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November 23 – National Eat a Cranberry Day

nPostednon November 23, 2015

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nWhennyou hear the word “bog,” do you think of muddy, swampy land,ndeadly quicksand, and the pungent smells of rotting plants?

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Orndo you think of still pools of water gone bright red with ripencranberries?

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nCranberriesngrow on dwarf shrub plants that grow in wetlands, sometimes partlynsubmerged in water. The wetlands aren’t just any wet place – forncranberries, the bogs must be acidic. The flower of this plant tendsnto bend toward the ground and looks a bit like the head, neck, andnbill of a crane – and that is where the name cranberry comesnfrom.

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nInnorder to make harvesting easier, cranberry growers flood the bog withnmore water so that the vines are entirely submerged, and a harvesternis driven through the beds to remove fruit from the vines. Releasednfrom the plant, the cranberries float at the top of the pools and cannbe easily sucked up via a hose.

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nActually,nthere is another, less common, method of dry harvesting, which is hownmost of the cranberries used to sell fresh in bags are harvested. 
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nThenmore usual wet harvesting method is fine for making cranberry juicenand cranberry sauce, which is how 95% of cranberries are used. 

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Some people prefer cranberry sauce (above).
and others prefer cranberry jelly (below).

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nAnd then there is my favorite: dried, sweetened cranberries in Trader Joe’s cereal.
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nHerenare some of the favorite cranberry recipes my family uses at thisntime of year:

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nWenmake an uncooked cranberry relish rather than a cooked cranberrynsauce, to go along with our turkey dinner at Thanksgiving time. It’snreally yummy!
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n1 bag fresh cranberries 

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n1 seedless orange, washed 

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nsugar        

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nUse a grinder to grind up the cranberries and the orange, rind and all. Add sugar to taste. Be conservative with the sugar at first, and let the relish sit overnight and then taste again. If you need more sugar, you can add a bit more. (Just remember, you can always add more, but you cannot take sugar out!)

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nAlso,nthis festive salad is great for holiday meals:

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n romainenlettuce in bite-sized pieces (one large head or two bags)

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n1npear, cored and cubed 

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n1napple, cored and cubed 

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n1ncup cashews 

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n¼ cup dried cranberries 

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n1 cup shredded Swiss cheese

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n Dressing – blend together:

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n½ncup sugar
1/3n- cup lemon juice
2ntsp. finely chopped onion
1ntsp. Dijon mustard
½ntsp. salt
2/3ncup oil
1nTbsp. poppy seeds 

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nOnn“Eat a Cranberry Day,” remember that you can enjoy many cranberrynproducts and recipes, but you can’t eat raw cranberries – they arenhard and very sour!

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nAlsonon this date:

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nDr.nWho Day
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nLabornThanksgiving Day in Japan

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nAnniversarynof the discovery of fossils in Antarctica

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nFibonaccinDay

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nPlannahead:

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nChecknout my Pinterest boards for:

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  • nNovembern holidays

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  • nNovembern birthdays

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  • nHistoricaln anniversaries in November

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nAndnhere are my Pinterest boards for:

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  • nDecembern birthdays

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  • nHistoricaln anniversaries in December

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