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Jellied Cranberry Sauce

By Adam Ried

Published on September 28, 2021

Time

50 minutes, plus 5 hours chilling

Yield

Serves 12 (Makes about 2¾ cups)

Jellied Cranberry Sauce

Ingredients

4 cups sweetened cranberry juice 12 ounces (3 cups) fresh or frozen cranberries 1⅓ cups (9⅓ ounces) sugar ¼ teaspoon table salt ¼ teaspoon vanilla extract

Before You Begin

If you don't wish to unmold the sauce, transfer the mixture to a glass serving bowl in step 3. To control evaporation, use a saucepan with a diameter no greater than 9 inches, and be sure to follow the timings in the recipe. Do not use unsweetened cranberry juice here.

Instructions

  1.  Bring cranberry juice, cranberries, sugar, and salt to boil in large saucepan over medium-high heat, stirring to dissolve sugar. Cook, lowering heat slightly if mixture threatens to boil over, for 10 minutes. Mash cranberries with potato masher. Continue to cook, stirring frequently, until mixture is slightly thickened, 15 minutes longer. (Mixture will be very foamy, but foam will subside as mixture cooks.)
  2.  Carefully strain mixture through fine-mesh strainer set over 4-cup liquid measuring cup. Stir and press solids with back of small spoon or ladle until about ¼ cup skins, seeds, and pulp remains in strainer. You should have about 2¾ cups strained mixture (it's fine if you have a little less; if you have more than 2¾ cups, return strained mixture to saucepan and cook over medium-high heat until reduced to 2¾ cups). Use clean spoon to scrape mixture from bottom of strainer into liquid measuring cup. Discard solids. Add vanilla and stir until mixture is smooth.
  3.  Transfer mixture to 3-cup mold or clean 15-ounce can (put leftover mixture in small mold or bowl). Let cool completely, at least 1 hour. Cover tightly and refrigerate until firm, at least 4 hours or up to 4 days. To unmold, use your fingers to gently pull sauce away from all edges of mold to loosen. Holding plate firmly over mold, invert mold and shake sharply until sauce releases. Remove mold and serve.

Jellied Cranberry Sauce

Save

Time

50 minutes, plus 5 hours chilling

Yield

Serves 12 (Makes about 2¾ cups)

Ingredients

4 cups sweetened cranberry juice
12 ounces (3 cups) fresh or frozen cranberries
1⅓ cups (9⅓ ounces) sugar
¼ teaspoon table salt
¼ teaspoon vanilla extract

Test Kitchen Techniques

Ingredients

4 cups sweetened cranberry juice
12 ounces (3 cups) fresh or frozen cranberries
1⅓ cups (9⅓ ounces) sugar
¼ teaspoon table salt
¼ teaspoon vanilla extract

Test Kitchen Techniques

Ingredients

4 cups sweetened cranberry juice
12 ounces (3 cups) fresh or frozen cranberries
1⅓ cups (9⅓ ounces) sugar
¼ teaspoon table salt
¼ teaspoon vanilla extract

Test Kitchen Techniques

Why This Recipe Works

For homemade jellied cranberry sauce with a fresh, fruity taste and an alluring semitranslucent quality, we simmered fresh cranberries with cranberry juice, a modest amount of sugar, and salt. A touch of vanilla stirred in after cooking brought everything to life. Cranberries are both rich in pectin and naturally acidic, which helped them form a gel. Cooking the mixture at a full boil for 25 minutes helped extract more of the berries’ pectin, resulting in a more stable gel and the firm, sliceable consistency that came with it.

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Before You Begin

If you don't wish to unmold the sauce, transfer the mixture to a glass serving bowl in step 3. To control evaporation, use a saucepan with a diameter no greater than 9 inches, and be sure to follow the timings in the recipe. Do not use unsweetened cranberry juice here.

Instructions

  1.  Bring cranberry juice, cranberries, sugar, and salt to boil in large saucepan over medium-high heat, stirring to dissolve sugar. Cook, lowering heat slightly if mixture threatens to boil over, for 10 minutes. Mash cranberries with potato masher. Continue to cook, stirring frequently, until mixture is slightly thickened, 15 minutes longer. (Mixture will be very foamy, but foam will subside as mixture cooks.)
  2.  Carefully strain mixture through fine-mesh strainer set over 4-cup liquid measuring cup. Stir and press solids with back of small spoon or ladle until about ¼ cup skins, seeds, and pulp remains in strainer. You should have about 2¾ cups strained mixture (it's fine if you have a little less; if you have more than 2¾ cups, return strained mixture to saucepan and cook over medium-high heat until reduced to 2¾ cups). Use clean spoon to scrape mixture from bottom of strainer into liquid measuring cup. Discard solids. Add vanilla and stir until mixture is smooth.
  3.  Transfer mixture to 3-cup mold or clean 15-ounce can (put leftover mixture in small mold or bowl). Let cool completely, at least 1 hour. Cover tightly and refrigerate until firm, at least 4 hours or up to 4 days. To unmold, use your fingers to gently pull sauce away from all edges of mold to loosen. Holding plate firmly over mold, invert mold and shake sharply until sauce releases. Remove mold and serve.

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