
Cranberry sauce earns its place on the table by doing what few condiments can—cutting through rich meats and buttery sides with bright, tart fruit and a clean finish. When you make it at home, you get full control over sweetness, texture, and spice. You also get a batch that actually tastes like cranberries instead of a sugary stand-in. If you’re cooking for a smaller household or just want a few jars tucked away for the holidays, a careful, small-batch canning method delivers that fresh flavor long after the berries disappear from the produce aisle.
This version relies on what cranberries already do well. They’re naturally high in pectin and acid, so the sauce sets on its own without added pectin and it’s safe for water-bath canning when processed correctly. Orange zest and juice round out the edges, a small dose of bottled lemon juice keeps acidity reliable from jar to jar, and a touch of warm spice is optional. The recipe scales cleanly, but keeping it small helps the fruit cook evenly and preserves a brighter color and flavor.
If you’ve never canned before, this is a friendly place to start. You’ll bring the sauce to a steady simmer, ladle it into hot jars, and process it in a water bath for a short time. There’s no advanced technique here—just good habits: hot jars, correct headspace, careful wiping of rims, and a full processing time adjusted for your altitude. Once the jars cool and seal, you have shelf-stable sauce that lasts through the year in a cool, dark cabinet.
Cranberry sauce isn’t only a holiday side. A spoonful wakes up turkey sandwiches, roast chicken, and pork. It’s also great with oatmeal, yogurt, and soft cheeses. Because this is a whole-berry style, you can mash it smooth after opening or leave it chunky. The texture is yours to decide in the pot: less time for looser sauce, more time for thicker. You can also decide how bright or mellow you want the citrus, and whether to keep the spice subtle or skip it entirely.
The goal here is simple: a reliable, small batch with clear steps and a clean ingredient list. You’ll see the exact equipment needed, realistic times, a measured ingredient table in both U.S. and metric, and a process that leads from fresh berries to sealed jars without detours. Follow the headspace, timing, and cooling guidance, label the jars with the date, and store them properly. When you finally crack one open, the sauce should taste like you cooked it yesterday.
What makes this a safe canning recipe?
Cranberries are a high-acid fruit with abundant natural pectin. High acidity supports safe water-bath canning when you maintain proper processing times. This recipe also includes bottled lemon juice to standardize acidity from batch to batch and to keep the flavor bright. Sugar does more than sweeten—it binds water, supports gel, and helps preserve color. Processing in a boiling water bath for the full time (plus altitude adjustment) completes the preservation.
Texture, sweetness, and flavor control
- Set/gel: Cranberries provide their own pectin. You don’t need commercial pectin. Simmer until some berries burst and the sauce sheets lightly from a spoon. A thermometer reading near 220°F can signal a firm set, but you don’t need to chase a jam-firm gel; cranberry sauce is forgiving.
- Sweetness: The range below fits most palates. Start with the lower end, taste after simmering, and add a bit more sugar if needed while the sauce is still hot. Remember it tastes slightly less sweet once fully cooled.
- Citrus balance: Orange zest gives aroma; juice softens tartness. Bottled lemon juice adds brightness and consistent acid. If you prefer a sharper, more cranberry-forward taste, use less orange juice and rely on water plus lemon.
- Spice: A cinnamon stick, a few allspice berries, or a small strip of fresh ginger can steep gently. Remove them before filling jars for clean texture.
Yield and jar sizes
This small batch fills about 3 half-pint (8-ounce/240-ml) jars or 1 pint plus 1 half-pint. You can use all half-pints for easier gifting and quick use after opening. Headspace is 1/4 inch for proper vacuum and cleanliness at the rim.
Required equipment
- Large, wide saucepan or a small Dutch oven (non-reactive)
- Water-bath canner or deep, lidded stockpot with a rack or folded kitchen towel on the bottom
- 3 warm, clean half-pint canning jars (plus 1 extra jar in case of yield variation)
- New two-piece lids (flats and bands) sized for your jars
- Canning funnel, ladle, and bubble remover/headspace gauge (a clean chopstick works)
- Jar lifter or sturdy tongs with rubber bands for grip
- Clean damp cloths or paper towels for wiping rims
- Zester or microplane and a citrus juicer
- Digital thermometer (optional but helpful)
Time guide
- Active prep: 10 minutes
- Cook time (sauce): 15–20 minutes
- Jar filling and processing: 25–35 minutes (includes bringing the canner back to a boil)
- Total, not including cool-down: about 60–70 minutes
- Cool and seal: undisturbed 12–24 hours
Ingredients (U.S. and Metric)
| Ingredient | U.S. Measure | Metric |
|---|---|---|
| Fresh cranberries, rinsed and sorted | 12 oz (about 3 cups) | 340 g |
| Granulated sugar* | 1 to 1¼ cups | 200–250 g |
| Orange juice, freshly squeezed** | ½ cup | 120 ml |
| Water | ½ cup | 120 ml |
| Bottled lemon juice (for reliable acidity) | 1 Tbsp | 15 ml |
| Finely grated orange zest | 1 Tbsp | ~6 g |
| Cinnamon stick (optional) | 1 small | — |
| Pinch of fine salt | ~â…› tsp | ~0.5 g |
| Vanilla extract (optional, added off heat) | ½ tsp | 2 ml |
* Use the lower amount for a brighter, tarter sauce; the higher amount for a rounder, softer profile.
** For a sharper cranberry flavor, reduce orange juice to ¼ cup (60 ml) and increase water to ¾ cup (180 ml).
Preparation instructions
1) Set up the canner and jars
- Place a rack in the bottom of your water-bath canner or deep stockpot. Fill with enough water to cover filled half-pint jars by at least 1 inch. Begin heating the water so it’s hot (not boiling) by the time you’re ready to process.
- Wash jars, lids, and bands in hot, soapy water; rinse well. Keep jars hot until filling to reduce thermal shock—either in the canner water (not boiling) or in a 180°F oven. Keep lids clean and at room temperature per manufacturer guidance.
2) Cook the sauce
- In a wide, non-reactive saucepan, combine orange juice, water, sugar, lemon juice, zest, salt, and the cinnamon stick if using. Bring to a gentle simmer over medium heat, stirring until the sugar dissolves.
- Add the cranberries. Increase heat to medium-high and return to a steady simmer. Cook 10–15 minutes, stirring often, until many berries have burst and the sauce thickens slightly. If using a thermometer, you can simmer toward 215–220°F for a firmer set; otherwise, watch for light sheeting from a spoon.
- Remove from heat. Lift out and discard the cinnamon stick. Stir in vanilla, if using. Taste for sweetness and acidity while hot; adjust with a bit more sugar or a drizzle more bottled lemon juice if needed. Keep the sauce hot for canning.
3) Fill the jars
- Lay a clean towel next to the stove. Using a jar lifter, remove one hot jar, draining water back into the pot. Set the jar on the towel.
- Place a canning funnel in the jar. Ladle hot cranberry sauce into the jar, leaving ¼-inch headspace. Run a bubble remover/chopstick around the inside edge to release trapped air. Recheck headspace and adjust if needed by adding or removing a spoonful.
- Wipe the rim with a clean, damp cloth to remove any sauce. Center a new lid on the jar and screw on the band until fingertip-tight — €”snug, not wrenched down.
- Repeat with remaining jars. If you have a small remainder that won’t fill a jar to proper headspace, refrigerate it to use first; do not water-bath a jar that’s under-filled.
4) Process the jars
- Return the canner to a full rolling boil. Lower the filled jars into the boiling water, ensuring at least 1 inch of water covers the lids. Cover the canner.
- Process for 15 minutes at sea level.
Altitude adjustments: Add 5 minutes for 1,001–3,000 ft; add 10 minutes for 3,001–6,000 ft; add 15 minutes for above 6,000 ft. - When time is up, turn off heat, remove the lid, and let jars rest in the hot water for 5 minutes. This helps prevent siphoning.
- Lift jars straight up and set them on a towel with 1–2 inches of space between each. Do not tilt. Let cool, undisturbed, for 12–24 hours.
5) Check seals and store
- After cooling, remove the bands. Check each lid for a firm, concave center that doesn’t flex when pressed. Lift each jar gently by the lid’s edge—sealed lids will hold.
- Wipe jars clean. Label with the product and date.
- Store sealed jars in a cool, dark place for up to 12 months for best quality. Once opened, refrigerate and use within 2–3 weeks.
Serving suggestions (after opening)
- Spread on turkey sandwiches with crisp lettuce and sliced onion.
- Spoon over warm pork chops or roast chicken.
- Stir into oatmeal or swirl into yogurt.
- Serve with soft-ripened or creamy cheeses and crackers.
- Warm gently and brush onto meatballs or a small glazed ham.
Troubleshooting and fine-tuning
- Too loose after cooling: Cranberry sauce often firms up as it chills. If it’s still looser than you like the next day, treat it as a relish and cook a bit longer next time or simmer to a slightly higher temperature.
- Too thick: Whisk in a small splash of hot water or orange juice after opening to loosen.
- Overly sweet: Add a squeeze of lemon when you open the jar or fold in a handful of chopped, unsweetened cranberries simmered on the side as a quick correction for that meal.
- Foam on top: Cranberry sauce rarely foams heavily. Skim with a spoon before filling jars if you see any.
- Siphoning (sauce leaked during cooling): Usually caused by boiling jars hard or skipping the 5-minute cool in the canner. If seals are intact and headspace looks reasonable, the jars are generally fine; just clean well and monitor during storage.
- Jar didn’t seal: Refrigerate and use within 2–3 weeks, or reprocess within 24 hours with a new lid if the headspace and cleanliness are correct.
Variations (canned safely with same process)
Keep total liquid close to the base recipe and maintain the lemon juice for consistent acidity.
- Ginger-orange: Add 6–8 thin slices of fresh ginger to the pot; remove before filling.
- Spiced cranberry: Steep 3–4 allspice berries and 2 whole cloves in a tea ball; remove before filling.
- Maple-cranberry: Replace ¼ cup (50 g) of the sugar with ¼ cup (60 ml) pure maple syrup. Simmer to the same thickness.
- Apple-cranberry: Add ½ cup (75 g) finely diced tart apple when you add the cranberries and cook until tender.
- Low-orange: Reduce orange juice to ¼ cup (60 ml) and increase water to ¾ cup (180 ml) for a sharper cranberry focus.
Avoid thickeners like cornstarch or flour in canned sauce. Butter isn’t recommended in water-bathed products. Add these only after opening.
Make-ahead and storage notes
- Shelf storage (sealed): Up to 12 months in a cool, dark cabinet; flavor is best within the first year.
- Refrigerated (opened): 2–3 weeks.
- Freezer option (not canned): Spoon cooled sauce into freezer-safe containers, leaving ½ inch headspace. Freeze up to 6 months. Thaw in the refrigerator.
Frequently asked questions
How sweet should it be?
A good starting point is 1 cup (200 g) sugar per 12 oz (340 g) cranberries. Move toward 1¼ cups (250 g) if you like a rounder, dessert-style sauce. Because cranberries are sharply tart, a little sugar goes a long way in making the fruit taste like fruit rather than pure sour.
Do I need pectin?
No. Cranberries contain enough natural pectin to set on their own when simmered. Commercial pectin tends to create a firmer, jellied texture; if that’s your preference, follow the pectin manufacturer’s directions for sugar and timing, but the recipe here is designed to gel without it.
Can I reduce the sugar further?
You can reduce slightly and still get a soft set, but texture and color preservation may suffer. For canning stability and flavor, the range provided is a reliable balance. For a lower-sugar refrigerator-only sauce, use less sugar and skip the canning step.
Why bottled lemon juice?
Bottled lemon juice offers consistent acidity, which supports safe canning and a clean flavor profile. Fresh lemons vary in acid. The small amount here also brightens the sauce without turning it sour.
How do I know the set is right?
Watch for gentle sheeting from a spoon, and note that the sauce thickens further as it cools. You’re looking for a glossy sauce that mounds softly, not a rubbery gel.
Can I can pint jars?
Yes. Keep the same ¼-inch headspace and use the same processing schedule for pints and half-pints.
Recipe Card
Small Batch Cranberry Sauce for Canning
Servings (as a condiment): about 24 tablespoons (12–24 two-tablespoon servings; ~3 half-pints)
Yield: ~3 half-pints (8 oz / 240 ml each)
Equipment:
Water-bath canner or deep stockpot with rack; 3 half-pint canning jars plus 1 extra; lids and bands; canning funnel; ladle; bubble remover/headspace gauge; jar lifter; clean towels; zester and juicer; thermometer (optional).
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 15–20 minutes
Canning/Processing: 15 minutes at sea level (see altitude adjustment) + 5-minute rest
Total (not including overnight cool): ~60–70 minutes
Ingredients:
- 12 oz (340 g) fresh cranberries, rinsed and sorted
- 1 to 1¼ cups (200–250 g) granulated sugar
- ½ cup (120 ml) orange juice
- ½ cup (120 ml) water
- 1 Tbsp (15 ml) bottled lemon juice
- 1 Tbsp (~6 g) finely grated orange zest
- 1 small cinnamon stick (optional)
- Pinch fine salt (~â…› tsp / ~0.5 g)
- ½ tsp (2 ml) vanilla extract (optional, off heat)
Instructions:
- Preheat canner and jars: Heat canner water to hot (not boiling). Keep jars hot until filling.
- Make sauce: In a wide saucepan, combine orange juice, water, sugar, lemon juice, zest, salt, and cinnamon stick (if using). Bring to a steady simmer, stirring to dissolve sugar. Add cranberries and cook 10–15 minutes, stirring often, until many berries burst and sauce visibly thickens. Remove from heat, discard cinnamon, and stir in vanilla if using. Taste and adjust sweetness or lemon.
- Fill jars: Working with one hot jar at a time, ladle hot sauce in using a funnel, leaving ¼-inch headspace. Remove air bubbles, recheck headspace, and wipe rim clean. Apply lid and band fingertip-tight.
- Process: Lower jars into boiling water with at least 1 inch of water above lids. Cover and process 15 minutes at sea level (add 5 minutes for 1,001–3,000 ft; add 10 minutes for 3,001–6,000 ft; add 15 minutes above 6,000 ft).
- Rest and cool: Turn off heat, remove lid, and let jars rest in hot water 5 minutes. Lift out and cool on a towel, undisturbed, 12–24 hours.
- Check seals and store: Remove bands. Confirm seals, wipe jars, label, and store in a cool, dark place up to 12 months. Refrigerate after opening and use within 2–3 weeks.
Nutritional information (approximate)
Serving size: 2 Tbsp (about 40 g)
- Calories: ~40
- Total fat: 0 g
- Sodium: <5 mg
- Total carbohydrates: ~10 g
- Dietary fiber: ~1 g
- Total sugars: ~9 g
- Protein: 0 g
Values are estimates based on common nutrition data for cranberries, sugar, and citrus. Actual values vary with sweetness and final thickness.
Good habits for consistent results
- Use a wide pan. More surface area helps the sauce thicken quickly and evenly.
- Stir often. Cranberries can scorch if left alone on higher heat. Steady, gentle simmering is your friend.
- Mind the headspace. A true ¼-inch matters for a clean seal and tidy rim.
- Wipe rims carefully. Any sauce on the rim can block a lid from sealing.
- Let jars rest in the canner. The 5-minute rest reduces siphoning and keeps sauce inside the jars where it belongs.
- Label clearly. Product and date make rotation easy. First in, first out.
After the holidays
A few jars on the shelf rarely go to waste. The sauce is a reliable weeknight helper—mix with pan juices to make a quick glaze for chicken thighs or skillet pork chops, spoon over roasted winter squash, or thin with a splash of warm water and lemon for a tangy vinaigrette. Because the recipe stays close to the fruit, it plays well with both savory and sweet dishes.
Keep the batch small, follow the simple timing, and enjoy a condiment that tastes like the season whenever you open a jar.
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