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A quintessential Thanksgiving recipe — the perfect Homemade Cranberry Sauce to pour all over your Roast Turkey!
Making your own cranberry sauce from scratch is so easy, and you can make it days ahead. With only THREE ingredients plus optional flavour suggestions… you’ll never want to buy store-bought again!
I can’t have a good Thanksgiving or Christmas without an incredible homemade Cranberry Sauce recipe! This is what my readers have been screaming at me through emails.
You asked — we delivered!
Cranberry Sauce
A classic sauce made from fresh or frozen cranberries, commonly served as a side with Thanksgiving dinnerthat seems to be forgotten about or preferred by many to grab a can from the store. However, homemade just doesn’t compare to anything in a jar or can.
Cranberries are tart and scream the need for sugar to balance out the sourness. The tartness never really disappears, which makes it the perfect sweet/tart sauce to serve with Turkey.
Some love it, some hate it. Others swear by it, believing wholeheartedly that thisis the perfect sauce for a holiday meal!
How To Make Cranberry Sauce
Just like making jelly or jam, our sauce is done in only a few easy steps:
Cook all ingredients together in a small pot Season with salt, fresh cracked black pepper, and/or a pinch of ground cinnamon if you wish.
For our recipe, we throw in a few whole cranberries right at the end once the sauce is nearly done. If you love the bursts of fruit, you will love this method!
What Do I Need To Make Cranberry Sauce?
Our recipe is quick to throw together, easy and uses only a handful of ingredients:
Brown sugar — or white granulated sugar. I find brown sugar creates the best flavour.
Orange juice — sub out the juice for water if you don’t like citrus flavours
Orange peel or lemon zest — both are optional but provide an even better flavour that pairs so well with cranberries. You could also add in 1-2 tablespoons of orange juice instead of using strips of peel or zest.
A pinch of salt and pepper
Optional add in’s: Pecans, cinnamon (ground or stick), nutmeg, all spice or finely chopped rosemary.
Is cranberry sauce supposed to be hot or cold?
Either! Some prefer to have it served fresh and warm, straight out of the pot, while others need it completely cooled down to enjoy the flavours. Personally, we prefer cooled sauce.
How long does homemade cranberry sauce last?
If stored in airtight jars or containers, sauce can be refrigerated for up to10 days.
Can I make it ahead?
Typically served chilled, our recipe can be made up to 3 days ahead. You may find the flavour has settled after two days, which makes it the perfect recipe to get started on ahead of time.
1strip orange rind or 1/2 teaspoon lemon zest(optional for added citrus flavour)
Instructions
Transfer 1/2 cup of cranberries a small bowl, set aside.
Cook remaining ingredients in a saucepan over low heat, while stirring occasionally, until the sugar dissolves and the cranberries are soft (about 10 minutes).
Increase the heat to medium and cook until the cranberries burst (a further 10 minutes).
Reduce heat to low and stir in the reserved cranberries. Add in a couple tablespoons of extra water, if needed.
A drop or two of rosewater or orange blossom water, a pinch of dried lavender buds, a sprinkle of fresh minced mint, tarragon, or cilantro; some fresh ginger or galangal or lemongrass; use a judicious hand to bring these fresh flavors into your canned sauce.
While there are some editors who prefer homemade cranberry sauce, the canned variety also has quite a following. "There's something so beautifully perfect about the texture of canned cranberry sauce, and none of those homemade mess will ever compete," says Senior Digital Food Editor Kimberly Holland.
"Instead, start by stirring in one tablespoon maple syrup and one teaspoon of a sweet drink like apple juice, orange juice, or fruity white or red wine. Add more to taste. Sprinkle with a pinch of salt (in small amounts, it intensifies sweetness)."
Their sharp tang counteracts bitter flavors without having to add extra sugar. While citrus is a natural pairing for cranberry sauce, bright, savory vinegars like sherry vinegar, balsamic vinegar, and apple cider vinegar play well with the bitter-tart berries.
The major variation you're likely to come across is "whole berry" versus "jellied." The only difference between them is that the jellied sauce is cooked until the berries have completely broken down. They both slide out of the can as a wobbly red cylinder.
That includes cranberry sauce, whose price is up about 18% compared to last year because cranberry crops are smaller this year, sparking a supply squeeze.
Cranberry sauce can be served either as a gooey liquid or as a solid jelly. The jellied version is solid enough to retain the shape of the container in which it's placed whereas the sauce version is much more fluid. The difference between the fluid sauce and the jelly versions comes down to pectin.
But why? Ocean Spray says this is to get the cranberry sauce out in one intact piece. “The rounded part of the can that looks like the bottom has an air bubble in it,” Ocean Spray's representative explains. The bubble is there so you can “break the seal the sauce makes with the can.”
Jelling. Homemade cranberry sauce is meant to thicken, or “jell,” while cooking. If it stays soupy, that could mean a couple of things. One possibility is that you may not have used enough sugar: Sugar helps the sauce firm up, so be sure to use the full amount called for in a recipe.
Maple syrup, brown sugar and even honey can make your cranberry sauce more dynamic. And don't forget the spices! Cinnamon sticks, whole cloves, citrus zest and star anise all work well with cranberries and can be added while the sauce cooks to infuse your sauce with flavor.
It's perfectly fine to serve up cranberry sauce — whole berry or jelled — straight out of the can. But in my experience, heating the canned sauce up takes its flavor to the next level. Plus, it becomes a little more aesthetically pleasing.
The traditional way to serve canned cranberry sauce is to slice the cylinder into rounds and arrange them on a platter. Go a step further by adding a garnish like sugared rosemary or candied ginger. Or, cook the canned sauce with orange juice and zest for a citrusy take on a holiday standby.
Cranberries are also rich in vitamin C and fiber, as well as the metabolism-boosting mineral manganese. And yes, you reap all these benefits whether the cranberry sauce on your holiday table is homemade or canned, jellied or whole-berry.
Introduction: My name is Allyn Kozey, I am a outstanding, colorful, adventurous, encouraging, zealous, tender, helpful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.
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