Coconut Water Chia Fresca: Natural Electrolyte Drink for Triathletes

Why This Recipe Works

Coconut water is naturally rich in potassium (600mg per 250ml), with useful amounts of sodium, magnesium, and calcium — the electrolytes lost in sweat. Chia seeds add omega-3s and a slow-release energy source, while fresh lime juice makes the whole thing drinkable and sharp enough to cut through summer heat. This is a 5-minute alternative to commercial electrolyte drinks that costs less per serving and contains no artificial sweeteners or food colouring.

Ingredients

  • 500ml natural coconut water (no added sugar)
  • 1 tbsp chia seeds
  • Juice of 1 lime (approx 30ml)
  • 1 tbsp honey or maple syrup (optional — adds approx 15g carbohydrate)
  • Pinch of sea salt (adds sodium to improve electrolyte balance)
  • Fresh mint leaves to serve (optional)

Instructions

  1. Add the chia seeds to the coconut water and stir well to prevent clumping.
  2. Let the mixture sit for at least 5 minutes (10 minutes is better) — the chia seeds absorb liquid and form a light gel that slows carbohydrate absorption.
  3. Add lime juice, honey/syrup if using, and the pinch of sea salt. Stir again.
  4. Serve over ice with fresh mint. Consume within 30 minutes of making for best texture.

Nutrition Notes

Per 500ml serving (without honey): approximately 50 calories, 10g carbohydrate, 2g fat (omega-3 rich), 1g protein, 600mg potassium, 35mg sodium, 30mg magnesium. With honey: add 60 calories and 15g carbohydrate — ideal for pre-workout use where you want a modest carbohydrate boost. The chia seeds are not a significant protein source but their omega-3 content supports recovery and inflammation management over time with regular consumption.

Timing: best consumed 30–45 minutes before an aerobic session lasting 60 minutes or more, or as a rehydration drink in the hour after training in hot conditions.