Bartenders and chefs are doing a lot more with watermelon this summer than you’d expect

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There is a reason watermelon feels like July in a single bite. It is not just nostalgia. Domestic watermelon shipments typically peak right now, which means the fruit hitting bars and restaurant kitchens this week is as good as it gets all year. And this National Watermelon Month, bartenders and chefs are doing something with it that goes well beyond the backyard cooler.

A glass of watermelon smoothie with a black straw and mint garnish, surrounded by fresh watermelon slices.
Photo credit: Depositphotos.

It is moving in two directions at once. Cocktail menus are moving away from artificial watermelon syrups toward drinks built on fresh-pressed juice and house-made shrubs. At the same time, restaurant kitchens are fermenting and pickling the rind, the thick white part most people throw away, and putting it on the plate as something worth ordering. The fruit itself is even changing at retail, with an heirloom-inspired variety showing up in grocery stores for the first time.

The U.S. produced 3.7 billion pounds of watermelon in 2024. At nearly 15 pounds available per person, it runs double the availability of every other melon variety combined. That kind of volume is exactly what makes this culinary moment interesting. When a fruit this widely grown starts getting serious kitchen treatment, it is not a trend. It is the whole category catching up.

Fresh watermelon takes over the bar

The Bacardi 2026 Cocktail Trends Report found that 77% of consumers now check ingredient origin labels when ordering drinks. Bartenders are responding by reaching for fresh, peak-season fruit instead of shelf-stable syrups. Watermelon is a natural fit. Its sugar content is high enough to sweeten a cocktail without additions, and its color needs no help. A drink made from locally grown watermelon, listed as such on a menu, tells a story a bottle of watermelon liqueur simply cannot.

Celebrate National Watermelon Month with a refreshing glass of red watermelon drink, garnished with lime slices and mint, beside a plate of juicy watermelon wedges, lime wedges, and a red checkered cloth.
Photo credit: YAY Images.

The rind is finally getting its moment

Watermelon rind has been pickled and preserved in Southern kitchens for generations. What’s happening in restaurants now is a more savory take on that tradition. Pickling and fermenting are having a major moment in professional kitchens this year, and watermelon rind is one of the ingredients benefiting most. It holds its texture through fermentation, carries brine and spice without going soft, and costs nothing extra. One watermelon, fully used.

A jar filled with pickled watermelon rinds sits on a table next to watermelon slices, a small bowl of spices, and a striped cloth with a fork.
Pickled watermelon rind. Photo credit: Cook What You Love.

There’s a new variety worth seeking out

Sprouts Farmers Market is carrying Moon & Stars this season, an heirloom-inspired seedless variety available at more than 480 locations across 25 states through early September. It looks unlike anything in the standard produce aisle: dark green rind with bright yellow speckling, deep red flesh and a crisp texture that ranked first in blind taste testing across five varieties. If you have a Sprouts nearby, it is worth picking up before the season ends.

Watermelon has always been the fruit of July. This summer, it is also the fruit of the bar menu, the fermentation crock and the specialty produce aisle. That is a lot of ground for one backyard staple to cover, and it is pulling it off.

Mandy Applegate is the creator behind Splash of Taste and seven other high-profile food and travel blogs. She’s also the co-founder of Food Drink Life Inc., a unique and highly rewarding collaborative blogger project. Her articles appear frequently on major online news sites, and she always has her eyes open to spot the next big trend.

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