Laura’s Sausage, Wild Mushroom and Sourdough Stuffing

December 3, 2008.   16 Comments.   Categories Christmas, Comfort Food, Fabulous Side Dishes, Thanksgiving Dinner.  

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Sausage, Wild Mushroom and Sourdough Stuffing

Every Thanksgiving I make this stuffing.  It uses the best ingredients from my Wine Country heritage – wine (of course), sourdough bread, fresh herbs and wild mushrooms!  It is simple and can be a bit of “chef’s delight” as each batch is a little different.  I never stuff the turkey as I believe it increases cooking time and really doesn’t add to the stuffing’s flavor.    Additionally, this should always be made on Thanksgiving and not assembled in advance.  It’s best if it is done just before you intend to serve it.

This recipe is more of a guideline – as you should taste as you go to perfect the flavor to your personal; tastes.  I guarantee this recipe will not be dry and is loaded with good flavor if you make sure you use all fresh, good quality ingredients.  And you can enjoy this really anytime of year – it’s too good to only serve during the holidays!

Ingredients:

  • 1 pound sourdough bread, cubed 1/2 inch thick
  • 1 pound bulk Boulder pork sausage (or good quality)
  • 1/4 stick butter (possibly more)
  • 1 large yellow onion, chopped
  • 3-5 large celery stalks, chopped
  • 3 garlic cloves, minced
  • 3/4 cup, good quality chicken stock/broth (not low sodium)
  • 1/4 cup dry white wine
  • 1.5 pounds crimini, oyster and other wild mushrooms that chop well, chopped – not too small
  • 1/2 cup (or more) chopped fresh poultry seasoning (not dried!)
  • 1/2 – 3/4 cup fresh chopped parsley
  • 2 eggs, beaten until blended

Instructions:

Place bread cubes on a large baking sheet… toast at 400 degrees until lightly brown (about 12 min)  Transfer the bread to an extra large bowl.

In a large frying pan over medium heat, cook the sausage until well cooked and crumbled (about 10 min.)  Drain fat… transfer to the large bowl with the bread.

Add the butter to the drippings in the pan, reduce the heat to low/medium and melt the butter while scraping the bits of the pan.  Add the onion and celery and saute’ for 1.5 minutes.  Add garlic at the very end until fragrant (about 1 min).  Transfer to the bowl with the bread.

In the same pan, add some butter and a splash of wine and saute’ the mushrooms until juices are rendered.  Add to the bread.  Add the poultry seasoning, parsley and fold in the eggs until all bread/mixture is well-coated.  Dust with salt and pepper and pour just a little bit of dry white wine (1/4 cup or less) into the mix and blend.  Mixture should be very well blended and moist.

Butter a large, deep baking dish (at least 13 x9).  Add stuffing mixture to dish and bake covered with foil at 325 degrees for 30 minutes.  Uncover, stir mixture and bake until the top is lightly crisp (about 30 minutes longer)

Happy Thanksgiving!

16 Comments

  1. I was trying to recreate the wonderful stuffing that my mother used to make when my husband found this recipe in 2008. Well, we not only LOVED it! but we have been making it religiously every year. With all the fresh herbs, this far surpasses the memory of my mother’s stuffing. I wanted to come back and tell you THANK YOU for the past 5 years of great Thanksgiving meals and for the many, many more to come! Wishing you and your family a wonderful Thanksgiving!

  2. This serves a lot – especially on Thanksgiving when you’re having so many other things. I usually make one of these batches and ALWAYS have leftovers no matter how many people come over for Turkey Day!! Plus, the sausage makes it more satisfying or filling.

  3. Laura,
    LOVE having leftovers…how many does this recipe serve…trying to decide if I should double it? Also, love a sausage and apple combo…any ideas?

  4. How many large appetites does this recipe feed? Sounds great! Thanks

  5. I just wanted to say I used this recipe for Thanksgiving this year and it was the best stuffing I have ever had and was definitely the hit of the day. Thanks so much!

  6. Your stuffing is absolutely the best I’ve ever had…i even pretend there isn’t sausage in there, since i don’t eat pork! 🙂

  7. Hi Sarah,
    You will find fresh poulty herbs at any fine grocery store (like Whole Foods or Wild Oats) in their fresh herb section. Safeway may have it – but I’d call them first. You can use dried poultry seasoning too – but it doesn’t have the same flavor.
    Happy Thanksgiving!

  8. Where can you find fresh (not dried) poultry seasoning?

  9. I made this stuffing recipe last thanksgiving less the white wine and absolutely love it. I used more sausage/mushrooms/butter than called for – also used some whipping cream as well. I’m going to try the white wine instead of the cream this year…or maybe a combination of the two. Fantastic dish for a decadent Thanksgiving. I like your site, great recipes, good content, I’m looking forward to looking over the rest of your site.
    cheers,
    greg

  10. I don’t like turkey. I like all the other stuff!!!
    My Nana from Arkansas made amazing stuffing and no matter how hard I try, I can’t recreate it. So I just keep making all kinds of stuffing to satisfy that need. Thank you

  11. That stuffing looks delicious – my only problem would probably be to want too many second servings!

  12. The sausage should be a decent quality pork sausage – basic pork with no strong flavoring. If you don’t have a good butcher or Whole Foods style brand – a Jimmy Dean style works – it’s just more fatty.

  13. Okay, a small question. What seasoning should we look for (or not) in that sausage? Thanks!

  14. This recipe has served me well. It’s fun because you can add/subtract ingredients as the mood strikes you. I’ve used leeks in the past – delicious. I hope you like it!

  15. Laura,
    I love your site and will actually try to make this recipe, it looks delicious. We have been cheating for the past 6 years by using pre-made stuffing from the butcher – it is so good that it turned a stuffing hater into a stuffing lover. But this one looks like it’s worth a try, yum.

  16. This looks and sounds wonderful. If I didn’t have to make my traditional giblet stuffing (yes, I stuff it in the bird) I would definitely make this.

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