Wild Rice And Oyster Dressing Recipes

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WILD RICE AND OYSTER DRESSING



Wild Rice and Oyster Dressing image

Savory Southern Oyster and Wild Rice

Provided by Anecia Hero

Categories     Side Dish

Time 45m

Number Of Ingredients 11

2 boxes wild rice with seasoning ((I use Uncle Ben's Original Recipe))
¾ cup celery (,chopped)
¾ cup onion (,chopped)
½ pound chicken livers (,cooked, chopped very fine; See Recipe Notes)
8 ounces fresh oysters (,with liquor (juice), chopped very fine )
4 cups chicken broth (, unsalted)
¾ stick butter (, unsalted, ½ stick for onions/celery; 2 tablespoons for rice)
½ teaspoon cayenne pepper
½ teaspoon garlic powder
salt (to taste)
green onions (garnish, optional)

Steps:

  • Preheat oven to 325ºF
  • Prepare two boxes of wild rice with seasonings in 4 cups of chicken broth and 2 tablespoons of butter; set aside
  • Drain and rinse chicken livers; place in medium saucepan and cover with water; lightly season with salt and pepper; cook on medium heat till livers reach internal temperature of 165ºF
  • In a medium saucepan, add 1/2 stick butter, chopped onions and celery; cook till tender
  • Using a slotted spoon, remove oysters from container; chop finely; DO NOT THROW AWAY the oyster liquor (juice); put chopped oysters and their liquor aside½
  • Remove half of the chicken livers from the saucepan and dice finely; set aside; See Recipe Notes
  • In a 9 x 13 baking dish, add cooked rice, sauteed onion and celery, chopped chicken livers, chopped oysters, cayenne pepper and garlic powder; combine well
  • Drizzle remaining oyster liquor (juice) over rice mixture; combine well
  • Bake uncovered at 325ºF for 15-20 minutes
  • Season with salt and garnish with chopped green onions

Nutrition Facts : ServingSize 1 cup, Calories 109 kcal, Carbohydrate 3 g, Protein 4 g, Fat 10 g, SaturatedFat 6 g, TransFat 1 g, Cholesterol 75 mg, Sodium 527 mg, Fiber 1 g, Sugar 1 g, UnsaturatedFat 3 g

HOW TO MAKE STUFFING



How to Make Stuffing image

Melissa Clark tells you how make the best stuffing.

Provided by Melissa Clark

Number Of Ingredients 0

Steps:

  • Although the two terms may be used interchangeably, for the most part stuffing is cooked inside the cavity of the turkey, while dressing is baked alone in a casserole or other shallow dish. As a result, stuffing is tender and moist, suffused with the juices and any rendered fat from the bird. Dressing has a crisper top from being exposed more directly to the heat of the oven. Here are tips to get the best results whichever method you choose.If you love the brawny flavor of poultry juices mixed with your side dish, or if you're simply a traditionalist, stuffing the turkey is the way to go. Here are some best practices for both flavor and safety: • Stuff the turkey just before it goes into the oven. We know you want to do as much ahead as possible, particularly on Thanksgiving, but stuffing ahead encourages the growth of bacteria, so don't do it. This said, you can make the stuffing mix up to four days ahead and keep it in the refrigerator before stuffing the bird just before roasting. • If your stuffing recipe calls for shellfish or turkey giblets, the Agriculture Department states that these need to be fully cooked and kept hot before they are stuffed inside the bird. So stir them into the mix immediately before stuffing the turkey. • Stuffing expands as it cooks, so fill the cavity loosely. • If you're going to stuff your bird, you should truss it, or at least tie the legs together to keep the stuffing from falling out. • Bear in mind that stuffed turkeys will take longer to cook than unstuffed ones: Stuffing insulates the turkey, thereby slowing down its cooking. • Both the turkey and the stuffing need to be cooked to 165 degrees before they are safe to eat. Usually the bird gets there before the stuffing does. To avoid overcooking the turkey, pull it from the oven once the flesh hits the desired temperature. Then spoon the stuffing out of the cavity and into a baking dish and return to the oven (or stick it in the microwave). Continue cooking until the stuffing reaches 165 degrees.Dressing is baked outside the turkey, which means it can achieve an appealingly crisp, browned top - a nice textural contrast to the softer layer underneath. Plus, with your dressing out of the way, you can add aromatics including lemons, garlic and bunches of herbs to the turkey's cavity for additional flavor. (Another bonus: an unstuffed bird will roast more quickly than a stuffed one.) Here are tips for achieving outstanding dressing: • You can turn any stuffing recipe into a dressing by simply baking it outside the bird. Spread the mixture in a shallow pan and bake until the mixture reaches 165 degrees. Dressing is pretty forgiving, so feel free to bake it at whatever temperature you need for other dishes you're cooking. • Vegetarians take note: because it doesn't touch the bird, dressing can be utterly meat-free. Try lemon-ginger bread stuffing, savory cornbread stuffing or wild rice, almond and mushroom stuffing. • On the opposite side of the spectrum, you can add turkey stock or chicken stock, crisped poultry skin, schmaltz and/or diced cooked gizzards, liver and shredded turkey neck to the dressing to give to it a meatier flavor. • If you've got enough extra turkey skin, drape it over the top of the dressing before baking. The skin will turn into poultry cracklings and render its luscious fat all over the dressing. Outstanding. If the skin isn't crisp when the stuffing is done, run it under the broiler for a few minutes to finish. (You can often special-order turkey skin from your butcher - chicken skin will work, too - or trim off the extra skin at the turkey's neck when you are getting it ready for the oven.) • If you like a deeply golden top, dot the top of the dressing with butter before baking. And if the dressing cooks through before the top is brown, run it under the broiler for a minute or two before serving.
  • Any bread, from soft white sandwich loaves to chewy bagels to crusty sourdough rye breads, can be turned into a stuffing or dressing.No matter what kind of bread you use in your stuffing, it will absorb more of the seasonings if it is stale and dry. You can either buy the bread several days to a week in advance and let it dry out at room temperature, or cube it and dry it out in a low oven (250 degrees) until thoroughly arid. Or consider making your own bread for stuffing. Cornbread comes together especially quickly, and you can control the amount of sugar in the recipe, depending upon whether you like it sweet or savory. Easy breads like biscuits, soda bread, no-knead bread and white sandwich bread all make great stuffing, too. Bake them several days ahead so they have a chance to get stale. Or bake them months ahead and freeze, then thaw them and let them dry out before making stuffing.
  • Discord swarms around the issue of stuffing. Should it be cooked in the bird or baked alongside, as dressing? White or corn bread? Firm enough to slice or soft as pudding? Call this recipe the peacemaker, because it's adaptable enough to make everyone happy. You can use white or corn bread (and gluten-free corn bread works perfectly). The mushrooms allow vegetarians to nix the bacon without sacrificing all the flavor. We advocate baking it separately (which technically makes it dressing), but if you want to stuff the turkey, you can do that, too.
  • Everything is better when you add bacon, including stuffing and dressing - and the same can be said for stirring in shrimp, oysters, sausage, nuts, cheese and the like. Most simple stuffing recipes can be embellished to suit your tastes and mood. Here are some guidelines and ideas.Oyster stuffing, which is actually a variation on bread stuffing, is a traditional 19th-century recipe that deserves a revival today. While oysters are present, they aren't usually the dominant flavor, instead adding a complex saline character that deepens the usual bread-and-onion mix. Fresh oysters will have the brightest flavor, but canned smoked oysters are reminiscent of bacon, and even regular canned oysters will work in a pinch. You can also consider other sea creatures for stuffing, including clams, shrimp and anchovy.Fresh oysters, clams, shrimp and scallops and other seafood should be lightly sautéed in butter or oil, or gently poached, before being added to the stuffing. Do this right before stuffing the turkey or baking the dressing, even if you've made the rest of the stuffing mixture ahead of time. The seafood needs to be hot when stuffed. Anchovies, which have been cured, can be chopped and stirred directly into a stuffing recipe, or sauté them with any onion or aromatics in the recipe.Cured meats and fresh sausages add depth and complexity to stuffing; use them by themselves or add them in combination. Cured hams, salamis and other hard sausages can simply be chopped up and stirred into the stuffing mix. Bacon and fresh sausages need to be sautéed beforehand. These work best when cooked and added to the stuffing mixture just before it goes into the bird or casserole dish for baking.Sautéed mushrooms, onions, peppers and other vegetables, and fruit both fresh (slivered pineapple, sautéed apples or pears) or dried (dates, raisins, figs), make a plain bread or rice stuffing a lot more interesting. Be sure to plump dried fruit in liquid before adding it to the stuffing mixture. Boiling water, hot wine or other spirits, or broth will work. Make sure to season any vegetables aggressively with salt and pepper and any desired herbs and spices so they hold their own against everything else going on in the stuffing mix.Nuts add crunchy texture to soft stuffings while cheese adds richness and flavor. Always toast nuts before adding to the stuffing mix, it gives them the deepest flavor. Cheese should be grated or cubed so it distributes easily. Use assertive aromatics sparingly so they don't overpower the stuffing.Chopped fresh herbs, garlic, ginger, chiles and even sun-dried tomatoes can make a plain stuffing a lot more interesting.Some possible combinations include:Cornbread stuffing with chiles, smoked mozzarella and cilantroChallah with blue cheese and pecansRye or whole grain bread with feta, dill and currantsSourdough bread with pine nuts, sun-dried tomatoes and olives.
  • Bread stuffing is the classic choice at Thanksgiving, but you could use rice or other grains like quinoa, farro, barley. Not only are grain stuffings elegant and refined, most are also gluten-free.Grain stuffings don't need to adhere like bread stuffings do, so you don't need to bind them with egg. Basically, your aim is to make a tasty rice pilaf or grain salad, but then cook it again inside your bird, which will give it an even more complex flavor rich with drippings. You can use classic bread stuffing aromatics (sage, celery, onion), or improvise another flavor combination. Chances are that as long as it tastes good on its own, it will taste even better after taking a turn inside the bird. Wild rice goes particularly well with the earthy autumnal flavors of a Thanksgiving meal. Or try sticky rice for something unexpectedly terrific.
  • If you don't stuff your turkey, you really don't need to truss it. But if you do stuff your bird, trussing helps keep the stuffing in its proper place, especially when you are moving the turkey from the roasting pan to the cutting board. Here's the simplest way to do it.Place the turkey breast side up on the rack in the roasting pan. Criss-cross the legs and use a piece of butcher's twine to tie them together at the ends, just above the joint. Wrap the twine twice around the legs to make sure they are secure. Take a long piece to twine and loop it around the body of the bird, so that the wings are pressed against the breast. Tightly tie the twine in a knot or bow at the top of the breast. The trussed turkey is now ready to roast.

OYSTER AND WILD RICE CASSEROLE



Oyster and Wild Rice Casserole image

Make and share this Oyster and Wild Rice Casserole recipe from Food.com.

Provided by ratherbeswimmin

Categories     Oven

Time 1h25m

Yield 6 to 8 side dish servings

Number Of Ingredients 12

1 (6 ounce) package long grain and wild rice blend (Uncle Ben's)
1/2 cup cream of chicken soup
1/2 cup half-and-half
1 tablespoon finely chopped onion
1 teaspoon curry powder
1/2 teaspoon dried thyme
3 dashes Worcestershire sauce
1/4 cup dry sherry
1 pint oyster, drained
8 mushroom caps
1 tablespoon lemon juice
fresh parsley sprig

Steps:

  • Prepare rice according to package directions; set aside.
  • In a bowl, combine the next 6 ingredients; mix well.
  • Pour sherry into a lightly greased 10x6 inch baking dish; top with half the rice.
  • Pour 1/2 of the soup mixture over the rice.
  • Arrange oysters and mushroom caps over soup mixture; sprinkle with lemon juice.
  • Top with remaining rice and soup mixture.
  • Bake, uncovered, in a preheated 350° oven for 45 minutes.
  • Garnish with parsley sprigs.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 155.6, Fat 5.4, SaturatedFat 2.2, Cholesterol 46.9, Sodium 230.7, Carbohydrate 8.9, Fiber 0.4, Sugar 1.1, Protein 9.1

OYSTER-AND-RICE DRESSING



Oyster-and-Rice Dressing image

Provided by Craig Claiborne

Categories     casseroles, side dish

Time 1h

Yield 12 servings

Number Of Ingredients 19

4 1/2 cups fresh or canned chicken broth
1 1/2 cups rice
1 1/2 cups finely chopped onion
1 cup finely chopped celery
1 cup finely chopped green pepper
1/2 cup finely chopped scallions
1/2 cup finely chopped parsley
1 cup fresh bread crumbs
4 tablespoons margarine
8 tablespoons butter
1 teaspoon finely minced garlic
2 eggs, well beaten
20 oysters, drained, about 1 1/2 cups
1/2 cup oyster liquor
1/2 teaspoon dried thyme
1/2 teaspoon dried oregano
Salt to taste, if desired
Freshly ground pepper to taste
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper

Steps:

  • Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
  • Combine 3 1/2 cups of the broth and the rice in a saucepan and bring to the boil. Cover closely and cook 17 to 20 minutes or until the rice is tender. Remove from the heat and let stand covered until ready to use.
  • Meanwhile, prepare the chopped vegetables and bread crumbs.
  • Heat the margarine in a skillet and add half the chopped onion, celery and green pepper. Cook, stirring, until the onions start to brown lightly. Add the butter, garlic and remaining chopped onion, green pepper and celery. Cook until the second batch of onion is wilted. Add the scallions and parsley. Remove from the heat and add the remaining chicken broth, beaten eggs, oysters, oyster liquor, thyme, oregano, salt, pepper and cayenne. Blend well.
  • Pour and scrape the mixture into a deep skillet and sprinkle evenly with bread crumbs. Bake 30 to 40 minutes or until piping hot throughout.

Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 332, UnsaturatedFat 7 grams, Carbohydrate 35 grams, Fat 15 grams, Fiber 2 grams, Protein 14 grams, SaturatedFat 6 grams, Sodium 675 milligrams, Sugar 2 grams, TransFat 1 gram

MINNESOTA WILD RICE DRESSING



Minnesota Wild Rice Dressing image

This recipe was given to me by a friend, and it has been a family tradition ever since. No need to stuff the turkey. This dressing can be made the day before Thanksgiving and heated in the microwave 10 minutes before serving!

Provided by MARJK

Categories     Side Dish     Stuffing and Dressing Recipes     Sausage Stuffing and Dressing Recipes

Time 1h

Yield 12

Number Of Ingredients 9

2 (4.5 ounce) packages instant long grain and wild rice
1 (16 ounce) package ground pork sausage
1 (16 ounce) package ground sage pork sausage
½ cup chopped celery
1 medium onion, chopped
½ pound fresh mushrooms, sliced
1 (5 ounce) can water chestnuts, drained and sliced
¼ teaspoon garlic powder
2 eggs, beaten

Steps:

  • Prepare instant long grain and wild rice according to package directions. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Lightly grease a 9x13 inch baking dish.
  • Place ground pork sausage and ground sage pork sausage in a large, deep skillet. Cook over medium high heat until evenly brown. Drain, and set aside. Cook and stir celery, onion, mushrooms, and water chestnuts in the skillet until browned and tender. Season with garlic powder.
  • Mix prepared rice, sausage, celery mixture, and eggs in the prepared baking dish. Bake 15 minutes in the preheated oven, until lightly browned.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 417.9 calories, Carbohydrate 20.4 g, Cholesterol 82.5 mg, Fat 31.6 g, Fiber 1 g, Protein 12.7 g, SaturatedFat 11.2 g, Sodium 834.9 mg, Sugar 2.2 g

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