Can we talk about how most cranberry sauce is just… sad? Jiggly, weirdly sweet, still shaped like the can it came out of. Yeah, we’ve all been there. The moment I tried Ina Garten’s cranberry sauce recipe, I genuinely couldn’t go back. It’s tart, glossy, layered with flavor, and takes about 15 minutes to make. No excuses left for the canned stuff.
I’ve made this every Thanksgiving for the past four years running. My family now specifically requests it, which, if you knew how picky my family is, you’d understand that’s basically a Michelin star.
What Makes Ina Garten’s Cranberry Sauce Different?
Ina Garten’s cranberry sauce stands out because it uses fresh cranberries, orange juice, orange zest, and a touch of Grand Marnier to create a deeply flavored, elegant sauce that goes way beyond basic sweetness.
Most recipes stop at cranberries and sugar. Ina adds orange in two forms, juice and zest, which gives the sauce a brightness that cuts through the richness of a holiday meal. The optional splash of Grand Marnier (an orange liqueur) adds a subtle warmth that makes the whole thing feel a little fancy. IMO, skip it, and you’re leaving flavor on the table.
Ingredients You’ll Need
This recipe makes about 2 cups, perfect for 6–8 people:
- 12 oz fresh cranberries (one standard bag, frozen works too)
- 1¾ cups sugar
- 1 cup freshly squeezed orange juice (about 3–4 oranges)
- 1 tablespoon grated orange zest
On the sugar: Yes, 1¾ cups sounds like a lot. Cranberries are aggressively tart, so they need it. Trust the recipe; the result is balanced, not cloying.
How to Make Ina Garten’s Cranberry Sauce
Step 1: Combine Everything in One Pot
Add the cranberries, sugar, orange juice, and orange zest to a medium saucepan over medium heat. Stir everything together so the sugar starts to dissolve before the heat really kicks in.
One pot. That’s it. No pre-soaking, no complicated prep. This is why Ina’s recipes work; she respects your time.
Step 2: Cook Until the Cranberries Pop
Bring the mixture to a boil, then reduce the heat and let it simmer for about 15 minutes. You’ll hear the cranberries pop as they burst open; that’s exactly what you want. Stir occasionally so nothing sticks to the bottom.
The sauce will look thin at first. Don’t panic. It thickens as it cools, so pull it off the heat when it still looks slightly looser than you’d expect.
Step 3: Add the Grand Marnier and Cool
Remove the pan from the heat and stir in the Grand Marnier. The alcohol cooks off quickly, leaving just the orange flavor behind.
Let the sauce cool to room temperature, then refrigerate it. It sets up beautifully after a few hours in the fridge and keeps for up to two weeks, which means you can absolutely make this days before the big meal.
Tips to Get It Just Right
- Use fresh orange juice, not the carton kind. The flavor difference is real.
- Don’t overcook it. Once the cranberries have all popped and the sauce coats a spoon, you’re done.
- Make it ahead. The flavor deepens overnight; day-two cranberry sauce is genuinely better than day-one. FYI, this is one of the rare dishes where being ahead of schedule actually pays off.
Final Thoughts
Ina Garten’s cranberry sauce is one of those recipes that makes you wonder why you ever did it any other way. Fresh cranberries, orange juice, zest, and a little Grand Marnier are simple ingredients that produce something genuinely special.
Make it once, and it’ll earn a permanent spot on your holiday table. And when someone asks you for the recipe, enjoy that moment. You’ve officially leveled up Thanksgiving.
Ina Garten Cranberry Sauce Recipe
4
servings10
minutes15
minutes80
kcalIngredients
12 oz fresh cranberries (one standard bag, frozen works too)
1¾ cups sugar
1 cup freshly squeezed orange juice (about 3–4 oranges)
1 tablespoon grated orange zest
2 tablespoons Grand Marnier (optional, but highly recommended)
Directions
- Combine Everything in One Pot
Add the cranberries, sugar, orange juice, and orange zest to a medium saucepan over medium heat. - Cook Until the Cranberries Pop
Bring the mixture to a boil, then reduce the heat and let it simmer for about 15 minutes. - Add the Grand Marnier and Cool
Remove the pan from the heat and stir in the Grand Marnier. The alcohol cooks off quickly, leaving just the orange flavor behind.