My friend Elise over at Simply Recipes recently shared a fantastic cranberry relish recipe. Her recipe calls for the use of a food grinder to get the perfect consistency for this condiment. I had two (minor) dilemmas: First, Either I can't find my food grinder or I foolishly gave it away before moving house last year. Hm. Fortunately Elise has found a good food grinder to buy, so I may just have to sashay over there and get one because I know I'm gonna make this again! The second dilemma: I wanted to prepare a cranberry dish that could be modified for my loved ones who can't eat sugar.
Stevia to the rescue. Stevia is a natural herb that is hundreds of times sweeter than sugar, with negligible calorie count. It can be safely used instead of sugar as a sweetening agent, and is much more healthful than artificial sweeteners. The drawback is that a tiny bit of Stevia goes a very long way, so it cannot be substituted for sugar in terms of volume or textural (structural) qualities that sugar brings to baking.
The great news is, very tart fruits such as cranberries and rhubarb work particularly well with Stevia, so this cranberry relish recipe was a great candidate for a non-sugar version. It comes in both a powder and a liquid version. I bought my Stevia online, but I have seen Stevia for sale at Trader Joe's, and it is available at many health food stores also. There are several cook books on cooking with Stevia, with Stevia Sweet Recipes: Sugar-Free Naturally by Jeffrey Goettemoeller getting good reviews.
I made one batch of the relish as per the recipe below. However I then cut the batch in half and made a sugar version, and then a sugarless version with Stevia.
CRANBERRY RELISH --TWO WAYS
2 cups washed raw cranberries
2 skinned and cored apples (note: I used Granny Smith)
1 large seedless orange
1/2 cup sugar (or more, to taste) and/or 1/8 to 1/4 tsp Stevia
Note: If you have a food grinder, I recommend you grind all fruits together as in Elise's original recipe. Otherwise you can do as I did in a pinch:
1. Manually crush the cranberries with a mortar and pestle and/or potatoe masher
2. Very finely dice or chop the apples
3. Slice up the orange pieces as small as you can
Combine all the fruits and toss gently in a big bowl.
Then divide the fruit into two work bowls.
SUGARLESS VERSION:
Add 1/8 to 1/4 teaspoon Stevia powder to the fruit, tossing gently with a rubber spatula and sprinkling the Stevia slowly and carefully to get good distribution. Start at lowest amount of Stevia, stir and very slowly add a bit more to desired sweetness. Yes, Stevia is that sweet! Technically I don't suppose Stevai macerates fruit in the same way as sugar, so you might not get a very syrup-like texture with this. However the Diabetics in my family really enjoyed this relish, so there were no complaints here!
SUGAR VERSION:
Add 1/2 to one cup sugar (to taste--see note below). Add, stir gently with spatula, and let sit to macerate about 15 minutes at room temperature. Can be refrigerated, although bring to room temperature to serve.
Cook's notes:
The original recipe called for 2 cups of sugar to sweeten the entire (non divided) recipe. If you divide it, normally one would add one cup of sugar to the sugar sweetened half of the recipe, but I used only one half cup and it was sweet enough for my family's taste. (We like tart foods). I recommend you start with 1/2 cup and slowly add up to one full cup of sugar to your desired level of sweetness.