3-Ingredient Cranberry Sauce Recipe (2024)

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Want to make homemade cranberry sauce for Thanksgiving this year? It’s very easy to make and you’ll only need 3 ingredients!

3-Ingredient Cranberry Sauce Recipe (1)

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For Thanksgiving dinner, when I was a kid, we always had canned jellied cranberry sauce. It was slid out onto a plate, complete with the distinctive ripples from the can. From there, it was sliced into perfect circles for serving.

When I started hosting my own Thanksgiving dinners, many years ago, I also served canned cranberry sauce. Sometimes it was the whole berry kind and sometimes it was jellied, but canned cranberry sauce was always on the holiday table.

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Fast forward a few years and was looking at a bag of fresh cranberries in the produce section of our grocery store. I noticed that homemade cranberry sauce really only needs a few ingredients. And the steps were minimal too. I made my first batch of homemade cranberry sauce that year, using the recipe right on the back of the bag.

Today, I’ve been making homemade cranberry sauce Thanksgiving and Christmas for many years. It may never be the most popular side dish on our table (um, mashed potatoes will win every single time!), but I love it and those who like cranberries always enjoy it too. It’s a tradition and it wouldn’t be Thanksgiving without it!

If you are new to making homemade cranberry sauce, you may also be surprised at how easy it is to make. And once you start making your own cranberry sauce, you’ll want to make it every Thanksgiving!

Ingredients Needed for 3-Ingredient Cranberry Sauce:

Cooking Equipment Needed for 3-Ingredient Cranberry Sauce:

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How to Make Homemade Cranberry Sauce

To make your own basic cranberry sauce, you will only need 3 simple ingredients: fresh cranberries, an orange, and granulated sugar. You will also need water and a pinch of salt. If you wish, you could skip the orange and the salt, but we think it’s best with them.

Making your own homemade cranberry sauce starts with washing and inspecting the cranberries. Place your cranberries in a strainer and wash them. Also, check through them and get rid of any cranberries that are soft, wilted, or brown. Set your cranberries aside.

The next step is to zest an orange. Remove any produce stickers on your orange and rinse the outside of the skin. Zesting means to scrape away the very outside, bright-colored part of the skin of a piece of citrus fruit, such as orange, lime, or lemon. In this case, we’re doing it with an orange, which I do with a microplane grater which gives fine zest, perfect for this recipe.

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Next, with the same orange that you zested, you’ll juice it. You can squeeze the juice by hand from the orange or use a citrus juicer, which is generally easier.

The juice from the orange is poured into a 1 cup measuring cup. Don’t be surprised if the orange juice doesn’t fill up the cup — it shouldn’t. You’ll probably only get about 1/3 of the cup, but that’s fine. Take however much orange juice you get, and fill the measuring cup up with water until it’s full to give yourself 1 cup of liquid (orange juice/water combo).

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Pour your 1 cup of orange juice/water combo into a medium saucepan and stir in the sugar. Add the cranberries and heat everything to a boil. Lower the heat to medium-low and simmer until the cranberries being to burst, stirring occasionally, for about 10 minutes.

If you prefer less whole berries, press the cranberries with the back of your cooking spoon while they are simmering. Remove the cranberry sauce from the heat and stir in the pinch of salt and most of the orange zest, reserving a pinch of orange zest for sprinkling on top.

Pour the cranberry sauce into a bowl or small serving dish. Sprinkle the top with the remaining orange zest. Cover and cool at room temperature. Once cooled, refrigerate until ready to serve.

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Cranberry Sauce Variations

There are multiple ways you can customize this cranberry sauce recipe!

  • You can skip the orange completely if needed. This recipe can be made with 1 cup of water instead of the orange juice/water combo. You can also skip the orange zest, if you prefer, or if you don’t have a zester
  • Instead of using a fresh orange, you can use already prepared orange juice. You won’t have the orange zest, but it will still be a great cranberry sauce. If you go this route, we recommend using 1/3-1/2 cup of orange juice, with the remainder of the cup being water. Using a full cup of orange juice also works.
  • If you prefer non-chunky cranberry sauce, press the cooked cranberry sauce through a mesh strainer. To do this, place the strainer over your bowl or serving dish and press the sauce through the strainer with the back of a cooking spoon. This will give you a smooth cranberry sauce, without the larger pieces.
  • Adding a pinch of cinnamon or ginger is delicious!

More Recipes with Cranberries!

If you love cranberries like I do, you’ll enjoy these recipes with cranberries too!

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3-Ingredient Cranberry Sauce Recipe (8)

3-Ingredient Cranberry Sauce Recipe

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5 from 4 reviews

  • Author: Brandie Valenzuela
  • Yield: 2 1/4 cups 1x
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Description

This Homemade Cranberry Sauce Recipe is easy to make and only needs 3 ingredients!

Ingredients

Scale

1 orange, medium size
Water (amount varies)
1 cup granulated sugar
12 ounces fresh cranberries; rinsed, inspected, and drained
Pinch of salt (optional)

Instructions

Remove any produce stickers on the outside of the orange and rinse the orange. Zest the orange to get as much orange zest as the orange allows. This amount will vary, but 1 teaspoons is great. Set the zest aside until later.

Cut the zested orange in half and juice it. Pour the juice into a 1 cup measuring cup (it won’t fill the cup). Add water to the orange juice in the measuring cup until you have 1 full cup of liquid.

In a medium sauce pan, combine the 1 cup of orange juice/water and the sugar. Add the cranberries and bring everything to a boil. Lower the heat to medium-low and simmer until the cranberries being to burst, stirring occasionally, for about 10 minutes. If less whole berries are desired, press the cranberries with the back of your cooking spoon. Remove from the heat and stir in the pinch of salt and most of the orange zest, reserving a pinch for sprinkling on top.

Pour the cranberry sauce into a bowl or small serving dish. Sprinkle the top with the remaining orange zest. Cover and cool at room temperature. Once cooled, refrigerate until ready to serve.

Notes

–You can skip the orange zest, if you prefer, or if you don’t have a zester.

–The orange in this recipe can be completely omitted, if you prefer. Simply use 1 cup of water instead of the orange juice/water combo.

  • Category: Side Dishes
  • Method: Stovetop
  • Cuisine: American

Recipe Card powered by3-Ingredient Cranberry Sauce Recipe (9)

3-Ingredient Cranberry Sauce Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What takes the bitterness out of cranberry sauce? ›

If you don't have maple syrup (pancake syrup WILL NOT do, y'all), try honey or a more neutral sweetener like agave syrup, brown rice syrup, or even simple syrup. All of these syrupy ingredients are a perfect quick fix for bitter cranberry sauce.

How do you cut the tartness out of cranberry sauce? ›

Sugar – you NEED sugar in this recipe to cut through the tartness of the cranberries. I use cane sugar here, but you can use any sugar of choice, from granulated, to coconut sugar, to maple syrup.

What role do sugar and water play in making cranberry sauce? ›

Instead, the pectin polymers will bind to each other, giving the cranberry mixture more and more structure. The sweet sugar-water molecules get trapped in between the pectin chains, resulting in a tasty cranberry sauce!

How to thicken homemade cranberry sauce? ›

Try reducing the sauce down even further so more of the liquid cooks off and the mixture thickens. If that doesn't work, add a thickener like gelatin, pectin or a cornstarch slurry (cornstarch whisked into juice or water). Let the sauce cool before refrigerating to completely set.

How to enhance cranberry sauce? ›

Adding a teaspoon or two of fresh lemon or orange zest, a tablespoon of chopped candied peel, or even a splash of juice to your canned sauce will brighten flavors and bring in some homemade flavor.

Why do you open cranberry sauce upside down? ›

According to Ocean Spray, that's intentional: It creates a seamless serving experience. The cans are “filled and labeled upside down with the rounded edge on top and the sharp can-like edge on the bottom to keep the jelly whole,” an Ocean Spray spokesperson told CNN Business.

What to add to cranberry sauce to make it less tart? ›

Taste and, if the mixture is too tart (keeping in mind that cranberry sauce is supposed to be a little tart!), add more orange juice, honey or maple syrup to taste. The sauce will continue to thicken as it cools.

What cancels out tartness? ›

How Do You Neutralize Sour Taste in Food? If a dish is too sour, add a little bit of sugar! Sweetness balances out sour flavors, so if something makes your mouth pucker, a dash of sugar may help soften the blow of the sour food.

How do you make cranberry sauce less acidic? ›

To start, we add a little salt. The salt helps to make the sugar taste sweeter, masking a little of the bitterness. Some suggest that adding a small pinch of baking soda helps by limiting the acid in the sauce. And while tannic acid is what makes up some of the tannins in cranberries, it's not all tannic acid.

Why is canned cranberry sauce so good? ›

I love the texture, shape, ridges, and dependability of the cranberry sauce that comes from a can. Each year, no matter what happens or may go wrong, I know the cranberry sauce will taste exactly as it has for as long as I can remember.

What are the two types of cranberry sauce? ›

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.

Can you cook cranberry sauce too long? ›

In the presence of sugar, the pectin molecules bond to one another, forming a kind of gel. The longer you cook a cranberry sauce, the more pectin is released and liquid is evaporated, and the stiffer the result will be.

What happens if you overcook cranberry sauce? ›

If your cranberry sauce is too thick, it's most likely overcooked. When you cook cranberries (or any berries), they burst, releasing pectin—a natural thickener. The key to a perfect consistency is to allow some but not all of the cranberries to split open—something you'll achieve with less time on the stove.

Should cranberry sauce be served warm or cold? ›

Should cranberry sauce be served warm or cold? You could, of course, serve it straight out of the pot, but I think it's best after it's chilled in the fridge. Chilling it helps it firm up some more in the fridge, plus, serving it this way means you can make it days ahead of a holiday.

How do you fix a sauce that is too bitter? ›

Add Some Baking Soda

If your tomato sauce is too acidic and verging on bitter, turn to baking soda, not sugar. Yes, sugar might make the sauce taste better, but good old baking soda is an alkaline that will help balance the excess acid. A little pinch should do the trick.

How do you neutralize bitterness? ›

Sweet ingredients like sugar, honey, fruit juices and maple syrup will balance bitterness. Any dish can also be balanced with a touch of a sour ingredient like lemon or vinegar. Finally, a fatty ingredient like oil, cream. coconut cream or butter will also tame bitterness.

How do you make cranberry juice less bitter? ›

I buy 100% pure cranberry juice, pour about a third of a glass and then add water. Instead of adding sugar (to reduce the bitterness) I decided to add salt!! OMG!! it tastes delicious!

Why do my cranberries taste bitter? ›

Cranberries are generally considered safe whether they are cooked or raw. However, because of their notoriously bitter, sharp taste, most people prefer not to eat them raw or unsweetened. This bitterness is due to the high tannin content of cranberries.

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