How To Make Cranberry Sauce

This is another one of those recipes that’s so easy you wonder why we buy this pre-made. Two ingredients and 15 minutes work, and it’s better than anything in a can. Courtesy of my mother-in-law, Nancy.

Ingredients

1 package (12 ounces) fresh or frozen whole cranberries
1 cup sugar
1 cup water

Directions

Dump all the berries into a colander.

Go through and pick out any that are split, discolored or badly shriveled up.

Rinse the berries under cold water. Get right in there with your hand and really stir them around under the running water.

Set the berries aside and put the sugar and water in a pan and stir.


Put the sugar water over high heat until the sugar is dissolved and the water starts to boil. Then add the berries and stir.


Bring the water back to a boil, and leave the heat up high until the berries start to pop. You’ll hear them if it’s not too noisy in the kitchen. It’s not as loud as popcorn, but sort of sounds the same.

Once the berries start popping, stir and reduce the heat to a simmer. (That’s still bubbling, but just barely.) Simmer for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally.

Important safety tip from Nancy: If you are using a fine china or glass serving dish — she got this as a wedding gift 47 years ago — put a metal spoon in the bowl before adding the hot food. This will help dissipate the heat, and keep the glass from cracking from the stress of the temperature difference.

Pour the cooked cranberries into the bowl and even out the top.

Let the berries cool to room temperature before removing the spoon, then refrigerate for several hours so it will gel up.

And that’s it.


Tomorrow I’ll have the smooth version, like the jellied kind in the can. (The way cranberry sauce is supposed to be. Please don’t tell Nancy I said that.)

Cranberry Sauce: Traditional

Cranberry Sauce: Traditional

Ingredients

  • 1 package (12 ounces) fresh or frozen whole cranberries
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 cup water

Instructions

Rinse berries in cold water. Sort through and pick out any that are split, shriveled, or not ripe -- meaning they're much lighter in color than the rest.

Mix the sugar and water in a pan and stir, then put on high heat until it comes to a boil. Add the berries and stir, then bring back to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer, stirring occasionally, until the berries start to pop.

Pour the cooked cranberries into a serving bowl and even out the top. Refrigerate until set.

NOTE: If you are using a delicate glass bowl, set a large metal spoon in it before pouring in the hot berries. The metal will diffuse the heat, protecting the glass so it doesn't shatter from thermal shock.