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View Poll Results: How is your dressing made?

Voters
54. You may not vote on this poll
  • Mine's made from day old bread

    13 24.07%
  • Mine's made from cornbread

    15 27.78%
  • Mine's from something else altogether

    20 37.04%
  • blech, dressing

    6 11.11%
Results 1 to 15 of 49

Thread: Dressing?

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Troutdale, OR
    Posts
    2,600
    Quote Originally Posted by bmccasland View Post
    First you make a cornbread, in a cast iron skillet. Turn out and let cool and dry out overnight....

    But Pll - yours sounds really tasty!

    Anyone ever had a Turducken? Better bought than trying to prepare one at home. Debone a turkey, a duck, and a chicken, but leave the leg bones in the turkey. Stuff the chicken with your favorite stuffing/dressing, stuff this inside the duck, and stuff the whole thing inside the turkey. Tie together with string. Roast.
    OMG!!! The oil from the duck keeps the turkey meat from drying out. but still its soo much work. When you debone the duck, chiken and turkey you do not want to cut it open. So when its deboned its like a tube. I think its easier to stuff the duck in turkey first then the chicken then the stuffing last.

    too too much work. besides I'm not on Atkin diet.

    I may not do the turkey this year. I might just butterfly open a cornish game hen. and pan roast with weight over it. Not sure which sauce I want to make... Besides, my home oven is kaputts. not doing the deep frying of turkey or roasting on our outdoor grill. Gallons of hot oil scare the heck out of me.

    smilingcat

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    3,867
    A while back they were making cornbread on one of those PBS cooking shows. I was appalled. It had flour and sugar in it. They cautioned it wasn't traditional Southern cornbread. I was going, "No s%#@!"
    It's called Johnnycake--it's more a Yankee thang. But my cornbread has flour in it, too. Doesn't yours?

    Oh, at Lowe's a while ago I saw a turkey "fryer" that uses infrared and NO oil. huh?

    Karen

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    3,867

    If you're cooking a chicken...

    for T'giving, try it this way. I found it somewhere (can't remember where) and tried it, and then I sent this email to my sons and my dad and they all tried it and loved it. I love it. It's incredibly easy and no fuss. You can doctor the skin anyway you like and even put some butter under the skin, but it's so not necessary. The part about cook for an "hour"--use your judgment...if the leg is loose, it's pretty much done.

    3-6 lb whole chicken
    Salt
    Pepper

    Heat oven to 450. Yes, 450.
    Rinse the chicken inside and out. Do what you will with the spare parts (I usually throw them away or cook them up for the dogs)
    DRY the chicken inside and out with paper towels. (Do this because you don't want any steam.)
    Sprinkle the chicken inside and out with salt and pepper.
    Throw the chicken breast side up in a roasting pan or whatever else you have. I used my 12" iron skillet. You can tie up the legs or whatever, but it's not necessary.
    Cook it for an hour or so (if you get a chicken with a pop-up thing, cook until the thing pops up). If you have a meat thermometer use that.

    Put it in the bottom of the oven. Because of the high temp it will spatter a bit, so cook it down low to keep the oven from getting too dirty.

    The skin will be CRISPY and salty and peppery and the inside will be divinely juicy.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    2,506
    Quote Originally Posted by Tuckervill View Post
    But my cornbread has flour in it, too. Doesn't yours?

    Karen
    Nope, never!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    foothills of the Ozarks aka Tornado Alley
    Posts
    4,193
    Here's a delicious crock pot dressing recipe:

    1 8 inch pan of cornbread
    8 slices of day old bread
    4 eggs
    1/2 cup celery, chopped and sauteed
    1 medium onion, chopped and sauteed
    1 tsp salt
    1/2 tsp black pepper
    1 1/2 tsp sage or poultry seasoning
    2 cans chream of chicken soup
    2 cans chicken broth
    2 tbs butter

    Crumble breads. Add all ingredients except butter. Pour into the crockpot and dot with butter. Cook on high for 2 hours or low for 3-4 hours. Makes 16 (6 oz) servings.

    I like to stew a fryer and use the meat and broth in the recipe.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Posts
    4,516
    My dressing never has cornbread in it - and I live in the South!!

    Nope, sage, celery, etc. Sometimes Oyster Dressing - YUMMY!!!

    CA
    Most days in life don't stand out, But life's about those days that will...

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    WA State
    Posts
    4,364
    The stuffing I grew up with (I'm a northerner) had bread, sausage, onion, celery and corn in it. Plenty of spiciness in the sausage, so no need to add more.
    "Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide

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  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Illinois
    Posts
    3,853
    Quote Originally Posted by CA_in_NC View Post
    My dressing never has cornbread in it - and I live in the South!!

    Nope, sage, celery, etc. Sometimes Oyster Dressing - YUMMY!!!

    CA
    I was soooo excited to be having Thanksgiving dinner a friends family when I was in college, my folks were traveling and being with a family was great. They served up the dinner and I took a huge portion of stuffing (as I've said I LOVE stuffing)...took a BIG bite and almost gagged, who puts oysters in stuffing???? So there I was, huge portion on my plate trying to figure out how I was going to choke down stuffing with fishy stuff in it, I was so sad about that...although their beagle was tickled pink with the under-the-table buffet.

    Electra Townie 7D

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Posts
    4,516
    Queen -

    LOL! I can imagine that would be an unpleasant surprise if one wasn't expecting it

    I didn't like it *at all* as a child, but now I make it as a separate dish

    CA
    Most days in life don't stand out, But life's about those days that will...

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Limbo
    Posts
    8,769
    Quote Originally Posted by sundial View Post
    Here's a delicious crock pot dressing recipe:

    1 8 inch pan of cornbread
    8 slices of day old bread
    4 eggs
    1/2 cup celery, chopped and sauteed
    1 medium onion, chopped and sauteed
    1 tsp salt
    1/2 tsp black pepper
    1 1/2 tsp sage or poultry seasoning
    2 cans chream of chicken soup
    2 cans chicken broth
    2 tbs butter

    Crumble breads. Add all ingredients except butter. Pour into the crockpot and dot with butter. Cook on high for 2 hours or low for 3-4 hours. Makes 16 (6 oz) servings.

    I like to stew a fryer and use the meat and broth in the recipe.
    That's four cans of liquid. I'm a big fan of the crockpot but this just doesn't sound right for dressing.

    Doesn't it come out all gloppy?
    2008 Trek FX 7.2/Terry Cite X
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  11. #11
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    around Seattle, WA
    Posts
    3,238

    Other TurkeyDay traditonal food

    Pickled Peaches (spiced peaches). Boy I miss those. They were always on my grandmother's table at Thanksgiving or Christmas, in a pretty crystal serving dish.

    Zen - the crock pot recipe - two of those soup cans are condensed soups, which are pretty viscous, so I don't think the recipe would be that gloppy.
    Beth

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    steuben county new york
    Posts
    626
    I buy a bag of seasoned croutons and some red box stuffing, cook up the celery and onion in lots o' butter, add some water and pour over the croutons and red box contents and I do add a can of drained minced clams. Bake fast and furious so the outside is crisp and crunchy and the inside is moist, its gone in no time.

 

 

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