Mama's Cranberry Salad

Mama's Cranberry Salad

Mama's Cranberry Salad

Mama's Cranberry Salad

Ingredients

  • Produce

    • 1 bag Cranberries, fresh
    • 1 Granny smith or other tart green apple, large
    • 1 Honey crisp or other red apple, large
    • 1 Orange, large
  • Baking & Spices

    • 1 cup Sugar
  • Nuts & Seeds

    • 1 cup Pecans or walnuts
  • Desserts

    • 1 large box Raspberry jello
  • Liquids

    • 2 cups Water

Found on

food52.com

food52.com

330 9
Title:

Mama's Cranberry Salad Recipe on Food52

Descrition:

On the chance that next week's contest is NOT about cranberries, I have to enter this. I usually eat it 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!

Mama's Cranberry Salad

  • Produce

    • 1 bag Cranberries, fresh
    • 1 Granny smith or other tart green apple, large
    • 1 Honey crisp or other red apple, large
    • 1 Orange, large
  • Baking & Spices

    • 1 cup Sugar
  • Nuts & Seeds

    • 1 cup Pecans or walnuts
  • Desserts

    • 1 large box Raspberry jello
  • Liquids

    • 2 cups Water

The first person this recipe

food52.com

food52.com

330 9

Found on food52.com

Food52

Mama's Cranberry Salad Recipe on Food52

On the chance that next week's contest is NOT about cranberries, I have to enter this. I usually eat it 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!