there are no lumps of meringue powder in the bowl. The mixture will be frothy on top with liquid on the bottom, kind of like beer.
Add the powdered sugar to the bowl all at once. Attach the bowl to the mixer fitted with the paddle attachment and mix on low to combine into a thick, syrupy icing. Add the vanilla, lemon extract (if you’re using it), corn syrup. Mix again, raising the speed to medium (four on the Kitchen Aid) for three minutes. The icing will be thick, glossy, and fluffy.
Cover the icing with cling film immediately, touching the surface. You could also cover it with a moist towel draped over the bowl if you’re going to be using it immediately. If you’re making it ahead, store it in an airtight container.
The consistency of the icing will be a toothpaste/piping/detail consistency. Color it and thin it out as needed for decorating.
success tips for making strawberry lemonade royal icing
- Don’t over mix the icing. Over-mixing causes the icing to not dry properly, and it will have a spongy texture that crumbles off the cookie.
- Use a dehumidifier if your room has a humidity level of 50% or higher. If you notice your royal icing is drying with a matte or sparkly finish, it could be because of the humidity in your room.
- If you have a dehydrator, popping the cookies in there for a few minutes will help the icing dry with more of a shine.
- If your icing is warm toned, and you want to tone it, add a squeeze of Americolor lilac and mix to combine. You may have seen the tip floating around online about adding purple gel coloring to icing or buttercream to tone it. Sometimes that ends badly with icing turning a lavender color since it’s tricky to add just the right amount of purple, which can be an intense color depending on which coloring you use. I found that Americolor lilac is a very delicate purple and perfect for toning icing and buttercream without turning it purple at all.
- Please note that corn syrup is NOT high fructose corn syrup and doesn’t even have the same chemical makeup. Corn syrup is pure glucose. If you don’t want to use it, you could use a teaspoon of vegetable glycerin in the icing to aid in softness. (I haven’t tried it myself, but I’ve heard great things.)
- Don’t use the whisk attachment in the mixer. It can aerate the icing too much and accidentally cause it to be over-mixed. Instead, use the paddle attachment.
strawberry lemonade royal icing
Strawberry royal icing tastes just like melted strawberry ice cream, and this strawberry lemonade version is perfect for summer cookies! If you want a pure strawberry flavor with no lemon, simply swap out the lemon juice for water and skip the lemon extract.
- Yield: 2 dozen 1x
Ingredients
¼ cup water (plus additional water as needed)
¼ cup fresh lemon juice
1 tsp Diamond Crystal kosher salt (or ½ tsp regular table salt)
6 Tbsp meringue powder
2 lb. powdered sugar
1–2 teaspoon vanilla bean paste (or extract)
½ tsp lemon extract (I use Watkin’s)
2–4 Tbsp light corn syrup (I use 85g, which is ¼ cup / 4 Tbsp)
50g freeze dried strawberries (*NOTE* if you do not want the entire batch to be pink, do not add freeze dried strawberries to the entire batch- the ratio is 10g freeze dried strawberry powder to 8 oz. royal icing)
Instructions
To the mixing bowl, add the salt, meringue powder, water, and lemon juice. Use a wire whisk to combine, making sure there are no lumps of meringue powder in the bowl. The mixture will be frothy on top with liquid on the bottom, kind of like beer.
Add the powdered sugar to the bowl all at once. Attach the bowl to the mixer fitted with the paddle attachment and mix on low to combine into a thick, syrupy icing. Add the vanilla, lemon extract, and corn syrup. Mix again, raising the speed to medium (four on the Kitchen Aid) for three minutes. The icing will be thick, glossy, and fluffy.
If you are turning the entire batch pink, sift 50g of pulverized freeze dried strawberry powder into the bowl. Pour water over the powder ½ teaspoon at a time, stirring just the powder into the water (not mixing into the icing yet). Keep adding water until the powder is mostly hydrated and a bit jammy. Then you can put the bowl back on the stand mixer and mix on low until combined.
If you are NOT turning the entire batch pink, place the amount you would like to turn pink into a separate bowl. The ratio of strawberry powder to icing is 10g powder to 8 oz. icing. Mix it just as you would in the above instructions.
Cover the icing with cling film immediately, touching the surface. You could also cover it with a moist towel draped over the bowl if you’re going to be using it immediately. If you’re making it ahead, store it in an airtight container.
The consistency of the icing will be a toothpaste/piping/detail consistency, although the texture of strawberry icing is a little different and more gluey or stretchy. It is not difficult to use, but I would steer away from using it to get very advanced, specific effects. Color it and thin it out as needed for decorating.





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