I am going to get on my soap box for this one... DO NOT COOK STUFFING INSIDE YOUR TURKEY THIS THANKSGIVING. There are three reasons for this. First, cooking stuffing inside your turkey raises the risk of serving undercooked food and risking poisoning your guests. If you stuff it too full, restricting airflow, it is difficult for the heat to reach the center of the stuffing. Second, a stuffed bird has to cook a bit longer than an unstuffed bird. With the cavity open, the hot air flows through the bird and adds cooking from the inside out, cutting down on cooking time, and giving you a chance to pull the bird out of the oven before the (overrated, but don't get me started) white meat dries out. How many times have you heard stories of waiting and waiting for the bird to reach temperature. I would bet dollars to donuts if you checked, those LONG cooking birds are stuffed, and the hot must penetrate all the way through the bird and the stuffing before it reaches temperature (internal temperature of the thickest part of the bird AND the center of the stuffing must reach 165 to be safe). And finally, the third reason... TASTE! Take a look at this recipe, and decide if this would have a better taste than seasoned bread crumbs and a can of chicken broth (and maybe a few diced celery stalks).Here's what I did...
First, just a small confession, I have been making dressing outside of the bird for several years. But this is the first time I made a savory bread pudding. I got the idea from attending the NEW ORLEANS SCHOOL OF COOKING Which I blogged about HERE. That wonderful old Creole cook talked about a savory bread pudding (when we were getting our lesson on the sweet dessert bread pudding). That discussion really peaked my interest, and I started researching what the difference is...
Basically, change the chicken broth you use for dressing to more eggs and milk. This creates more of a custard taste than the bread taste of dressing. I found a recipe I liked, and then pondered about what changes I could make to make it mine...
And this is what happened...
Bake at 350 degrees for about an hour. You want to be able to insert a knife and have it come out clean. The taste is incredible... Try it and you will never make stuffing (shudder) again!
And BTW, same night I was serving this, I had a guest who did not eat pork. I made a separate vegetarian savory bread pudding that I will be blogging about shortly...
And another BTW, I am leaving you for a bit... Not as a blogger, I have 7 fresh posts in the can as they say, and will be posting original content each of the next 7 days. But I am having a bit of a family thing going on, and need to spend a week with my sainted Mother (will try to give her a cooking lesson or two, but you know Mothers). So, I will not be able to visit your sites, nor comment on the wonderful things you will be doing. I will miss you all, and will be back in a week (but remember to check back here daily for that fresh content I mentioned).
And consider serving a savory bread pudding for your Thanksgiving dinner... You will not be sorry!
I mentioned several gadgets during this post, as well as books... Pus, I am including links for Julie & Julia pre-release (and even a link for a free JULIE & JULIA shopping bag with your pre-order). Take a look at the discounts Amazon.com offers (have I mentioned I am cheap, save a little here and there and you can live and eat like a king!

I promise not to stuff my bird this Thanksgiving! :-)
ReplyDelete"serving undercooked food and risking poisoning your guests."
ReplyDeleteThis reminded me of the first comment on my recent thermometer post when Lord of the Wing replied "I just don't care about my friends and family". Cracked me up.
Hope Mom is okay, have a safe trip!
That is one kicking dressing. Wow!! Never knew that about the adding more eggs. I'm certainly going to do that this time. I'm surprised I'm not dead; through all my years we've only had stuffing cooked inside the bird, but of late I've taken to cooking it outside. Even the Bells packages showed the stuffing spilling out of the turkey. Oh, well, times change as we learn more.
ReplyDeleteYou are preaching to the choir - I do not Stuff the turkey. Have a safe trip.
ReplyDeleteI bet this is awesome! I'll definitely give it a try, but speaking of mothers I better not make it for Thanksgiving, she gets so mad if I change the traditional dishes. I'll whip up a batch to go with the leftovers.
ReplyDeleteHope everything is ok with your mom. See you when you get back :-)
This sounds awsome, Dave! I wouldn't have thought of using POM, but why not!
ReplyDeleteI've never stuffed the turkey because it cooks faster unstuffed, and I really am afraid of it not getting done.
I watched Alton Brown on this too.. I've been brining turkeys for 15 years, and only recently did a test of inside/outside the bird stuffing/dressing... The result was- they were both equally good, with the outside slightly edging out the inside(more texture contrast)..
ReplyDeleteShorter cooking time for the bird increases the odds of a juicier bird- without a doubt! If you are deep frying or smoking turkey-stuffing in bird is not even an option!
This is the one I have been waiting for, YUM. I will be making this for Turkey Day!
ReplyDeleteThe bread pudding sounds super - I like to use dinner guests as guinea pigs and they are used to it. Rather than our usual and oyster dressing, it will be our usual and this recipe - looking forward to trying it.
ReplyDeleteI've been making savory bread pudding for quite a while( see my recent posting of mushroom bread pudding) but I have to confess I stuff my turkey. Have been doing so since the 60's and my mother and grandmother before her. Nobody has gotten sick yet and I love the way the stuffing soaks up the turkey juices. (I especially love that little gem of skin and stuffing where the turkey neck was!) Whatever is left over from stuffing, I put in a casserole and bake separately.
ReplyDeleteI know all the warnings, but there are warnings for just about everything now. I swear, it's a wonder we all grew to adulthood!
Thankfully I have never stuffed my bird!! My recipe is a bit more traditional, but I might have to try yours this year. :)
ReplyDeleteHere's my recipe for Oatnut Sourdough Herb Dressing. http://www.3sidesofcrazy.com/2008/11/slow-cooking-thursday-aka-scratch.html
My favorite thing to do with good olive oil recipe:
ReplyDeletehttp://bitemenewengland.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-need-job.html
I always felt eek about eating the stuffing from inside the turkey, therefore made sure to reserve some for serving on the side. A Savory bread pudding however is OUTRAGEOUS ! and spiked with POM Juice ? I can just imagine how amazing this would have tasted... Thanks to all the new things I've learnt from my fellow foodie friends since becoming a food blogger,... my thanksgiving table this year is gonna be SOOOO GREAT !
ReplyDeleteI love the looks of this bread pudding, and I love that you put POM in it!
ReplyDelete