Mama's Cranberry Salad Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Make Ahead

by: Kayb

November6,2010

4.5

22 Ratings

  • Prep time 8 hours
  • Cook time 15 minutes
  • Serves 12, unless one of them's me; in that case, 6

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Author Notes

I usually eat this with the main portion of my Thanksgiving meal, but as I double the recipe and make it from the time ripe cranberries appear in the stores until they no longer do, it serves very well for dessert too. And for breakfast and for a late-night snack, for that matter. This has been on every holiday table I can remember, and its origins are lost in time—I'm not sure if it was a grandmother's recipe, or if Mama came up with it—but I can no more imagine Thanksgiving or Christmas without it than I can the one without turkey, and the other without ham!

Helpful tools for this recipe:
- Cuisinart Elemental Food Processor
-
- Feast Serving Bowl by Yotam Ottolenghi

Kayb

Test Kitchen Notes

In 2017 and 2018, our traffic numbers show us that this cranberry salad was the most visited recipe page in the month of November.

Featured in: Our Most Popular Thanksgiving Recipe for 2 Years Running. —Eric Kim

  • Test Kitchen-Approved

What You'll Need

Watch This Recipe

Mama's CranberrySalad

Ingredients
  • 1 (12-ounce) bag fresh cranberries
  • 1 large Granny Smith or other tart green apple
  • 1 large orange
  • 1 large Honey Crisp or other red apple
  • 1 cupchopped pecans or walnuts
  • 1 large (6-ounce) box raspberry jello
  • 2 cupswater
  • 1 cupsugar
Directions
  1. Zest the orange, peel, and liquefy in the food processor.
  2. Chop all the other fruit in the food processor, and add to large bowl with orange and zest. Add nuts.
  3. Bring water and sugar to a boil until sugar dissolves completely. Remove from heat, let cool just a bit, and whisk in jello. Don't be hating on the jello here; it's not really noticeable, but helps things hold together. You could use unflavored gelatin and additional sugar if you wish.
  4. Pour jello over fruit, give a good stir, and refrigerate overnight.

Tags:

  • Salad
  • Eastern European
  • Cranberry
  • Make Ahead
  • Serves a Crowd
  • Christmas
  • Winter
  • Thanksgiving
  • Fall
  • Vegetarian
  • Dessert
Contest Entries
  • Your Best Non-Pie Thanksgiving Dessert

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • Cheryl Bruner

  • Miss_Karen

  • monkeymom

  • dymnyno

  • Kayb

I'm a business professional who learned to cook early on, and have expanded my tastes and my skills as I've traveled and been exposed to new cuisines and new dishes. I love fresh vegetables, any kind of protein on the grill, and breakfasts that involve fried eggs with runny yolks. My recipes tend toward the simple and the Southern, with bits of Asia or the Mediterranean or Mexico thrown in here and there. And a peanut butter and jelly sandwich on a float in the lake, as pictured, is a pretty fine lunch!

Popular on Food52

25 Reviews

Christy December 9, 2023

I made this cranberry salad for the first time and took it to, two different Christmas parties and it was the hit of the party both times. I will definitely -definitely be making it again. Absolutely love it

JLTen November 24, 2023

I wanted to try something new this Thanksgiving that sounded homey, easy, and vintage. I landed on this and am so glad I did, I loved it. I was asked for the recipe, so I sent them the link to keep the recipe and story going! The only thing I would change, if anything, is the amount of added sugar. I am someone who usually reduces the amount of sugar in baked goods by 1/4 - 1/3 though. I will be making this every Thanksgiving and Christmas from now on. Thank you for sharing this recipie!

Jerre November 23, 2022

My mother's recipe for the cranberry salad was identical to this one. I was trying to make this for Thanksgiving this year and I had forgotten to the amounts needed for each thing. I couldn't believe that it was here! Thank you so much.

Sharona November 20, 2022

I would like to make this recipe since I love cranberry salad and thanksgiving is just around the corner. My son is diabetic and tries to watch carbs. I need nutrition information for this recipe.

l W. January 2, 2021

Make this for every Thanksgiving and Christmas, using the following changes: Use 3 oranges, 3 apples, and 1 can pineapple (either crushed or tidbits). Use the juice from the pineapple to make the water used to cool down the jello (I follow the directions on the jello box for water used to cook and cool the jello). If you can find it, cranberry jello is my first choice.

HOLLY January 1, 2020

I just noticed your note about how many portions it serves and it made me laugh. I have made this twice since having it at Thanksgiving and have probably eaten 90% of it. I'm a huge cranberry fan and a secret jello fan, and I LOVE it. Thanks for sharing.

Geema December 21, 2019

I made this at Thanksgiving and I must say it was a hit! Many have asked for the recipe and I thought I had lost it. It is now pinned to my favorites. I, too, was hesitant about not cooking the cranberries but I thought I would (for once) follow the recipe exactly. I am not a fan of jello either like some have said, but it makes this perfect. I have tried MANY cranberry salad recipes over the years and this one got the most compliments.

Kayb December 21, 2019

That makes me smile. I think it would make Mama smile, too. Merry Christmas to all you and yours!

Lala November 27, 2019

https://food52.com/recipes/7554-mama-s-cranberry-salad

It's not about not wanting to use Jello because of any other reason than the fact that gelatin is made entirely from animal bones, skin and hooves. Do you even know this? It's really gross. This is why I am "hating on it."

Eric K. November 27, 2019

I get it. I wonder if there's a way to replace it with agar agar or some plant-based alternative.

Anyone try this?

Shutsu12 January 25, 2020

Not made from hooves, but yeah it’s still a little gross

Cheryl B. November 24, 2019

Question: How far in advance can you make this and keep in the fridge, and does it freeze well?

Margery A. March 30, 2020

i just pulled some from the freezer that I made last November. It was as good or better than the original. This year I will triple the recipe, so i will have more all year long!

Roxanne H. November 23, 2019

Question-so you don’t cook the cranberries? I made one last year but I had to cook them.

Kayb November 24, 2019

No. No need to cook them.

Miss_Karen November 21, 2019

I make something similar that I use in one of my cookie recipes. I zest the orange.( colored part only) then I cut the oranges into a few pieces. Remove the pith (bitter white part) like you are peeling it. Then grind the oranges & cranberries into small pieces. Stir in the other stuff.

liz S. November 21, 2019

Fy family's tradition has fresh cranberries cooked with a small amount of sugar, canned crushed pineapple & juice, chopped celery and chopped walnuts, and is made with plain gelatin, set up in a wet mold. Beautiful and delicious, every year.

Toni November 26, 2019

Do you use 1 pack of cranberry and 1 small or lg jello

monkeymom November 6, 2010

I love this! Our version has mayonnaise, I know sounds gross, and canned cranberries. I like the idea of using fresh instead. I also MUST have this every Thanksgiving.

Eric K. November 27, 2019

Interesting.

Makes sense; in line w/ all those fruit-mayo salads. Ambrosia, etc.

dymnyno November 6, 2010

My mother made a very similar recipe...I am glad that you posted yours because I have long lost hers....I remember how delicious it is!

Kayb November 6, 2010

My girls and I will go to the refrigerator and get a bowl of this like you'd go get ice cream....I love it!

Donna F. November 23, 2019

Aunt Doris made this every year. My favorite

Paul November 24, 2019

Mom made this on the holidays, included grapes. we also froze the cranberries getting a better grind in either the grinder or later the food processor.

Eric K. November 27, 2019

Grapes sound yummy.

Mama's Cranberry Salad Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

Why is my cranberry salad runny? ›

Mistake #2: Your Cranberry Sauce Is Too Runny

You may have added too much liquid to the cranberries. In addition to pectin, cranberries contain water, which means you only need to add a splash of liquid to get the cooking going. Add too much and you'll be stirring at the stove much longer than expected.

What to do with cranberries after making juice? ›

Fresh cranberry juice is often blended with other delicious fruits, and the leftover pulp is just as wonderful. Put that pulp to use with this festive Cranberry Chutney! Delicious spread on crostini with brie cheese or served alongside turkey, pork or chicken.

How to serve canned cranberry sauce? ›

How to Serve Cranberry Sauce. Remove the cranberry cylinder from the can and slice it into rounds. Arrange the rounds on a platter. Top with citrus salad and serve.

How do you make salad less watery? ›

Although ingredients like watermelon, lettuce, and tomatoes are some of the best foods for hydration, this also means that they can add tons of moisture to your prepped salads. However, by removing the seeds of veggies like cucumbers and tomatoes, you can help reduce excess water that can lead to soggy salads.

How do I get my cranberry sauce to thicken? ›

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.

What can I mix cranberry juice with to make it taste better? ›

Some syrups that would be great include orange, pineapple, coconut and strawberry. These syrups will give you more flavors while also sweetening it up to make it a bit more drinkable. This is probably one of the most common ways to make cranberry juice taste better.

What should you not drink cranberry juice with? ›

Aspirin: Like aspirin, cranberries contain salicylic acid. If you take aspirin regularly, as a blood-thinner, for example, or if you are allergic to aspirin, you should not take cranberry supplements or drink a lot of juice. Other medications: Cranberry may interact with medications that are broken down by the liver.

What takes out cranberry juice? ›

Combine rubbing alcohol and liquid detergent in a plastic or glass bowl (do not use metal), and mix gently. If you are cleaning the stain from upholstery, add white vinegar to the mixture. Test a small area of the garment or upholstery to ensure that the mixture will not cause the fabric to bleed.

How to jazz up cranberry sauce from a can? ›

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 cranberry sauce cans open on the bottom? ›

But why? Ocean Spray says this is to get the cranberry sauce out in one intact piece. “The rounded part of the can that looks like the bottom has an air bubble in it,” Ocean Spray's representative explains. The bubble is there so you can “break the seal the sauce makes with the can.”

Can you just eat canned cranberry sauce? ›

It's perfectly fine to serve up cranberry sauce — whole berry or jelled — straight out of the can. But in my experience, heating the canned sauce up takes its flavor to the next level. Plus, it becomes a little more aesthetically pleasing.

Will my cranberry sauce thicken in the fridge? ›

Cranberry sauce will thicken as it cools. To store, let cool completely, then transfer to a resealable container and refrigerate for up to 1 week or freeze for up to 3 months.

Why is my fruit salad watery? ›

The first thing you need to remember when it comes to making fruit salad is that you need to drain the fruit co*cktail. Draining the fruit co*cktail is important because unless it's drained of as much liquid or syrup as possible, your fruit salad may and will be thin and watery.

What if I add too much water to cranberry sauce? ›

What to do if the cranberry sauce is too thin or loose. If you inadvertently added too much water, simply bring the cranberry sauce back to the stove top and bring it to a low boil, cooking it down just a bit to help thicken it up.

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