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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, November 22, 2006

FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Simple stuffings often best

By Wanda A. Adams
Advertiser Columnist

Video: How to make your own apple onion turkey stuffing
 •  Giving thanks feeds the soul

Bread crumbs, apples, onions, butter, wine, almonds, lemon juice, nutmeg and allspice: That's all it takes to make the simple but memorably delicious stuffing from the recipe below.

DEBORAH BOOKER | The Honolulu Advertiser

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DEBORAH BOOKER | The Honolulu Advertiser

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There are as many ways to make stuffing (aka dressing) as there are ingredients. I say this because in scanning the Internet for recipes to use at Thanksgiving, I came across dishes so diverse as to bear almost no relationship to each other, though all shared the name "stuffing."

There were stuffings made with oysters, with chestnuts, with challah bread, with Portuguese pickled pork, with wild rice, even with mashed potatoes. There were Crock-Pot stuffings and stovetop stuffings and oven versions. And the flavors: from Southwest spicy to fruit sweet.

But after I'd analyzed things a bit, I did find some commonalities that serve as a kind of formula to use in creating your own recipes. And I also learned that stuffing is one of the oldest dishes we know of; there are recipes in the earliest written cookbook, by the Roman epicure Apicius, using grain, herbs and organ meats to stuff fowl, rabbits and even mice!

All stuffing recipes draw from four classes of ingredients:

  • Starches — usually plain white bread crumbs or chunks, but also cornbread, rich breads such as challah and brioche, rice or wild rice, wheat berries or other whole grains and even potatoes.

  • Vegetables — onions and celery are most common, but ingredients from mushrooms to fennel make an appearance.

  • Liquids — chicken stock and melted butter are usual, but wine, fruit juices, vegetable or mushroom broth, water and even splashes of vinegar or lemon juice also are used.

  • Flavorings — meats (sausage, ham, pickled beef or pork), fruits (raisins, cranberries, apples), nuts (chestnuts, pecans, almonds, walnuts), oysters, hard-boiled eggs, spices (often warm and sweet spices such as nutmeg or cinnamon, but also chilies), herbs (parsley, sage and thyme, the famed Bell's Seasoning used by Martha Stewart and others in eastern states).

    Stuffing is one of the easiest things in the world to make; it's just the shopping and chopping that take time. After that, it's generally a matter of briefly sauteing the vegetables, combining the ingredients, drizzling the liquid (and sometimes fats) over. Then it's oven time.

    But easy to make doesn't mean easy to make well: Too many stuffings arrive on the table a heavy, soggy, indigestible mess.

    The key here is to employ a light hand, both with the fats and the liquids. A lot of recipes call for whole sticks of butter, but you can generally cut the fat by half without ill effect. Keep the saute temperature at medium and use a little lowfat broth if the vegetables start to stick. If you're going to drizzle turkey drippings over the stuffing, de-fat the drippings first. And when you add liquids, go slowly — add no more than half a cup at a time, then toss the ingredients. The bread should be slightly moist, not soggy. You can always add more liquid.

    Sometimes the flavor of stuffings isn't wonderful because the cook neglected to taste. And use the best ingredients you can, especially if it's a quite plain recipe — real butter, a rich broth, fresh vegetables, fruits and nuts, good-quality bread. As many stuffings contain raw ingredients, heat a tablespoon or so with a little butter or broth until it's cooked through, then taste to see what it needs before you serve up an over-salted or under-herbed dish.

    My strong preference is for stuffing recipes that exercise restraint, relying on just a few flavor and texture notes in the right balance with each other (rather than fighting or overpowering each other). I think there should be no more than two or three things going on: For example, the crunch of nuts, the warm sweetness of fruit and spices, the richness of butter-bread-broth. That's plenty. Don't throw stuff in just because you can.

    My grandmother's recheado (Portuguese for stuffing) — which is, of course, the best on the planet, except for my godmother Cyrilla's — has just eight ingredients, and that's counting the salt and pepper.

    Riffling through a friend's recipe collection earlier this month, I came across an almost equally simple apple-onion stuffing recipe that actually tempted me to consider not doing Grandma's recipe this year. My friend vouched for this one, which I found on many Web sites when I went in search of its origins.

    People seem to like it, and when I tested it, I could see why: It's a tart, tangy, crunchy stuffing that is a good foil to the richness and silkiness of the other Thanksgiving foods — turkey, gravy, mashed potatoes dripping with gravy.

    The apples should be the tart, baking kind; I used Granny Smiths in testing this. If you don't like to use wine in cooking, substitute broth or a blend of water and white grape juice or water and apple juice.

    The bread crumbs should be fresh; choose a good quality French- or Italian-style loaf and cut away the crust, using the soft middle. You have a texture choice here: If you like a loose, chunkier dressing, cut the bread into small cubes. For a finer, more dense texture, put the bread through a food processor.

    APPLE ONION TURKEY STUFFING

  • 5 tablespoons butter

  • 1 cup onion, roughly chopped

  • 2 cups soft bread crumbs

  • 2 baking apples, peeled, cored, chopped

  • 1 cup white wine

  • 1 cup chopped almonds

  • 2 tablespoons lemon juice

  • 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg

  • 1/4 teaspoon ground allspice

    In a large saute pan, Dutch oven or wok, melt butter and saute onion over medium heat until translucent, about 5 minutes. Add bread crumbs, using a spatula or large spoon to lift from the bottom to combine (avoid packing or mashing the ingredients). Gently add apples, white wine and nuts and cook for 5 minutes longer; the wine will cook off, leaving very little liquid in the bottom of the pan. Add lemon juice, nutmeg and allspice.

    Stuff in turkey or bake alongside turkey (325 to 350 degrees) in a buttered baking dish, about 30 minutes; until lightly browned and crispy on top and heated through.

    Makes 8 smaller servings; 6 larger.

  • Per serving (8 servings): 260 calories, 17 g fat, 5 g saturated fat, 20 mg cholesterol, 135 mg sodium, 19 g carbohydrate, 4 g fiber, 8 g sugar, 5 g protein

    And a final word on safety: As with the turkey, the internal temperature of stuffings that contain raw meats, seafood, eggs or meat juices should reach 165 degrees. The safest way to assure this is to cook the stuffing separately rather than in the body cavity of the turkey.

    Send recipes and queries to Wanda A. Adams, Food Editor, Honolulu Advertiser, P.O. Box 3110, Honolulu, HI 96802. Fax: 525-8055. E-mail: wadams@honoluluadvertiser.com.

    For more information about our 150th anniversary cookbook, call 535-8189 (message phone; your call will be returned). You can order the cookbook online.