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My Easy Cranberry Sauce Recipe for Holiday Tables

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When I want a side dish that wakes up the whole plate, I make this cranberry sauce recipe. It’s bright, sweet-tart, and far better than anything that slid out of a can. Best of all, it takes about 15 minutes on the stove.

I use it for Thanksgiving, Christmas ham, and leftover turkey sandwiches. Below, I’m sharing the exact amounts, the simple steps, easy flavor swaps, and a fast way I dress up canned cranberry sauce when I need a shortcut.

Why this cranberry sauce recipe works every time

I keep coming back to this recipe because it’s almost impossible to mess up. Cranberries naturally thicken as they cook, so I don’t need cornstarch or fancy steps. Sugar softens the sharp bite, while orange adds a fresh, clean note that keeps the sauce from tasting flat.

It also fits busy holiday cooking. I can make it ahead, chill it, and forget about it until dinner. That’s a gift when the oven is packed and the sink is full.

Here’s the quick snapshot: Prep time: 5 minutes. Cook time: 12 to 15 minutes. Yield: about 2 cups, or 8 servings.

Simple ingredients for perfect results

I only need a few basics for this sauce.

Cohesive hand-drawn graphite sketch of key cranberry sauce ingredients—fresh red cranberries, whole oranges, granulated sugar, and cinnamon stick—arranged top-down on a wooden surface with muted reds, oranges, and browns.
IngredientAmountNotes
Fresh or frozen cranberries12 ouncesOne standard bag, no need to thaw if frozen
Granulated sugar1 cupUse less for tart sauce, more for sweeter sauce
Water1 cupHelps the berries cook evenly
Orange zest1 teaspoonAdds bright flavor
Orange juice2 tablespoonsFresh tastes best
Fine salt1 pinchBalances the sweetness
Cinnamon stick1, optionalAdds gentle warmth

If I want a tarter sauce, I start with 3/4 cup sugar. If I’m serving kids or a sweeter ham, I use the full cup. For a sweeter finish, I’ll add 1 to 2 more tablespoons after tasting.

Fresh cranberries are great, but frozen work just as well. That makes this recipe easy to keep in my back pocket all season.

How I make this cranberry sauce recipe in just 15 minutes

This method is simple, fast, and very beginner-friendly.

  1. Start the base. In a medium saucepan, I combine the water, sugar, orange zest, orange juice, salt, and cinnamon stick, if I’m using it. Then I bring it to a gentle boil over medium-high heat.
  2. Add the cranberries. I stir in the cranberries and lower the heat to medium. Then I simmer for 10 to 12 minutes, stirring now and then, until most of the berries burst.
  3. Watch the texture. The sauce should look glossy and a little loose. I take it off the heat before it gets too thick, because it firms up as it cools.
  4. Cool and serve. I remove the cinnamon stick and let the sauce cool for 20 to 30 minutes. After that, I serve it warm, at room temp, or chilled.

I never wait for the sauce to look fully set in the pot. It thickens a lot as it cools.

If I want a smoother texture, I mash some of the berries with the back of a spoon. If I want more whole fruit, I stir less and stop cooking as soon as most berries pop. Either way, the flavor lands somewhere between jam and chutney, but with a cleaner finish.

The easiest ways I adjust sweetness, orange, and spice

I like this recipe as written, but it’s easy to tweak.

For a less-sweet version, I cut the sugar to 3/4 cup. The sauce will taste brighter and a little sharper. If I want it sweeter after cooking, I stir in 1 tablespoon sugar at a time while it’s still warm.

Orange is the easiest add-in. I use 1 extra teaspoon of zest for stronger citrus flavor. I’ll also add 1 more tablespoon of orange juice if I want a softer, fruitier taste. I don’t add much more than that, though, because too much liquid can thin the sauce.

Spice changes the mood fast. A cinnamon stick gives gentle warmth. For a deeper holiday flavor, I add 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon and a tiny pinch of cloves or ginger. A little goes a long way, so I keep it light.

If the sauce seems too thick after chilling, I stir in 1 tablespoon water or orange juice. If it feels too loose, I simmer it for 1 to 2 more minutes.

Make-ahead tips, storage, and freezing

This is one of my favorite make-ahead holiday sides. I often cook it 1 to 3 days before dinner, then store it in the fridge. The flavor gets better overnight, and the texture settles into that spoonable sweet-tart spot.

I keep leftovers in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 7 to 10 days. Before serving again, I give it a quick stir. If it’s very cold and stiff, I let it sit on the counter for a bit.

Freezing works well too. I spoon cooled cranberry sauce into a freezer-safe container, leaving a little room at the top. Then I freeze it for up to 2 months. When I’m ready to use it, I thaw it in the fridge overnight and stir well before serving.

Quick twist: how I upgrade canned cranberry sauce

Sometimes I need speed, and that’s when I turn a can into something better.

Cohesive hand-drawn graphite sketch with light shading on clean white paper, showing an elegant white bowl of glossy homemade cranberry sauce topped with orange zest curls and whole cranberries, spoon dipping in, top view slightly angled.

I empty one 14-ounce can of whole-berry or jellied cranberry sauce into a small saucepan. Then I add 1 tablespoon orange juice, 1 teaspoon orange zest, and 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon. If it tastes flat, I stir in 1 tablespoon maple syrup.

I warm it over low heat for 3 to 5 minutes, stirring until smooth and glossy. If I’m using jellied sauce, I break it up with a spoon as it heats. Then I chill it again or serve it warm.

That tiny fix gives canned sauce more life, more aroma, and a more homemade feel.

Homemade cranberry sauce doesn’t ask for much, yet it adds so much to the table. I love that this recipe is easy enough for a weeknight and special enough for a holiday meal. If I’m short on time, the canned version still gives me a solid backup. Either way, a good spoonful of cranberry sauce makes the whole plate taste brighter.

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