It is possible to make jam from dreams. Just add fruit and sugar. -Stanislaw Jerzy Lec
Skip to content
  • This blog

Yes, we cran (part un)

IMG_4733

First things first: Happy Halloweeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeen. It’s been pouring rain all morning and not showing any signs of letting up, so those cute little candy-crazy ghouls will be slipping and sliding their way along sidewalks painted with soggy yellow leaves tonight. Be careful, kids!

In other news, I’ve just whipped up a couple of crackerjack cranberry creations. So let us consider the cran.

It grows on a shrub-like vine in highly acidic bogs and it’s produced in several Canadian provinces and northern states. Though cranberry sauce is a time-honoured staple on Thanksgiving and Christmas spreads, for years folks have been buying the canned (not home-canned!) stuff, despite cranberry sauce being the easiest thing in the world to make (cranberries+water+sugar: heat + stir for 10 minutes).

IMG_4734

The tart, taut crimson fruits are also great to bake with and are perfect for fall and holiday season jams and conserves. Plus, their extra high pectin content means they gel very easily. The best thing to do if you live in a cranberry-producing region is to forget about those flown-in plastic bags at the grocery store and head to your local farmer’s market for some local berries at great prices. I recently bought a basket of Quebec crans that weighed almost five pounds for $13. Here’s an action shot of cranberry harvest time:

recolteuse-garrochage

Yep, for the past month I’ve been crushing on the cran, big time. For Thanksgiving I made this incredible vodka-spiked cranberry sauce I found on Epicurious. Then I made a cranberry-orange jam (see below). Then, last night I concocted a batch of cranberry and toasted walnut conserve. When cooked with a little water, they make a lovely pop corn-esque popping sound when their skins split open, and that colour! A rich, velvety, sexy, lipstick, boudoir red. When the little orbs boil down, they look like a burbling cauldron of planet Mars. And, of course, there are the health benefits – they’ve nearly reached super-fruit status. But I don’t want to overwhelm you with crantabulousness, so stay tuned for cranberry madness part two.

For now, let’s start with that jam.

IMG_4767

Cranberry-orange jam

4 cups (about 1 lb) cranberries

2 cups sugar

1/4 cup water

1 orange (zest and juice)

1 tsp orange flower water

IMG_4766

Stir together cranberries, water, orange juice and zest and cook over medium-high heat for about 10-15 minutes, or until the berry skins begin popping open and the fruit softens. At this point I like to turn the heat off for a moment and use a potato masher to squash the berries into the liquid, creating a more uniform consistency. Return to medium heat, stir in sugar then orange flower water and continue to cook at a low boil for five or 10 minutes more, until you’ve hit the thickness you prefer.

IMG_4764

Pour into hot, clean jars (it’ll be quite thick so watch out for air bubbles) and process in a boiling water bath for 10 minutes.

IMG_4793

This was written by gen. Posted on Saturday, October 31, 2009, at 1:29 pm. Filed under Blog. Tagged cranberry and walnut conserve, cranberry jam, cranberry orange flower water, cranberry orange jam, cranberry recipes, Quebec cranberries. Bookmark the permalink. Follow comments here with the RSS feed. Post a comment or leave a trackback.

3 Comments

  1. tigress wrote:

    i like it! :)

    Sunday, November 1, 2009 at 10:11 am | Permalink
  2. Mary wrote:

    I am going to try that Cosmo sauce at Christmas. I hope the rain stopped in Mtrl. in time for the kids, it did here near Ottawa. This month I went looking for your blog as Susan aka fanmom didn’t send it to me, she must have been too busy visiting ON!Keep blogging, delicious to read and view!

    Monday, November 2, 2009 at 3:57 pm | Permalink
  3. gen wrote:

    Hi Mary! Oh yeah, that vodka-cran sauce is really delish. let me know how it goes over. Thanks so much for popping in again.

    Friday, November 6, 2009 at 5:32 pm | Permalink

2 Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Consider the Pantry › Yes, we cran (part deux) on Wednesday, November 11, 2009 at 6:16 pm

    [...] cran fans, we’re back talking about our flame-coloured, bog-grown friends again. In part one, I gushed enough about the lil’ ruby fruit, so let’s get down to next [...]

  2. Consider the Pantry › Have a canned Christmas on Tuesday, December 22, 2009 at 10:30 pm

    [...] grocery stores. Buy them fresh or frozen and make my cranberry walnut preserve or, even easier, my cranberry-orange jam. Both will be very yummy spread on leftover turkey [...]

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *
*
*
‹ Leaves are falling all around
Jar world weekly round-up #1 ›
  • Archive

    • March 2010
    • February 2010
    • January 2010
    • December 2009
    • November 2009
    • October 2009
    • September 2009
    • August 2009
    • July 2009
  • About

    • This blog
  • Links

    • 101 Cookbooks
    • BBC Food
    • Bitten (NY Times)
    • Canning Across America
    • Chocolate and Zucchini
    • Chowhound
    • Dorie Greenspan
    • Eater
    • endless banquet
    • Epicurious
    • Food in Jars
    • Ghost Town Farm
    • Hungry for Paris
    • James Beard Foundation
    • Kitchn
    • Orangette
    • Soup Nancy
    • Tigress in a Jam
    • Traveler's Lunchbox
    • Wednesday Chef
    • Well-Preserved
  • Rss

    • All posts
    • All comments
© 2010 Genevieve Paiement