25 December 2016

Dressing for the bird

So here I am up at 6 a.m. on Christmas morning making "dressing" — that's what I call stuffing when it is not stuffed into the bird. I'm probably insane on some important level, but there you go.


This year we'll again have a cornbread dressing, cooked in a casserole dish separately from the Guinea fowl capon we are planning to spit-roast in a couple of hours. Both the bird and the dish of dressing won't fit into our oven at the same time, so we have to juggle.


Yesterday I made a list of ingredients for my dressing, so I wouldn't forget anything this morning. Giblets, sausage, mushrooms, bell peppers, cranberries, sage, pistachios, thyme, onion, garlic... 


I also started preparations by doing what I could do ahead. Shell out a bowl full of pistachios, for example. Peel, chop, and sauté some onions. Wash, slice, and cook some mushrooms.


Actually, I made the cornbread base for the dressing on Friday. Yesterday all I had to do to it was cut it up into little cubes.


Then I'll toss it with the other ingredients — those mentioned just above plus some cooked sausage meat, the cooked Guinea fowl liver, some dried cranberries that Walt re-hydrated yesterday, some sliced bell peppers from the freezer, and so on.


I'll try to get this organized into a recipe later today or tomorrow — including a recipe for the cornbread. At this point, it's pretty free-form. Moistened with broth and duck fat, bound together by a couple of beaten eggs, it will all become a savory (corn)bread pudding.

Merry Christmas to all. Et bon Noël.

15 comments:

  1. What a great looking dressing!
    Merry Christmas to you, Walt, Callie and Bert and best wishes for 2017.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Merry Christmas to you and yours too, BettyAnn. All the best for the new year.

      Delete
  2. Merry Christmas Callie, Ken.... and Walt! Have a good feast....
    Here, stuffing is stuffing.... in or out of the bird!
    This one looks tasty.... ours will involve chair and chestnuts!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Merry Christmas to you and Pauline too. We've made chestnut stuffings in the past, but I always come back to cornbread, which is what we often had in the U.S. The bird is on the spit and turning constantly, so the breast should be tender and not dry. Tuscan kale and sucrine squash are the accompaniments. More tomorrow...

      Delete
    2. I read in the U.S. Joy of Cooking book that the term "stuffing" was too vulgar-sounding or suggestive to the Victorians. To the Americans too, I guess. So the term "dressing" was adopted. Now some of us make a distinction between stuffing and dressing.

      Delete
  3. Merry Christmas guys! Your Christmas meal looks and sounds delicious. I bet preparing it is just as much fun as eating it. I will be dropping in at the caterer presently to pick up our lunch: foie gras, followed by a 'râble de lièvre' in an mustard cream sauce. Can't wait to tuck in :) Have a lovely day. Martine

    ReplyDelete
  4. Merry Xmas to you both. Your meal looks so classy and delicious. Hope you enjoyed it all and had a wonderful day. Love to read about other cases so different from ours

    ReplyDelete
  5. Xmases for goodness sake not cases

    ReplyDelete
  6. haha, had never heard that about stuffing vs dressing! merry Xmas

    ReplyDelete
  7. Joyeux Noël Ken. Looks good and tasty :-)

    ReplyDelete
  8. Mmmm it all looks tasty ! I made cornbread a couple of days ago for mine .. making just a basic Southern style stuffing to go on the side since dinner will be fresh roasted Salmon instead of a Turkey :)
    Try it one day .. cornbread stuffing as a side with roasted filet of salmon. Happy Holidays !!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Looks great! We've never used home-made corn bread for ours... we buy the Pepperidge Farm bags of stuffing. They're more like croutons because they're pretty dry.
    Merry Christmas, Ken!

    ReplyDelete
  10. Hi Ken and Walt--Merry Christmas! Your influence is felt far and wide; our Christmas Eve dinner was stuffed mushrooms, inspired by your write-up a few days ago (Tony sent you a photo). Came out great! Thanks for sharing your life with us.
    Chris and Tony

    ReplyDelete
  11. Thanks for sharing your life with us, Ken and so many good recipes. Merry Christmas and wishing you and Walt a wonderful New Year.

    ReplyDelete
  12. The stuffing-dressing sounds delicious. Hope you had a merry day.
    Bon Noël, if a bit late.

    ReplyDelete

What's on your mind? Qu'avez-vous à me dire ?