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Home » Recipes » Juice and Smoothies

Easy Ginger Shot Recipe: Hydrating Immunity Ice Cubes (Hack)

Yoko from Yoko's kitchen
Modified: Feb 2, 2026 · Published: Feb 2, 2026 by Yoko · This post may contain affiliate links · Leave a Comment
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Need an easy immunity boost without a daily hassle? These homemade frozen ginger shot ice cubes are packed with anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, and they taste so much fresher than store-bought ones. Once you freeze it, you can get a quick ginger shot when you need it. It's a busy mom wellness hack!

You can also make a soothing ginger tea for those days when you're feeling under the weather. Coconut water and a pinch of salt are added for extra hydration, and honey helps soothe a sore throat and balances out the intense ginger flavor.

A hand dropping a frozen ginger shot ice cube from a glass storage jar into a glass mug to prepare a morning immunity drink.

As a mom of a toddler who goes to daycare, I'm all about supporting my immunity during the flu season. This ginger shot enriched with citrus and honey makes my favorite anti-inflammatory, soothing ritual on busy days. This recipe is a powerful shield against my toddler directly coughing in my face!

If you like classic ginger shots, I recommend Turmeric Ginger Shots made without a juicer. If you want to bump up the antioxidant, Purple Ginger Immunity Shot is also a fun way to use purple cabbage.

Jump to:
  • Why Freeze Your Ginger Shots?
  • Why You'll Love Frozen Immunity Cubes
  • Ingredients of Frozen Immunity Cubes
  • Instructions
  • How to Use Your Immunity Cubes
  • Japanese Home Remedies: From Folklore to Modern Rituals
  • The Japanese Wellness Secret: Gut Health & Immunity
  • More Japanese Wellness Ideas
  • FAQ
  • Easy Ginger Shot Recipe: Hydrating Immunity Ice Cubes (Hack)

Why Freeze Your Ginger Shots?

As a busy working mom, my biggest struggle with homemade ginger shots is finding the time to make them every day. Meal prepping and freezing ginger shots takes the heavy lifting out of my morning routine and supports my healthy habits. Plus, freezing has other benefits too!

  • Extend the Shelf Life: Usually, homemade ginger shots are best consumed within 2-3 days. By freezing them, you can extend their life up to 3 months when stored in an air-tight container.
  • Ultimate Time-Saving Ritual: While fresh immunity shots are so precious, running and washing your blender every day is such a hassle. Spend 10 minutes on Sunday to meal prep your immunity support.
  • Zero Food Waste: Have you ever found your ginger sad and soft in the fridge? Freezing is a convenient way to use up every bit of ginger before it goes bad.

Pro-Tip for Busy Parents: While frozen ginger shots are lovely, you can also freeze a whole piece of ginger for cooking. You can easily grate frozen ginger directly into an recipes calls for ginger!

Why You'll Love Frozen Immunity Cubes

  • Meal prep and freezing ginger shots for your healthy habits.
  • Anti-inflammatory rich ginger combined with Vitamin C from citrus is a powerful immune booster!
  • Honey soothe sore throat and makes spicy ginger taste better.
  • Coconut water and salt make it extra hydrating!

Ingredients of Frozen Immunity Cubes

Freshly peeled and chopped lemons and oranges on a cutting board with a jar of raw honey, ingredients for a hydrating ginger shot recipe.
  • Ginger: It's known that the anti-inflammatory and antibiotic properties of ginger can help boost your immune system!
  • Lemons and Oranges: They're both amazing sources of Vitamin C! Vitamin C helps protect us from catching common colds and helps us recover from them.
  • Honey: Honey adds natural sweetness that makes drinking spicy ginger shots easier. It also coats the throat and helps with a sore throat. It's a simple home remedy item used for centuries!
  • Coconut Water: Coconut water contains electrolytes such as potassium, sodium, and magnesium, which help us keep hydrated!
  • Cinnamon: I like Ceylon cinnamon for its sharp flavor. Cinnamon is rich in antioxidants, great for anti-inflammation!
  • Sea Salt: Salt provides essential electrolytes, sodium and chloride! Add a generous pinch of salt to make your shots extra hydrating.

Instructions

Fresh ginger, lemon, orange, honey, coconut water, cinnamon, and salt in a high-speed blender being prepared for homemade immunity shots.
  1. In the high-speed blender, combine all the ingredients and blend until smooth.
Straining the blended ginger and lemon mixture through a cheesecloth into a large glass measuring cup to create a smooth, pulp-free ginger shot liquid.
  1. Place a cheese cloth and a nut bag over a measuring cup and strain the mixture through. Tightly squeeze the cheesecloth until the dry pulp is left.
The bright orange ginger and citrus mixture poured into a silicone ice cube tray and topped with lemon slices and fresh mint leaves for easy meal prep and freezer storage.
  1. Pour the mixture into an ice cube tray and freeze. Customization Options: To make these even more flavorful and pretty, cut a few thin lemon slices into small pieces and place one into each ice cube tray cavity. Then add the fresh mint for a refreshing flavor and pop of color. Once frozen, these look so beautiful!
A steaming glass of ginger lemon honey tea made from a frozen immunity cube, showing a healthy morning hydration habit.
  1. Defrost and enjoy as a shot. Or pour hot water over 3-5 ice cubes, mix, and enjoy as soothing tea. 

Tip: Skip straining if you're planning to use these in smoothies or if you love extra fiber! I like my shots smooth and pulp-free for making tea and sipping it when I'm not feeling well to help ward off a cold.

How to Use Your Immunity Cubes

  • Ginger Tea: Add 3-5 cubes into a mug and pour hot water. Mix well and add more honey if needed. I like this ginger tea as a soothing hydration tea when I'm not feeling well, and drinking plain water feels hard chore.
  • Ginger shots: Thaw the ice cubes overnight in the refrigerator, and the shot is ready the next morning! I like ginger shots as a part of my immune-boosting habit.
  • Smoothie: These ice cubes are an immunity-boosting secret to make your smoothies extra nutritious! Add a few frozen ginger shots into your favorite smoothie recipes to spice them up.

Japanese Home Remedies: From Folklore to Modern Rituals

Healthy habits and home remedies always start in the kitchen. In Japanese and Asian medicine, ginger has long been used in natural remedies.

One of the time-honored ways of using ginger to fight a cold is Daiichi Daikon-to (第一大根湯). It's a folk-remedy beverage made with daikon, ginger, soy sauce, and bancha tea, used to break a fever and detoxify the body.

While ginger shots are a modern way to enjoy ginger's powerful health benefits, the principle remains the same. It's a beauty of borrowing the power of nature to support our body. Whether drinking it as a quick shot to boost immunity or as a comforting tea for soothing hydration when feeling mild symptoms, it's a helpful wellness tool you want to keep in your home apothecary.

The Japanese Wellness Secret: Gut Health & Immunity

But here is the "Japanese Wellness" secret, Immunity starts in the gut. While these ginger shots work from the "outside in" to stimulate circulation and provide Vitamin C, my Shio Koji (Salt Koji) works from the "inside out." By pairing the anti-inflammatory power of ginger with the probiotic benefits of fermented foods like Koji, you are creating a comprehensive wellness ritual!

Having these home remedies in your kitchen medicine cabinet is a beautiful, holistic way to navigate flu season. If you're into it, the Homemade Honey and Daikon Cough Syrup is another handy home remedy tool you need!

A clear glass weck jar filled with bright orange frozen ginger and lemon ice cubes with fresh mint leaves, showing a convenient way to store homemade immunity shots in the freezer.

More Japanese Wellness Ideas

  • Homemade Honey and Daikon Cough Syrup
  • Japanese fermentation with Koji
  • How to make Shio Koji
  • How to enjoy powerful antioxidants in matcha
  • Turmeric Ginger Shots made without a juicer
  • Purple Ginger Immunity Shot

FAQ

Do I need to peel the ginger before blending?

No, there's no need to peel it! The ginger skin is safe to consume, and you won't be bothered by the texture after blending and straining. Just scrub it clean really well. I like using organic ginger and use it unpeeled. If you decide to peel, use a spoon to scrape off the skin for an easy peel.

Can I make this ginger shot recipe without a juicer?

Yes, absolutely! This is a blender-friendly ginger shot recipe, just like my No-juicer Turmeric Ginger Shots.
You can make a smooth, pulp-free wellness shot by blending and straining through a cheesecloth. No need for expensive equipment that takes up storage space!

How long do ginger ice cubes last in the freezer?

These cubes will stay fresh for up to 3 months when stored in an airtight container or a heavy-duty freezer bag. This makes them the perfect weekend meal-prep project during winter.

A hand dropping a frozen ginger shot ice cube from a glass storage jar into a glass mug to prepare a morning immunity drink.

Easy Ginger Shot Recipe: Hydrating Immunity Ice Cubes (Hack)

Need an easy immunity boost without a daily hassle? These homemade frozen ginger shot cubes are packed with anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, and they taste so much fresher than store-bought ones. Once you freeze it, you can get a quick ginger shot when you need it. It's a busy mom wellness hack!
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time 10 minutes mins
Total Time 10 minutes mins
Course Drinks
Servings 8 servings
Calories 63 kcal

Ingredients
  

  • 1-2 knobs ginger (about 45g) chopped *see note
  • 2 lemon peeled and chopped, plus more sliced pieces for garnish
  • 2 oranges peeled and chopped
  • ¼ cup honey
  • 1 cup coconut water
  • Dash cinnamon
  • Generous pinch sea salt
  • 1-2 stem fresh mint leaves (optional) for garnish

Instructions
 

  • In the high-speed blender, combine all the ingredients and blend until smooth.
  • Place a cheese cloth and a nut bag over a measuring cup and strain the mixture through. Tightly squeeze the cheesecloth until the dry pulp is left.
  • Pour the mixture into an ice cube tray and freeze.
  • (Optional) To make these even more flavorful and pretty, cut a few thin lemon slices into small pieces and place one into each ice cube tray cavity. Then add the fresh mint for a refreshing flavor and pop of color. Once frozen, these look so beautiful!
  • Defrost and enjoy as a shot. Or pour hot water over ice cubes, mix, and enjoy as soothing tea.

Notes

* Note: The spicy level of this recipe is on the mild side. If you wish, you can double the amount of ginger to double the heat! 
This recipe makes about 2 cups of ginger shots. One serving is about 2 oz.
Tip: If you're planning to use this as a smoothie ingredient or love extra fiber, you can skip the straining process. Personally, I prefer a smooth texture for making tea and sipping it when I'm not feeling well to help ward off a cold.
Please note that the nutritional information provided is just an estimate, and accuracy is not guaranteed.
If you like classic ginger shots, I recommend Ginger and Citrus Immunity Shots made without a juicer. If you want to bump up the antioxidant, Purple Ginger Immunity Shot is also a fun way to use purple cabbage.

Nutrition

Serving: 1servingCalories: 63kcalCarbohydrates: 16gProtein: 1gFat: 0.2gSaturated Fat: 0.1gPolyunsaturated Fat: 0.03gMonounsaturated Fat: 0.02gSodium: 38mgPotassium: 187mgFiber: 2gSugar: 13gVitamin A: 98IUVitamin C: 26mgCalcium: 28mgIron: 0.3mg
Keyword ginger, immunity shots, lemon
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Welcome to Yoko's kitchen!

I’m Yoko, a matcha lover, mom, and Japanese native who is passionate about sharing healthy plant-forward versions of the Japanese food I grew up with. From seasonal recipes to koji fermentation, I’m sharing Japanese-inspired, colorful recipes that you can easily try at home. I hope these recipes bring joy and harmony to your kitchen!

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