I don't know if I got you right, but do you think that electricity is made out of photons...? It's not like that.
Electromagnetic radiation such as light is made out of photons. Which means nothing else than it is emitted in discrete amounts, according to E=h·f --you can't emit half a photon, or three and a quarter, of a given frequency, but the total amount of energy will have to be a multiple of this (very tiny) E that depends on f(requency).
"Electricity", if you mean electric current, is _not_ made out of photons; but of any charged particle (photons are not charged). Such as the valence electrons inside a metal, or the ions inside an electrolyte solution, both of which are free to move impelled by electric fields.
Electromagnetic radiation is actually made out of pulsating electric and magnetic fields, but it does not involve charged particles. It can affect other particles though (charged or not), and photons have mechanical momentum depending on their energy/frequency.