Delicious, nutritious homemade Jellied Cranberry Sauce with a hint of orange is just what your cranberry sauce lovers want at your Thanksgiving meal this holiday season! Tangy, sweet, and a holiday classic, your own cranberry sauce is the perfect complement to any roast you serve!
Serve this delightful homemade cranberry sauce right after it has been made and chilled, or you can can it to make it shelf-stable for longer storage. And it’s easy to make to boot!
My eldest son has -year after year- requested a giant Thanksgiving style feast on his birthday that falls about a week and a half before Thanksgiving. It’s his favourite meal of the year and he sees no reason to be confined to having it only once.
He also sees no problem with having the gigantic meal twice in one month. …And he knows what he likes.
Since he was able to serve himself at the table, the thing he has grabbed for first from the table is the bowl of cranberry sauce. According to him, it has to be smooth.
He and I both feel strongly about this. Even though Martha and legions of foodies present the beautiful relishes and whole berry sauces with the recognizable berries peeking out of it, I continue to hew the middle-America, smooth, quivering, ruby-red, can-shaped tube of sauce like the one I grew up eating.
My son loves this version the very best, too. Is my love for it nostalgia?
Perhaps, but it’s what I like. …And I know what I like.
(I do like some of the whole berry stuff, but it HAS to be like this homemade sweet and spicy one or all bets are off!)
Fresh Cranberry Sauce
But what I like very best of all is this homemade Jellied Cranberry Sauce. It has all the punch of fresh cranberries, less sugar, and a hint of orange juice all in a smooth, jelled package.
Wonder of wonders, you can whip this jellied cranberry sauce up with minimal prep time, easy to find ingredients, and very little hands-on time. This easy homemade cranberry sauce is a staple of the holiday table.
And I feel like I’m standing on pretty firm ground when I assert that Thanksgiving leftovers are one of the best parts of the season. Leftover turkey sandwiches made from rolls topped with roast turkey breast, leftover cranberry sauce, and a thin layer of pan fried stuffing with a ladle of gravy over the top is one of the best holiday meals in existence.
If you’re a fan of canned cranberry sauce and it’s classic slices, take heart! Homemade cranberry sauce can be umolded like it’s cousin-in-a-can by gently running a little hot water over the outside of the jar, running a flexible, thin spatula around the inside of the jar, and plopping it onto a plate or into a bowl. If you follow the instructions, it’ll be as firm as the commercially available canned stuff.
If you do not bring the sauce to 215ºF after adding the sugar, it may end up softer set. It is still marvelous either way.
Can I Can Homemade Cranberry Sauce?
We have fresh cranberry sauce at our Thanksgiving table without fail, but that’s not the only time we eat it. If you’re like us, you may be wondering if you can can homemade jellied cranberry sauce.
The short answer here is yes. I can homemade cranberry sauce every year.
EVERY YEAR. The great advantage to canning it is that you can store it on pantry shelves for up to a year!
Given that cranberries are usually on wicked sale this time of year, and that we eat it year ’round, it makes sense to make it in massive quantities and can it up. That way we have homemade classic cranberry sauce available year-round.
Do I have to can it?
The short answer is no. If you’re can-phobic, you can certainly pour it into jars or another airtight container, put the lids in place, and refrigerate it up to 10 days before serving.
While I’ve not tried freezing it, I imagine the taste would hold up beautifully in the freezer. Would the gel hold up? I couldn’t say.
Homemade Cranberry Sauce
Why make your own jellied cranberry sauce when the cans are so inexpensive at the store? Because it just plain tastes better!
Homemade jellied cranberry sauce has a better texture, more vibrant, fresher flavour than the stuff that you purchase and you control what goes into it. You can even add a little minced jalapeño if you like a kick to your homemade cranberry sauce or simmer a stick of cinnamon in it if you’d like to spice up your life or Thanksgiving dinner.
How to Make Cranberry Sauce
Ingredients
- Fresh Whole Cranberries
- Juice and Zest of an Orange
- White Sugar
- Optional: Minced Jalapeño Pepper or a Whole Cinnamon Stick
Equipment Needed to Make Cranberry Sauce
- Liquid Measuring Cup
- Microplane or Zester
- Heavy Bottomed Saucepan or Stockpot
- Long Handled Wooden Spoon
- Fine Mesh Sieve
- Immersion Blender or Potato Masher or Blender/Food Processor
- Instant Read Thermometer or Cold Spoon (store a handful of spoons in the freezer.)
Are you looking for more cranberry goodies? Try out this jiggly and delicious Cranberry Ginger Finger Gelatin, Cranberry Eggnog Doughnut Bread Pudding, Cranberry Brussels Salad with Bacon Vinaigrette, and Simple Candied Cranberries + Cranberry Syrup.
You can also break up homemade jellied cranberry sauce with a fork until it is spreadable and use it between layers of cake or to stuff French toast.
Jellied Cranberry Sauce
Combine the cranberries, orange juice, water, and orange zest in a medium saucepan and bring to a boil over medium-high heat. If you’re using a cinnamon stick or minced jalapeño peppers, add it here. Reduce the heat and simmer gently for 8 to 10 minutes while the cranberries pop open.
Use an immersion blender, potato masher, or a blender to carefully blend the mixture until it is mostly smooth. It does not need to be perfect, but the smoother the puree, the faster it’ll move through the sieve.
Pour into a fine-mesh sieve over a heat-proof bowl and use a silicone spatula or wooden spoon to press it through the sieve until all that remains is a paste of little twiggy bits and seeds from the cranberries and orange zest. Return the cranberry sauce to the pan.
Return the pan to medium high heat, add the sugar, and stir until dissolved. Bring the mixture to a boil, stirring frequently, and boil until your cranberry mixture reaches between 215ºF and 217ºF.
Pour into sterile canning jars, leaving 1/4-inch headspace. Wipe the rims, place new lids on the jars, and screw the rings into place until finger-tip tight.
Store in the refrigerator OR place the jars filled with hot cranberry sauce in a canner and cover with hot water. Bring to a boil and process for 15 minutes. Turn off the heat, remove the lid from the canner and let the jars remain in the water for five minutes. Transfer the jars to a wire rack or towel to cool overnight, undisturbed. Wipe the jars down, label them, and store in a cool, dark place for up to a year.
If you do not have an instant read thermometer, you can test the doneness of the sauce by dipping a cold spoon into the simmering sauce and lifting it up. The cranberry sauce should gel against the spoon and hold a clean line when you draw your finger through it.
Jellied Cranberry Sauce {canned or refrigerated}
Rate RecipeEquipment
- 1 liquid measuring cup
- 1 microplane or zester
- 1 heavy-bottomed stockpot
- 1 long handled wooden spoon
- 1 fine mesh sieve
- 1 instant read thermometer
Ingredients
- 9 cups fresh cranberries
- 4 cups sugar
- The juice of one orange plus enough water to equal 3 1/2 cups
- The zest of 1 orange
Instructions
- Combine the cranberries, orange juice, water, and orange zest in a medium saucepan and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat and simmer gently for 8 to 10 minutes while the cranberries pop open.
- Use an immersion blender, potato masher, or a blender to carefully blend the mixture until it is mostly smooth. It does not need to be perfect, but the smoother the puree, the faster it’ll move through the sieve.
- Pour into a fine-mesh sieve over a heat-proof bowl and use a silicone spatula or wooden spoon to press it through the sieve until all that remains is a paste of little twiggy bits and seeds from the cranberries and orange zest. Return the cranberry sauce to the pan.
- Return the pan to medium high heat, add the sugar, and stir until dissolved. Bring the mixture to a boil, stirring frequently, and boil until your cranberry mixture reaches between 215ºF and 217ºF.
- Pour into sterile canning jars, leaving 1/4-inch headspace. Wipe the rims, place new lids on the jars, and screw the rings into place until finger-tip tight.
- Store in the refrigerator OR place the jars filled with hot cranberry sauce in a canner and cover with hot water. Bring to a boil and process for 15 minutes, whether in a pint, pint and a half, or quart sized jar. Turn off the heat, remove the lid from the canner and let the jars remain in the water for five minutes before transferring to a wire rack or towel to cool overnight, undisturbed. Wipe the jars down, label them, and store in a cool, dark place for up to a year.
Nutrition
Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.
did you make this recipe?
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Originally published November 2013, updated November 2020 with additional notes, and November 2022 with improved instructions.
Reader's Thoughts...
Sonia says
I love this recipe. I think it’s might be my 3rd or 4th year making this cranberry sauce! It’s wonderful 🙂
Rebecca says
I’m so glad you love it, Sonia! Thanks for letting me know!
Joyce says
I just made your recipe and canned it, I only got 3 pints! I find it very tart and not sweet enough, can I add more sugar?
Sorry I only gave you three stars because this is something I wouldn’t serve at my Thanksgiving dinner, I’m sorry! I’m glad other people like it I’m sure if it was sweeter I would love too!
Rebecca says
Hi Joyce. You can definitely add more sugar… I don’t have cooking times or ratios for you, but it sounds like you’re looking for more of a dessert level sweetness so play around a bit with the sugar ratio you prefer. 🙂
Toni says
Can I replace the orange juice with water and forget the zest?
Rebecca says
Hi Toni- Certainly! It’ll be different, obviously, but should still work!
Kathleen says
Sounds yummy. Unfortunately my hubby is a diabetic. Can I use Stevia one to one for the sugar?
Rebecca says
Hi Kathleen- Unfortunately, I do not know whether it would work out. If I was in your position, I’d do a dry run with a quarter volume of the recipe. I will suggest, though, that if you do this, you don’t try to process the jars. Sugar does help with food preservation, so home canning doesn’t seem like a great job for stevia. 🙂 Please let me know if it works out if you give it a go!
Victoria says
I KNOW this is going to be delicious just by the list of ingredients. Can you tell me what type of jars would be best for this? Are jelly jars (1/2 pint) okay? I’m trying to find smooth sided jars as well. I’m, trying to impress my husband who only eats this type of cranberry relish (you know, the canned stuff). Thank you.
Rebecca says
Hi Victoria! Jelly jars would be fine, I do believe. 🙂 I just recommend something as straight sided as you can. Wide mouth pint jars are perfect as are wide mouth pint and a half jars. 🙂
Victoria says
Just took this out of the canner and the art of making this went perfect! I did get 7 half pints out of this recipe plus about a 1/4 cup of a sample to taste it. YUM! I can’t wait till Thanksgiving to unmold it. Thank you for a delicious tasting side dish and for your excellent directions! Happy Thanksgiving!
Rebecca says
You’re so welcome, Victoria! Thank you for taking the time to rate the recipe and let me know you love it!
Jane says
Hi, when I set the servings calculator in the recipe to 3x the orange juice and water portions stay the same as 1x. Is that correct?
Rebecca says
Hi Jane! It is not correct. I’ll have to tinker with that a bit. 🙂
Carol D says
I messed up last year also and added the sugar too soon so I made whole cranberry sauce with it instead and it was fabulous! In fact I bought a lot more cranberries and canned about twenty four pints of the whole cranberry sauce.
Rebecca says
Sounds delightful, Carol!!
Fran says
Really looking forward to making your jellied cranberry sauce. Is it OK to substitute raspberry juice for the orange? Would it be about 1/4 to 1/2 cup?
Rebecca says
Hi Fran- That sounds delicious, but I haven’t tried that myself. I’m not sure it’d be suitable for canning with the switch, but it sounds tasty!
Fran says
Making it tomorrow. Bought raspberry syrup from Stonewall Kitchen to sub for the orange. Not planning to can.
Miriam Rose Blanar says
My store was out of cranberries. Can I use cranberry juice instead.
Rebecca says
Hi Miriam- I’m so sorry your store was out of cranberries. Unfortunately, cranberry juice will not behave the same way. If you have unflavoured gelatin, you could make some jellied cranberry sauce with that… But you’ll need to add something to make up for the naturally occurring pectin in fresh cranberries.
Andrea says
I am making my second batch even as I write this. You know it really helps to follow the directions. I added the sugar at the beginning of cooking it. But I canned that batch to give to the people who are at the Thanksgiving table this year. I made the second batch correctly! It tastes yummy. I think I might add a little less zest next time and maybe a couple of cinnamon sticks. Doesn’t that sound yummy?
I make cranberry relish a lot and cranberry salsa al lot and have wondered about making the jelly. I’m glad I found the recipe this year.
Thanks
Rebecca says
I’m so glad you love it, Andrea! Thanks for taking the time to let me know.
Carol says
Making this for my daughter who loves the canned stuff too. But I REALLY hate throwing away all that pulp. What do you do with it?
Andrea says
Let me know if you find out. I know you can dtry leftover tomato pulp, but that doesn’t have anything but pulp, it doesn’t have any twigs, seeds or zest in it.
Denise P says
What is the yield for this recipe? It says 16 servings, but that’s not useful. How many jars do I need to prep? Obviously it will depend on the size of the jar. Thank you.
Rebecca says
Hi Denise-I get 4 pints out of this, give or take a bit. And the number of servings is useful inasmuch as people usually ask for nutritional information and that is crucial in determining it 🙂
Andrea says
I got just over 4 cups
Tracy J Rutter says
Lots of people have issues with diverticulosis and diverticulitis and can’t have whole berry cranberry sauce. It’s nice to see a homemade sauce that gives those folks a fresh, homemade option.
Rebecca says
Thanks, Tracy! It just plain tastes great, too!
Sharon Wooding says
What size and what kind of jars you use and how much does this make? Thanks!
brinda says
If i wanted to add jalapenos to this recipe would it be still safe for water bath canning?
Rebecca says
Hi there, Brinda! I think if you add no more than 1 minced pepper you should be okay!
Kekentia says
Hello
I want to use this in place of the canned stuff this year as my store is completely devoid of it! my question tho; what makes the JELLY part of the Jelly? Does it just go there on its own??? Do I add agar at some point?
Rebecca says
Hi Kekentia! You do not need to add anything at all if you have fresh cranberries. They’re super high in natural pectin, so it should thicken all on its own! On the rare occasion that it doesn’t gel, you can save it by making “finger gelatin”. If you look up cranberry ginger finger gelatin here on the site, it’ll give you tips on how to add the gelatin to get a nice set.
Andrea says
Mine jelled wonderfully with no more help than the added sugar.
Susan Reich says
Love your recipe! The ads however are the worst I’ve seen. They pop up on top of your instructions!
Rebecca says
Thanks for your input Susan. If you ever have crazy ads popping up, please take a screenshot and email it to me so I can take it up with my ad server. I hope you enjoy the cranberry sauce and Happy Thanksgiving and holidays!
Lisa says
How many pints does this recipe make? I want to make and give as gifts, but I don’t know how many jars I can get from one recipe. It looks yummy! Thanks!
Cheryl says
Hello! I haven’t tasted your cranberry jelly as I’m canning it as I type! Do you have any ideas about saving the leftover cranberries that I took the juice from? I hate to toss them. I will freeze them and hope to hear from you! Thank you for such an easy recipe and we can’t wait to taste the jelly!
Rebecca says
Hi Cheryl! You can most def save them if you want! Maybe mix with some applesauce and make fruit leather?
Laura Tilley says
I’ve cooked and cooked and can’t get my temp over 200!
Rebecca says
Hi Laura- Is it boiling? If so, it might be that your thermometer is a little off… Boiling is 212ºF. If it IS boiling, have you tried doing the gel test? If it gels on a cool spoon (leaves a clear line that doesn’t fill back in when you draw your finger down the back of a cool spoon that was dunked into the cranberry sauce), you’re probably right there.
It does take a while at a good steady boil to get it to that 215ºF or 217ºF, so if you haven’t brought it to a boil yet, you’ll likely need to raise your heat.
Melinda Foote says
Can the jalapeno version of the saI’ve be canned and water bathed?