Things You'll Need:
- Loaf of delicious bread
- Stick of butter (not margarine)
- 1 to 2 cups chicken stock
- Dried or fresh herbs: parsley, sage, rosemary, thyme
- 1 sweet onion
- 6 stalks of celery
- Optional: nuts, dried fruit, other herbs
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Step 1
Croutons--half the work of making stuffingTake a loaf of bread that you find delicious—ones loaded with nuts and whole grains are wonderful for stuffing. Sourdough works great too. Anything but white bread (too fluffy—needs to be a bit sturdier). I'm a fanatic—I make loaves of "stuffing" bread to use (chock full of fresh herbs). But pick a bread you already like. Day-old bread is fine too. You will need about eight cups worth of croutons. If the loaf of bread is large, you may not need the whole loaf.
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Step 2
Place the slices flat on a baking sheet without overlapping, if possible. Toast lightly in a 350 degree oven for 8~10 minutes, or until lightly toasted. Slice in thin strips lengthwise and then again crosswise to make little cubes (1/3 inch or so). Scoop all the croutons into a large bowl.
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Step 3
Saute celery and more . . .Chop up one medium onion (sweet ones like Walla-walla or Vidalia are especially yummy for this) and about 6~8 stalks of celery (slice each stalk lengthwise first and then crosswise to make smaller pieces). Sauté the onions and celery in 6~8 tablespoons butter (use butter unabashedly, but start with the lesser amount and see if it needs more later, depending on the quantity of croutons you have), along with the following herbs (fresh if you can get them, and chopped coarsely): Parsley, Sage, Rosemary, and Thyme. Does that sound familiar? It's part of the refrain from a Simon and Garfunkle song, Scarborough Fair. Yup. It's the herbal code for stuffing (and poultry seasoning). If you have a choice of parsley, use Italian flat leaf instead of the curly kind—but fresh is always preferable to dried. How much of each herb to use? Fresh, maybe 3 tablespoons each. Dried, maybe 1 tablespoon each. It's important to sauté the herbs so that the fragrance and flavor get infused. Add in about 1/2 cup of dried cranberries if you have them (makes it irresistible—sauteing plumps them). Once the onions are slightly translucent and no longer crunchy, remove from the stove.
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Step 4
Onions and herbs and butter--oh my!Stir this sauted herb mixture into the croutons. Add about 1 cup of chicken broth—slowly—so that you can gauge when to stop adding. (Keep little jars of all-natural chicken stock concentrate in the fridge for uses such as these. Cubed bouillon is too salty and has too much artificial stuff, along with MSG. Chicken stock that comes in cans and cartons is good but too pricey.) This is the trickiest part—if you add too much broth, the stuffing becomes mushy. Too little and it's chokingly dry. Just right is slightly moist, with mouth "give." Just right is not too crumbly and holds up on the plate. Add salt to taste (I especially recommend Vege-sal vegetable salt). And more melted butter, if needed. Toss lightly and serve as is or use about half to stuff bird. Keeps well for several days.









Comments
kevinhawkins said
on 5/1/2009 This recipe tastes just like Stove Top. My family loved it.
derbyka said
on 1/12/2009 This sounds so delicious. Stuffing is my favorite thanksgiving food too!
BroderWriter said
on 11/21/2008 Delightful and wonderful recipe! Amazing what you can do if you think about it.