An easy and delicious recipe for cranberry sauce is something everyone should have in their arsenal. And this whole berry cranberry sauce recipe is the one!
Made with fresh orange juice, orange zest and just a hint of nutmeg, it will be the perfect side dish for your holiday meals year after year.
I’ll admit, I’m a bit of a cranberry fanatic. During the holiday season, I just can’t get enough of them. There is literally never a time during November or December when you won’t find a jumbo-sized bag of fresh cranberries in my fridge.
I bake them into breads, cookies and muffins. I muddle them into cocktails and use them to garnish cheese boards and party trays.
And obviously, the cranberry sauce. Soooo much cranberry sauce. It’s nothing to see me standing at the fridge eating this whole cranberry sauce out of the container with a spoon.
What’s in this Whole Berry Cranberry Sauce
Just a few simple ingredients is all you’ll need to make the best cranberry sauce recipe:
- Fresh cranberries
- Fresh oranges
- Sugar
- Grated nutmeg
I’ve seen some recipes for cranberry sauce out there that have cinnamon in them. Cinnamon is amazing, but if you really want to elevate your cranberry sauce to something worthy of a holiday table, go with nutmeg.
We’re only using a tiny bit, but it just gives this whole cranberry sauce that extra special something. It’s arguably the best part!
How to make Whole Cranberry Sauce
We’re using the whole orange in this recipe, both the juice and the zest. So zest the orange first, and then juice it.
Bring the cranberries to a boil with the sugar, orange juice and some water. Once it starts to thicken, stir in the orange zest and nutmeg. And that’s it!
It will thicken as it cools, so let it hang out on the stovetop after you turn off the heat until it cools down.
See the recipe card below for full instructions.
Cranberry Sauce vs. Cranberry Relish
Cranberry sauce and cranberry relish are made with very similar ingredients, but have one important difference. While cranberry sauce is cooked on the stovetop until the berries begin to soften and burst open, cranberry relish is made with uncooked cranberries that have been finely chopped.
So it’s more of a fresh cranberry sauce.
Relish has a brighter, fresher taste than cranberry sauce, which is more syrupy.
Whole Cranberry Sauce vs. Jellied Cranberry Sauce
Jellied cranberry sauce, or cranberry jelly, will always hold a special place in my heart, because it’s the kind that I grew up on.
Jellied cranberry sauce has the solid cranberry pieces strained out and the result is a smooth, firm substance that takes on the shape of whatever container it’s in – kind of like Jell-o with less jiggle.
Whole berry cranberry sauce maintains the pieces of actual cranberry, and is looser in form. You can’t slice it the way you can slice the canned stuff.
Both are chock full of nutrient-rich cranberries, so it comes down to preference.
How to serve Whole Berry Cranberry Sauce
I think we can agree that no Thanksgiving dinner is complete without cranberry sauce. So what happens if you have some left over?
Here are some of my favorite ways to enjoy leftover cranberry sauce, even after the Thanksgiving turkey is gone:
- Mix it together with mayonnaise to spread onto leftover turkey sandwiches
- Spread it onto a wheel of brie and bake it
- Make my favorite Cranberry Brie Tartlets for your next holiday party
- Stir it into a sauce for Sweet and Sour Meatballs
- Make a double batch and save some for Christmas dinner! It’ll be one less thing to worry about.
But I challenge you to not want to eat this whole cranberry sauce with a spoon right out of the container. I know I can’t resist.
When you make this whole cranberry sauce for your Thanksgiving table, I’d love to hear about it! Drop a rating or leave a comment below. Enjoy!
For more holiday side dish recipes, try these:
- Potatoes au Gratin with Corn & Gruyere
- Broccoli & Cheddar Bake
- Jalapeño Corn Casserole with Cheddar Cheese
For more Thanksgiving recipes, try these:
Homemade Whole Berry Cranberry Sauce (Easy Recipe)
Ingredients
- 3 cups fresh cranberries
- 3/4 cups water
- 1 orange
- 1 cup white sugar
- 1/8 tsp. ground nutmeg
Instructions
- Put water and sugar into a medium saucepan. Zest the orange and set aside the zest. Juice the orange and add it to the saucepan (you should get about 1/4 cup of juice from one orange). Bring the water, sugar and juice to a boil. Add cranberries. Return to a boil and then reduce heat to a simmer. The cranberries should have started to pop by now.
- Add the orange zest and nutmeg. Smash the cranberries with a wooden spoon until about half of them are smashed and the rest are left whole. Simmer on low heat about 10-15 minutes. Remove from heat and allow to cool to room temperature. It will thicken as it cools.
- Refrigerate in an airtight container.
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