Classic bread stuffing recipe for your Thanksgiving or Christmas turkey, with an easy oven-baked stuffing option, as well.
With Canadian Thanksgiving in just a few days and being in full-on preparation mode, I thought I’d share the classic bread stuffing recipe I’ve used for many years. In addition, I also wanted to share something I was experimenting with this week!
I have always stuffed my turkey personally. There is no question in my mind that bread stuffing that is allowed to baste inside the bird for hours is the gold standard of bread stuffing. That said, there are a couple of things that aren’t completely ideal with turkey stuffing.
First, unless your turkey is really, really big, it’s sometimes difficult to cook as much stuffing inside the bird as you need to adequately feed the number of people who may be gathering around the Thanksgiving table.
Secondly, there’s those lovely crispy bits of stuffing deliciousness that are sticking out of the turkey when you take it out of the oven and wishing there was more of that.
And finally, even if you have enough stuffing for the dinner, there is seldom any stuffing left to enjoy with the turkey leftovers.
So I started wondering if I could take my classic bread stuffing recipe and adapt it to an oven-baked version, so I could make more and maybe enjoy more of those crispy bits.
So I cooked up a couple of batches to get it just right and I have to say, I’m pretty pleased with the results. Is it as good as the stuffing cooked in the turkey? Nope. Not going to lie :) But I didn’t expect it would be, either. I just wanted to know if I could make some stuffing in the oven that would be still lovely and crispy and I think I have.
I’m planning to do both, this year :)
Top Reader Tip!
“One of the things I have learned … is to buy extra turkey wings and place them on top of the filled baking dish, cover with foil for the first 30 minutes, then remove the foil and finish baking. This method provides moisture, turkey flavor from the rendered wings, but also allows the edges to become crispy – so you tend to get similar to ‘turkey stuffed’ stuffing and crispy bits. Delicious!!!” – Reader Barbara
Ingredients and Substitutions
Butter: You can use salted or unsalted butter here, but if you are doing the oven-baked version, just be conscious of the added salt to the dish, as the stock will add additional saltiness as well. Low-sodium broth helps.
Fennel: I don’t love fennel, so I use all celery in my stuffing, but if you are a fennel lover, go ahead and use half celery and half fennel.
Bread: While technically you can use any bread here, I prefer to stick with a basic white bread. I look for the bakery, unsliced white loaves, as they are easier to tear up. A French loaf works nicely as well. If you can get either off the “day old” rack, all the better, as it won’t be too moist.
Herbs: I always use dried herbs for my dressing, with the exception of the fresh parsley. If making the oven-baked version, dried parsley is probably a better choice, as it is less prone to burn in the oven.
Stock or Broth (for Oven Version): You can use turkey or chicken broth here. I had no luck sourcing turkey broth, so I used chicken here, though I think turkey broth or stock is the best option here, if you can find or make it. As mentioned above, starting with a low-sodium stock or broth is a great way to control the saltiness of the finished dressing.
Recipe Tips
The one thing I always do when it comes to bread stuffing is to go out and buy fresh, dried herbs, for the best flavour. Here in Canada, Bulk Barn is my destination, so I can just buy in the quantities I need. It makes such a difference!
Dry bread makes the best stuffing as fresh bread will go a little mushy. I buy either whole, unsliced white bread or the softer-crusted French bread for my stuffing. Simply tear into pieces and spread on a large baking sheet. Let sit on the counter for several hours to dry out before making your stuffing.
I always check the “day old” bread rack at the grocery store for my stuffing bread first. It’s already a little dryer than the fresh-baked bread (and half price!). If you can’t find any old bread and you don’t have the time to let your bread dry on the counter, you can quickly dry any bread in the oven, Simply spread onto a baking sheet and pop into a 300F oven for 5-10 minutes.
This stuffing recipe is suitable for stuffing a 15-16 lb. turkey. If you have a giant turkey, you’ll probably want to scale the recipe up accordingly.
Top Tip!
Oven baked stuffing also offers the opportunity to make some stuffing for vegetarian guests. Simply swap out the chicken or turkey broth for vegetable broth, for delicious, vegetarian bread stuffing!
Food Safety for Turkey Stuffing
The warm, moist uncooked stuffing mixture is an ideal breeding ground for bacteria, so once mixed up, it must be cooked immediately, either inside your turkey or by immediately baking. *You can make the butter/onion/celery mixture ahead and refrigerate apart from the bread, then mix with the bread before stuffing. The butter mixture will need to be re-heated slightly though, as the butter will solidify in the fridge.
If stuffing your turkey, be sure to cook until the internal temperature of the stuffing mixture reaches 165F and IMMEDIATELY remove the stuffing from the turkey once the turkey is out of the oven. Refrigerate if not eating right away.
For oven-baked stuffing, the same internal temperature should be reached (165F). The stuffing should go right into the oven after mixing and be fully baked. You can do this a day ahead, if you like. Once baked, cover with aluminum foil and refrigerate. Re-heat, covered, in a 350F oven for 15-20 minutes, or until warmed through.
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Get the Recipe: Classic Bread Stuffing with Oven-Baked Option
Ingredients
Stuffing For Turkey:
- 3/4 cup butter
- 2 1/2 cups onion, finely chopped
- 1 cup celery, finely chopped
- 1 cup fennel, finely chopped (or additional 1 cup celery)
- 4 teaspoons dried sage
- 1 teaspoon fine salt
- 1 teaspoon dried savory
- 1 teaspoon dried marjoram
- 1 teaspoon pepper
- 1/2 teaspoon dried thyme
- 14 cups white bread, cubed or torn into about 1-inch x 1-inch pieces
- 1 cup fresh parsley, chopped, or 4 Tbsp dried parsley for oven-baked stuffing
Additional Ingredients for Oven-Baked Stuffing:
- 2 cups chicken or turkey stock or broth, low-sodium recommended
- 1-2 Tablespoons butter, cut into small pieces
Instructions
- Tear bread into small pieces (about 1 inch x 1 inch) and place in a large bowl. *If bread is fresh, let sit on the counter for several hours, tossing several times to dry out a bit.
- In a skillet, melt the butter over medium heat. Add onions, celery and all the spices and cook for 10 to 15 minutes until the vegetables are tender. *Taste test a piece of celery and make sure it is tender. Take the pan off the heat and let cool for a few minutes.
- Pour the mixture over the cubed bread and stir to distribute with the bread. This is where you need to get your hands dirty! Dig in with your hands and “squeeze” the mixture together, so that the butter mixture gets right into the bread. You can also break up the bread chunks a bit.
- Immediately add stuffing to turkey cavity or follow the directions below to bake immediately. *You can bake ahead, refrigerate then reheat later, but you should not make ahead and not bake, for food safety reasons.
- For Oven-Baked Stuffing: Preheat oven to 350F. (regular bake setting/not fan assisted) Spread warm stuffing evenly into a 9x13-ish casserole dish. Drizzle with 1 cup of the chicken stock. Cover with aluminum foil and bake for about 30 minutes. Remove from oven. Drizzle remaining 1 cup of chicken stock over-top and top with butter pieces. Return to the oven, uncovered, for an additional 25-30 minutes, or until golden. If you'd like it extra crispy, you can pop under a hot broiler for a few minutes.
- If stuffing turkey, be sure to remove stuffing from the turkey as soon as the turkey comes out of the oven. Do not let it sit in the turkey. Eat immediately or cover and refrigerate.
- For reheating oven-baked stuffing: remove from refrigerator for 15 minutes, then cover with aluminum foil and heat in 350F oven until warmed through, about 20 minutes. If it seems dry, you can drizzle a bit more chicken stock over-top before reheating.
Notes
More Thanksgiving Recipes to Love!
Hi! I’m Jennifer, a home cook schooled by trial and error and almost 40 years of getting dinner on the table! I love to share my favourite recipes, both old and new, together with lots of tips and tricks to hopefully help make your home cooking enjoyable, stress free, rewarding and of course, delicious!
I have been spatchcocking a turkey lately. I use a 6 to 7 kg turkey and brine it ahead of time. It cooks so quickly and is always moist.
I always make some turkey broth from turkey backs, necks, and wings ahead of time. Then I use some of the broth while roasting the turkey , some for gravy, and some in my stuffing.
My stuffing is very similar to yours. I cook mine in the slow cooker, works great.
Hi! I would love to try dressing in a Crock Pot. Would you mind sharing how you cook it in a slow cooker?
Jennifer
I have always baked my stuffing outside the turkey my family and l have lost our taste for turkey my. son-in-law is an excellent cook so now l make the stuffing and he makes either a standing rib roast or deep fried mignon one well done and one medium rare they are crisp on the outside and nice and juicy and tender inside a fantastic meal
Lil
Can this be made the day before?
Hi Carol, it is not recommended that you make then refrigerate unbaked stuffing. If you are making the oven-baked option, you can certainly bake the day before, refrigerate, then re-heat it to serve the next day.
I much do I have to increase everything for 35 people
Hi Tom, I think for 35 people, you would need to triple the recipe. If you click the “3X” button on the recipe card, it will calculate the increased amounts for you. Enjoy!
I’m making the stuffing a day ahead ,using your oven method, which is a great idea. I halved the recipe , followed the reduced measurements , but didn’t notice the 1/4 cup of dried parsley doesn’t recalculate to 1/8 cup. As soon as I mixed it , I realized too much parsley! So I’m mixing a second half batch, no parsley and blending the two batches before baking. Should have lots of leftovers for next week!
Sorry about that Cheryl. I didn’t realize that the amounts in the ingredient notes didn’t scale automatically. I have added some code to that part manually, so that it will scale properly going forward. Sorry about the mix up, but hopefully you will enjoy the leftover stuffing. It also freezes well, if you need to. Hope you have a wonderful Thanksgiving :)
I made this recipe for the first time at Christmas. My family loved it! I used the bake ahead option, and added a little extra chicken broth before reheating, as suggested. This will be our “go to” stuffing recipe now.
So glad to hear, Barb :) Thanks so much!
Absolutely perfect stuffing! This will be my new go to recipe for life.
So glad to hear, Justine! It has been our family stuffing for many years and so I’m glad it’s now yours, too :) Thanks!
Perfect! Enough said 🙂
So glad to hear, Avis :) I just enjoyed a feed of this yesterday, too! Thanks so much!
I’m just curious about how many loafs of a large bread/French bread would you need for the 14 cups?
Hi Jennifer, I would pick up 2. You might not need quite all of it, but just to be on the safe side :)
I think if I had to choose the one dish that says Thanksgiving to me – it would be this! I am all about the stuffing! And then the bird! ;)
Same Annie and I was so happy to have lots of it this Thanksgiving :) Thanks!
Stuffing is such a huge part of our Thanksgiving feast. I swear, my hubby could make a meal on stuffing alone. I’d love to try your recipe. Thanks for including the oven baked version!
Thanks Leanne!
This recipe brings back fond memories of my Gram at the Thanksgiving holiday Jennifer. always stuffed the bird and made an extra pan. Her recipe was very similar. I loves the spices you’ve added. Pinned!
Thanks so much, Mary Ann and yes, Thanksgiving memories are what it’s all about :)
Hello. I am new to your site and look forward to all of the goodies you have available. My grandparents and parents were from Canada and this recipe is very familiar as my grandma and mom made this type of stuffing. One of the things I have learned over the many years of using this recipe for baked in the oven stuffing, is to buy extra turkey wings and place them on top of the filled baking dish, cover with foil for the first 30 minutes, then remove the foil and finish baking. This method provides moisture, turkey flavor from the rendered wings, but also allows the edges to become crispy – so you tend to get similar to ‘turkey stuffed’ stuffing and crispy bits. Delicious!!! Thanks again for great information.
Hi Barbara :) I LOVE the idea of baking the stuffing with turkey wings on top. That’s brilliant and would deliver that bit of turkey goodness. In fact, I’d love to add that as a top tip to my post! Now I just need to figure out how to get hold of turkey wings :) Thanks so much.
I have been oven baking dressing for years, and it always comes out delicious. We no longer buy the whole bird since it’s just the two of us, and neither of us really like white meat, so I go to my local butcher and order fresh turkey thighs. I make the oven dressing, top with herb buttered thighs, cover with foil and bake 30 min, remove foil and bake until turkey reaches desired temp. The herbed butter and turkey juices seep into the dressing, and there’s no basting required! It’s a win-win!
Yum! Definitely a recipe to have in my arsenal. I am loving all the herbs you’re using and feel the same about fennel:) Pinned.
Thanks Milena! I want to like fennel, as a lot of people seem enthusiastic about it, but it just doesn’t do it for me :)
I’m trying recipe this for our Thanksgiving dinner this year. My family doesn’t care for my cornbread dressing anymore – and they swear I changed it somehow. Whatever! I’m really glad because I can try something new – and this is it! Pinned and printed :)
Thanks Tricia! Bread stuffing is far more common in Canada than cornbread, which I guess is more of a southern thing. It’s fabulously delicious, especially when cooked in the turkey :)