10 Recipes for Cranberry Lovers Only

Fresh cranberries bring a tart, colorful dimension to these sweet and savory recipes.

Gingersnap Pavlova with Cranberries, and in the Background, Forks on the Counter and on a Stack of Plates, a Bowl of More Sauce, and a Bowl of Cranberries

Simply Recipes / Mark Beahm

You can get dried cranberries all year long, but there are only a few precious months when bags of fresh cranberries appear in produce aisles. I can take or leave dried cranberries, but I can't get enough of the fresh ones. There's something magical in the way they pop and transform into a glossy, jammy, garnet-red mass when you boil them with sugar.

And then there's the flavor. Cranberries have a bite, a tartness with a pinch of a tannic finish. They excel in salads, relishes, drinks, and sauces.

Luckily they're super easy to freeze. Just throw the whole bag in the freezer as-is: a great reason to stock up on fresh cranberries when they're around so you can extend their season for months to come.

  • Cranberry Orange Scones

    A stack of three cranberry scones on a plate

    Simply Recipes / Sally Vargas

    Break away from dried cranberries in scones for something enticingly tart and fruity. Orange zest complements the cranberries' flavor, and the scones themselves are tender, with an appealing exterior crust.

  • Cranberry Upside-Down Cake

    Cranberry Upside Down Cake
    Elise Bauer

    This cake, a longtime reader favorite, is a refreshing change from pumpkin-based Thanksgiving desserts, but it's lovely all fall and winter long. A brown sugar and butter topping goes in the bottom of the pan and mingles in the oven with cranberries and their juices to form that striking surface.

  • Cranberry Glazed Meatballs

    Cranberry Glazed Meatballs

    You know those crockpot appetizer meatballs that are cooked in grape jelly and chili sauce? This is a fancied-up version with a glaze of cooked fresh cranberries lending a sweet and sour vibe to moist turkey meatballs.

  • Cranberry Sorbet

    A bowl with three scoops of cranberry sorbet and a spoon
    Elise Bauer

    Serve this striking sorbet at the end of a heavy meal for a memorable finale.

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  • Cranberry Orange Nut Bread

    Cranberry Nut Bread
    Elise Bauer

    I'm not quite a fruitcake person, but I adore this fruitcake-adjacent bread. It's got orange zest, orange juice, chopped nuts, and fresh cranberries that make pretty pockets in the bread. When I make this, I double the cranberries to make it extra fruitcake-like.

  • Cranberry Applesauce

    A bowl of Cranberry Applesauce
    Elise Bauer

    Throw a handful of fresh cranberries in a pot of simmering applesauce and here's what you get. Isn't it pretty? For all the jokes about pork chops and applesauce, this makes an excellent accompaniment to a big, juicy, simply prepared pork chop.

  • Brandied Cranberries

    A small bowl of brandied cranberries
    Elise Bauer

    Aren't these gorgeous? Brandied cranberries are like a cranberry sauce that you cook long enough to candy the cranberries. Try them as a topping for ham, or on a cheese board.

  • Cranberry Relish

    A bowl of cranberry relish
    Elise Bauer

    Unlike cranberry sauce, which is cooked, cranberry relish tends to be made from raw cranberries that are ground or processed with aromatics and a little sugar. It keeps for about two weeks and only gets better as it sits, so if you're planning for Thanksgiving this one's worth making ahead.

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  • Leftover Turkey Tacos With Cranberry Salsa

    Turkey Tacos with Cranberry Salsa
    Elise Bauer

    Leftover turkey sandwiches are well and good, but here's a quick lunch or dinner idea to put a new spin on the leftover turkey scene. Since turkey leftovers are often bland, the lively cranberry salsa lends a big boost.

  • Cranberry Sauce

    A Thanksgiving table set with a bowl of cranberry sauce next to a platter of turkey and other sides.

    Simply Recipes / Annika Panikker

    Cranberry sauce is about the easiest thing you can make for Thanksgiving. A handful of ingredients and a quick simmer on the stove result in a sauce so alluring you can eat it straight from a spoon (well, if you're me). The sauce set up as it cools, so make it ahead of the big meal.