Cornbread Sausage Stuffing Recipe with Apples and Cranberries (2024)

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This Cornbread Sausage Stuffing recipe with Apples & Cranberries is a delicious side dish for Thanksgiving, Christmas, or Sunday dinner. Made with all the best stuff: cornbread dressing, sausage, celery, leeks, Granny Smith apples, and dried cranberries.

Cornbread Sausage Stuffing Recipe with Apples and Cranberries (2)

It’s almost here! Tomorrow is Thanksgiving — my most favorite of all the holidays. And with that,I’m bringing you my very last Thanksgiving recipe of 2013. After this, it’s onto Christmas! Oooh, I can’t wait. But for now, we still have Thanksgiving and, this year, I’m trying something new for our dinner.

Recently, someone asked me if I had a good sausage stuffing recipe. I told them that I didn’t, because my stuffing recipe is right there on the back of the Mrs. Cubbison’s Classic Dressing box. Yep! I make stuffing the same way my mom did. She made it with Mrs. Cubbinson’s and that’s how I make it too. I love it, my family loves it…it works. But, there is a part of me that feels like we’ve been missing out a bit. There are so many awesome ways to you can make stuffing and I’ve been wanting to try something new.

Then it dawned on me — I don’t have to make just one or the other, I can make two different stuffings. And that’s exactly what I’m doing. I’m making our old favorite from the back of the Mrs. Cubbison’s box, but I’ve also made aCornbread Sausage Stuffing with Apples and Cranberries. It’s pretty amazing, if I do say so myself and I think my stuffing-loving family is going to like having another option.

There is one dilemma with making another stuffing recipe. Every year, I’ve been cutting vegetables for my big batch of stuffing mostly by hand. Two batches means cutting even more vegetables. And my knives haven’t been as sharp as they can or should be. David sharpens them, but they never seem sharp enough. Last year, I even gave myself a blister while cutting the vegetables because of how hard I had to press down.

I don’t want a repeat of last year…I’d like to stay blister free and I’d like the whole process to be a smooth as possible. So, I bought an awesome electric knife sharpener! David and I headed over to cooking heaven — aka Williams-Sonoma — to buy it. Can I live here?

Once inside, I proceeded to drool on everything. Oh, and I picked out my new knife sharpener: the Edgeware Ceramic Edge Gourmet Electric Knife & Scissors Sharpener.I have provided you with a very helpful photo with big red arrows showing you where it was on display in the store.

The associate had to get me a boxed one from the back stock room and then I was on my way home to sharpen my knives. And if you think I was excited, you should have heard David “do you have to take a photo of it at home?”. Which is code for “do I have to wait to use it?”.

But he knows the drill…I take photos of everything. We unpacked it and there was even an instructional DVD with it, so we watched that. It was VERY helpful. I actually think we might have been sharpening our knifes wrong all this time.

We sharpened all of our knives, and well, let me just say that I wish I had done this before now. I use knives almost daily in my kitchen and I could have saved myself a lot of aggravation over the years if I had bought one of these sooner. With all the holiday cooking, I do, this is going to be a huge help.

And with my new sharp knives, I got busy on all my chopping and slicing for myCornbread Sausage Stuffing. My knives were so sharp that it actually made the whole process enjoyable.

I thinly sliced my leeks…

Cornbread Sausage Stuffing Recipe with Apples and Cranberries (8)

I chopped celery….

And I cubed up some Granny Smith apples.

After slicing and chopping all my ingredients, I looked for more things to slice and chop. Ha, not really. Now it was time to cook the sausage. After the sausage was cooked, I removed it from the pan and sauteed the leeks and celery until tender. Then the apples were thrown in with a bit of thyme. Once the apples were a bit tender, everything was combined together.

The sausage/vegetable mixture was stir into the Mrs. Cubbison’s Corn Bread Stuffing, and chicken stock and dried cranberries were also added. The stuffing is placed in a baking dish and cooked until hot and the top was browned.

And there you have it!Cornbread Sausage Stuffing with Apples and Cranberries — a delicious stuffing for Thanksgiving, Christmas, or Sunday dinner.

Here’s the complete recipe, ready for you to print, save to your ZipList recipe box, or you can pin it to Pinterest for safekeeping if you aren’t ready to use it right now.

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Cornbread Sausage Stuffing Recipe with Apples and Cranberries (14)

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  • Author: Brandie Valenzuela
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Description

This Cornbread Sausage Stuffing recipe with Apples & Cranberries is a delicious side dish for Thanksgiving, Christmas, or Sunday dinner. Made with all the best stuff: cornbread dressing, sausage, celery, leeks, Granny Smith apples, and dried cranberries.

Ingredients

Scale

  • 1 oz box Mrs. Cubbison’s Corn Bread Dressing (12)
  • 1 lb ground breakfast sausage
  • 23 tablespoons butter
  • 1 1/2 cups celery (diced)
  • 2 in leeks (white & pale green end only, cut half lengthwise and sliced thinly crosswise)
  • 2 Granny Smith apples (peeled, cored and diced)
  • Salt and Pepper
  • 2 teaspoons thyme
  • 23 cups apple juice or chicken stock
  • 1 cup dried cranberries

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Place corn bread dressing into a large bowl and set aside.
  2. In a large pan over medium-high heat, cook the sausage into crumbles until cooked thoroughly. With a spoon, remove sausage from pan to a bowl and discard any excess grease.
  3. Heat butter in pan over medium heat. Add the leeks and celery to the skillet and cook until vegetables are beginning to soften. Add apples and thyme to pan and cook until apples are beginning to soften. Season with a pinch of salt and pepper each.
  4. Add sausage back into the pan with the vegetables and apples; stir to combine. Add sausage/vegetable mixture to the corn bread dressing bowl. Mix to combine. Gradually add apple juice or chicken stock, 1/2 cup at a time, mixing after each addition. Continue adding juice or stock until mixture is moistened, but not mushy — 2 cups should be enough, but feel free to add more if you wish. Mix in cranberries.
  5. Place in a 9×13″ baking dish. Bake until hot and top is browned (about 20 minutes).
  • Category: Side Dish
  • Method: Baking
  • Cuisine: American

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Cornbread Sausage Stuffing Recipe with Apples and Cranberries (2024)

FAQs

Is it OK to make stuffing a day ahead of time? ›

No matter where you fall, getting a head start on what can be prepared before the big day is essential. One question that always crops up: Can you make stuffing ahead of time? The short answer to whether you can making stuffing ahead of time is yes.

What is sausage stuffing made of? ›

A mixture of sage, sausage, onion, garlic, and celery lends this stuffing classic flavor.

Can you prepare uncooked stuffing ahead of time and refrigerate? ›

If you don't plan on stuffing the bird, but preparing the dressing as a side dish, you can prepare uncooked stuffing ahead of time as long as you freeze the stuffing immediately after mixing the wet and dry ingredients. USDA recommends that you never refrigerate uncooked stuffing.

Can you refrigerate uncooked stuffing overnight? ›

Do not refrigerate uncooked stuffing. If stuffing is prepared ahead of time, it must be either frozen or cooked immediately. To use cooked stuffing later, cool in shallow containers and refrigerate it within 2 hours. Use it within 3 to 4 days.

How much water do you put in sausage before stuffing? ›

Add at least 1 oz. of water per pound of meat to aid in the stuffing process.

Should you use eggs in stuffing? ›

The most important ingredient of stuffing may be the binder, which keeps all the other elements in place. For a fluffy texture, use eggs. Stock is the most-used binder. Less conventional possibilities include fruit juice (such as apple or orange) and alcohol (wine or liqueur).

Why put eggs in stuffing? ›

Broth: Chicken broth keeps the stuffing moist without making it soggy. Eggs: Two lightly beaten eggs help hold the dressing together and add moisture. Water: You can add a few tablespoons of water, if you'd like, to achieve your desired consistency.

How do you keep stuffing moist when reheating? ›

Heat the oven to 350°F and transfer the stuffing to an oven-safe dish (or, you can keep it in the dish that it was originally cooked in). If it seems dry, you'll want to add a splash of broth. Cover with foil and bake for 20 minutes, then remove foil and bake again until crisp, 15–20 minutes.

Will bread dry out overnight for stuffing? ›

So, how do you dry bread for stuffing? There are two ways to go about it. If you've planned your Thanksgiving dinner ahead of time, you can cut your bread into cubes and leave them out to become stale overnight. Or, if you're short on time, you can use the oven method for a quick and easy way to dry.

Can I stuff my turkey with stuffing the night before? ›

Do not stuff whole poultry and leave in the refrigerator before cooking. If stuffing whole poultry, the ingredients for the stuffing can be prepared ahead of time. Keep wet and dry ingredients separated and chill. Mix wet and dry ingredients just before putting stuffing into a casserole or filling the bird's cavity.

Can you put stuffing in a turkey the night before you cook it? ›

Place the prepared stuffing in the whole turkey just before roasting. Stuffing the night before could cause food-borne illness. Stuff both the neck and body cavities of a completely thawed turkey, allowing ½ to ¾ cup of stuffing per pound. Don't pack stuffing too tightly, as it may cause uneven cooking.

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