Cornbread Mason-Dixon Stuffing
Submitted by Locke_Peacecraft
Cornbread stuffing that straddles the Mason-Dixon line, blending crumbly cornbread with white bread, buttery onion and celery, sweet corn, and toasted pecans. Keep it dry for Western dressing or moist for Southern.
YIELD
12 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
5 minREADY
10 minCaught right on the line between North and South, this dressing can’t quite decide which side of the Mason-Dixon it loves more, so it borrows from both. Crumbly cornbread gives it that golden, slightly sweet backbone, while cubes of white bread keep the texture light and pillowy.
Low and slow is the move for the onions and celery: cook them in butter until they slump and turn sweet, with no browning to muddy the flavor. That whole buttery tangle gets poured over the bread so every cube drinks it up.
Chopped pecans bring toasty crunch, and sweet corn folds in pockets of brightness. Then comes the part you control: add broth until it feels right. Keep it on the dry side for a Western dressing, or soak it good and moist the way folks do down South.
This is holiday stuffing at its most flexible, ready to bake alongside the bird or right inside it.
Pro Tips
- Stale or oven-dried bread soaks up broth without turning to mush; fresh cubes go soggy.
- Cook the onions and celery slowly; rushing them brings bitterness instead of sweetness.
- Toast the pecans first to deepen their flavor before they go in.
Variations
- Add cooked, crumbled sausage or diced apple for a heartier, sweeter dressing.
- Stir in fresh sage, thyme, and a little poultry seasoning for a classic herb profile.
- Use fresh or frozen corn off the cob when sweet corn is in season.
Ingredients
Directions
Cut the cornbread and white bread into small cubes, placed into a big bowl.
Melt the butter in a large frying pan, add the onions and celery, and cook over low heat until the vegetables are soft, but not browned.
Dump the butter/vegetable mixture over the bread.
Stir in the nuts, canned corn and its liquid (if used), seasonings.
Add broth to moisten to the consistency you like (Western-style dressing tends to be a bit dryer than the Southern version).
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