Latest News Reports

TBO.com > Entertainment

Above the Fruited Plain - With Kristi Siegel

Stuffing? Dressing? Or Something Else?


Yep, it’s only September, but now is the time to begin fine-tuning your Thanksgiving feast. And what American turkey-table is often seen without that ever-popular bread-based filler?

In some parts of the USA, folks take their holiday turkey with dressing. That is, of course, if you’re in the South. But if you ask a Pennsylvanian what they want on the side of their bird, they’ll likely tell you “stuffing.” No matter what part of the country you’re in, there are as many ways to make stuffing/dressing as there are turkeys in a pen. Here are three unique and time-tried recipes for this delicious and very American side-dish. (And please, try to avoid preparing that popular, ready-made stuff in a box. It always tastes just like the box!)

Gay Carpenter, of Anderson, South Carolina, says: “Before her death at age 88, my Alabama mother taught me to make the “dressing” recipe passed to her by my grandmother. Now I’ll pass it on to fellow connoisseurs!”

Alabama Dressing
1 8x8 pan of cornbread
1 stack pack of Premium saltines crushed fine
3 stalks of celery/ 1 medium onion both chopped
3 eggs beaten
2 or 3 cans Sweet Sue chicken broth or broth from baked poultry
Salt/Pepper to taste

Cook celery/onion in chicken broth. Crumble cornbread in large container. Add crushed saltines eggs, broth, celery, onions. Mix well. Pour into well-greased 9x13 baking dish. Bake at 375 degrees for 30-40 minutes. Gay says, “As in most Southern recipes the measurements may need a little “tweaking”, but it is wonderful!”



Here is an old, old Texan stuffing recipe from Kelly Ehlinger: “This is stuffing the way my mother, granny, Jewell, and great-granny, and now myself make it....My granny told me that this is how her grandmother and great grandmother made it all the way back to when they were garrisoned at Fort Stockton, Texas after the Texas war for independence. Any additions or variations cause a tremendous outcry from the family. I made oyster-rice dressing once and was in fear for my life!”

Texas Independence Cornbread Stuffing
2 pans cornbread, 1 white, 1 yellow
Pan of day-old biscuits
Celery and onions softened just a little in some broth
Green onions
Salt
Pepper
Sage
Celery salt
Poultry seasoning
Chopped hard-boiled eggs

“Mush/mix it all together using chicken stock/broth until very moistened, and bake. Get busy making the giblet gravy.”

***

This Amish recipe calls for an interesting ingredient: chopped, cooked chicken. You could probably use chopped turkey as well; but if you’re using this to stuff your bird, it might result in ‘turkey overload.’

Amish Stuffing
1 loaf bread, diced and toasted
4 eggs
1 med. onion, chopped
3 1/2 c. milk
1/2 tsp. salt
1/8 tsp. pepper
1/2 tsp. sage
1/2 tsp. thyme
3/4 c. diced cooked potatoes
2 c. cooked chicken
1/2 c. shredded cooked carrots
3 stems celery

Put eggs in bowl and beat. Add salt, pepper, sage and thyme. Mix. Add 2 cups milk, onion, celery, potatoes, diced chicken and carrots. Add bread crumbs and enough milk to moisten well. Substitute 1 cup chicken broth instead of milk for added flavor. Bake in well greased casserole at 350 degrees. Variation: add 2 cups cooked ham in place of chicken. Also add 1 large pepper, cut in narrow strips.

Send Us Your Comments


Advertisement

Send Us Your Comments
Terms & Conditions

* Comments Must Include Full Name And Location


Full Name:

Email:

Location:

Smileys

Please enter the word you see in the image above:

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?


Get Weekly Deals | Write a letter to the editor | Subscribe and get two weeks free | Place an Ad

Site Tools

RSS Feeds:
XML Feed for this channel
All feeds/RSS FAQ


About This Blog
    Which modern meals best represent the USA? Kristi Siegel is in search of the history behind the foods that flavor a nation. Macaroni & cheese, meatloaf, Cincinnati chili and an amazing take on the grilled cheese sandwich: they're examples of American foodstuffs in Above the Fruited Plain: America's Best-Loved Meals.

    Here we chronicle the culinary preferences of the people who live to eat the foods that bind a nation through mutual adoration: cafeteria chefs, school cooks, housewives, church pot-luck folk, diner owners, coffeehouse waitresses, southerners, firehouse gourmands, Yankees and midwesterners.
Most popular entertainment:

This feature requires the Macromedia Flash Plugin. Please visit http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer to download this plugin.


ADVERTISEMENT

Advertise With Us:
Online | In Print | Broadcast