Holiday
The Absolute Best Way to Make Thanksgiving Stuffing, According to So Many Tests
There's good stuffing—and then, there's the absolute best stuffing.
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54 Comments
Dee C.
November 25, 2020
After "growing up" and leaving the house, for three decades I veered from our family's traditional Thanksgiving stuffing. Every year stuffing was a variable: oyster stuffing, no-meat or meat stock stuffing, increased veggies stuffing, cornbread dressing, apples and leeks dressing, the stuffing was different every year. And now, at 57, I find that all I've ever really wanted was the family stuffing I tried to steer away from for thirty years.
viviancooks
November 16, 2020
The next day we always make stuffing waffles and serve them with fried eggs and whatever fruit. Just take the left over stuffing and cook in your waffle maker until nice and crispy. Unbelievable treat!
Claudia
November 16, 2020
I am not allowed to change the menu. Period. The turkey must be roasted. Not grilled, deep fried, rubbed and God forbid, brined. There must be sausage and pears in the stuffing, there must be Spiced cranberries, mashed potatoes, nothing different and candied sweet potatoes. There must be apple and pumpkin pies. The vegetable and rolls can change as long as they are there. There would be a mutiny and a coup if I did anything differently. After 38 years I don’t want to risk replacement. I have tried in the past- just don’t do it. You just don’t mess with my husband’s Thanksgiving dinner.
Jack
November 10, 2020
I also cook my turkey splatchcocked, I put the dressing in a flat pan put a rack on top
With the turkey on it, cook it for thirty minutes to absorb juices. I have another pan ready to transfer the turkey to finish cooking. I finish cooking the dressing later, after the turkey is done and resting
With the turkey on it, cook it for thirty minutes to absorb juices. I have another pan ready to transfer the turkey to finish cooking. I finish cooking the dressing later, after the turkey is done and resting
Catherine
November 26, 2019
This is blasphemous, I know, but I could never stand my grandmother's stuffing (well, technically dressing). It was one of those soggy, stock and mushy veg numbers that had both the appearance and taste of a grey, wet sponge (I am so going to hell for this). My mom and I now have adopted Thomas Keller's Leek Bread Pudding as our "stuffing" (again, really dressing). It is our platonic ideal of savory, herby, creamy, and crunchy and we look forward to it every year.
Catherine
November 26, 2019
P.S. We do use challah, in lieu of the recommended brioche or pullman loaf, to great effect.
jpriddy
December 3, 2020
I use homemade sourdough, which my mother would never have used, celery and onion and fresh herbs and fresh herbs (sage, rosemary, thyme) and chopped fresh cranberries and butter (ditto), and cooked in a casserole. For many years I was the Thanksgiving cook for my mother's Thanksgiving with her preferred soggy stuffing and bland bakery rolls. My way is better. (Yeah, going to hell for that.)
sajerd
November 25, 2019
My hack for the In-bird taste: I do a large baking dish of stuffing in the oven with an open rack placed on top of the vessel (same one I use for cooling baked goods). On top of the rack I place one or two (depending on size) turkey leg quarters to roast while the stuffing is baking. The drippings, well, do what drippings do and flavor the stuffing right up- plus there is a little extra dark meat, which we all love!
Jo B.
November 25, 2019
Last year we made stuffing in the crock pot. It was delish!! Creamy insider and crIspy top and sides. I'm not doing dinner this year but the next time I make stuffing/dressing, I'm using the oven-remove the crusts-olive oil-bake rather than the staling method. And can I tell you I gave found my new favorite food site. I ❤ food52.com!
S L.
November 26, 2019
I'd like to try that. I've heard it works quite well and saves oven space. Any special hints?
S L.
November 24, 2019
My family (including extended) have always made cornbread stuffing with a side of dressing so me had enough. We define "stuffing" as "in the bird" and "dressing" as "baked in a dish". It is always made from scratch and there must be leftovers to go on the turkey sandwiches the next day. The only variation is sometimes it has no sausage and sometimes it has Jimmy Dean sausage - original. Sometimes we do both. The one caveat is my father was from Iowa so we usually did a very small bowl of oyster stuffing made with bread for him. He liked both and ate both.
I have tried other stuffings over the years and they run from the simple to the over experimental with everything you can think of and none of them stood up to traditional corn bread.
I have tried other stuffings over the years and they run from the simple to the over experimental with everything you can think of and none of them stood up to traditional corn bread.
viviancooks
November 23, 2019
French bread. Onion, celery and sage heavy. In bird. Taken out while bird is resting and finished off in hot oven. Briefly broiled before bringing to table.
Abby H.
November 23, 2019
You can certainly assemble the dressing the day before, refrigerate and then bake on Thanksgiving day. If you are worried about oven space on the big day you can also bake in advance then crisp up in the oven while the turkey "rests". You can make, freeze the stuffing a week in advance then defrost overnight and bake on the big day. Or what I am doing this year is to sauté and freeze all the 'add-ins" (applies, sausage, onions, celery, chestnuts) - defrost adding "bread" and stock to moisten either the day before or on Thanksgiving morning - baking on thanksgiving.
Cooking D.
November 23, 2019
My son thinks Thanksgiving feast is just stuffing. I make it with a bit of challah and other artisan type breads from a local bakery. I’ve noticed that the better the bread, the tastier the stuffing. Other than that, cooked celery and onions in butter, fresh sage and parsley from
our garden. Salt and pepper. Moisten with eggs from the neighbors backyard chickens, and just enough turkey broth to moisten. I bake it in a sheet pan with turkey wings on top for more turkey flavor, cover with foil until turkey wings are done, and then uncover to crisp it.
our garden. Salt and pepper. Moisten with eggs from the neighbors backyard chickens, and just enough turkey broth to moisten. I bake it in a sheet pan with turkey wings on top for more turkey flavor, cover with foil until turkey wings are done, and then uncover to crisp it.
Leslie
November 23, 2019
Make mine with Pepperidge Farm seasoned ( not cubes)Soaked in chicken stock and butter per directions( not water) then mix ( after cooled) with eggs, Sautés onions, celery , cut up cooked turkey liver, and Cooked/crumbled Bob Evans savory sage sausage. A little poultry seasoning. Always loved. Always craved. I stuff it my turkey. Never had an issue. You just got my secret dressing recipe. Bon Apetite !
PS to this recipe you can add cranberries, nuts, heck I even tried water chestnuts.
PS to this recipe you can add cranberries, nuts, heck I even tried water chestnuts.
Janet K.
November 23, 2019
I remember my mother toasting her own crumbs in the oven from Pepperidge Farm sandwich bread. I think she cut off the crusts. She also threw in some Pepperidge Farm stuffing mix for flavor. Like a couple of comments below, she and then my sister who took over Thanksgiving, sauteed onion and celery in lots of butter and added dried herbs like poultry seasoning with extra sage and marjoram. We just kept tasting until it seemed right. Maybe a little broth. We like it crusty and soft inside. Chestnuts were added by my sister. We were purists, no fruit, no meats, no eggs. We stopped stuffing the turkey and started baking it instead. I do miss that flavor but my sister made turkey broth ahead of time and used that to flavor the stuffing and make gravy. Unfortunately, because of age and geography, I'm not sure when we'll all be together like this again. My mother is long gone and even my sister doesn't want to do Thanksgiving at her place, though she does it at her son's so he doesn't have to travel with young children. He lives across the country from me and I've only gone there once at Thanksgiving. I'm going to a friend's who has her own traditions.
Julie S.
November 23, 2019
I’ve always used brioche or potato bread for our family’s sausage stuffing. Usually made TG morning with mirepoix, country pork sausage from the nearby Amish farmers market and with chicken stock. It always goes into a large casserole dish, since hub spatchcocks our turkey. Some of those lovely drippings get shared with the stuffing before it’s baked and with the mushroom gravy.
Robin
November 22, 2019
Growing up, stuffing was the best part of Thanksgiving.
Found a recipe several years ago that uses a bag of Pepperidge Farm cornbread & a bag of their herb. It cooks in the crockpot. I'm never looking back.
Not forcing the stuffing to share oven space with the bird, genius.
The stuffing my mother made was pretty firm. How could it not be, it had mashed potatoes, celery, onions, eggs, stale cubed white bread, mashed (with potato masher) with broth from the turkey that was roasting. Still remember my parents debating how wet they wanted it to be before it went into the oven.
Mom also did a small dish of oyster dressing. It used those rock hard OTC oyster crackers, don't think you can find them anymore. I loved everything about it except the actual oysters.
Found a recipe several years ago that uses a bag of Pepperidge Farm cornbread & a bag of their herb. It cooks in the crockpot. I'm never looking back.
Not forcing the stuffing to share oven space with the bird, genius.
The stuffing my mother made was pretty firm. How could it not be, it had mashed potatoes, celery, onions, eggs, stale cubed white bread, mashed (with potato masher) with broth from the turkey that was roasting. Still remember my parents debating how wet they wanted it to be before it went into the oven.
Mom also did a small dish of oyster dressing. It used those rock hard OTC oyster crackers, don't think you can find them anymore. I loved everything about it except the actual oysters.
Millie J.
November 22, 2019
I usually bake a gluten-free cornbread the day before and let it dry out overnight, then mix it with the usual items and bake it in a loaf pan. Always comes out great. But this year someone offered me a box of GF stuffing mix and I thought of the 1-2 hours of work saved and accepted it, and I intend to use it next Thursday. I hope I won't regret it!
MB
November 22, 2019
I grew up on the classic Pepperidge Farm Herb stuffing mix. I still like it but find the herb seasoning too strong. So I make it as directed with onion and celery but add in about half again as much torn bread of any type - Tuscan white, French, hot dog or hamburger rolls - whatever I have on hand. I throw in pomegranate seeds and pignoli for fun. I always cook in the bird. What's left over goes into a casserole but the flavor never compares with the bird. I think adding various other breads to the package mix both softens the flavor and makes the stuffing moist. All so easy. The hardest part (or most time-consuming) is opening the pomegranate. That's my little granddaughter's job.
Abby H.
November 22, 2019
In an effort to make T'giving a tad easier.....I have sauteed the onions, celery, sausage, etc. Bagged and frozen - on Thanksgiving morning will mix in with "bread", chopped chestnuts and liquid (turkey stock simmer right now for use next week). Basically partial prep. but it will make Thursday speedier and less crazy! The turkey stock - will be cooked down, strained, and frozen to be defrosted and used with pan drippings for gravy and to moisten stuffing.
Cassandra J.
November 22, 2019
50/50 from- scratch cornbread and sourdough, a generous hand with the sage and other seasonings, onions and celery slowly carmelized in plenty of butter, and you have my mom’s stuffing that is the gold standard in my family.









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