You know that feeling when you’re coming down with something and all you want is that one drink that makes everything feel a little more manageable? For a lot of us, that drink is the Starbucks Medicine Ball. Warm, soothing, and just sweet enough to feel like a treat — it’s basically a hug in a cup.
The problem? At $5 a pop, running to Starbucks every time you feel a sniffle coming on adds up fast. And honestly, once you see how simple the ingredients are, paying that much for it feels a little ridiculous. So I did what any self-respecting home cook would do — I figured out how to make it better, cheaper, and way more convenient at home.
These Medicine Ball cubes are the answer. Make a batch, freeze them, and whenever you need that warm, comforting drink, just drop a cube or two into hot water with your tea bags and you’re done. Cheaper, cleaner, and honestly? Even better than the original.
Why you’ll love this recipe
- It saves you serious money. One batch of these cubes costs a fraction of what you’d spend at Starbucks. You do the math — it’s not close.
- Meal prep friendly. Make a big batch, freeze them, and you have soothing Medicine Ball drinks ready to go for weeks. No blender, no fuss, just drop and steep.
- Better ingredients, better result. You control exactly what goes in — real honey, fresh ginger, fresh lemon. No mystery syrups or preservatives.
- Perfect for cold and flu season. Ginger, lemon, and honey are a classic combination for soothing a sore throat and warming you up from the inside out.
- Ridiculously easy to make. If you can squeeze a lemon and pour liquid into a mold, you can make these. Seriously, that’s basically the whole recipe.
- Customizable. Want more ginger? Add more. Prefer it less sweet? Dial back the honey. This recipe is completely flexible to your taste.
Ingredients
For the medicine ball cubes
- 1/2 cup raw honey — use good quality raw honey here. It makes a real difference in flavor and you get all those natural soothing properties intact.
- 1/2 cup fresh lemon juice — approximately 4-5 lemons. Bottled lemon juice works in a pinch, but fresh is noticeably better.
- 2 tablespoons fresh ginger, finely grated — fresh ginger gives you that warm, slightly spicy kick that makes this drink so comforting. Ginger powder works as a substitute (use 1 teaspoon) but fresh is preferred.
- 1/4 cup warm water — helps loosen the honey so everything blends together smoothly.
- 1 teaspoon lemon zest — optional, but it adds a bright citrus punch that takes the flavor up a notch.
- Pinch of cinnamon — optional, adds a subtle warmth that pairs beautifully with the ginger.
For serving (per cup)
- 1-2 medicine ball cubes
- 1 bag Jade Citrus Mint green tea — this is what Starbucks uses and it pairs perfectly.
- 1 bag Peach Tranquility herbal tea — the combination of these two teas is the real secret to that signature Medicine Ball flavor.
- 8 oz hot water
- Optional: a small splash of lemonade for extra brightness, just like the original Starbucks version
Step-by-step instructions
Making the honey ginger lemon mixture
In a small bowl or measuring jug, combine the warm water and raw honey. Stir well until the honey is fully dissolved and the mixture is smooth. This step matters — undissolved honey will settle unevenly in your cubes.
Add the freshly squeezed lemon juice, grated ginger, lemon zest, and cinnamon if using. Stir everything together until well combined. Give it a quick taste — if you want more ginger, add it now. More sweetness? A little extra honey goes a long way.
The mixture should smell incredible at this point. Bright, citrusy, and warming all at once. If it doesn’t make you feel better just smelling it, I’m not sure what will.
Pouring and freezing the cubes
Pour the mixture evenly into a silicone ice cube tray. Standard cube-sized molds work perfectly here. If you want larger cubes that pack more flavor per cup, use a larger silicone mold.
Tap the tray gently on the counter a few times to release any air bubbles and settle the mixture evenly. Place the tray flat in the freezer and freeze for a minimum of 4 hours, or overnight for best results.
Once fully frozen, pop the cubes out and transfer them to a zip-lock freezer bag or airtight container for storage. Label it with the date so you’re not playing freezer mystery later.
How to make the Medicine Ball drink using the cubes
Bring your water to a hot but not boiling temperature — around 175-185°F is ideal for green tea. Boiling water can make green tea bitter and nobody wants that.
Place both tea bags in your mug and pour the hot water over them. Let steep for 3-4 minutes. Remove the tea bags without squeezing them — squeezing releases bitter tannins.
Drop 1-2 medicine ball cubes directly into the hot tea and stir gently until fully dissolved. Add a small splash of lemonade if you want that full Starbucks experience. Sip slowly and let it do its thing.
Serving suggestions
- With a drizzle of extra honey — if you’re dealing with a particularly rough sore throat, a little extra honey stirred in goes a long way.
- Over ice for a cold version — drop the cubes into cold water with the tea bags and let it cold brew overnight in the fridge for a refreshing iced version.
- With a cinnamon stick — stir your drink with a cinnamon stick for a subtle spiced warmth that makes the whole experience feel a little more intentional.
- Alongside a light snack — dry toast, plain crackers, or a simple piece of fruit pair well when you’re under the weather and your appetite is not exactly on its A-game.
Storage tips
Freezer: Store the cubes in a zip-lock freezer bag or airtight freezer-safe container for up to 3 months. Keep them flat so they don’t stick together — or separate layers with a piece of parchment paper.
Refrigerator: If you plan to use the cubes within the week, you can store the mixture as a liquid syrup in a sealed jar in the fridge for up to 7 days. Just pour directly into your hot tea instead of using frozen cubes.
Labeling: Always label your freezer bags with the date. Frozen cubes all start looking the same after a while and you don’t want to be dropping random mystery cubes into your tea at 7am.
Note: The honey mixture can crystallize slightly over long freezer storage. This is completely normal and doesn’t affect the flavor or quality at all. The cubes will dissolve just fine in hot liquid.
One last thing
There’s something really satisfying about having a stash of these cubes in your freezer, just waiting for the moment you need them. No Starbucks run, no $5 charge, no waiting in line behind someone ordering a 47-step drink — just you, your kettle, and a cup of something genuinely soothing.
Make a batch this weekend and thank yourself later. And if someone in your house starts sniffling, you’ll already be ready.
If you try these, drop a comment below and let me know how they turned out. I love hearing from you — especially the stories about how many cubes you went through in a single week during cold season. No judgment here.
With gratitude, Kip.
Starbucks Medicine Ball Cubes (Better-For-You Copycat Recipe You Can Make at Home)
Description
These better-for-you Starbucks Medicine Ball cubes are made with real honey, fresh lemon juice, and ginger, frozen into convenient cubes you can drop straight into hot tea. They're a healthier, budget-friendly alternative to the popular Starbucks Medicine Ball drink — and so easy to make ahead and store for whenever you need them most.
Ingredients
Medicine ball cubes:
For serving (per cup):
Instructions
-
Combine warm water and honey in a bowl. Stir until fully dissolved.
-
Add lemon juice, grated ginger, lemon zest, and cinnamon. Stir well to combine.
-
Pour the mixture into a silicone ice cube tray. Tap gently to release air bubbles.
-
Freeze for a minimum of 4 hours or overnight.
-
Pop cubes out and transfer to a labeled freezer-safe bag or container.
-
To serve, steep both tea bags in 8 oz of hot water for 3-4 minutes.
-
Remove tea bags and drop 1-2 cubes into the hot tea. Stir until dissolved.
-
Add a splash of lemonade if desired. Serve immediately.
