New England Cranberry Sauce
Submitted by snajlba
Three-ingredient New England cranberry sauce with fresh cranberries, sugar, and water. Homemade cranberry sauce that thickens as it cools, ready in under 30 minutes.
YIELD
5 cupsPREP
5 minCOOK
25 minREADY
30 minThree ingredients. That’s all homemade cranberry sauce takes, and once you make it from scratch, the canned version never finds its way back to your holiday table. Fresh cranberries, sugar, and water boil together until the berries pop and the liquid reduces into a glossy, ruby-red sauce.
Listen for the berries while they cook. Each cranberry has a waxy skin that traps steam as it heats, and they burst with an audible pop. When the popping slows down and most of the berries have split open, the sauce is nearly done. About 10 minutes of cooking after the initial boil gets you there.
Don’t judge the thickness while it’s hot. Cranberries are loaded with pectin, a natural gelling agent, and the sauce continues to thicken significantly as it cools. What looks thin and runny in the saucepan will set into a spoonable, jammy consistency once it hits room temperature. Pull it off the heat when it’s still a little loose.
Pro Tips
- Stir only until the sugar dissolves, then let the berries cook undisturbed. Constant stirring breaks them up too much and you lose the chunky texture.
- Make this a day or two ahead. The flavor deepens and the sauce sets more firmly overnight in the fridge.
- Use fresh or frozen cranberries. Frozen berries don’t need to be thawed first and cook identically.
Variations
- Add a cinnamon stick and a few whole cloves to the pot for a spiced version.
- Stir in the zest and juice of one orange for a citrus cranberry sauce.
- Replace half the water with port wine or red wine for a richer, more complex adult version.
Ingredients
Directions
Mix all ingredients in a saucepan.
Heat to boiling, stirring until sugar has dissolved.
Cook about 10 minutes, or until berries have all burst and liquid is reduced somewhat.
Sauce will thicken more as it cools.
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