Chorizo Cornbread Stuffing Dressing Recipe (2024)

Published: · Modified: by Steven Pennington · This post may contain affiliate links | disclosure policy

When it comes to cornbread, our chorizo cornbread is exceptional. This recipe is anything but ordinary. The special Spanish ingredient of chorizo adds more richness and complexity to this successful holiday recipe.

This chorizo cornbread recipe is a must-try whether you're hosting a party or just looking for a new way to spice up your weekly meal rotation.

Chorizo Cornbread Stuffing Dressing Recipe (1)

Jump to Recipe Jump to Video Print Recipe

This recipe came to life from my love of southern & southwest flavors. We use all the usual ingredients you'd hope to find, but we up the flavor profile. The use of cornbread is my favorite way to make stuffing and dressing. Guess what? We also use onion bread (optional), packed with flavor.

Chorizo, cornbread, onion bread, sage...All are very welcome at my Thanksgiving table or any other time of the year, all are very welcome at my Thanksgiving table. Crazy good!

I shoot for a balance of textures, flavors, and colors in every dish I create.

What is Chorizo Sausage?

Chorizo sausage is a highly seasoned pork sausage originating in Spain. It is made from fresh pork, garlic, paprika, and other spices. The name comes from the Spanish word Chorro (meaning "to make flow"), which refers to removing excess fat from the raw meat.

Chorizo is strongly associated with Spain and can be found in many Latin American countries as well as in some places in southern France. The word chorizo may refer to longaniza (also known as chorizo de lechazo), which is similar but contains no large chunks of fat.

What’s the Difference Between Stuffing and Dressing?

The key difference between dressing and stuffing is this:

Stuffing comes from taking the mixture and stuffing the turkey or chicken inside the cavity. There are many different schools of thought about this technique. One thing is for sure, the method will take much longer to cook and potentially cause your turkey or chicken to overcook by the time the stuffing is cooked all the way through.

Be careful using this technique or risk getting your guests sick from undercooked stuffing or turkey. Make sure you check the doneness with a temperature probe to ensure the middle of the stuffing is cooked to the correct temperature, which needs to be around the same as your turkey or chicken's "done temperature."

Reason NOT to stuff the turkey or chicken: the texture. You end up with crispy edges if you cook the chorizo cornbread correctly.

Chorizo Cornbread Stuffing Dressing Recipe (2)

What Makes This The Most Amazing Cornbread Chorizo?

I would say the technique used on the vegetables and cornbread instead of just stale bread. I suggest buying great bread-like Brioche or Challah, to make a great special stuffing dressing.

While those types of bread are great, our recipe calls for Onion rolls. Most grocery stores offer onion rolls these days. You do not "have" to use onion rolls, and this will still be the most amazing Chorizo Cornbread Stuffing Dressing Recipe. You could also use the Hawaiian King's rolls. mmm. I'm going to give that a try soon.

Chorizo Cornbread Stuffing Dressing Recipe (3)

The secret ingredient that takes this recipe over the top?

Chorizo: Spanish sausage made with paprika, garlic, etc. Crazy Good!

Chorizo Cornbread Stuffing Dressing Recipe (4)

What are some of your favorite flavoring ingredients to add to stuffing and dressing recipes?

Leave your answer in the comment section below.

Posts To Visit

Mexican Cornbread Recipe

45 Types of Peppers | A to Z | Defined| Photos

What Are the Best Potatoes for Mashing?

Types of Sweet Potatoes | A to Z | Photos

Types of Carrots: A-to-Z, Photos

📖 Recipe

Chorizo Cornbread Recipe

Steven Pennington

Most amazing Southwest Cornbread Chorizo Stuffing/Dressing

5 from 5 votes

Print Recipe Pin Recipe Save For Later

Prep Time 10 minutes mins

Cook Time 40 minutes mins

Total Time 50 minutes mins

Course Holidays-Seasonal

Cuisine Southern American

Servings 8 Servings

Suggested Equipment

Food Processor

Ingredients

  • 1 medium Onion
  • 2 Stocks of Celery
  • 1 medium Carrot
  • 7 Sprigs of Fresh Thyme Optional: 2.5 Tsps Dried Thyme
  • 1 ½ cups Chicken Stock Optional: vegetable broth
  • 1 Package of Cornbread Mix Hill Country Fare brand in video
  • ½ cup Milk
  • 2 Eggs
  • ½ Can of Cream Corn
  • 3 Onion Rolls French Bread works, just sit it out on your counter overnight to dry it out, or you could use the oven on low heat to dry your bread out
  • 1 teaspoon Sea Salt
  • 1 Red Bell Pepper Small dice/chop
  • 5 cloves Garlic
  • 3 Leafs of Sage
  • 5 tbsps Chorizo Spanish Sausage

Instructions

Making The Base

  • Chop half of the onion (small chop), half of the bell pepper (small chop), all of the celery (small chop), fresh thyme, plus the bread (medium cut); into a large mixing bowl.

  • Using a food processor or blender ( a blender might need a splash of chicken stock to get going) Add the remaining half of onion and bell pepper, plus 5 garlic cloves, 3 sage leaves, carrots, and blend together. Do not puree all the way, try to keep some good texture. Add the mixture from thefood processor into a large mixing bowl.

  • Add salt and pepper, plus Creole season or Cayenne pepper.

  • Add Chorizo, break into small pieces, using a fork to flick off small pieces. Use as little or as much as you like.

  • Add a solid pinch of sugar to help balance the flavors. 1 to 2 Tspworks

  • Lastly, add the fresh Thyme.Combine all ingredients.Base Complete

Making The Cornbread Batter

  • Crack 2 eggs into another mixing bowl, blend them up and add the milk, cream corn, and the cornbread package/dry mix and combine well making sure to not over mix the batter. Over mixing causes tough cornbread.

Finishing

  • Combine the cornbread batter with all the remaining vegetables and the sliced bread.Tip: Add the bread last before the chicken stock.

  • Finished with 1 ½ cups or more of chicken stock. If you would like the texture to be even moister, Eyeball adding in more chicken stock. If you add more start with a ¼ cup and mix and go from there.

Cooking Directions

  • Spray a casserole baking dish so the /stuffing/dressing will not stick.

  • Key: Do not overfill the casserole dish. Cooking will take too long, plus the texture will be mushy.

  • The second idea would be to spray a cupcake cooking tray for individual portions.

  • Oven Temp: 425 Cooks for 30 to 45 minutes ( Depends on your liking, longer time equals more crispy stuffing/dressing.

Video

Chorizo Cornbread Stuffing Dressing Recipe (6)

Keyword Chorizo Cornbread Stuffing Dressing Recipe, holiday cornbread recipe, holiday stuffing

Tried This Recipe? Pin it!Leave a Comment Below how was it?

Chorizo Cornbread Stuffing Dressing Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between cornbread stuffing and cornbread dressing? ›

So stuffing is cooked inside the bird. Dressing is cooked outside the bird, usually in a casserole dish.

What's the difference between dressing and stuffing? ›

To understand the difference between the two, all you have to do is look at the cooking method. Stuffing is stuffed (literally) inside the cavity of the turkey, while dressing is roasted in a separate casserole dish.

How do you keep cornbread dressing from being gummy? ›

Already baked cornbread dressing can also be frozen, then thawed and reheated as normal. Why is my Cornbread Dressing gummy? Adding too much liquid can result in a gummy-like texture. Baking it longer, using less liquid, and more stirring can help avoid a gummy texture.

Why is my cornbread dressing mushy? ›

Why is my cornbread dressing mushy? If your cornbread dressing is mushy, be sure you baked it in a wide enough pan.

How do you make Paula Deen's cornbread dressing? ›

In a large bowl, whisk together broth, soup, eggs, poultry seasoning, salt, and pepper; stir in vegetable mixture. Crumble cornbread into broth mixture and stir until well combined. Pour mixture into prepared pan. Bake until center is set, 45 to 55 minutes.

What do Southerners call stuffing? ›

But for the Thanksgiving side dish in the South, the term dressing was adopted in place of stuffing, which was viewed as a crude term, during the Victorian era. Although dressing and stuffing are interchangeable terms, the signature ingredient of this Thanksgiving side dish in the South is cornbread.

Is stuffing the same as dressing black folks? ›

The stuffing mixture may be cooked separately and served as a side dish, in which case it may still be called 'stuffing', or in some regions, such as the Southern US, 'dressing'. This is from Wiki. Basically, everyone except a tiny percentage of Black people with family in Alabama calls it stuffing.

Why is it called dressing in the south? ›

In the 1800s, the word dressing gained popularity in some areas of the US as a word for the dish cooked inside a bird. The rise of this preference is theorized to be based in part on Victorian-era prudishness and a resulting movement away from more “graphic” terms for food preparation.

Do you have to put 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).

Is it better to use broth or stock for dressing? ›

You can use either stock or broth for keeping dressing moist or as a basis for gravy, but a strong flavor will give you better results.

Can you leave cornbread out overnight for dressing? ›

Be sure to leave enough time — the cornbread needs to sit out overnight to harden slightly before you make the dressing.

How long can cornbread dressing stay in the fridge before cooking? ›

Here are the guidelines for refrigerating vs freezing the dressing. Make ahead and refrigerate: Make up to 2 days ahead and store, covered and uncooked, in the fridge. Bake the day you plan to serve it. Make ahead and freeze: Make up to one month ahead; cover well and freeze.

What is the best way to dry out cornbread for stuffing? ›

I got you! Bake in cubes at 350 for 15 minutes, toss and bake again for 10-15 minutes. And you have stuffing bread.

Is it better to stuff a turkey or not? ›

The United States Department of Agriculture ( USDA ) recommends cooking the stuffing out side of the bird. Bacteria can survive in stuffing that has not reached 165 F, possibly resulting in foodborne illness. Some people feel that stuffing has a better taste and is moister when prepared in the turkey.

Why is it called dressing instead of stuffing? ›

The term dressing, per the History Channel, originated around the 1850s, when the Victorians deemed stuffing too crude for the dish to be named. This happened around the same time that the term “dark meat” began to refer to chicken legs and thighs.

Do Southerners say stuffing or dressing? ›

Apparently in the South, what we all grew up knowing as stuffing is actually referred to as dressing.

What is cornbread dressing made of? ›

Add sautéed onion and celery to the crumbled cornbread. Stir in chicken stock, eggs, sage, salt, and pepper until well combined. Pour dressing into the prepared baking dish.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Greg O'Connell

Last Updated:

Views: 6103

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (62 voted)

Reviews: 85% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Greg O'Connell

Birthday: 1992-01-10

Address: Suite 517 2436 Jefferey Pass, Shanitaside, UT 27519

Phone: +2614651609714

Job: Education Developer

Hobby: Cooking, Gambling, Pottery, Shooting, Baseball, Singing, Snowboarding

Introduction: My name is Greg O'Connell, I am a delightful, colorful, talented, kind, lively, modern, tender person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.