The Best Thanksgiving Sausage Stuffing There Ever Was Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Bake

by: Cara Nicoletti

November17,2022

5

3 Ratings

  • Prep time 10 minutes
  • Cook time 1 hour 30 minutes
  • Makes one 10 x 14- inch casserole dish, plus 5 cups for stuffing the turkey
Author Notes

This stuffing is a Nicoletti family tradition. Unlike most sausage stuffings, which cook the sausage first and bind the stuffing with eggs, this one omits the eggs and uses the sausage as a binder. As a kid we used shrink-wrapped logs of Jimmy Dean sausage, but these days, since I make sausage for a living and am a bona fide a-dult, I make the sausage from scratch, which makes this stuffing even better. I’m not budging on the cheap white sandwich bread though. That stays.

Note: Grandy always spun the spice rack at the very end and added a dash of whatever his hand landed on, which was thrilling to me when I was small. Please feel free to do that. —Cara Nicoletti

Test Kitchen Notes

Everyone has strong opinions about who makes the best Thanksgiving stuffing, and what ingredients put it over the top: Is it the bread, the seasoning, the vegetables (leek-lovers, raise your hands), or the sausage? Recipe developer and fourth-generation butcher Cara Nicoletti would argue it’s all of the above.

In this recipe, she makes her own sausage using pork shoulder, dried sage, and white wine–and shows you how to easily make your own using a stand mixer or your hands. Once you see how the sausage gets made–ha!–make the rest of the stuffing using white sandwich bread, butter, onions, mushrooms, celery, and bell peppers.

The only question that remains is: To stuff the bird or not to stuff the bird? While the name “stuffing” comes from the idea of actually stuffing a turkey with the bread-and-sausage mixture, doing so isn’t necessarily recommended. The reason why most people don’t recommend stuffing the bird itself takes much longer to cook than the stuffing. A stuffed bird may cause the bird to dry out before the stuffing is fully cooked, leading to a potential risk of food poisoning. Hence, we recommend baking stuffing in a separate casserole dish so it cooks evenly alongside the turkey. As the bird bakes, baste the stuffing with chicken stock just as you would with a roast turkey to prevent the bread from drying out.

The best part of stuffing–or dressing, if you also say “y’all”–is that you can customize it. Hate bell peppers? Leave them out!
Food52

  • Test Kitchen-Approved

What You'll Need

Ingredients
  • For the sage sausage
  • 2 1/2 poundsground pork shoulder, chilled (or any mix of cuts that is 70% lean to 30% fat)
  • 1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 2 teaspoonsfreshly ground black pepper
  • 1 1/2 teaspoonsdried sage, ground
  • 1 splashwhite wine (about 1/8 cup)
  • 1/4 cupice water
  • For the stuffing
  • 1 poundsliced white sandwich bread (the cheaper the better!), cut into 1/2-inch cubes
  • 1/2 cup(1 stick) unsalted butter, cut into pieces
  • 3 medium yellow onions, chopped
  • 1/2 poundbutton mushrooms, sliced thin
  • 4 large celery ribs, chopped
  • 3 green bell peppers, cored and diced
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 teaspoonkosher salt (you may want to adjust this is you're using a particularly salty stock)
  • 2 1/2 poundssage sausage (recipe above)
  • 1 cupchicken or turkey stock
Directions
  1. For the sage sausage
  2. A note before starting: Make sure your pork is cold! Meat binding breaks down at 64° F, so if the meat gets warm, it’s going to be a lot harder to make it bind together, and your sausage will be a crumbly mess.
  3. To make the sausage in a stand mixer:Place the ground pork shoulder in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. Turn the mixer to the lowest speed and add the salt, pepper, and sage. Mix for exactly 1 minute (set a timer!), then add the white wine and mix for another timed minute, then add the ice water (just the water, not the ice) and mix for one more timed minute.
  4. TO MAKE THE SAUSAGE BY HAND: Add the pork and spices to a large bowl and knead the meat like you would knead bread, for about 5 minutes, until the mixture is tacky. Add the wine and the water and continue to knead until the surface is no longer outwardly wet—about 1 more minute. The sausage should resist slightly when you try to pull a chunk out. A good way to test if the sausage is done is to take a medium-sized piece of it and stick it to the palm of your hand. If the mixture stays stuck to your palm for 10 seconds when you hold your palm up in the air, you’re good to go!
  1. For the stuffing
  2. Heat the oven to 350° F and lay the bread cubes out in an even layer on two baking sheets. Bake until bread has dried out, rotating sheets halfway through—about 10 to 12 minutes.
  3. Melt butter in a large skillet and add onions, mushrooms, celery, bell peppers, garlic, and salt. Cook until onions are translucent and the mushrooms and peppers are soft. Set aside to cool.
  4. Once the vegetables have cooled enough to handle, transfer them to a very large bowl and add the toasted bread cubes and sausage to the bowl. Roll your sleeves up and mush the mixture together with clean hands, until everything is mixed evenly throughout (this was my favorite part as a kid).
  5. Reserve 5 cups of sausage for stuffing your turkey. Transfer the remaining stuffing to a large casserole dish (10 x 14 inch, or 2 quarts), cover with aluminum foil, and bake on the middle rack of the oven for 40 minutes, basting with chicken stock every 20 minutes or so.
  6. After 40 minutes, uncover the pan and roast until internal temperature reaches 140° F, about 25 more minutes (if you aren’t sure about the quality of your pork, cook it until the internal temperature is 160° F).
  7. Stuff your turkey with the remaining 5 cups of sausage. Cook your stuffed bird until the thickest part of the inner-thigh reads 175° F—the stuffing should reach at least 140° F.

Tags:

  • Stuffing/Dressing
  • American
  • Sausage
  • Sage
  • Chicken
  • Serves a Crowd
  • Bake
  • Thanksgiving
  • Fall
  • Side

See what other Food52ers are saying.

Recipe by: Cara Nicoletti

Cara Nicoletti is a butcher and writer living in Brooklyn, New York. Cara started working in restaurants when she moved to New York in 2004, and was a baker and pastry chef for several years before following in her grandfather and great-grandfathers' footsteps and becoming a butcher. She is the writer behind the literary recipe blog, Yummy-Books.com, and author of Voracious, which will be published by Little, Brown in 2015. She is currently a whole-animal butcher and sausage-making teacher at The Meat Hook in Williamsburg.

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4 Reviews

ibbeachnana December 24, 2017

A friend brought homemade herb stuffing bread cubes, how many cups of this should IU use, I think there are between 8 and 12 cups...Merry Christmas everyone.

kristin November 23, 2017

Making this right now! We got pork from our butcher, and they had some that was pre-seasoned for stuffing. Smells amazing!

Therese November 22, 2017

Just made this for Thanksgiving tomorrow. Tried it right now and it’s so delicious that I can’t wait to serve it tomorrow. I also made it with Jimmy Dean sausage!

Jennifer D. November 10, 2017

This is just like my stuffing recipe, except I cheat and use Jimmy Deans Sage Sausage. I also use a variety of breads- hearty grain, wheat and dark rye. Make a lot- people love it!!

The Best Thanksgiving Sausage Stuffing There Ever Was Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

Is stuffing better with or without eggs? ›

It's all about personal preference. If you want a sturdier dressing, eggs can help do that. I don't use eggs in this recipe, though, because I like a lighter, more crumbly texture in my dressing.

What does egg do for stuffing? ›

Eggs: Two lightly beaten eggs help hold the dressing together and add moisture.

How to make stuffing for turkey Gordon Ramsay? ›

Make the stuffing, melt butter in a large frying pan and gently sauté onion and garlic for five minutes until soft. Stir in the herbs for one minute then add breadcrumbs to absorb butter. Mix in zest, pine nuts and seasoning and cook over medium heat for about seven minutes until crumbs start to brown and crisp.

In what did recipes did people originally use stuffing? ›

The earliest documentary evidence is the Roman cookbook, Apicius De Re Coquinaria, which contains recipes for stuffed chicken, dormouse, hare, and pig. Most of the stuffings described consist of vegetables, herbs and spices, nuts, and spelt (a cereal), and frequently contain chopped liver, brains, and other organ meat.

Is homemade stuffing better than boxed? ›

The Foodie picked: Homemade. "The texture of the homemade is really superior, mostly moist and tender but with those crispy, crunchy, buttery edges, almost like French toast.

What is the best bread to use for stuffing? ›

The best bread for stuffing is a sturdy loaf with a tight crumb. Bakery French bread, Italian bread, Challah, and Sourdough are all good choices. When you cut up a 1-pound loaf into cubes, it should fit in an even layer on a single half-size rimmed baking sheet.

What makes stuffing unhealthy? ›

Stuffing is not strictly a healthy food, because it is typically high in calories, fat, sodium, and refined carbohydrates. 1 But that doesn't mean you can't enjoy it, All foods can fit into a healthy diet in moderation.

How soggy should stuffing be before baking? ›

The stuffing should be moist but not wet. If there is a puddle of broth at the bottom of the bowl, you've added too much. Add more bread to soak up the excess moisture. If the mix is still dry and crumbly, add more liquid and toss gently until it starts to clump together.

What makes stuffing mushy? ›

You'll need day-old loaves to get stale so that the stuffing doesn't get too mushy. Don't cube that bread! Ragged, imperfect pieces of bread have more surface area; it's those nooks and crannies that give you good texture. Speaking of texture, that's what stuffing is all about--you want a mix of crispy and soft pieces.

How to make stuffing jamie oliver? ›

Tear the stale bread into small chunks and whiz into breadcrumbs. Add these to the bowl, then crush and crumble in the chestnuts. Place the diced pork into the food processor, pick in the sage leaves, roughly chop and add the bacon, followed by 1 level teaspoon of white pepper and a good pinch of sea salt.

What is stuffing called when it's not in a turkey? ›

Some people insist that it should be called dressing when it hasn't actually been stuffed inside a bird. But many people insist on one term or the other regardless of how it's prepared or what's in it. The term dressing is most commonly used in the South, but it's popular in pockets throughout the US.

What animal does stuffing come from? ›

According to question, Traditionally, stuffing is often made using poultry meats like turkey or chicken. However, other meats like pork, sausage, or even vegetarian options can also be used based on personal preferences and regional variations. Stuffing is usually large bread crumbs with herbs.

Why does stuffing taste so good? ›

When made from scratch and seasoned right, it is rich, moist and savory, shot through with different textures and flavors that give cooks plenty of room to play. That basic amalgamation of starch, fat and aromatics is indisputably delicious.

What is a good substitute for eggs in stuffing? ›

However, if skipping the binder completely sounds like too big of a risk, many egg alternatives exist. Berries and Lime list seven: silken tofu, aquafaba, vegetable oil, baking powder, fruit or vegetable puree, yogurt, and finally, the substitute that Minimalist Baker specifically recommends for stuffing, a flax egg.

What can you use as a binder instead of eggs in stuffing? ›

16 egg substitutes
  1. Mashed banana. Mashed banana can act as a binding agent when baking or making pancake batter. ...
  2. Applesauce. Applesauce can also act as a binding agent. ...
  3. Fruit puree. Fruit puree will help bind a recipe in a similar way to applesauce. ...
  4. Avocado. ...
  5. Gelatin. ...
  6. Xanthan gum. ...
  7. Vegetable oil and baking powder. ...
  8. Margarine.
Mar 30, 2021

How do you keep stuffing moist when cooking? ›

Typically, baking the stuffing inside the bird helps keep the mixture moist. “I prefer stuffing (in the bird) to dressing (outside of the bird) because all those delicious drippings that come off the turkey gets absorbed right into the stuffing,” Bamford says.

What is traditional stuffing made of? ›

Classic stuffing made with bread cubes, seasonings, and held together with chicken stock and eggs. A holiday staple!

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