I Tried Martha Stewart’s Cranberry Relish, and It Tasted Like a Memory I Didn’t Know I Missed
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Martha Stewart Cranberry Relish
Leave a Comment on I Tried Martha Stewart’s Cranberry Relish, and It Tasted Like a Memory I Didn’t Know I Missed
I wasn’t going to cook.
The house was too quiet, the fridge too loud. One of those days
Then I found the cranberries.
They weren’t even meant for this—they were just there. Cold, tart, forgotten in the crisper.
But once I started zesting the orange, I couldn’t stop.
Funny how that smell brings back her cake. The one Mae made, collapsed in the middle, all icing and effort. I still taste lemon differently because of it.
So I made Her Highness’s cranberry relish. Or a version of it.
And the day softened. A little.
What the Original Looked Like
Martha’s cranberry relish isn’t cooked. That’s the first thing.
She keeps it raw, bright, zippy. Like a citrus salad dressed up in red.
It’s got red onion, lime, jalapeño. Fresh ginger and celery for snap.
She stirs in chopped oranges and finishes with mint and toasted pecans, just before serving.
It’s the kind of thing you imagine on a white plate beside a roast. But I ate mine out of the mixing bowl with a spoon.
What I Did Differently
Used navel oranges instead of blood—those are dreams where I live.
Forgot the mint. Found it the next morning behind the oat milk. Wilted. Regret: mild.
I pulsed the cranberries a bit too long. Got overexcited.
And I didn’t toast the pecans. No time. No energy. Didn’t matter.
The Way It Happened in My Kitchen
The cranberries made that soft clatter in the food processor.
Like rain on old windows.
I added the onion, and the sharp hit of it reminded me of that one Christmas. Before everything fell apart. When vanilla still meant joy.
Mae came in halfway through and asked, “That weird salsa again?”
Took a spoon, scooped some. She didn’t even wait for the nuts.
I said nothing. Just kept stirring.
Sometimes that’s the only kind of conversation we manage now.
The celery popped. The orange bled.
And suddenly the bowl felt heavy in my hands.
A Few Things I Learned
Ginger doesn’t ask permission. It just shows up.
Cranberries hold more emotion than any berry should.
And sometimes, the bitterness helps.
What I Did With the Extras
Mae took some back to school in an old yogurt tub.
I found the rest the next day and spread it on toast. Burnt, of course.
It helped.
Would I Make It Again?
Yes.
For the quiet. For the sting. For the reminder.
That’s As Much As I Remember
The fridge stopped humming at some point.
The bowl emptied slower than I thought.
And the magnet finally stuck straight.
If citrus and sharp things make you feel more grounded, I did a riff on Martha’s onion quick-pickle last spring that packed more bite than expected.

FAQs
yep. just thaw ‘em a little so they don’t wreck your food processor.
not unless you leave the seeds in. or you’re my aunt.
a couple days. maybe longer. but the nuts get soft if they sit.
you don’t. but it makes it taste awake.
roast meat. turkey. or toast. I ate it with crackers. that worked too.

Martha Stewart Cranberry Relish
Description
Tart, citrusy, and just sharp enough to remind you you’re still here.
Ingredients
Instructions
- Pulse the cranberries.Just a few times in the food processor until they look chopped—not slushed. I got carried away. Still worked.
- Add the sharp things.Toss in the red onion, jalapeño, lime juice, and that grated ginger that always smells like something’s about to start.
- Fold in the fruit and the crunch.The orange segments go in next—mine bled a bit, which I liked. Stir in the sugar, celery. Don’t think too hard about it. Just mix.
- Let it rest. Cover it and let it sit in the fridge for at least an hour. Mine went in for three because I forgot it was there. Maybe it needed that.
- Finish with the extras. Right before serving, stir in the pecans. I skipped the mint. You might not.
- Eat it however you want. Out of the bowl. On toast. Next to turkey. With a spoon, alone in a quiet kitchen. There’s no wrong version.