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Gluten Free Herbed Bread Stuffing Recipe

Herbed Bread Stuffing Recipe for Thanksgiving

True confessions: I’ve never cooked a Thanksgiving dinner.

I know, spoiled much!?!

I’ve always gone to my mom’s or my mother-in-law’s, and in recent years we’ve been going to my sister-in-law’s house for Thanksgiving dinner, but this year I’m going to be cooking! Of course I had to call my mom and ask her for all the family recipes so I can make it taste like home.

My favorite part of her Thanksgiving meal is her herbed bread stuffing, so when Keller’s Creamery reached out and asked me to cook one of my traditional family Thanksgiving recipes, I immediately knew which recipe I would share.

Herbed Bread Stuffing Recipe for Thanksgiving

Keller’s Creamery butter has been a Philadelphia family tradition since 1906. You can’t go into any grocery store around here without seeing Keller’s prominently displayed, and this time of year they bring out their beloved turkey butter sculptures — the perfect accompaniment to any Thanksgiving tablescape!

Fun fact: last Thanksgiving, Philadelphians bought more than 10 million sticks of butter.** That’s 514 times the amount of yards rushed by the Philadelphia Eagles in 2016 (1,813 yards) and enough sticks of butter to run the length of the Benjamin Franklin Bridge 292 times!

Keller's Creamery Turkey Shaped Butter Sculpture

For those who are local, I found my butter sculpture and a large selection of the different Keller’s Creamery butter varieties at my local Acme, but it’s also available at other major regional grocers. (CLICK HERE to save $1 on any two packages of Keller’s Butter!)

This bread stuffing recipe is really easy to make, but it packs a punch when it comes to flavor. I used gluten-free bread, but regular works too. Also, I prefer a dry stuffing so I put it in a casserole dish, but you can certainly use it to stuff your turkey if you wish. My mom always makes a huge batch and uses half in the turkey and puts the other half in a casserole dish.

Herbed Bread Stuffing Recipe for Thanksgiving

This dish wouldn’t be the same without real butter, so it’s fitting that you start this recipe by melting 1/3 cup butter in a large sauté pan.

Keller's Butter

While that’s going, you can chop your onions.

Chopped onions for herbed bread stuffing recipe

When the butter is nice and happy, you add the onions and cook until they’re soft.

sautéed onions for herbed bread stuffing recipe

Chop your bread into small cubes until they equal about 4 cups.

gluten-free bread cubes for herbed bread stuffing recipe

Then add half the bread cubes to the onion/butter mixture and stir lightly to combine.

Herbed Bread Stuffing Recipe for Thanksgiving

After that, all you have to do is dump that over into a mixing bowl and add the remaining bread cubes along with chopped celery, sage, thyme, and salt & pepper. I like the crunch of the raw celery in the dish, but if you prefer, you can cook it along with the onions in the butter for a more subtle flavor and a softer stuffing.

Herbed Bread Stuffing Recipe for Thanksgiving

Turn it all over into a small casserole dish and bake for 20 minutes, or until it’s brown on top, and serve!

Herbed Bread Stuffing Recipe for Thanksgiving

Traditional Bread Stuffing Recipe

Ingredients:

1/3 cup Keller’s Creamery butter
1/4 cup minced onion
4 cups bread cubes (I used gluten-free, but either works.)
1/2 cup chopped celery
1/2 tsp dried sage
1 tsp chopped fresh thyme
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp black pepper

Instructions:

Heat oven to 375º F.
Melt butter in a large sauté pan over medium heat. Add the onion and cook till soft and just starting to brown.
Add half the bread crumbs and gently stir until warm and soft.
Remove from the heat and pour bread/onion mixture into a medium-sized mixing bowl.
Add the remaining ingredients, and toss to combine.
Pour the stuffing mixture into an un-greased 2 quart casserole dish and cook for 20 minutes or until lightly browned on top.
Serve warm alongside a roast turkey, and top with turkey gravy if desired.
Serves 4-6.

This recipe serves 4-6, so it’s perfect for our family of 5, but if you’re serving a crowd, you will want to double or triple it. If you make a larger portion, you’ll want to cook it longer too. Just make sure to cook it till it’s lightly browned on top. Serve warm alongside your Thanksgiving turkey, or you can always make it to go along with a roasted chicken — no need to wait for Thanksgiving to enjoy this dish! I like mine best with gravy drizzled on top.

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This post is brought to you by Keller’s Creamery. Thank you for supporting the retailers that support this site.

*According to an October 2017 Survata survey of 717 Philadelphian adults.

**According to November 2016 industry data.

Join The Conversation

13 Responses

  1. Dressing is my favorite dish at TG and yourecipe is almost identical to my Mom’s! Those turkey butter sculptures are awesome! I live in CO and have never seen them in stores here. Have any of you readers living in Northern Colorado found them? Please share if you have.

    1. Nope, I just cut it up and threw it in. It was a few days old, though. I purposefully let it sit on the counter (in the package, but typically I freeze it to keep it fresher) for a few days so it would be a little drier than normal. It was perfect!

  2. I’d like to know which brand of gluten-free bread you used. Was it Udi’s? I’ve never been completely happy with my gluten-free version of my mom’s dressing (which is very similar to your mom’s, by the way).
    So I was just wondering what you used. Thanks!

  3. We do cornbread dressing around here, but I also really enjoy good bread stuffing (even though it’s considered almost a sacrilege to my southern brethren)! Fortunately for me, my sister in law with Wisconsin roots always makes some. I had no idea it was so easy. I think I may shock my husband by making some soon–I’ll have fun trying to convert him. Thanks for the recipe!

  4. Don’t worry about cooking dinner, you will do great! I absolutely LOVE those little butter turkeys – OMG we have to get those up in Canada. I will have to see if we could get them shipped! 🙂 I am instantly obsessed! 🙂 🙂
    When I did my first dinner my mom gave me a book with instructions, including info starting the week before to get prepared. It was awesome! Since we have been married (19 years) I have only missed 3 Thanksgiving dinners. Stuffing is my absolute favorite food. We always make a ton!

  5. That reminds me of the first time I cooked Boxing Day dinner. I had my mom’s recipes and was on the phone on and off all afternoon wanting it to turn out perfectly for my whole family. I was so proud of myself that day. I think I was 21 or 22. Big step for me. 
    Your dressing is a little different than mine but sounds yummy. Dishes are both regional and family inspired. It’s my favourite part of the meal. 

  6. Thanks so much for sharing your family recipe. I also make my mom’s dressing and have a notebook of family recipes my daughter made for all the girls a few years ago.  And I too wish I could get some of the cute yummy turkey butter in OK! Happy Thanksgiving! ???????????? 

  7. You set a beautiful table, Jo-Lynne! And those butter turkeys are adorable.

    We love dressing. Our current favorite is Apricot, Almond and Apple Bread Stuffing from The Frog Commissary Cookbook. It’s posted here:
    https://www.recipelink.com/msgbrd/board_31/2001/OCT/6676.html

    I bake it covered for 15 minutes, and uncovered for the last 10 minutes. I use 350 degrees, so I can bake rolls alongside near the end.
    Hope you have a great Thanksgiving!

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