![]()
Popular Name
Cranberry
Scientific Name
Vaccinium macrocarpum Ait. V. oxycoccus L (small bush cranberry), V erythrocarpum Michx (Southern Mt. Cranberry), V. Vitis (Lowbush Cranberry)
Family: Ericaceae.
Common Names
Cranberry, Bounceberry, "Trailing Swamp Cranberry"
Description
Cranberries are a low-growing vine native to the bogs and sandy plains of New England, and are a close relative of the blueberry. Massachusetts is second in the nation in cranberry production (Wisconsin is first), producing some 2 million barrels of fruit each year. They were not cultivated as an agricultural crop until 1816. They are packed with Vitamin C and numerous phytochemicals. 20% of all cranberries produced and sold during one year are sauced and eaten at Thanksgiving.
Folklore
Eastern Europeans believed cranberries could reduce fever and cure cancers.
Effect
Cranberries are believed to prevent adherence of E. Coli bacteria to urinary tract walls.
Yearly production in U.S
About 70,000 tons
Culinary Use
Fresh, canned, frozen, juiced, jellied.
Potential Health Uses
In the 1800's, German physicians noted an increase in hippuric acid, a known anti-bacterial, in the urine of those who recently consumed cranberries. Researchers are now considering cranberry's effectiveness in the prevention and treatment of urinary tract infection.
Active Constituents
Anthocyanin dyes, catechin, triterpinoids, citric, malic, quinic, benzoic, and glucuornic acids, leptosine glycoside, some alkaloids, and ascorbic acid.
Cranberry Museums
Cranberry World Visitors Center
225 Water Street
Plymouth, MA
(508) 747-2350
Open daily May 1 through November 30, 9:30 AM to 5:00 PM EST, including weekends and holidays. Admission is free.
Cranberry World West
1301 American Pacific Dr.
Henderson, NV 89014
(800) 289-0917
It certainly wasn't present at the first Thanksgiving and the cranberry wasn't even made into a "sauce" until early American colonists started experimenting with native ingredients.
(Also visit our main Thanksgiving Recipes page)
Copyright © 1998, Lynn Kerrigan. No portion of this article may be reproduced for publication without express, written permission of the author.
This page created 1998 and modified February 2007

The Global Gourmet®
Main Page

Spring Recipes for
Easter & Passover
Twitter: @KateHeyhoe
Advanced Search
Recent Searches
Kate's Global Kitchen
Kate's Books
Cookbook Profiles
Global Destinations
Holiday & Party Recipes
I Love Desserts
On Wine
Shopping
New Green Basics
Cooking with Kids
Archives
Conversions, Charts
& Substitutions
Search
About the
Global Gourmet®
Contact Info
Advertising
Feedback
Privacy Statement
Cooking Italian
175 Home Recipes
4-Hour Chef
Bakery Cookbook
Barefoot Contessa
Bouchon Bakery
Burma: Rivers of Flavor
Cake Mix Doctor
Comfort Food
Craft of Coffee
Crazy Sexy Kitchen
Daily Cookie
Fifty Shades Chicken
French Slow Cooker
Frontera - Rick Bayless
Gluten-Free Quick & Easy
Jerusalem: A Cookbook
Kitchen Science
Lidia's Favorite Recipes
Make-Ahead and Freeze
Modern Milkshakes
Modernist Cuisine
Mystic Cookbook
Paleo Slow Cooking
Picky Palate
Pop Bakery
Practical Paleo
Quick Family Cookbook
Saltie
Sensational Cookies
Smitten Kitchen
Southern Living Recipes
Sweet Life in Paris
Trader Joe's Vegetarian
True Food
Whole Larder
Copyright © 1994-2013,
Forkmedia LLC
Global Gourmet®
Shopping
Gourmet Food, Cookbooks
Kitchen Gadgets & Gifts
Bestselling Cookbooks
Cooking Light Store
Kitchen Markdowns
Buy 3 Products, Get 4th Free
Kitchen Bonus Deals
Cookware Rebates
Bestselling Small Appliances