Leftover Cranberry Sauce Bread Recipe from Oh My Veggies! (2024)

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Back in the day, when I was all anti-establishment and down with the man, I would have never found myself partaking in Black Friday madness. But this year, I'm counting down the days to Black Friday because we need a new couch. Couches are expensive! Sales on couches are good! Do you know what two dogs and a little boy do to a cheap couch in three years? Terrible things.

One thing I won't be doing the day after Thanksgiving is eating leftovers because, since it's just the three of us for Thanksgiving this year, I decided not to make a big dinner. Sad, right?!

But if you do happen to have Thanksgiving dinner leftovers, save some cranberry sauce to make this Leftover Cranberry Sauce Bread.


Yes! You put the sauce in the bread! It has to be the chunky kind, not the jellied variety, of course.

This is a variation of my mom's famous strawberry bread. I swapped out the strawberries for a cup of cranberry sauce and it works out perfectly.

And if you still have leftover sauce after making the bread, you can serve it with a spoonful of cranberries on top.

More Cranberry Sauce Things!

If you're looking for other ideas, a few years ago I posted 9 Ways to Use Leftover Cranberry Sauce. And if you're still in need of a cranberry sauce recipe, here are two that I can vouch for:

Ginger Orange Cranberry Sauce // The secret ingredient is ginger beer!

Happy Thanksgiving!

Recipe

Leftover Cranberry Sauce Bread Recipe from Oh My Veggies! (3)

Leftover Cranberry Sauce Bread

Use your leftover cranberry sauce to make this easy dairy-free quick bread!

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Prep Time: 10 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 35 minutes minutes

Total Time: 45 minutes minutes

Course: Baking, Breakfast, Snack

Cuisine: American

Diet: Vegan, Vegetarian

Keyword: dairy-free bread, dairy-free quick bread, Leftover Cranberry Sauce Bread, quick bread recipe

Servings: 3 mini loaves

Calories: 919kcal

Author: Oh My Veggies

Ingredients

US Customary - Metric

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350ºF.

  • Combine the ground flax and water in a small bowl; set aside. Whisk the flours, cinnamon, baking soda, and salt in a medium mixing bowl. In another medium mixing bowl, whisk the coconut milk into the sugar until creamed. Slowly pour in the coconut oil, whisking to incorporate it into the sugar mixture. Stir in the flax mixture and vanilla extract, then pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and stir until just combined. Fold in the cranberries.

  • Spray 3 mini loaf pans (3 x 5.75 inches) with oil or grease them with coconut oil. Divide the mixture into the 3 pans.

  • Bake for 30-35 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the center of the bread comes out clean. Cool for 5 minutes, then remove the loaves from the bread pans and finish cooling on a rack.

Notes

If your cranberry sauce has a lot of liquid in it, drain some of it off before adding it to the bread batter. I used this recipe for the sauce. I haven't tested this particular bread recipe with a large loaf pan, but I have tested it with the strawberry version I'm adapting it from and a large loaf takes 45-60 minutes to bake.

Note: The estimated nutrition values are for one full mini loaf.

Nutrition

Calories: 919kcalCarbohydrates: 131gProtein: 9gFat: 45gSaturated Fat: 35gPolyunsaturated Fat: 3gMonounsaturated Fat: 3gSodium: 583mgPotassium: 269mgFiber: 7gSugar: 75gVitamin A: 45IUVitamin C: 1mgCalcium: 47mgIron: 4mg

Craving more veg-friendly recipes? Shop our collection of vegetarian and vegan cookbooks, including our new Vegan Thanksgiving and Vegan Christmas cookbooks!

« Simple Vegan Pasta Bake With Tofu

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Lisa @ Greek Vegetarian says

    Wow, Kiersten, I just have to tell you how in awe I am of you and the energy and enthusiasm you put into your blog. I have missed a few of your posts recently and coming back here I see I’ve in fact missed a LOT of your posts, and not only that, you have a gorgeous new look to your blog, and even better photography. Wonderful, wonderful work, Kiersten. Yours is the kind of blog that inspires me to get back on track with my own blogging routine (which has sadly fallen by the wayside).

    I love this recipe, and even more lovely is that it’s one of your mum’s recipes that you veganised for your recently-veganised mum!!! So serendipitous 🙂

    Have a lovely Thanksgiving xx

    Reply

    • Kiersten says

      Aw, thank you--that means so much coming from you because I just adore your blog! But really, whenever people tell me that, I have to remind them that this is my full-time job now, so I really have no excuse not to put so much energy and time into my blog. Before I got laid off last year, I was much more relaxed about things! There's really no better motivation than having no other job prospects. 😉

      Reply

  2. Liz says

    "(Cats: This is why we can’t have nice things.)" Just sub in "S.O." for cats, and that's my life LOL so I DEFINITELY feel your pain and anguish. 🙂 (Apparently, he was raised in a cave with wolves who had no need for furniture, and he tries hard to keep that tradition by demolishing every piece we own. 🙂 )

    Your mom is a BAD ASS! I love hearing about older individuals/Baby Boomers adopting a plant-based diet; I'm always so amazed and inspired by them. It's SUCH an admirable change considering how HARD it is to change your habits and way of life, the older you get. I'm just in my early 30's, and I ALREADY feel so cemented in my ways (not necessarily a BAD thing). It might be kind of interesting to feature one or two of the recipes you veganized for your moms. Ya know, give us the original recipe, then the steps you took to veganize and knock the sugar, then show us the recipe you came up with. Might be interesting, no?

    Oh. And I'm pretty sure I won't be able to have a good's night sleep without seeing your new couch, or, at the very least, know what kind of bargain you got on it. 🙂 I'll be couch shopping soon, too.

    Reply

    • Kiersten says

      How does your SO destroy your furniture?! Maybe I don't want to know. 😉 I ended up waiting on the couch. I wanted to take advantage of the Crate & Barrel 15% off sale (15% off isn't usually too great, but on a big-ticket item, that's a lot of money!), but the couch we ended up liking (http://www.crateandbarrel.com/taraval-3-seat-sofa/f49527) was still a little too spendy for our budget right now. Sigh. I swear to you, IKEA has ruined furniture shopping for me because I want everything to be $400 and I want to get a cinnamon bun afterwards. But our last 3 couches have been IKEA and they have each lasted us about 2 years. West Elm has 25% off of $1000 or more, so I considered them too, but our local WE doesn't have many couches in store and buying one without sitting on it makes me nervous!

      My mom, my uncle, my aunt, and my great aunt have all gone vegan in the past few years. And my grandma is almost there. How crazy is that? It's funny because I always had the radical diet growing up and now I'm the moderate one because I still eat dairy and eggs a few times a week. The other bread recipes that I veganized for my mom are going in my cookbook! 😀

      Reply

  3. Eat Good 4 Life says

    This looks awesome. I am loving cranberry season 🙂 We too stayed at home, just the 4 of us, because my husband's relatives leave 10 hours away. We will be seeing them over Christmas so that will suffice 🙂

    Reply

    • Kiersten says

      Sometimes it's nice to have a relaxed, low-key Thanksgiving too! 🙂 I agree, it's definitely too much to travel that far twice within a month.

      Reply

  4. Sherri says

    Delicious! I made the following alterations to fit in into our "clean eating" diet. Replaced all of the flour with Trader Joes gluten free all purpose flour, used organic granulated coconut sugar instead of white sugar, added 1/4 tsp. grated lemon peel and a few grates of nutmeg. Baked in 8.5" loaf pan for about 40 minutes. I'll definitely make this again!

    Reply

    • Sherri says

      Oh forgot...I didn't have flax seed so I replaced it with hemp seed 🙂

      Reply

    • Kiersten says

      I'm glad it turned out well--thanks for the feedback! 🙂

      Reply

  5. Jeanette | Jeanette's Healthy Living says

    Your cats sound like my boys! I can't tell you how beaten up our couch was before I finally decided to replace it. Boys are so hard on furniture and everything else. Love how you converted your mom's recipes so she could enjoy them. This quick bread looks incredibly good. I've got to make gluten-free bread for my son, but I'm going to give his a try using almond flour. Hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving Kiersten!

    Reply

    • Kiersten says

      Let me know how it works out with the almond flour if you make it! Another reader successfully substituted gluten-free flour, so that might be another option. I hope you had a great Thanksgiving too!

      Reply

  6. Jessica @ Jessiker Bakes says

    Such an ingenious idea! I can see a simple sweet bread recipe being uplifted with the addition of cranberry sauce! Thanks for this recipe Kiersten!

    Reply

  7. Nichole | Green Cuisine Queen says

    Cats and couches! I love my kitty and thankfully she does not scratch anything, but I used to have a cat who did. And the jumping on the counter thing...drove me crazy! I love cranberry and this is such a good idea. Unfortunately, we did not have any leftover cranberry sauce. But I might try this anyways with dried cranberries or strawberries! Sounds so good. 🙂

    Reply

    • Kiersten says

      All of our cats scratch, but two of them are very good at scratching the scratching posts and mats we have for them and others will step around them to get to the couch. They are too smart sometimes!

      Reply

  8. mjskit says

    Well, I've made cranberry bread but never cranberry "sauce" bread. What a great idea! It looks marvelous!! Did you find your couch? 🙂

    Reply

    • Kiersten says

      Well, I did find my couch, but it ended up being one of the more expensive ones there, so I'm waiting for an even better sale. 😉

      Reply

  9. Daniela @ FoodrecipesHQ says

    Oh what a cute bread! I think cranberry is just perfect in it. Good luck with your search of a perfect sofa... will you blog from it? (I always write while laying on the sofa :))

    Reply

    • Kiersten says

      Ha! I do! I tried to get out of that habit and start using my desk, but my desk isn't nearly as comfortable. 😉

      Reply

  10. Heather says

    Can I sub canola oil for the coconut oil & regular milk for the coconut milk? We're not vegan, so I don't keep them in the pantry & I'd like to use what I have.

    Reply

    • Kiersten says

      If you sub in regular milk, I'd use whole just because coconut milk is so fatty. I think the canola oil will work fine; my mom's original recipe called for butter.

      Reply

      • Lisa says

        HI, I'd like to make this today, but do not have coconut milk or whole milk, how was the butter used? Or, can I use evaporated milk? Thanks!!

        Reply

        • Kiersten Frase says

          I haven't made the recipe with evaporated milk, so I can't tell you how it would turn out.

          Reply

  11. The Peace Patch says

    lol...how did you know I have cranberry sauce aplenty after T-day? We were sent home with a giant bowlful and will never finish it...this is perfect! I wonder if the recipe would work with orange marmalade too... 🙂

    Reply

    • Kiersten says

      Cranberry sauce was always the last leftover we had left after Thanksgiving--that container would sit in the fridge for days! If you try it with marmalade, let me know how it turns out...

      Reply

  12. Genevieve says

    Those loaves are so perfect and adorable! i wouldn't have thought of swapping strawberries with cranberries! I wonder if you could just kind of mash up some whole cranberries instead of using leftover sauce...I know a lot of cranberry sauces have a high amount of sugar in them, so it would cut down on extra sugar, but maybe it would end up being too tart? (sorry if you already answered this question, I didn't read through the other comments!)

    Reply

    • Kiersten says

      I think I would probably mash the cranberries with a little maple syrup or honey just to make sure the bread doesn't end up being tart. I've actually never tried whole cranberries outside of a sauce or chutney, so I'm not sure how tart they are!

      Reply

  13. Shirley says

    Must make! Can I tell you how much I love cranberry sauce? I was eating it straight out of the Trader Joe's jar one day, and my work friends thought I was weird. "No turkey chaser?" Are you going to feature any more of the recipe makeovers you did for your mom?
    Oh, and I feel you on the couch. About 2 weeks ago, Gandalf suddenly started scratching our couch! I put the sticky paws tape on parts of it, and he would move over and scratch a new spot. Little brat. I didn't want to tape the entire couch, and the stuff would come off and stick to me when I'd walk past the couch too. Here's hoping 'nipping up his scratching post and moving it next to the couch works.

    Reply

    • Kiersten says

      I have a few vegan bread recipes that I'm putting in my cookbook. 🙂 And I think we're just going to have to tape our whole cough. Or cover the whole thing in foil. Something! We have FIVE(!!!) scratching posts and mats all around the couch, but it doesn't make a difference.

      Reply

  14. SK says

    Made with leftover cranberry orange relish and added walnuts. So delicious and moist!

    Reply

    • Kiersten says

      I'm glad you enjoyed it! 🙂

      Reply

  15. Susan Weintrob says

    This is the first time I have come to your blog. The leftover Cranberry Sauce Bread looks terrific. I so love ways to use leftovers and this is on my list to make after Thanksgiving. Also want to mention that your logo is so very nice. Makes me smile.

    Reply

    • Kiersten Frase says

      Thank you! 🙂 I hope you enjoy the bread!

      Reply

  16. Michele says

    I don't know what happened but mine did not rise, it was super dense. I love the flavor, but bummed with how it turned out.

    Reply

  17. Leslee says

    Loved this bread. Although I didn't have the coconut milk so I used vanilla flavor soy milk, buckwheat flour instead of whole wheat flour and I did bake in a regular loaf pan for 50 mins. Turned out awesome!!!! Thanks for sharing

    Reply

  18. Debra Gulley says

    one year had whole berry cranberry sauce leftover, as well as pumpkin, so made pumpkin bars and swirled the cranberry throughout... omg!! gave several mini pans away as gifts and received many compliments!

    Reply

  19. Mary says

    Mine did not rise much and are very gummy even after extra baking time. Shouldn't there be baking powder in this recipe? I'm thinking that might be the problem.

    Reply

    • Alissa says

      Sorry to hear that! The baking soda should make it rise. If your baking soda is old that could be the problem. You can test it by sprinkling some in a glass of vinegar - if it fizzes it's good, and if not, it's time for a new box. 🙂

      Reply

  20. Pennie says

    This recipe is amazing!! so happy to find leftover cranberry sauce in the fridge. Even moe excited because i just found some more, so in goes another batch.
    FYI, i replaced the flour with King Arthur GF cup for cup flour..Came out perfect!!
    Thanks again, love your recipes!!

    Reply

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Leftover Cranberry Sauce Bread Recipe from Oh My Veggies! (2024)

FAQs

What else can I use cranberry sauce for? ›

Crantastic! 12 Ways to Enjoy Your Leftover Cranberry Sauce
  • Make the ultimate… grilled cheese! ...
  • Pour it over your… pancakes! ...
  • Spoon it into… muffins! ...
  • Roll it up in... cinnamon rolls! ...
  • Stir it into... yogurt! ...
  • Whip it into a… smoothie! ...
  • Top your… toast! ...
  • Bake it into… homemade pop tarts!

What to do with leftover cranberries after making cranberry juice? ›

Fresh cranberry juice is often blended with other delicious fruits, and the leftover pulp is just as wonderful. Put that pulp to use with this festive Cranberry Chutney! Delicious spread on crostini with brie cheese or served alongside turkey, pork or chicken.

How long is jellied cranberry sauce good for after the expiration date? ›

As long as an unopened can of cranberry sauce is stored in a consistently cool pantry, it'll keep and taste good for at least a year beyond the date stamped on the can. (That date is the manufacturer's estimate of how long the cranberry sauce will remain at peak quality and is not a safety-related expiration date.)

How long will cranberry sauce keep in the fridge? ›

We do suggest making sauce ahead of time and storing it in an air-tight container in your refrigerator. It will keep for up to one week.

How to doctor up canned jellied cranberry sauce? ›

Adding a teaspoon or two of fresh lemon or orange zest, a tablespoon of chopped candied peel, or even a splash of juice to your canned sauce will brighten flavors and bring in some homemade flavor.

What does cranberry sauce do for your body? ›

The great amount of antioxidants found in cranberries, such as proanthocyanidins, could help lower your chance of getting cancer. However, more research is needed to confirm this. Cranberries have two big benefits for heart health: lowering blood pressure and improving cholesterol.

Can you freeze fresh cranberries to use later? ›

Place plastic bags of cranberries directly in the freezer for up to twelve months and use without thawing—just run cold water over them to rinse before using. Because some bruised and soft berries and some stems and leaves are often in the bags, you might prefer to sort and wash the berries before freezing them.

How do you store leftover cranberry sauce? ›

While refrigeration is a suitable method, leftover cranberry sauce will only last for a few weeks this way. So if you want to keep cranberry sauce longer than that, turn to the freezer to extend the life of your cranberry sauce.

Does 100 cranberry juice go bad? ›

The Google consensus is that it's SAFE to drink even AFTER 12-24 MONTHS past any printed date on the bottle. THIS APPLIES ONLY TO UNOPENED BOTTLES OF CRANBERRY JUICE. If opened, the juice should be refrigerated and used within 2 weeks.

Is canned jellied cranberry sauce good for you? ›

Health Benefits

Cranberries are also rich in vitamin C and fiber, as well as the metabolism-boosting mineral manganese. And yes, you reap all these benefits whether the cranberry sauce on your holiday table is homemade or canned, jellied or whole-berry.

Is canned pumpkin good 2 years after the expiration date? ›

Most shelf-stable foods are safe indefinitely. In fact, canned goods will last for years, as long as the can itself is in good condition (no rust, dents, or swelling). Packaged foods (cereal, pasta, cookies) will be safe past the 'best by' date, although they may eventually become stale or develop an off flavor.

How long is ocean spray cranberry sauce good for? ›

Unopened canned cranberry sauce can last a year in the pantry but make sure to check the "best before" date to make sure it hasn't expired, and once open, it can be stored in a container with a tightly fitting lid for up to two weeks.

How do you know if cranberry sauce has gone bad? ›

Sight is usually the best way to tell if your cranberry sauce has gone bad. For canned sauce, if the top of the can is rounded and dome shaped instead of flat across, the sauce has most likely gone bad. If you open the can and anything is brown or black, then do not eat the sauce.

Can jellied cranberry sauce be frozen? ›

Unlike its homemade counterpart, canned cranberry sauce doesn't freeze or defrost very well. The jellied texture changes after freezing, becoming more watery. Even the leading authority on canned cranberry sauce, Ocean Spray, agrees that freezing canned cranberry sauce is not recommended.

Why did my cranberry sauce not gel? ›

One possibility is that you may not have used enough sugar: Sugar helps the sauce firm up, so be sure to use the full amount called for in a recipe. Another possibility is that the cranberries need to boil for longer, releasing their pectin and ensuring a jelly consistency.

Can cranberry sauce be frozen? ›

Homemade cranberry sauce keeps wonderfully in the freezer for up to three months. Pour your cooled cranberry sauce into freezer-friendly zip-top plastic bags, and remove as much air as possible from the bag before sealing.

How do you cut the tartness out of cranberry sauce? ›

Add A Splash Of Vinegar

Their sharp tang counteracts bitter flavors without having to add extra sugar. While citrus is a natural pairing for cranberry sauce, bright, savory vinegars like sherry vinegar, balsamic vinegar, and apple cider vinegar play well with the bitter-tart berries.

Can you melt cranberry sauce? ›

A can of cranberry sauce typically contains cranberries, high fructose corn syrup, corn syrup, and water, so when you plop it into a pot on low heat, it is going to melt down into an almost jam-like consistency, but that's not all that is going to change.

Why do Americans eat cranberry sauce? ›

To help offset some tartness in the fruit, both the Native Americans and pilgrims used maple, honey and other natural sweeteners to make the cranberries more palatable. According to Wick, the tart fruit became popularly used to create cranberry sauce for turkey and other types of meat in the late 17th century.

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