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Herbed cornbread dressing, part 2 of 2

Artist: _
Categories: Bakery, Cereals, Dressings, Entrees, Herbs & Spices, Holidays, North American, Pastry, Southwestern
Yield: 8
Rating: 0
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Ingredients:
See Part 1
Procedures:
1: continued from part 1 make dressing: 30 minutes before you are ready to stuff the turkey, make the dressing.
2Crumble the stale cornbread in the very largest bowl you can find.
3Add the herbed bread cubes and mix thoroughly by hand.
4Add the rice and mix thoroughly by hand.
5Briefly saute the onions and celery in butter just enough to make the vegetables translucent.
6Saute the mushrooms in butter (or margarine) until all the resulting liquid has evaporated.
7Add the sauteed onions, celery and mushrooms, and mix thoroughly.
8Add the pecans and mix thoroughly.
9Season with salt, pepper, sage and thyme to taste.
10Bring the turkey broth to the boil and boil for a minute or two to make sure it is sterile.
11If you are going to stuff the turkey, add just enough turkey broth to barely moisten the dressing.
12Taste for seasoning and adjust if necessary.
13Very loosely stuff the abdominal cavity and breast cavity with dressing.
14Do not pack it in tightly.
15It needs room to expand.
16You are going to be cooking some more dressing in a baking pan beside the turkey, so there will be plenty to go around.
17Secure neck cavity opening with one or more poultry skewers.
18The abdominal cavity may be left open or (if your butcher cleaned the turkey properly and left a flap of skin) secured with poultry skewers.
19Add enough boiling broth to the remaining dressing to moisten it uniformly.
20Do not over-moisten.
21The baked dressing should be barely moist, not gummy-wet.
2214 spoon dressing into uncoated baking pans.
23Cover with foil/plastic wrap and refrigerate until ready to bake.
24One half hour before serving dinner, bake dressing, uncovered, at 425 °F.
25For 30 minutes.
26Notes: * southwestern style herbed cornbread turkey stuffing ~- this is the traditional mcgarvey family dressing for thanksgiving and christmas dinner.
27It originated with my maternal grandmother in southern virginia and evolved through her moves to texas, oklahoma and california and further evolved through my military family"s moves all over the world.
28The recipe includes making 1 batch of cornbread and 1 batch of turkey broth.
29Directions are given for both stuffing the bird and baking the dressing separately.
30* this recipe makes enough dressing to stuff a 15-pound turkey and 2 9-inch-square baking pans.
31* never stuff the turkey until you are ready to roast it.
32Cooking lore is rife with horror stories of food poisoning resulting from turkeys stuffed too early and let sit while wonderful organisms develop in the stuffing.
33Make sure you bring the turkey broth to a boil before you use it, just to make sure that nothing is growing in it.
34The stuffing inside a turkey does not reach a high enough temperature to kill bacteria while the turkey is roasting, so you must be extremely careful with what you put there.
35* i like to use pepperidge farm brand herbed bread cubes.
36* i use a huge ceramic bowl (large enough for "rising" a 4-loaf recipe of bread dough) in which to mix the dressing.
37If you don"t have one handy, you can use your kitchen sink.
38Clean and rinse the sink thoroughly, then put in the stopper and use as a mixing bowl.
39If you are going to stuff the turkey, be sure that you don"t overmoisten the dressing.
40The stuffing will absorb a lot of moisture from the bird, and who wants a turkey with stuffing soup? also, be sure to not over-stuff the turkey: the stuffing will expand during the roasting and it needs room to expand.
41* about 12 c of turkey broth is at least double the amount of liquid necessary to moisten the dressing.
42If you use all of it, you will not have a relatively light, dry dressing.
43The extra broth should be used in making turkey gravy or can be the base stock for making turkey soup with the carcass.
44If you"re not up to making turkey broth, you can substitute chicken broth, but this is a great way to use the neck and gizzard.
45* no quantities of the herbs are given because you can make this as spicy or as mild as you like.
46We like ours heavy on the sage and thyme.
47: difficulty: moderate.
48: time: several hours, spread over 2 days.
49: precision: measure the cornbread ingredients.
50: pamela mcgarvey : ucla comprehensive epilepsy program, los angeles, calif., usa : ihnp4!sdcrdcf,ucbvax!ucla-cs,hao!cepu!pam :
 
 
 
 

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