How to Make Fermented Cranberries for Your Holidays or Any Time: A Recipe — All Posts Healing Harvest Homestead (2024)

NOTE: This article is about how you can ferment and preserve your cranberries. You don’t need a freezer, and by fermenting any extra cranberries you have from the holidays, you’ll actually increase their nutritional value! Cause…that’s what fermentation does. Read on for the directions!

Have you ever cleaned out your freezer and found things in there that you should really just use already?I found a bag of frozen fresh cranberries hiding out in my freezer, and I decided I'd just go ahead and ferment them in time for this year’s holiday feast.

This recipe is easy, tasty, and healthy, with a flavor that is unlike any cranberry taste you’ve ever tried!

But why cranberries?

The reason I decided to ferment these frozen cranberries is because 1) I just didn't feel like a cranberry sauce deal; and 2) I just wanted to see how it would go! 3) I had to get them used up, as they were getting on the old side, and…

Fermented foods are GREAT for your gut!So here's how I fermented my cranberries and also how I used these red beauties in our food.

FTC Disclosure: There are affiliate links scattered throughout this article. If you click through and make any kind of purchase, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

How to Make Fermented Cranberries for Your Holidays or Any Time: A Recipe — All Posts Healing Harvest Homestead (2)

Recipe for Fermented Cranberries

You’ll need a quart wide mouth mason jar to make these. You really don’t need any fancy equipment, although you could use a mason jar airlock system if you like.

Ingredients for Making Fermented Cranberries

1) One bag of fresh or frozen cranberries

2) Sea Salt

3) Juice from 1 squeezed lemon or orange

4) Optional: Spices, such as Cinnamon Chips, Cloves, Ginger, etc.

Directions for Fermented Cranberries

Step 1) Since my cranberries were frozen, I put them in a colander and let them defrost. If you're using a fresh bag, you can skip this step. Rinse them well!

Step 2) Crush them up. You can use a large fork, a sauerkraut masher, or even a potato masher. You want to try to bust most of them up a bit to allow the juices out and to help them ferment better as the brine will soak into them more easily.

Step 3) Place them in a wide mouthed quart Mason jar or other fermenting vessel.

Step 4) Squeeze the juice of a lemon into the jar---or you can use an orange.

Step 5) Add some Cinnamon Chips and Clove Buds if you like.

Step 6) Add about 3/4 tablespoon up to 1 tablespoon of sea salt.

Step 7) Fill up the rest of the way to within one inch of the top of the jar with distilled water. Since we are on a well, I just use our well water.

How to Make Fermented Cranberries for Your Holidays or Any Time: A Recipe — All Posts Healing Harvest Homestead (4)

How to Make Fermented Cranberries for Your Holidays or Any Time: A Recipe — All Posts Healing Harvest Homestead (6)

Step 8) Place your weight on top of the cranberries, making sure they are all under the liquid.

Step 9) Now put on your airlock system. For Mason jars, my favorites are these silicone "nipple" types, but you can also purchase lids with an actual airlock that will fit on a Mason jar. Alternatively, you can simply use a regular Mason jar lid---if you do this, you will HAVE to "burp" your fermenting jar once or twice a day to allow the gases to escape.

Step 10) After you feel they have fermented long enough (I let mine go about 2 to 3 weeks on my counter), it's time to test them out!

Step 11) Enjoy!

How Do Fermented Cranberries Taste, You Wonder?

Well, I was pleasantly surprised! You know how cranberries are usually super tart? To the point where you can't really eat them by themselves?

Fermenting them makes them MUCH more mild. They are slightly salty, and not sweet. Since I like my cranberries a little tiny bit sweet, I added some Lemon Infused Honey, and MMMmmmmm! So, So Good!

How to Make Fermented Cranberries for Your Holidays or Any Time: A Recipe — All Posts Healing Harvest Homestead (8)

Final Reflections on Fermenting Cranberries and Ideas for Using Them

I admit. This was initially a move of desperation. You see, I hate waste. When I pulled out that old bag of frozen berries, I had three choices: 1) Give them to the chickens (but I wasn’t sure they’d go for them); 2) Compost them; 3) Try an experiment and see what happens if I fermented them.

Well, I’m glad I chose number three. This experiment just underscored for me how wonderful the traditional food preservation practice and skill of fermentation is. What would have been a waste turned into a delicious treat and side-dish.

Besides adding them to yogurt like I did in the above picture, you could try adding them to stuffings, potatoes, marinades, soups, and whatever else you think they might go with! Keep in mind, cooking them will kill off the raw probiotics, but if you are just going for a different taste or a unique addition to a traditional recipe, I think you’ll like these!

How to Make Fermented Cranberries for Your Holidays or Any Time: A Recipe — All Posts Healing Harvest Homestead (9)

I hope you enjoyed this unique cranberry recipe as much as I enjoyed experimenting and writing it for you! :-)

I should mention where I first learned how to ferment foods. These are my first and favorite books on fermentation and traditional food preparation methods: Nourishing Traditions by Sally Fallon is a feast of excellent research and information from the Weston A. Price Foundation. I love this book.

Other great books about fermentation include Sandor Katz’s The Art of Fermentation and Fermented Veggies by Christopher Shockey.

You may also enjoy these related articles on fermentation:

Russian Tomato Recipe,

Sauerkraut Recipe,

How to Ferment Lemons!

How to Make Your Own Raw Fruit Vinegars

If you just want more information about what fermentation is, you’ll enjoy: What is Fermentation and Why You Should Eat Fermented Foods Every Day!

Be sure to take a look at my website for hundreds more articles and/or my YouTube Channel for videos on. natural living!

Hugs, Health, & Self-Reliance!

Heidi

P.S. If you haven’t yet, I hope you’ll sign up for our newsletter! You’ll never miss a thing, AND you’ll get a ton of free stuff in the Resource Library! These are eBooks, guides, checklists that are all printable and will get you started on your self-reliance and natural living life! One of these is my FREE Herbal Remedy Guide that’s perfect for your kitchen or home apothecary!

You might also want to sign up for the FREE 5-Day Herbal Foundations Course, and start using herbs and spices for your own home remedies today! Just click here or on the image below:

Recipes, Fermentation

Heidi Villegas, MA, CA, Herbalist

fermentation, fermented cranberries, how to ferment cranberries, how to make fermented cranberries, why ferment foods

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How to Make Fermented Cranberries for Your Holidays or Any Time: A Recipe — All Posts Healing Harvest Homestead (2024)

FAQs

Can you ferment cranberries? ›

Cutting them in half will help get the salt inside of the fruit and make it ferment quicker. Once halved, combine the cranberries and salt together and mix well. Make sure to coat the cranberries completely with salt and stick them in a glass jar. Cover the glass jar with a plastic bag.

How long does it take for cranberry juice to ferment? ›

Sprinkle the wine yeast over the surface of the juice and then cover with a thin, clean towel. Allow this mixture (must) to ferment for 5 to 7 days. You should start to see some foaming activity within 24 hours of adding the wine yeast.

How long to ferment cranberries in honey? ›

As the cranberries ferment, small bubbles will form in the jar; shake it every now and then, and burp the jar, to release the trapped air. The berries are transformed after even just a week of fermentation, but this ferment can proceed for several months if desired.

Why should cranberries not be eaten raw? ›

Is it safe to eat cranberries raw? Cranberries are generally considered safe whether they are cooked or raw. However, because of their notoriously bitter, sharp taste, most people prefer not to eat them raw or unsweetened. This bitterness is due to the high tannin content of cranberries.

Does fermented fruit turn into alcohol? ›

Fermentation occurs in nature in any sugar-containing mash from fruit, berries, honey, or sap tapped from palms. If left exposed in a warm atmosphere, airborne yeasts act on the sugar to convert it into alcohol and carbon dioxide. The making of wines and beers uses this biotechnology under controlled conditions.

How much alcohol is in fermented cranberry juice? ›

It also fermented at the slowest rate. The juices with the most sugar, purple grape juice and white grape juice (15% sugar) each produced the greatest yield of potential alcohol (8%). Cranberry juice had the lowest sugar content (7%) and produced the least amount of potential alcohol (0.25%).

Why does my cranberry juice taste like wine? ›

Similar to red wine, cranberry juice contains a reasonable amount of tannins. Riddled with these bitter and mouth-drying compounds, the juice functions as a zero-alcohol stand-in for wine. Juxtaposing decadence and umami, tart cranberry juice proves itself as an equally effective palate cleanser.

How do you ferment faster? ›

Fermentation times can be shortened by using powdery (non-flocculent) strains of yeast or by mechanically stirring the fermenting wort. The yeast can also be roused toward the end of fermentation by the injection of carbon dioxide or by using a re-circulating device.

How do you store fermented cranberries? ›

Once the cranberries have reached the level of tartness you want, likely somewhere between 5-8 days, remove them from the bag and strain the liquid into separate containers. Store in the fridge for 4-7 days without much change in taste. To prevent further fermenting, store them in freezer bags with the air removed.

What does honey do when fermented? ›

If honey starts to ferment in the hive, the honeycomb cells are filled with bubbles and an odor of yeast can be smelled. Sometimes foam oozes out and collects under the frames. In a controlled circ*mstance fermentation of honey can be purposefully utilized to produce an alcoholic drink known as mead.

Can I add honey after fermentation? ›

First off, welcome! I think you would have no problem adding the honey to your primary fermenter after the initlal fermentation died down a bit. You will see an additional kick-start to the fermentation obviously.

Is cranberry hard to ferment? ›

Cranberries are tough to penetrate, so this will give the fermentation a bit of a head start. I did this by poking them with a fork all over, but you could also give them a couple of pulses in a food processor. Frozen cranberries can be used instead of fresh, but it is best to thaw them before adding the honey.

Can cranberry turn into alcohol? ›

Making alcohol with cranberries is interesting and challenging. The problem is with fermenting cranberry juice is that it is very acidic, being about 2.3 to 2.5 pH. As a result, straight cranberry juice is too acidic to make wine.

Can alcohol be made from cranberries? ›

Absolutely, although in the case of cranberries, you'll likely have to add sugar to get to the potential ABV you want… and you may have to blend it with something to offset the brutally high acidity and tannin. Blackberries and cherries are super easy, though.

Can cranberry juice become fermented? ›

It is most certainly safe! I've made cranberry wine 2 or 3 times, and it's a big hit at festive meals…you know, to go with the turkey, stuffing and cranberry! I make it from actual cranberries, but juice would ferment also, providing the sugar content is high enough.

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