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This thread centers around personal experiences and recipes related to stuffing and dressing for Thanksgiving, with participants sharing their traditions, preferences, and cooking methods.
Views differ on stuffing preferences, with some participants favoring traditional homemade recipes while others prefer convenience options like STOVETOP. No clear consensus emerges on a single preferred method or recipe.
Participants share personal anecdotes and recipes, reflecting diverse culinary traditions and family practices related to Thanksgiving stuffing.
Consultants interested in holiday cooking traditions and recipe sharing may find the experiences and suggestions shared in this thread relevant.
KellyTheChef said:Sorry...I am not a help here. The only dressing my DH will eat is STOVETOP!! How boring is that??
Teresa said:My earliest holiday tradition memories are of me being about 3 & every year until I was about 10 the day before Thanksgiving I would go with my uncle to the day old bread store. We would buy a dozen loaves of stale bread and prepare the stuffing in his basement kitchen. My aunt would be upstairs in "her" kitchen doing the other foods but we had dressing duty.
we spread foil on all the tables and opened all the bread and tore it into cubes 1 slice at a time. I'm sure my uncle got real tired of this but it was the way I wanted it done
then we would dice onions, cut celery, measure the seasonings beat the eggs and boil our turkey necks and gizzards for the stock.
We had huge galvanized washtubs we only used for stuffing making and we would mix dressing, he has a photo of me with my hair in pink curlers and up to my elbows in dressing.
We would have about 45 people each Thanksgiving...... fast forward to my first year of marriage and they are coming to Texas with my mom. So I buy a dozen loaves of bread......... it never once occured to me that 12 loaves of bread for 5 people was too dang much....
I can do better proportions now but I never measure so I can only tell you what goes in it.
stale white bread
sliced celery
diced onion
eggs
milk
fresh broth
butter
sage & Lawry's seasoning salt
I saute my onion and celery in the butter then add it to my eggs and some milk mix thoroughly. Pour over the dry bread, add the seasonings and broth until it's pretty soggy. Pour in a greased foil disposable pan (I'm all about easy clean up for the holidays) bake at 350 until golden brown. It will get a little puffy so do not fill to the top.
KellyTheChef said:Sorry...I am not a help here. The only dressing my DH will eat is STOVETOP!! How boring is that??
KellyTheChef said:Sorry...I am not a help here. The only dressing my DH will eat is STOVETOP!! How boring is that??
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