Old Fashioned Cornbread Dressing is made in the traditional way of using leftover buttermilk cornbread and biscuits. Lots of fresh sweet onions, celery and sage give this dressing an unforgettable flavor. One of the most popular recipes on this blog.
I’m stepping out here and ready to make a bold statement. I think I might have figured out how to make Granny’s Old Fashioned Cornbread Dressing even better. She always added leftover biscuits, bread, or saltine crackers. Well, sir, I made a batch of Sage and Onion Biscuits to throw in along with Southern Buttermilk Cornbread , which Granny called eggbread. Also, I used fresh sage, lots of it, instead of the poultry seasoning she always used. The results are spectacular.
An ongoing rivalry exists between stuffing lovers and dressing lovers. Stuffing is most often associated with being stuffed in the cavity of the Thanksgiving turkey before cooking. Dressing is baked in a pan and never sees the inside of the bird and is served as a side dish. Over the years, the name stuffing has taken on a different meaning and is used interchangeably with dressing. We need to set the record straight: stuffing is stuffed and dressing is….well….it isn’t anything. It’s baked all by itself. Southerners generally prefer dressing, typically cornbread dressing.
Dressing was created as a way to use up leftover cornbread, biscuits and bread. You can store leftover pieces of bread and biscuits in the freezer to use in dressing. If you’re making cornbread dressing, the addition of an item made from wheat flour does give the dressing a nice texture and helps it bind together. Crushed buttery crackers or saltines are a handy substitute for biscuits or bread.
A tip for getting as much flavor in your dressing as possible is to use stale cornbread and bread. I made cornbread and biscuits a day or two ahead. Stale bread will soak up more of the stock and bring loads of flavor into the dressing. Of course, you need to have a good quality stock. Homemade chicken or turkey stock is easy to make and keeps well in the freezer. If you’d rather purchase from the grocery store, chose stock over broth. Stock is made with the bones, skin, and fat and has more flavor than broth which is made solely from the meat. And that trend now for bone broth is there just to confuse us all. Bone broth is stock.
I’ve been cooking for many years and have gone through many cooking phases including everything from hating to cook to preparing large gourmet spreads. During my gourmet cooking phase, I experimented with dressing up the dressing. I was snobbish and thought cornbread dressing was just too plain and simple. As it turns out, being plain and simple is what makes it taste so good. I’m over being snobbish about my food. I’ve come full circle back to the down home honest cooking that has fed my family for generations. I’m thankful to be back home and I won’t be straying again.
For an extra special Thanksgiving celebration, add this spectacular Thanksgiving Punch .
Old Fashioned Cornbread Dressing
preheat oven to 350 degrees
yield: approximately 16 servings
An iconic Southern dish. Lots of onions, celery, and fresh sage combine with buttermilk cornbread, sage onion biscuits, and good quality stock. A must have for Thanksgiving. To save time, mix up the dressing and freeze uncooked. Thaw in the refrigerator and proceed with baking instructions.
1 batch Southern Buttermilk Cornbread or use your favorite recipe
1 batch Sage Onion Biscuits
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter
3 medium sweet onions, diced
1 whole stalk (head) of celery, diced
1/2 cup fresh sage leaves, finely chopped
2 quarts homemade chicken/turkey stock or good quality commercially prepared
black pepper to taste
salt to taste
2 eggs, beaten
Make a batch of Southern Buttermilk Cornbread and Sage Onion Biscuits a day or two ahead and let them get stale.
Melt butter in a large skillet over medium-low heat. Add onions and celery. Cook until the volume has reduced to about half and the vegetables have softened but not browned. Stir occasionally.
For last two minutes of cook time, add chopped sage and stir.
Crumble cornbread and biscuits into a large (very large) bowl. Add cooked onions, celery , and sage. Stir with a large wooden spoon.
Add stock and stir. Add more stock and stir. Keep adding stock and stirring until the cornbread mixture reaches a soupy consistency.
Add salt and black pepper. Start with a teaspoon of each. Now, you must taste. Add more salt, black pepper, or sage as needed.
Stir in beaten eggs.
Place in a greased cooking vessel. Some folks use a roasting pan. Some use casserole pans. The choice is yours.
Cook until the top is browned.
Serve with Giblet Gravy.
You might also enjoy:
Upside Down, Inside, Outside Turkey.
Old Fashioned Cornbread Dressing
Ingredients
- 1 batch Egg Bread Southern Buttermilk Cornbread or use your favorite recipe
- 6 cups croutons or stale biscuits I used Pepperidge Farm Cubed Stuffing Sage and Onion flavor, or use Sage Onion Biscuit Croutons
- 3 medium sweet onions diced
- 1 bunch celery diced
- 1 cup butter unsalted
- 2 tablespoons fresh sage finely minced
- 2 quarts homemade chicken/turkey stock or good quality commercially prepared
- 1 to 2 teaspoons black pepper
- salt to taste
- 2 eggs slightly beaten
Instructions
- Tear cornbread into pieces.
- Put the cornbread and croutons into large bowl. You'll need to find a bowl bigger than your head. I have a 16 inch graniteware bowl that is perfect for making dressing.
- Cook onions and celery in butter until tender. Add to bowl along with sage.
- Add stock and stir well. Add one teaspoon of black pepper, stir and adjust as needed. I rarely need to add additional salt. Stir in beaten eggs. Let dressing sit for 30 minutes to absorb all the liquid. Stir and pour into greased baking pans. I used 2 (8 x 8) aluminum pans instead of 1 (9 x 13) pan because I want to freeze the dressing for use at a later date. One 8 x 8 pan fits nicely inside a gallon freezer bag for storage. Bake at 350 for 45 minutes or until the top has browned.
- Serve with Giblet Gravy.
Barbara Starling says
Thank you Jackie for this recipe.
Finding the Pepridge Farm cubed stuffing mix around here is like hen’s teeth.
All I can find is the crumbs.
Do you think it would matter in the taste?
I’m thinking the amount of broth would need to be adjusted.
Jackie Garvin says
Barbara,
I think you are right on target, it what I think! The breadcrumbs wouldn’t effect the taste at all but you’re right about adjusting the stock. You might want to use less then the 6 cups that I used in the recipe. Another suggestion is to use salad croutons. That’s all in the world the Pepperidge Farm stuffing is. Or, just cube up bread, sprinkle on some oil and whatever seasoning you like an toast it up. 🙂
J. Scott says
I make seasoned dried toast in the oven the day before to use with my cornbread for stuffing.
Jackie Garvin says
J. Scott,
I like for my bread and cornbread to dry out before making dressing, too. It absorbs the stock better.
Jean says
Another question about dressing is…do you put eggs in yours? Yep we put eggs our mix and many dont. I have eaten it both ways and like it all. I think the crock pot dressing calls for poultry seasoning. I use sage too.
Jackie Garvin says
Jean,
I don’t put boiled eggs in my dressing but I put them in the Giblet Gravy that you love so much! 🙂
Jean says
Raw eggs…..my mother in law put the boiled eggs in her dressing. Now you would not have to ask me about giblet gravy…LOLOL!!!!
Jackie Garvin says
Jean,
I don’t put raw eggs in my dressing. There’s enough eggs in the cornbread. Plus the white wheat from bread or crackers helps bind it together. 🙂
Myra says
This recipe above calls for eggs.
Jackie Garvin says
Yes , two eggs.
Sheri says
I’m confused. You said you don’t put eggs, but then you do. 2 eggs
Jackie Garvin says
Hi Sheri,
Where did you find that I said don’t add eggs?
Judy says
How long does it bake ? What temp ?
Jackie Garvin says
Judy,
I’m sorry that I left that off the directions. I edited the post to add it. Bake at 350 degree for 45 minutes or until the top is brown.
Thank you so much for bringing that to my attention. 🙂
junior says
I am form the old school lmake sausage cornbread stuffing it. Is so good.
Jackie Garvin says
Sausage cornbread dressing is delicious, Junior. I’m sure you family and friends love it.
Pamilla Martin says
I agree 100 %. I also make my dressing from home made cornbread from scratch. The only way to go for me! The Best!
Chris says
I always make my mother-in-law’s cornbread dressing up here in the land of bread stuffing. (I love that, too!) She always added a couple of eggs, shaped it into serving-sized ovals, and baked it in a pan. It seems to make the best combo of crunchy edges to moist insides. Your recipe looks delicious!
Jackie Garvin says
Chris,
Your mother-in-law’s idea for adding more crispy edges is plum smart! 🙂
Sherri says
Love trying out new Holiday recipes. This looks and sounds so tasty! Thank you for sharing on my FB page as well. Happy Thanksgiving.
Jackie Garvin says
Sherri,
Thanks for stopping by! Happy Thanksgiving to you and your loved ones.
Kevin Goodnight says
Jackie,
Esther made the egg bread from scratch. I think she used corn meal or flour, an egg and buttermilk. I can’t remember for sure. She baked it in an 8 in iron skillet. She also taught me to use chicken thighs for the stock and the meat for the dressing. She said it was the richest and her dressing was GREAT!
Jackie Garvin says
Kevin,
I always have homemade stock on hand because I save chicken and turkey carcasses just for that purpose. I don’t add meat to my dressing because I always have giblet gravy with lots of meat added.
I wouldn’t think of starting my dressing without have some good, old fashioned homemade eggbread for it! I made the cornbread a day or two ahead so it can get stale which makes it soak up more stock and gives it more flavor.
Diana says
I make dressing just like yours, but I use dried sage & poultry seasoning both, and half butter, half olive oil. It turns out very good! Also the gravy. You & my Mother must have been cooking sisters! (That’s where most my learning came from.) Thank you for sharing so many good recipes with us. Does using fresh herbs make things taste better? We just never did, as they wouldn’t be growing by Thanksgiving & Christmas. We tied them in bunches & dried them before they flowered.
Jackie Garvin says
Diana,
I love in central Florida and have fresh herbs growing year round. I don’t think there’s an appreciable difference between fresh and dried. It’s simply a matter of preference and availability.
You are so blessed to have a Mama that taught you basic, down home cooking techniques. God bless you. 🙂
Marcie says
I love plain and basic dressing….but since most of this family are Italian, I fry and crumble Italian sausage into it and I’ll tell you what…. delicious!!! Add enough sausage and it can almost be a meal in itself w a green salad.
Jackie Garvin says
Marcie,
We love Italian sausage! I’ve never put it in dressing but I have put country sausage in. It’s good. 🙂
Laura Gatrel says
My Dressing is made just like Yours, except I put chicken in mine an don’t use celery. I also freeze mine in pie pans saved an washed from My Homemade Pecan Pies. I have the same pan You mix Yours in, but most of tha time I mix up a dish pan full. So many love My dressin. I Love Your site.
Love, Laura Gatrel
Jackie Garvin says
Laura,
I can’t imagine a Thanksgiving without cornbread dressing. My husband looks forward to it all year long. Thanks for being a friend of Syrup and Biscuits. 🙂
Gail Morris says
Here in south Louisiana, we
add bell pepper and green onions to the celery that goes in the dressing. My mama always stuffed her turkey with it and placed the rest around the turkey in the pan when the turkey was nearly done. We practically fought over the dressing that cooked inside the turkey! The flavor was the best!
Jackie Garvin says
Happy Thanksgiving, Gail!
Lesli M says
I use a similar recipe, but mine includes a couple pounds of Jimmy Dean sausage browned with my vegetables! Yum yum!
And I don’t stuff my bird. 🙂
Jackie Garvin says
Cornbread sausage dressing is soooooo good. How can it not be?
Teresa Little says
Wonderful! This is exactly how I make my dressing! It is on my table evey Thanksgiving Day! My Husband LOVES it! My family is from the south and my husband is from the north. He never had cornbread dressing til he met me! I am so glad and feel blessed that I paid attention to all the recipes that my Mom made! Of course she never measured anything and it was always amazing every time! I don’t stuff my turkey and maybe it is because my Mom never did eith! I hope you all have a Great Thanksgiving and a very Blessed Holiday season !
Sincerely, Teresa from Michigan! 🙂
Jackie Garvin says
Teresa,
Your family is mighty blessed that you continue those wonderful family traditions. God bless you all. Happy Thanksgiving!
Shelli says
I bake 3 loaves of cornbread (Dixie Lilly Yellow) 1 loaf I add jalepenos. One day ahead of mixing. I use 1 bag of Peteridge Farm herb stuffing. 2/3 in mix to start. other 1/4 to deliver consistancy after mixing. Add fresh turkey stock (from Turkey cooking). about a cup of milk, 6-8 raw eggs,melted butter, sage, sauted onion and celery,dried ocean spray cranberries,and pecans. I bake at 350 in a covered roasting pan for about 50-60 minutes
terry says
Where do.i get the silver dish holder
Jackie Garvin says
Terry,
Isn’t it beautiful? I just love it and can’t, for the life of me, remember where I bought it.
Jim Fields says
I love how you explained the stuffing dressing issue .. of course being southern . I lived for stuffing . My Mom’s was just right crusty on the outside and moist and warming in the inside .. I think I will be using your recipe . maybe cut down on the celery .. my guest arent big celery fans . again thanks for the stuffing dressing issue .
Jackie Garvin says
Happy Thanksgivjng, Jim.
Berlena says
I purchased the silver dish from the ABC catalog….
Sandy says
You’re a girl after my own heart! Your dressing is almost exactly the same as mine. I cook my celery and onions in water instead of butter and I also use several more eggs, but basically it’s the same. I use dried herbs, poultry seasoning and sage. This year I’m going to use my turkey carcass to make stock. I’ve never made stock before, so wish me luck!
Happy Thanksgiving!
Jackie Garvin says
Sandy,
Have your stockpot ready when you carve your turkey and throw the carcus directly in there.Add in vegetables, apples, lemons, herbs, and spices and starting boiling. Your stock is in the making while you enjoy Thanksgiving dinner.
Happy Thanksgiving!
Sandra says
My Granny tought me to put sliced pickled jalapeños in my dressing, I thought that wouldn’t be good but oh my is it ever! I put everything in the pan & add the jalapeños to half of it because I have little grandkids. The jalapeño side always gets eaten first! I also boil a chicken for the stock then stir the meat in. Yummmmmmm
Jackie Garvin says
Sandra,
Spiceness from jalapeños would be great! Excellent tip. Oh, yes…..chicken added in makes it a meal in itself. Happy Thanksgiving!
Sandra says
I can’t wait to try your Lacey cornbread, my hubby has been bugging me for years to find a recipe, his grandmother used to make it for him. I only attempted it once years ago, time to try again! Happy Thanksgiving to you too!
Jackie Garvin says
Hi Sandra! If you haven’t seen our FB Live demonstration for Lacey Cornbread, be sure to watch it. It’s simple to make but it’s all about technique.
Happy Thanksgiving. God bless you and your family.
Lisa says
Hi Jackie, this is just like what I grew up with but there were never any recipes written down. I love the measurements you give because I haven’t made it enough yet to just “eye” everything like mom and grandma did. One difference is that my family grew up with patties. Do you have any suggestions about how to take this to a firmer consistency to make cookie sheets full of patties instead baking in a casserole pan? Add 1 more egg maybe? and/or use half the stock maybe?
Thanks!
Jackie Garvin says
Hi Lisa,
I’d add another egg AND reduce the amount of stock. Also, add half the stock and let the dressing sit in the bowl for at least 30 minutes to give it a chance to absorb as much liquid as possible. Then, try forming into patties. If it’s too crumbly, slowly add more stock and test the texture. Happy Thanksgiving!
Cathi Carmack says
I was searching for a recipe to duplicate as closely as possible my late Mom’s and Grandma’s dressing (they never wrote anything down), and chose this one. It is awesome! Came out perfectly and I am in heaven. So many good memories. I also used both your cornbread and biscuit recipes – both so good especially the biscuits. I followed everything exactly except topped the biscuits with melted butter rather than cooking oil.
Thank you for such a wonderful recipe, and one I will treasure for years.
Jackie Garvin says
Cathi,
I’m so happy this recipe suited your quest for an authentic cornbread dressing. We certainly enjoyed ours this year. My daughter ate half the pan before we even sat down to dinner! I hope your Thanksgiving was wonderful and unforgettable.