How Did Cranberry Sauce Become a Staple Thanksgiving Food? (2024)

You can thank Ulysses S. Grant for the sweet November side dish.

By Matthew Reed Baker·

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How Did Cranberry Sauce Become a Staple Thanksgiving Food? (1)

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Question:

I hope I don’t offend anyone, but I really don’t like cranberry sauce. Why do we have to have it on Thanksgiving? Did the Pilgrims eat it when they got here? And am I a bad New Englander for hating it? —W.P., Newton

Answer:

Okay, W.P., no offense taken, so I hope you don’t mind the question I have: What is wrong with you?  Cranberry sauce is a crucial component of the Thanksgiving table, where its tart, bright acidity cuts through all of the heavy turkey and gravy and stuffing and mashed potatoes. The zippy little fruit—our official state berry, mind you—is also a crucial component of the Massachusetts economy: Each year, the Bay State’s own cran-cooperative, Ocean Spray, produces some 70 million cans of cranberry sauce alone.

That being said, I hardly think you’re a bad New Englander for not eating the stuff, as it’s likely the Pilgrims didn’t eat it either when they arrived here on the Mayflower 400 years ago. Going by two eyewitness documents from the time, we can only say for certain that the First Thanksgiving meal in 1621 consisted of waterfowl (probably goose or duck), wild turkey, venison, and corn in some form—everything else is educated conjecture. Indeed, the Wampanoags used the area’s native cranberries for food and dyeing clothes, and many academics suggest that they taught the settlers to make a healthy energy staple called pemmican out of cranberries pounded together with dried meat and fat. But as for your reviled relish, the Smithsonian and Plimoth Plantation agree that the first written reference by an English settler to boiling the berries with sugar to make “a sauce to eat with…meat” wasn’t penned until 50 years after the First Turkey (or Waterfowl) Day—and it took General Ulysses S. Grant famously serving it to his Union soldiers during the Civil War to popularize it. As for the notorious jellied version, you can thank farmer Marcus Urann of Hanson, who first came up with the idea of canning his berries in 1912.

But even if you’re not a fan of the cranberry sauce that slithers out of a can with a glurg and lands with a thunk on the platter, you might enjoy something like my mother’s chilled cranberry-grape salad, which, while it does include fresh cranberries cooked with sugar and gelatin, also features plenty of other textures and flavors in the form of chopped celery, apples, and walnuts. I hope you try making it, and if you do, I have only one caveat: It’s not really a New England recipe, as my mom’s from Iowa.

How Did Cranberry Sauce Become a Staple Thanksgiving Food? (2024)

FAQs

How did cranberry sauce become a Thanksgiving staple? ›

The traditional cranberry sauce, made with sugar, did not become popularized until the 19th century. By the early 20th century, farmers began harvesting cranberries in bogs instead of dry-harvesting, which led to cranberry sauce as a Thanksgiving staple.

Why is cranberry sauce the best Thanksgiving food? ›

Cranberry sauce is a crucial component of the Thanksgiving table, where its tart, bright acidity cuts through all of the heavy turkey and gravy and stuffing and mashed potatoes.

Why are cranberries important to Thanksgiving? ›

Actually, cranberries graced the table of the Pilgrims' first Thanksgiving. Cranberries are one of the few fruits (blueberries and Concord grapes are among the others) that are native to North America.

Was cranberry sauce at the first Thanksgiving? ›

The Pilgrims might have been familiar with cranberries by the first Thanksgiving, but they wouldn't have made sauces and relishes with the tart orbs. That's because the sacks of sugar that traveled across the Atlantic on the Mayflower were nearly or fully depleted by November 1621.

What is the staple of Thanksgiving? ›

At Thanksgiving dinner, turkey is served with a variety of side dishes which can vary from traditional, such as mashed potatoes, stuffing, and cranberry sauce, to ones that reflect regional or cultural heritage.

How do you serve cranberry sauce on Thanksgiving? ›

The traditional way of serving jellied cranberry sauce is sliced into rounds. With the column set on its side, slice into ¼-inch thick rounds and then arrange the slices on a serving platter. Serve the slices plain, garnished as desired, or read on for easy upgrades.

What are some fun facts about cranberry sauce? ›

10 fun facts about canned cranberry sauce:
  • Ocean Spray is the largest producer of cranberry products here in the U.S. Marcus L. ...
  • Fresh cranberries are only available for a short time in the fall. ...
  • This canned fruit log became a Thanksgiving staple in the early 1940s.
  • It takes about 200 cranberries to make one can.
Nov 7, 2020

How many people eat cranberries on Thanksgiving? ›

400 million pounds of cranberries are consumed by Americans each year. Twenty percent of that is during the week of Thanksgiving. That's 80 million pounds!

How much cranberry sauce per person for Thanksgiving? ›

How Much Cranberry Sauce Do I Need Per Person? If you're making fresh cranberry sauce, plan on at least 1/4 cup per person—more if your family really likes cranberry sauce. I usually make about 1/2 cup per person and find I have plenty left over for a few days of slathering cranberry sauce over everything.

Is cranberry Christmas or Thanksgiving? ›

With Thanksgiving coming up in just a few weeks, you likely have started planning the Thanksgiving menu or if you are not responsible for the food, you are planning what you will eat. Besides the obvious turkey, one of the symbols of the holiday is the cranberry.

Is cranberry sauce Native American? ›

Native Americans also made the first cranberry sauce. Poet, lawyer and chronicler of the French exploration of Acadia (Maine and the Maritimes in Canada) Marc Lescarbot (c. 1570-1641) observed natives eating cranberry sauce with meats in the early 17th century.

Why is cranberry sauce a Thanksgiving staple? ›

According to Wick, the tart fruit became popularly used to create cranberry sauce for turkey and other types of meat in the late 17th century. Within a hundred more years, cranberry sauce became a staple dish in the U.S., with its popularity taking off even more throughout the 19th century.

What food was really at the first Thanksgiving? ›

There are only two surviving documents that reference the original Thanksgiving harvest meal. They describe a feast of freshly killed deer, assorted wildfowl, a bounty of cod and bass, and flint, a native variety of corn harvested by the Native Americans, which was eaten as corn bread and porridge.

What is the dark history of Thanksgiving? ›

Others pinpoint 1637 as the true origin of Thanksgiving, since the Massachusetts Bay Colony's governor, John Winthrop, declared a day to celebrate colonial soldiers who had just slaughtered hundreds of Pequot men, women, and children in what is now Mystic, Connecticut.

Is cranberry sauce served hot or cold on Thanksgiving? ›

Cranberry sauce is best served at room temperature or slightly chilled. (You've got enough things on the menu to warm up! Don't make the list longer!) I tend to make cranberry sauce a few days before Thanksgiving and then set it on the table about an hour or two before we plan to eat.

How much cranberry sauce is sold during Thanksgiving? ›

Americans buy 75 million cans a year, with 85 percent sold during the Thanksgiving to Christmas season. Here's how it's made, from the farm to the factory. Jellied cranberry sauce is one of the easiest things to prepare on Thanksgiving.

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