Yes—pomegranate blends well when you start with arils, add a little liquid, then strain if you want a silkier pour.
Pomegranate is one of those fruits that looks fussy, then turns into a week of smoothies once you get your rhythm. The good news: you can blend it. The better news: you can blend it without ending up with gritty bits, bitter notes, or a blender that smells like fruit for days.
This article walks you through the cleanest way to prep, blend, strain (or not), and store pomegranate drinks at home. You’ll get texture options, flavor tricks, and a couple of no-drama recipes that don’t rely on a pile of sweeteners.
Can I Blend Pomegranate? What Happens In The Blender
Pomegranate “seeds” are arils: juicy sacs wrapped around a crunchy center. When you blend arils, the red juice breaks free fast. The crunchy centers get chopped into tiny pieces. That’s the source of the gritty feel people notice.
If you like a drink with bite, blending arils straight is fine. If you want a smooth juice-style drink, plan to strain. Straining isn’t a failure; it’s just choosing a texture.
Two Texture Paths You Can Pick
- Rustic blend: Blend arils with a little liquid and drink as-is. Expect a light crunch.
- Silky blend: Blend, then strain through a fine mesh sieve or nut-milk bag. Expect a smoother pour and a cleaner finish.
Choosing Pomegranate For Blending
Blending doesn’t hide a dull fruit. It amplifies it. Look for pomegranates that feel heavy for their size with skin that’s firm, not shriveled. A few natural marks on the rind are normal. Soft spots or leaking juice means the fruit is past its prime.
Fresh Arils vs. Packaged Arils
Packaged arils can save time and still taste good. Keep them cold and use them soon after opening. If you buy whole fruit, you control freshness and cost, but you’ll spend a few minutes on prep.
If you want storage pointers and season timing, the USDA’s pomegranates seasonal produce guide is a handy reference.
Fast Prep Without Red Splatter
Pomegranate juice stains. So set yourself up for an easy win:
- Cut the crown off the top, just deep enough to score the rind.
- Score the rind down the natural ridges, then pull the sections apart.
- Hold each section in a bowl of water and nudge the arils out with your thumbs.
- Skim off floating pith bits, then drain the arils well.
Water helps the pith float and keeps your counter cleaner. Dry the arils before blending so you can control the liquid you add.
How To Blend Pomegranate For The Taste You Want
Start with arils. Add a small splash of liquid. Blend in short bursts, then check. Over-blending can chop the crunchy centers finer, which can raise the gritty feel in an unstrained drink.
Good Liquids To Add
- Cold water for a clean, pure pomegranate taste
- Orange juice for a softer, less sharp sip
- Coconut water for a lighter feel
- Plain yogurt or kefir for a thicker smoothie
Easy Ratio That Works
A simple starting point is 1 cup arils to 1/4–1/2 cup liquid. Use less liquid for a spoonable smoothie, more liquid for a drinkable blend.
When Straining Makes Sense
Strain when you want a juice-like texture, when serving kids who dislike grit, or when mixing pomegranate into cocktails and you want a clean mouthfeel. A fine mesh sieve works. A nut-milk bag makes the smoothest result with less mess.
Table 1 (after ~40% of the article)
Blend Options That Match Your Goal
| Goal | What To Blend | Best Move |
|---|---|---|
| Smooth juice-style drink | Arils + cold water | Blend 20–30 seconds, then strain through fine mesh |
| Thicker smoothie | Arils + yogurt + banana | Blend until creamy; strain only if you dislike crunch |
| Tart “sparkling” base | Arils + a squeeze of citrus | Blend, strain, then top with sparkling water |
| Frozen slush | Frozen arils + ice | Pulse to crush, then blend; add liquid in small splashes |
| Balanced, less sharp flavor | Arils + orange juice | Blend briefly; taste, then decide on straining |
| Meal-style shake | Arils + milk + oats | Soak oats 5 minutes, blend, then strain for a smoother sip |
| Bright sauce for bowls | Arils + a pinch of salt | Blend, strain, then reduce gently on the stove if you want it thicker |
| Quick “no-prep” shortcut | Packaged arils | Rinse, drain, blend; strain if the pack has extra pith |
Keeping The Flavor Clean And Not Bitter
The bitter taste people blame on “seeds” usually comes from pith. That’s the pale membrane inside the fruit. A few flecks won’t ruin a blend, but a lot of it will.
Small Steps That Pay Off
- Pick out pale membrane pieces during prep.
- Rinse arils fast, then drain well.
- Blend in short bursts instead of running the motor for a full minute.
Smart Pairings That Round Out Tartness
Pomegranate has a bright bite. Pair it with creamy or mellow fruits to soften the edges: banana, pear, mango, or a spoon of plain yogurt. A pinch of salt can make the fruit taste fuller without making it “salty.”
Straining Without Losing All The Good Stuff
Straining is the cleanest way to turn a blended batch into a smooth drink. It’s not slow, and you don’t need special gear.
Three Straining Tools, Ranked By Texture
- Fine mesh sieve: Fast and common. Press gently with a spoon to speed it up.
- Nut-milk bag: Smoothest result. Pour, twist, and squeeze over a bowl.
- Clean cheesecloth: Works in a pinch. Use a double layer so pulp doesn’t slip through.
Don’t mash hard. Heavy pressure can push bitter pith bits through and cloud the drink. A steady press is enough.
What To Do With The Pulp
After straining, you’ll have a damp pile of chopped seed centers and fruit bits. Tossing it is fine, yet it can be handy in the kitchen. Stir a spoon into oatmeal, mix it into yogurt, or blend it with a little honey and freeze it into pops. If you bake, fold a small amount into muffin batter for a tart pop.
Equipment Notes That Save You Time
You don’t need a fancy machine, but the blender style changes the result.
High-Speed Blender
A high-speed blender breaks arils fast and makes a smoother drink before straining. It can still leave grit if you drink it unstrained, since it chops the crunchy centers smaller rather than removing them.
Standard Blender
A standard blender works well for smoothies. Use a little extra liquid, blend in bursts, and plan to strain if you want a juice-like texture.
Immersion Blender
An immersion blender can work in a tall container. It tends to leave more texture, so it’s better for rustic blends or thicker smoothies.
Food Safety And Storage For Blended Pomegranate
Fresh fruit drinks are perishable. Keep them cold, keep your tools clean, and don’t leave blended fruit sitting out for long. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s guidance on selecting and serving produce safely stresses clean handling and quick refrigeration of cut produce.
How Long It Keeps
- Blended, unstrained smoothie: Best within 24 hours for taste and texture.
- Blended, strained juice: Best within 24–48 hours, kept cold in a sealed jar.
- Frozen: Freeze in ice cube trays for up to a few months, then blend cubes into drinks.
Separation is normal. Give it a shake or stir. If it smells “off,” looks fizzy when it shouldn’t, or tastes strange, toss it.
Table 2 (after ~60% of the article)
Troubleshooting A Pomegranate Blend
| What You Notice | Likely Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Gritty mouthfeel | Crunchy centers chopped up | Strain; or blend less and drink it thicker |
| Bitter finish | Too much pith got in | Pick out membrane; rinse arils; strain after blending |
| Too tart | Fruit is sharp by nature | Add banana, pear, yogurt, or a splash of orange juice |
| Watery smoothie | Too much liquid | Add more arils, frozen fruit, or a spoon of oats |
| Blender stalls | Not enough liquid to move blades | Add liquid 1 tablespoon at a time and pulse |
| Foamy top layer | Air whipped in during long blending | Blend in shorter bursts; rest 2 minutes before pouring |
| Dull flavor after a day | Oxidation and separation | Store cold, sealed; add a squeeze of citrus right before drinking |
Two Reliable Ways To Drink It
These are built for repeat use. Each one keeps the pomegranate flavor up front without leaning on lots of added sugar.
Strained Pomegranate Refresher
- 1 cup arils
- 1/3 cup cold water
- Pinch of salt
- Ice, to serve
Blend arils and water for about 25 seconds. Strain into a jar, pressing gently. Stir in a pinch of salt. Serve over ice. If you want bubbles, top with sparkling water after straining.
Creamy Pomegranate Smoothie
- 1 cup arils
- 1 small banana
- 1/2 cup plain yogurt
- 1/4 cup water or milk
Blend until creamy. Taste. If you want it smoother, strain; if you like texture, drink it as-is. For a thicker texture, use frozen arils or add a handful of ice.
What You Get Nutritionally
Pomegranate arils bring natural sugars, water, and small amounts of fiber. When you strain, you remove much of the solids, so the drink shifts closer to juice. If you keep the whole blend unstrained, you keep more of the fruit’s structure.
If you track nutrients, pull the exact values from the USDA’s pomegranate listings and match them to the serving size you use.
Cleaning The Blender Without Stains
Pomegranate clings to plastic. Clean it right away and you’ll save scrubbing later.
- Rinse the jar with cool water.
- Add warm water and a drop of dish soap.
- Run the blender for 10–15 seconds.
- Rinse, then air-dry with the lid off.
If the jar looks pink, a quick soak with warm soapy water usually lifts it. Avoid harsh abrasives that scratch plastic, since scratches trap smells over time.
Quick Checklist Before You Hit Blend
- Use arils, not chunks of rind or membrane.
- Add a small splash of liquid to get things moving.
- Blend in bursts, then decide: strain or sip.
- Chill fast and store sealed.
- Shake before pouring if it separates.
References & Sources
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).“Selecting and Serving Produce Safely.”Tips on cleaning, handling, and refrigerating cut produce to reduce foodborne risk.
- USDA SNAP-Ed Connection.“Pomegranates.”Overview of pomegranate arils, seasonality, storage notes, and common uses in foods and drinks.