Slushy Syrup Ratios Explained: Why 5:1 Is the Commercial Standard
5:1 vs 6:1 Slushy Syrup Concentrate: Which Ratio Is Correct?
- 5:1 = 5 parts water to 1 part concentrate — the commercial standard for Slush Puppie and Jolly Rancher
- 6:1 dilutes the mix below the 13–15 Brix threshold most commercial machines need to freeze properly
- Using 6:1 with a 5:1-formulated syrup causes thin, watery slush or freeze-solid failures
- A 4L Slush Puppie jug at 5:1 yields 24L of mix — approximately 67 x 12 oz servings
- Pre-chilled water (4–8°C) at 5:1 produces the best texture and fastest freeze time
You open your slushy syrup concentrate and the label says 5:1. A quick search suggests some operators use 6:1 to stretch their supply. Which is right — and does it actually matter?
It matters a lot. The ratio is not just about flavour intensity. It directly controls the sugar concentration of your finished mix, and sugar concentration determines whether your commercial slushy machine can freeze the product correctly.
What 5:1 and 6:1 Actually Mean
Both numbers refer to water-to-concentrate ratios:
| Ratio | Water | Concentrate | Finished Mix from 4L Jug | Servings (12 oz) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5:1 | 5 parts | 1 part | 24 litres | ~67 |
| 6:1 | 6 parts | 1 part | 28 litres | ~78 |
At 6:1 you get roughly 17% more volume from the same jug. That looks attractive until your machine stops working correctly.
The Brix Problem: Why 6:1 Breaks Commercial Machines
Brix is the measure of dissolved sugar in your mix. Commercial slushy machines require a finished mix of 13–15 Brix to freeze properly. Below that, the freeze point of the liquid drops too low and the machine either cannot reach the right temperature or the mix freezes completely solid.
| Ratio | Approximate Brix | Machine Result | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4:1 (too strong) | ~18–20 Brix | Freezes too hard, difficult to dispense | Too thick |
| 5:1 (correct) | ~14–16 Brix | Correct semi-frozen texture, dispenses cleanly | Correct |
| 6:1 (too diluted) | ~11–12 Brix | Watery, does not hold slush, may freeze solid | Too thin |
What Slush Puppie and Jolly Rancher Are Formulated At
Both Slush Puppie and Jolly Rancher concentrates available at ChickenPieces.com are formulated and quality-tested at 5:1. The concentrate was designed to hit 13–16 Brix when mixed at this ratio. The colour, flavour intensity, and freeze performance are all calibrated for 5:1.
Blue Raspberry / Cherry / Orange — 4L
- Mix ratio: 5:1 (5 parts water, 1 part concentrate)
- Yield per jug: 24L / ~67 x 12 oz servings
- Brix at 5:1: ~14–16
- Machine type: non-carbonated slushy / granita
- Canadian-made, widely recognized brand
Blue Raspberry / Watermelon — 64 oz
- Mix ratio: 5:1 (5 parts water, 1 part concentrate)
- Yield per jug: ~10L / ~32 x 12 oz servings
- Brix at 5:1: ~13–15
- Machine type: non-carbonated slushy / granita
- Strong brand recognition, youth-driven demand
When 6:1 Is Actually Used
A 6:1 ratio is used for specific product types that are formulated differently from standard 5:1 concentrates:
- Some neutral slush bases (like Lynch Neutral Base) are formulated at 6:1 because they use a different sugar balance
- Home blender slushies where freeze point is less critical — the blender crushes ice rather than freezing the liquid
- Granita machines with different freeze-point specs (always check your machine manual)
- Snow cone syrups poured over pre-shaved ice, where no machine freezing occurs

How to Mix 5:1 Correctly — Step by Step
- Measure 1 part concentrate (e.g., 1 litre) into a clean container
- Add 5 parts cold water (e.g., 5 litres) — use water at 4–8°C for fastest freeze time
- Stir thoroughly for 60 seconds — colour and flavour settle during storage
- Pour into your slushy machine tank
- Allow 20–40 minutes for the machine to reach serving temperature
- Test texture before serving — it should be thick, spoonable, and hold its shape in a cup
5:1 vs 6:1 — Cost Comparison Per Serving
| Ratio | Servings per 4L Slush Puppie | Syrup cost per 12 oz serving | Machine performance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5:1 (correct) | ~67 | ~$0.22–$0.28 | Optimal |
| 6:1 (diluted) | ~78 | ~$0.19–$0.24 | Degraded / unreliable |
The cost saving at 6:1 is approximately $0.03–$0.04 per serving — about $2 per 4L jug. Not worth the risk of machine problems, repeat batches, or customer complaints about watery slushies.
Use 5:1. Every time.
Slush Puppie, Jolly Rancher, and Concession Stand concentrates are formulated for 5:1. The Brix level at this ratio is exactly what commercial slushy machines need. Diluting to 6:1 saves a few cents per serving while risking machine failure, product inconsistency, and customer dissatisfaction. The math does not support 6:1 for commercial operations.
Shop Slushy Syrup Concentrate
Slush Puppie (Canadian-made), Jolly Rancher, and Concession Stand brand — all 5:1 formulated. Ships from Calgary to all Canadian provinces.
Shop Slushy Syrups → Full Operator Guide