Honeydew Mint Iced Tea is what I make when I want something iced-cold and genuinely refreshing—but still a little special. The honeydew blends into a pale green, silky puree that gives the tea a gentle fruit sweetness and a soft, almost “juicy” body, while mint keeps it crisp and clean.
It’s also wonderfully low-effort: blend, stir into chilled green tea, and pour over ice. If you’re in a sipping mood, this is the kind of pitcher drink you’ll want to keep in the fridge while you browse Citrus and Crave recipes and decide what to make next.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
- The honeydew and mint blend into a smooth, glossy puree that turns plain iced tea into something softly fruity and vibrant.
- Green tea keeps the drink light and clean-tasting, so the melon doesn’t feel heavy or syrupy.
- It’s easy to adjust: leave it unsweetened for a delicate, spa-water vibe or stir in honey for a rounder finish.
- The color is gorgeous—pale, misty green with minty flecks—especially in a clear glass over plenty of ice.
- Great make-ahead potential: brew and chill the tea, cube the melon, and you’re minutes from a full pitcher.
The Story Behind This Recipe
I started making this when honeydew was especially fragrant at the store—sweet enough to eat plain, but so juicy it begged to become a drink. Blending it with mint gives you that “fresh-cut melon” aroma right away, and stirring it into chilled green tea makes the whole thing taste lighter and more refreshing than straight fruit juice.
What It Tastes Like
Think bright honeydew sweetness up front, followed by cool mint and the mild, slightly grassy edge of green tea. The texture is what surprises people: not thick like a smoothie, but not watery either—more like a lightly pulpy iced tea with a silky, fruit-forward finish and a clean, minty aftertaste.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Honeydew is doing the heavy lifting here, so use ripe melon with a strong aroma and juicy flesh—it’s what gives the tea its natural sweetness and that pale green hue. Fresh mint adds a cool snap (don’t skip it), and chilled green tea keeps everything crisp and not overly sweet. Honey is optional, but it’s handy if your melon is less sweet than expected.
- 2 cups honeydew melon, cubed
- 1/4 cup fresh mint leaves
- 4 cups green tea, brewed and chilled
- 1/4 cup honey (optional)
- Ice cubes
How to Make Honeydew Mint Iced Tea
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Blend the honeydew and mint until glossy (30–60 seconds).
Add the cubed honeydew and mint leaves to a blender. Blend until the mixture looks smooth and shiny, with the mint fully broken up. You’re looking for a pourable puree—not chunky salsa. -
Stir the puree into chilled green tea.
Pour the chilled green tea into a large pitcher, then add the honeydew-mint puree. Stir well for 20–30 seconds, scraping the sides of the pitcher if needed, until the color looks even and no thick fruit streaks remain. -
Sweeten only if you want to.
Taste the tea. If you’d like it sweeter, add honey and stir until it fully dissolves and the tea tastes balanced (not sugary). If your tea is very cold, give it an extra moment of stirring so the honey doesn’t settle at the bottom. -
Serve over ice.
Fill glasses generously with ice cubes and pour the tea over. If you have extra mint leaves or a few honeydew cubes, they make an easy, pretty garnish.
Tips for Best Results
- Start with truly chilled tea. Warm or room-temp tea melts the ice fast and can make the melon flavor feel muted.
- Blend until the puree turns “slick.” That glossy look is your cue that the honeydew is fully broken down and will mix smoothly into the tea.
- Taste before adding honey. A ripe honeydew can be sweet enough on its own, and the green tea tastes best when it still has a little gentle bitterness.
- Stir again right before pouring. The fruit puree can settle a bit as it sits; a quick stir brings back that even pale-green color.
- Use plenty of ice. This drink shines when it’s very cold—mint feels sharper and the honeydew tastes cleaner.
Variations and Substitutions
- Skip the honey for a lighter sip. You’ll get a more delicate honeydew flavor with a cleaner green tea finish.
- Make it mint-forward: add a few extra mint leaves if you want a cooler, more herbal edge (it’ll read more “mint tea” than “melon tea”).
- More melon body: blend a little longer to fully smooth the puree; it won’t make it thicker, but it will feel silkier on the tongue.
How to Serve It
Serve this in clear glasses so the soft green color shows off, with lots of ice to keep it snappy and cold. It’s especially good alongside a simple brunch spread—think baked cottage cheese eggs or an easy breakfast casserole—because the clean green tea and mint cut through richer bites. For something sweet on the side, try crispy air fryer apple fries and let the melon-mint combo do the refreshing work.
How to Store It
Store the mixed tea in a covered pitcher in the refrigerator and give it a good stir before serving, since the honeydew puree can settle. For the freshest flavor and brightest mint aroma, I like to drink it within 24 hours. Keep ice separate—pouring over fresh ice prevents the tea from getting diluted as it sits.
Final Thoughts
If you love drinks that taste clean and breezy but still feel homemade, this Honeydew Mint Iced Tea is a great one to keep in your rotation—especially when honeydew is at its juiciest. It’s quick to blend, easy to tweak with honey, and the minty-green-tea finish makes every sip feel extra cold and refreshing.
Conclusion
If you want to compare approaches, this Iced Honeydew Mint Tea Recipe is a helpful reference for the same flavor idea. For a tea-shop take on the honeydew-and-mint pairing, take a look at Capri honeydew melon mint tea. And if you’re curious about fruit-tea blends built around this combo, honeydew mint fruit tea is another interesting angle to explore.

Honeydew Mint Iced Tea
Ingredients
Method
- Blend the honeydew and mint until glossy (30–60 seconds).
- Add the cubed honeydew and mint leaves to a blender. Blend until the mixture looks smooth and shiny, creating a pourable puree.
- Pour the chilled green tea into a large pitcher, then add the honeydew-mint puree. Stir well for 20–30 seconds until everything is evenly mixed.
- Taste the tea. If you want it sweeter, add honey and stir until fully dissolved.
- Fill glasses generously with ice cubes and pour the tea over. Garnish with extra mint leaves or honeydew cubes if desired.