By Eileen Goldfinger, food editor @Blogfinger and Paul Goldfinger, official taster and photographer @Blogfinger.
In October we usually attend the Chatsworth Cranberry Festival. It’s fun. Read about it at http://www.cranfest.info.
It was cancelled for 2020.
The Festival is a very crowded event in the Pine Barrens, about an hour from here. The best bet is to go on Sunday morning early and park along the side of the road. Mark your calendar for October 2021 and check the date on-line since that date has not yet been announced.
New Jersey is one of the most important cranberry growing regions in the world with over 3,500 acres devoted to the crop. In the US, we are second in size to Wisconsin and Massachusetts. Cranberries are grown in bogs where the soil and water requirements are quite complicated. The harvest is usually complete by the end of October.
In New Jersey, most of the growing occurs in Burlington County, around Chatsworth, where the annual Cranberry Festival is held.
We go to the Festival to enjoy this unique cultural event—-Appalachia in Jersey. Hear bluegrass music and buy fresh picked cranberries. Eileen purchases her usual 7 pound box. Vendors make all sorts of products from this versatile fruit.
In 2015 we were away for the Festival, so we drove to Tabernacle, NJ ( BF search “Tabernacle”) down the road from Chatsworth, one week later, and visited Russo’s Farm Market where Eileen purchased her supply of cranberries. That’s where we went recently (2020)
She makes fresh cranberry sauce for Thanksgiving and freezes the rest of the berries in small Ziploc portions to use throughout the year. Fresh cranberries can be purchased at Wegmans and Delicious Orchards. Or take a ride to Russo’s. But remember the Pine Barrens scene in The Sopranos.
Below is Eileen’s recipe for homemade cranberry sauce. It’s a treat for your company on Thanksgiving, so don’t get bogged down with that gelatinous canned stuff.
EILEEN’S CRANBERRY SAUCE:
1 cup of water
1 cup sugar
2 cups fresh cranberries
1 orange, peeled and diced
1 tablespoon orange zest
1/8 cup Grand Marnier (optional)
INSTRUCTIONS:
Mix sugar and water in a medium sauce pan.
Bring to a boil and stir to dissolve sugar.
Add cranberries and bring to a boil; then reduce the heat and gently boil for ten minutes, stirring occasionally.
Remove from heat.
Cool to room temperature.
Add diced orange and zest and Grand Marnier.
Refrigerate.
Makes approx. 2 cups of cranberry sauce. In general, if used as a condiment, it will serve about 4 people.
MICHAEL GIACCHINO, COMPOSER OF THE MOVIE SCORE OF RATATOUILLE. From the soundtrack of the Disney/Pixar film. The selection is “Le Festin” by Camille.
Wonderful recipe. Adding Grand Marnier is a new “must try” for me!
My cranberry sauce recipe is so easy and simple and lower In sugar
1 bag cranberries
1 Apple (pared, not peeled; cut into slices, the, cut each slice in half)
1 can Frozen apple juice concentrate
1 cinnamon stock
Add all ingredients to sauce pot and bring to a boil. Boil until all cranberries pop.
I like to make this a day ahead, as the flavor a get more intense.
Tenter: I don’t know about Pinterest or recipe boards. You can email us with more info. Thanks, Paul (blogfinger@verizon.net)
Wonderful post. I especially like the bowl of cranberries on the 1950s dish cloth–and the recipe! So when are you going to connect with Pinterest so I can pin that picture and have it on my recipe board?!