America's Test Kitchen LogoCook's Country LogoCook's Illustrated Logo

Reviews You Can Trust.
See Why.

The Best Cranberry Sauce

This traditional Thanksgiving condiment is often an afterthought. What factors can turn it into a Turkey Day star?

Headshot of Chase Brightwell
By Chase Brightwell

Published on May 14, 2020

What You Need To Know

  • Taste 10 sauces (3 jellied, 7 whole berry), priced from about $2.00 to roughly $8.00 per container (about $0.10 to around $0.70 per ounce), purchased in Boston-area stores and online
  • Taste plain
  • Taste with roast turkey breast
  • Randomize samples in both tastings and taste blind to eliminate bias
  • Compare sauce textures
  • Compare amounts of sugar based on standard 70-gram (roughly ¼-cup) serving size

Preparing and executing a memorable Thanksgiving meal is hard work, and buying a quality canned or jarred cranberry sauce is an easy way to streamline things. Prepared cranberry sauces come in two different forms. “Jellied” sauces are smooth and gelatinous, with varying levels of firmness and no cranberry solids. “Whole-berry” sauces or “relishes” can vary in texture, but all include cranberry pieces or whole cranberries. (For this testing, we referred to these simply as “whole-berry” sauces.) We sought a winner in each category that could complement Thanksgiving mainstays and add zing to your Turkey Day plate. We purchased 10 sauces (three jellied, seven whole berry), priced from about $2.00 to roughly $8.00 per container (about $0.10 to roughly $0.70 per ounce), online and from supermarkets and specialty stores. Panelists sampled the sauces plain and with roast turkey breast to evaluate flavor, texture, and sweetness.

How Is Cranberry Sauce Made?

No matter what the end product looks or tastes like, all cranberry sauces start in the same place: the humble cranberry bog. Cranberries grow on small shrubs with vine-like stems in beds of wet, boggy soil mixed with sand and peat, which are flooded come harvest season. Harvesters use water reels, devices that agitate the flooded bogs, to dislodge the berries from their stems. Ripe cranberries contain air pockets, causing them to float in the bogs. Booms skim the surface and corral the berries, which are then sent to manufacturers for processing.

Twenty-one editors and test cooks tasted 11 samples of 10 sauces (a control sample was included) of varying textures and sweetness levels. They tasted them both plain (above) and with roasted turkey.

What happens next depends on the style of cranberry sauce. For a basic jellied sauce, manufacturers grind the berries into a puree and pass the mixture through a filtration screen to remove the solids. Cranberries are naturally quite tart and have a low sugar content, so manufacturers sweeten the puree with corn syrup or cane sugar. The sauce is then poured into cans and heated, causing the cranberries’ pectin to form a jelly that takes the shape of the can (ridges and all). Whole-berry sauces, on the other hand, are either not sieved or have cranberry solids added back into the puree.

In either case, sauces with higher percentages of pectin by volume set more rigidly, whereas sauces that are diluted with extra water, juice, or other ingredients have less pectin and are often looser. Added sugars can also affect the setting process: The sugar molecules will bind with water and allow the pectin to form a firmer gel. Many sauces contain other ingredients, such as tapioca starch or additional pectin for thickening and spices, citrus juices, or citric acid for flavor and tartness.

Solid jellies, spiny skins, and thin syrups were just some of the textures we encountered in our diverse lineup. Sauce names were no guarantee of texture; some jellies barely held together, and some so-called whole-berry sauces had only a few cranberries floating in our bowls.

Texture Matters

The texture of the sauces—determined by the liquid content, thickness, and amount of cranberry solids—varied markedly within each sauce category. We were surprised to discover that many of the sauces’ names did not accurately describe their textures. Some jellied sauces didn’t hold their containers’ shapes at all and were much looser than the firm, jiggly cylinders of jelly we were anticipating. Some whole-berry sauces were firmly gelatinous with only a few cranberry pieces or skins present. Another supposed whole-berry sauce was a thin, translucent syrup with only a few cranberry pieces floating in the can.

All in all, sauces were thick and thin, coarse and smooth, and everything in between—and rankings all came down to personal preference. Some tasters preferred one style to another across the board, while others were drawn to both styles. Among the jellied sauces, tasters enjoyed those that offered “smooth,” “melt-in-your-mouth” textures. Some jellied sauces, however, were “grainy” and “mealy” and scored lower in our ranking. For whole-berry sauces, tasters preferred choices that offered consistently sized, discernible cranberry chunks with no competing textures or tangly skins. Our favorites had “jammy” textures interlaced with the “pop of whole berries.” Other whole-berry sauces were less successful; their “inconsistent,” “chunky mishmash” of textures “distracted” from the turkey.

Just Cranberries, Please

Flavor preferences among our tasters were clear and consistent across both styles: the less sweet and the fewer added ingredients, the better. Our top three finishers contained only cranberries, sugar or corn syrup, and water, and they were among the tartest in our lineup. Tasters praised their “classic” and “straightforward” flavors, noting that their “bright,” “tart,” and “balanced” notes were “great foil[s] for salty, savory, fatty holiday foods” and complemented turkey well.

In contrast, sauces with added fruit juices, warm spices, and nuts generally performed poorly. Tasters “lost the cranberry” flavor in those “aggressively spiced” mixtures and noted that a few tasted the way “air fresheners,” scented “candles,” or “potpourri” smell. Tasters also didn’t like sauces that were too sweet. Instead of tasting like cranberry, they reminded us of “cough syrup,” “liquid candy,” or simply “sickly-sweet goo.” Interestingly, our perceptions of sweetness didn’t always match up with the amount of added sugar. Many tasters perceived the sauce with the most sugar per serving to be among the tartest in our lineup, likely due to the natural tartness of the many intact cranberries it contained.

  • Bright, fresh cranberry taste that balances sweetness and tartness and doesn’t contain competing flavors
  • Jellied sauces: consistent, smooth texture
  • Whole-berry sauces: pleasant, jammy texture with discernible berries
  • Simple ingredient list (cranberries, corn syrup or sugar, and water)

The Best Cranberry Sauces: Ocean Spray Jellied Cranberry Sauce And New England Cranberry Colonial Cranberry Sauce

In the end, we picked a favorite in each style. Ocean Spray’s traditional jellied sauce earned our top spot among the jellies. We loved its “classic,” “smooth” texture and “fresh” flavor. One taster summed it up by saying that it tasted “just like Thanksgiving.” For those interested in a more coarsely textured sauce, we recommend our whole-berry winner, New England Cranberry Colonial Cranberry Sauce. It had a “good mixture of sweet and sour,” and tasters noted that the whole berries and jam-like sauce “don’t compete with each other; they blend together nicely.” Either of these sauces would add depth and variation to your Thanksgiving menu, so choose the texture that seems right for you and your guests. Cranberry sauce doesn’t always get the attention it deserves, but your choice could just make or break Turkey Day.

Everything We Tested

Recommended

Best Jellied SauceOcean Spray Jellied Cranberry Sauce

Our winning jellied sauce had a “tangy,” “tart” flavor that tasted “so classic.” Tasters noted that it was “smooth” and “melt-in-your-mouth.” It was “a great foil for salty, savory, fatty holiday foods.”

Style: Jellied

Sugar: 25 g

Ingredients: Cranberries, high fructose corn syrup, corn syrup, water

Price at Time of Testing: $2.29 for 14-oz can ($0.16 per oz)

Our winning jellied sauce had a “tangy,” “tart” flavor that tasted “so classic.” Tasters noted that it was “smooth” and “melt-in-your-mouth.” It was “a great foil for salty, savory, fatty holiday foods.”

Style: Jellied

Sugar: 25 g

Ingredients: Cranberries, high fructose corn syrup, corn syrup, water

Price at Time of Testing: $2.29 for 14-oz can ($0.16 per oz)

Best Whole-Berry SauceNew England Cranberry Colonial Cranberry Sauce

Our favorite whole-berry sauce offered a jammy texture laden with large cranberries. Though it contained the most sugar in our lineup, tasters noted that its whole cranberries added “complex,” “balanced,” slightly “bitter” flavors and liked its “great texture and cranberry tang.” It both held its own and complemented the turkey: “Just what I want to cut through a fatty holiday meal,” said one taster.

Style: Whole berry

Sugar: 51 g

Ingredients: Cranberries, sugar, water

Price at Time of Testing: $7.99 for 12-oz jar ($0.67 per oz)

Our favorite whole-berry sauce offered a jammy texture laden with large cranberries. Though it contained the most sugar in our lineup, tasters noted that its whole cranberries added “complex,” “balanced,” slightly “bitter” flavors and liked its “great texture and cranberry tang.” It both held its own and complemented the turkey: “Just what I want to cut through a fatty holiday meal,” said one taster.

Style: Whole berry

Sugar: 51 g

Ingredients: Cranberries, sugar, water

Price at Time of Testing: $7.99 for 12-oz jar ($0.67 per oz)

Ocean Spray Whole Berry Cranberry Sauce

This sauce finished only slightly behind our whole-berry winner, and tasters praised the “pop of whole berries” and “variation in texture” between the berries and the smooth sauce. We thought it had a “homemade feel” and “balanced bitterness.” One taster said that it tasted “like my childhood, just elevated.”

Style: Whole berry

Sugar: 22 g

Ingredients: Cranberries, high fructose corn syrup, corn syrup, water

Price at Time of Testing: $2.29 for 14-oz can ($0.16 per oz)

This sauce finished only slightly behind our whole-berry winner, and tasters praised the “pop of whole berries” and “variation in texture” between the berries and the smooth sauce. We thought it had a “homemade feel” and “balanced bitterness.” One taster said that it tasted “like my childhood, just elevated.”

Style: Whole berry

Sugar: 22 g

Ingredients: Cranberries, high fructose corn syrup, corn syrup, water

Price at Time of Testing: $2.29 for 14-oz can ($0.16 per oz)

Recommended with Reservations

Gefen Whole Berry Cranberry Sauce

Some tasters found this sauce’s flavor “nice and tangy,” and others found it “passable but forgettable,” noting that it was “blandly sweet but saved a little by the slightly bitter finish.” Texture-wise, some tasters were put off by the sheer number of furled, “spiky”-looking cranberry skins, which made the sauce “stringy” and “tough.”

Style: Whole berry

Sugar: 24 g

Ingredients: Cranberry, cane sugar, water

Price at Time of Testing: $2.99 for 16-oz can ($0.19 per oz)

Some tasters found this sauce’s flavor “nice and tangy,” and others found it “passable but forgettable,” noting that it was “blandly sweet but saved a little by the slightly bitter finish.” Texture-wise, some tasters were put off by the sheer number of furled, “spiky”-looking cranberry skins, which made the sauce “stringy” and “tough.”

Style: Whole berry

Sugar: 24 g

Ingredients: Cranberry, cane sugar, water

Price at Time of Testing: $2.99 for 16-oz can ($0.19 per oz)

Woodstock Organic Jellied Cranberry Sauce

While some tasters praised this sauce, saying it tasted “like home” and that they “could eat it plain,” in general it failed to stand out. Most thought it was “bland and lacked depth” and that the flavor was “too one-note.”

Style: Jellied

Sugar: 24 g

Ingredients: Organic cranberries, organic sugar, filtered water, organic lemon juice concentrate

Price at Time of Testing: $2.29 for 14-oz can ($0.16 per oz)

While some tasters praised this sauce, saying it tasted “like home” and that they “could eat it plain,” in general it failed to stand out. Most thought it was “bland and lacked depth” and that the flavor was “too one-note.”

Style: Jellied

Sugar: 24 g

Ingredients: Organic cranberries, organic sugar, filtered water, organic lemon juice concentrate

Price at Time of Testing: $2.29 for 14-oz can ($0.16 per oz)

Stonewall Kitchen New England Cranberry Relish

Many tasters found this sauce “aggressively spiced but also bright-tasting.” However, most found this sauce’s citrus and spice notes “overpowering” and said that the added ingredients muddled the cranberry flavor: “I’ve lost all the cranberry and all I can taste is warm spice and orange,” said one taster.

Style: Whole berry

Sugar: 14 g

Ingredients: Cranberries, pure cane sugar, water, orange juice, orange peel, tapioca starch, spices, citric acid

Price at Time of Testing: $6.49 for 12-oz jar ($0.54 per oz)

Many tasters found this sauce “aggressively spiced but also bright-tasting.” However, most found this sauce’s citrus and spice notes “overpowering” and said that the added ingredients muddled the cranberry flavor: “I’ve lost all the cranberry and all I can taste is warm spice and orange,” said one taster.

Style: Whole berry

Sugar: 14 g

Ingredients: Cranberries, pure cane sugar, water, orange juice, orange peel, tapioca starch, spices, citric acid

Price at Time of Testing: $6.49 for 12-oz jar ($0.54 per oz)

Not Recommended

Williams Sonoma Jellied Cranberry

Don’t be fooled by this product’s “jellied” claim: It barely held its shape and disintegrated into a mealy mixture when we scooped it out of the jar. Tasters objected to its additional ingredients, saying that it was “very heavily spiced” and tasted “like a bunch of spices fell into the mix by accident.”

Style: Jellied

Sugar: 22 g

Ingredients: Pureed cranberries, sugar, water, applesauce (apples, water, ascorbic acid), pectin (sucrose, pectin, calcium citrate), orange peel, sea salt, lemon juice concentrate, cinnamon, clove, citric acid, black pepper

Price at Time of Testing: $6.99 for 13-oz jar ($0.54 per ounce)

Don’t be fooled by this product’s “jellied” claim: It barely held its shape and disintegrated into a mealy mixture when we scooped it out of the jar. Tasters objected to its additional ingredients, saying that it was “very heavily spiced” and tasted “like a bunch of spices fell into the mix by accident.”

Style: Jellied

Sugar: 22 g

Ingredients: Pureed cranberries, sugar, water, applesauce (apples, water, ascorbic acid), pectin (sucrose, pectin, calcium citrate), orange peel, sea salt, lemon juice concentrate, cinnamon, clove, citric acid, black pepper

Price at Time of Testing: $6.99 for 13-oz jar ($0.54 per ounce)

Harry & David Country Cranberry Relish

This sauce contains more added sugar by volume than cranberries themselves—and it shows. Tasters objected to the “candy-sweet,” “cloying” flavor mixed with orange and cinnamon, comparing it to a “holiday candle scent” or “cough syrup.” With inconsistently sized cranberry chunks and walnut pieces, its texture was “all over the place.”

Style: Whole berry

Sugar: 37 g

Ingredients: Sugar, cranberries, water, orange peel (with orange juice, water, citric acid), corn syrup, walnuts, port wine (with sulfites), pectin, cinnamon, citric acid

Price at Time of Testing: $6.99 for 10-oz jar ($0.70 per oz)

This sauce contains more added sugar by volume than cranberries themselves—and it shows. Tasters objected to the “candy-sweet,” “cloying” flavor mixed with orange and cinnamon, comparing it to a “holiday candle scent” or “cough syrup.” With inconsistently sized cranberry chunks and walnut pieces, its texture was “all over the place.”

Style: Whole berry

Sugar: 37 g

Ingredients: Sugar, cranberries, water, orange peel (with orange juice, water, citric acid), corn syrup, walnuts, port wine (with sulfites), pectin, cinnamon, citric acid

Price at Time of Testing: $6.99 for 10-oz jar ($0.70 per oz)

Woodstock Organic Whole Cranberry Sauce

We were not impressed with this sauce’s very thin, syrupy consistency and put off that it contained only a few waterlogged cranberries. One taster called it “cranberry-flavored water” that was “wholly forgettable.” Others deemed it “unpleasant,” “like pouring syrup on turkey.”

Style: Whole berry

Sugar: 22 g

Ingredients: Organic cranberries, organic sugar, filtered water, organic lemon juice concentrate

Price at Time of Testing: $4.04 for 14-oz can ($0.29 per oz)

We were not impressed with this sauce’s very thin, syrupy consistency and put off that it contained only a few waterlogged cranberries. One taster called it “cranberry-flavored water” that was “wholly forgettable.” Others deemed it “unpleasant,” “like pouring syrup on turkey.”

Style: Whole berry

Sugar: 22 g

Ingredients: Organic cranberries, organic sugar, filtered water, organic lemon juice concentrate

Price at Time of Testing: $4.04 for 14-oz can ($0.29 per oz)

Discontinued

Williams Sonoma Cranberry Relish

Fans praised this sauce’s “well-rounded” flavor, noting that it tasted “like fall” due to the warm spices and citrus and even going so far as to call it “the cranberry sauce I have been searching for.” Critics were “distracted” by the additions, saying that “it might have too much going on.”

Style: Whole berry

Sugar: 20 g

Ingredients: Water, sugar, cranberries, sweetened dried cranberries (cranberries, sugar, sunflower oil), dried apples, orange peel, cranberry juice concentrate, lemon juice concentrate, cinnamon, cloves

Price at Time of Testing: DISCONTINUED

Fans praised this sauce’s “well-rounded” flavor, noting that it tasted “like fall” due to the warm spices and citrus and even going so far as to call it “the cranberry sauce I have been searching for.” Critics were “distracted” by the additions, saying that “it might have too much going on.”

Style: Whole berry

Sugar: 20 g

Ingredients: Water, sugar, cranberries, sweetened dried cranberries (cranberries, sugar, sunflower oil), dried apples, orange peel, cranberry juice concentrate, lemon juice concentrate, cinnamon, cloves

Price at Time of Testing: DISCONTINUED

Reviews You Can Trust

The mission of America’s Test Kitchen Reviews is to find the best equipment and ingredients for the home cook through rigorous, hands-on testing. Have a question or suggestion? Send us an email at atkreviews@americastestkitchen.com. We appreciate your feedback!

Appears In

This item is featured in the following. Click the links to dig in!

*All products reviewed by America’s Test Kitchen are independently chosen, researched, and reviewed by our editors. We buy products for testing at retail locations and do not accept unsolicited samples for testing. We list suggested sources for recommended products as a convenience to our readers but do not endorse specific retailers. When you choose to purchase our editorial recommendations from the links we provide, we may earn an affiliate commission. Prices are subject to change.

Reviews You Can Trust.
See Why.

This is a members' feature.
America's Test Kitchen LogoCook's Country LogoCook's Illustrated Logo