I love fresh cranberries with their vibrant color and their tart and bitter flavor. They pair beautifully with sour-sweet fruits like raspberries and cherries, as well as citrus fruits like kumquats and mandarins. While I'm not one to shy away from cranberry compotes and sauces, I prefer cranberry relish for its freshness and for that wonderful hit of subtle bitterness that's lost when cranberries are cooked.
This relish, which combines cranberries with sour-sweet mandarin oranges, apple juice and a hit of whole, unrefined cane sugar, is one of my favorites and finds a place on my Thanksgiving table each year.
The Goodness in Cranberries
Cranberries, like other berries, are particularly rich in antioxidants which help to detoxify free radicals that can accumulate in the body from diet, the environment or from the body's own internal metabolism. They are particularly rich in vitamin C, quercetin, anthocyanins and flavonoids, and its these micronutrients that give cranberries not only their vivid color but they're remarkable and potent flavor. Cranberries can reduce oxidative stress, and help to enhance heart health as well as health overall (1).