8/27/14

Southern-Style Baked Beans with Bacon

A classic Southern-style baked beans recipe made with brown sugar topped with crispy bacon.

JUMP TO RECIPE

You know how you lay slices of bacon on top of baked beans and they cook up all glorious? Except that they shrink up so much that when the beans are done only the center of your dish has bacon? And you’ll have like 5 slices but it’s impossible to cut them with the serving spoon so only 5 people actually get the bacon.

And the other people are walking around mumbling under their breath like, That heifer just had to get that last slice of bacon.

And, He was all ‘ooops, didn't mean to snag that bacon but oh well!’ knowing good and well he hooked it with his thumb.

And, That youngin ain't got no raisin’ taking that bacon like that. His mama ought to teach him better. Bless her heart.

There are the recipes that call for cooking the bacon first and crumbling it on top. But, as I've said many, many times around here, ain't nobody got time for that. So here’s what I do! I mix up my very favorite baked beans then top them with a gozillion nuggets of bacon that crisp up and work their magic while the beans are cooking.

End result? Bacon for everyone!

Southern Style Baked Beans! A classic Southern-style baked beans recipe made with brown sugar topped with crispy bacon.

HOW TO COOK SOUTHERN-STYLE BAKED BEANS

  • Mix together ketchup, barbeque sauce, brown sugar, mustard, worcestershire sauce, Liquid Smoke, garlic and pepper then set aside.
  • Open each can of beans then pour off all the standing liquid in the top of the can then gently stir beans into the ketchup mixture. Pour into a shallow baking dish.
  • Cut bacon into 1/2 inch pieces then place pieces evenly in a single layer on top of bean.
  • Bake beans, uncovered, at 350 degrees for 1 to 1.5 hours or until bacon is cooked through and starting to crisp. 

NOTES ABOUT MAKING SOUTHERN-STYLE BAKED BEANS

  • In the recipe card, you’ll notice I call for canned “plain pork and beans”. What I mean by that is we just want plain jane pork and beans, not “baked beans” or “barbeque beans” or anything fancy like that as they’re already jazzed up. I usually buy Van Camp’s or Libby’s.
  • We’re going to pour off the standing liquid in the cans to ensure our beans are rich and thick. Be sure to keep the cans upright until you’re ready to cook. You want all the liquid to settle on top so you can pour it off easily.
  • Once the bacon is cut into small pieces, I like to kinda crumple each piece a bit when topping the beans instead of laying the bacon pieces flat over the beans – like little inchworms (the cute ride-on toys from the 80’s not actual worms). This is totally optional but it makes the finished dish look extra gorgeous!

Recipe for Southern Style Baked Beans with Bacon

Southern Style Baked Beans! A classic Southern-style baked beans recipe made with brown sugar topped with crispy bacon.

Be sure to check out my recipe for COWBOY BEANS too! The recipe has a lot of the same ingredients plus ground beef and sausage!


Southern-Style Baked Beans with Bacon

Southern-Style Baked Beans with Bacon
Yield: 10-12 Servings
Author: Mandy Rivers | South Your Mouth
Prep time: 10 MinCook time: 1 HourTotal time: 1 H & 10 M
A classic Southern-style baked beans recipe made with brown sugar topped with bacon.

Ingredients

  • 2 28-oz. cans plain pork n’ beans
  • 1/2 cup ketchup
  • 1/2 cup barbeque sauce
  • 1/4 cup brown sugar
  • 1 tablespoon yellow mustard
  • 1 tablespoon worcestershire sauce
  • A few drops Liquid Smoke (optional)
  • 1/4 teaspoon garlic powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon pepper
  • 5-6 slices thick, center-cut bacon

Instructions

  1. Combine ketchup, barbeque sauce, brown sugar, mustard, worcestershire sauce, Liquid Smoke, garlic and pepper in a medium-sized bowl then mix well; set aside.
  2. Open each can of beans and pour off all the standing liquid in the top of the can. Discard liquid then add beans to the ketchup mixture. Mix beans gently with the ketchup mixture until thoroughly combined then pour into a shallow 2-quart baking dish.
  3. Cut bacon into 1/2 inch pieces then place pieces evenly in a single layer on top of beans. I like to kinda crumple each piece a bit instead of laying them flat – like little inchworms (the cute ride-on toys from the 80’s not actual worms).
  4. Bake beans, uncovered, at 350 degrees for 1 to 1.5 hours or until bacon is cooked through and starting to crisp.

Notes

  • When I say "plain" pork n’ beans, I mean not “baked beans” or “barbeque beans” or anything fancy like that as they’re already jazzed up. You just want plain jane, inexpensive "pork n' beans". I usually buy Van Camp’s or Libby’s.
  • Be sure to keep the cans upright until you’re ready to cook. You want all the liquid to settle on top so you can pour it off.
  • If you can't find thick center-cut bacon, just buy thick then trim off the fatty ends.


baked beans, bbq, barbeque, barbecue, cowboy, beans, bacon, southern, southern-style, recipe, best, authentic, traditional, easy, side dish, potluck
side dish
american, southern
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8/26/14

Chipotle Shrimp Tostada Bites

A super fun and easy appetizer recipe made with tortilla chips, chipotle glazed shrimp and guacamole sprinkled with a confetti of red onion and cilantro.

JUMP TO RECIPE

Sometimes I look back on my adventure with Food Network and I think did that really happen to me? Did I really get to be a cast member on America’s Best Cook? Did I really get to work with chefs I've admired for years and years? Like Michael Symon and Alex Guarnaschelli and Cat Cora?

Cat-frickin-Cora, man. I mean, come on?!  Did that happen to me?

There were hundreds of little moments that are emblazoned in my memory that I will cherish forever. Walking through Chelsea Market to the undisclosed location of the studios every day. Spending my last night in an Irish pub in Manhattan with new friends, many of whom are now my forever friends. Cooking for an Iron Chef in Kitchen Stadium. And her telling me my food was cooked perfectly; that it was delicious. And that she’d love to spend a day in my kitchen cooking with me. Did that happen?

Ugh. What a journey. What an amazing journey.

Chipotle Shrimp Tostada Bites! A super fun and easy appetizer recipe made with tortilla chips, chipotle glazed shrimp and guacamole sprinkled with a confetti of red onion and cilantro.

Anywho, I’d been wanting to cook the shrimp I made for Cat again so when I saw gulf shrimp at the market yesterday I pounced on them. And I didn't have to rip the heads off and clean these with the clock ticking down either, thankyouverymuch Food Network.

I decided to make these into an appetizer since I was really just cooking them for fun. I whipped them up, poured myself a beer and let myself take a stroll back down memory lane.

Chipotle Shrimp Tostada Bites! A super fun and easy appetizer recipe made with tortilla chips, chipotle glazed shrimp and guacamole sprinkled with a confetti of red onion and cilantro.

These are super easy and delicious! It only takes a minute or two to assemble the tostadas once you have the shrimp cooked. These would make a beautiful appetizer at any event or party. I can’t wait to make these for football season!

Minus the marinade time I can assure you this can be made in under 30 minutes because I've done it. With 87 cameras in my face. Running for ingredients and equipment like a 3-legged cat running for dirt. Oh no, it won't be anything at all like Chopped. Not at all. Right.

Recipe for Chipotle Shrimp Tostada Bites

Chipotle Shrimp Tostada Bites! A super fun and easy appetizer recipe made with tortilla chips, chipotle glazed shrimp and guacamole sprinkled with a confetti of red onion and cilantro.
Chipotle Shrimp Tostada Bites

Chipotle Shrimp Tostada Bites

Yield: 35-40 Servings
Author: Mandy Rivers | South Your Mouth
Prep time: 10 MinCook time: 5 MinTotal time: 15 Min
A super fun and easy appetizer recipe made with tortilla chips, chipotle glazed shrimp and guacamole sprinkled with a confetti of red onion and cilantro.

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 pounds medium shrimp
  • 1 7-oz. can chipotle peppers in adobo sauce
  • 1 tablespoon minced garlic
  • 1/4 cup brown sugar
  • Juice of one lime
  • 1 8-oz. package prepared guacamole
  • 1 bag bite-sized round tortilla chips
  • Chopped cilantro
  • Finely diced red onion
  • Coarse-grain sea salt or kosher salt

Instructions

  1. Peel and de-vein shrimp; set aside.
  2. Combine chipotle peppers in adobo sauce, garlic, brown sugar and lime juice in a large bowl and mix well. If you want yours spicy, chop open the peppers to release the seeds, if not, leave them whole. Add shrimp and gently stir to combine ingredients. Cover bowl and refrigerate shrimp for 4 hours to marinate.
  3. Cook shrimp on the grill, in a grill pan or in a large skillet (grease whichever you use with oil or cooking spray) over medium-high heat 2-3 minutes on each side or until shrimp are cooked through. If cooking in a pan or skillet, cook in several batches to ensure the shrimp aren't overcrowded. Set cooked shrimp aside until ready to serve. The tostadas are perfectly delicious served at room temperature so feel free to prepare the shrimp ahead of time.
  4. To assemble, spread a dollop of guacamole onto each tortilla chip (about a teaspoon). Place one shrimp on top of guacamole then arrange tostadas on a serving platter or cutting board. Sprinkle tostadas with cilantro, diced red onion and sea salt. Serve within one hour of assembling.

Notes

  • Feel free to make your own or make my Quick & Easy Chunky Guacamole but seriously, I think the prepared kind is perfect for this! Easy, peesy, bo-deezy!
  • You might want to buy two of these or get the family-size in case there are lots of broken chips (you just never know, ya know?) and you’ll need as many chips as you have shrimp.
tostada, mini, bites, tortilla, chips, shrimp, chipotle, appetizer, snack, recipe, super bowl, tailgating, football, mexican, guacamole, easy, how to, best
appetizer
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Semi-Homemade Party Guacamole

An unbelievably easy and inexpensive semi-homemade guacamole recipe using fresh avocado, cilantro, onion and garlic with prepared guacamole.

JUMP TO RECIPE

I have a major love affair going on with guacamole right now. Actually, it’s been going on for over a year.

I thought I was pregnant. Twice. Mom, I’m not. Put the phone down.

My friend Mary got me hooked on those vacuum-sealed packs you can get in the deli section at the grocery store.

No lie. I pack it with tortilla chips for lunch, I use it instead of mayo on sandwiches, I put it on burgers, I have it with my omelets, etc. When you have it ready to go in the fridge you’ll be amazed how often you’ll use it.

Semi-Homemade Party Guacamole! An unbelievably easy and inexpensive semi-homemade guacamole recipe using fresh avocado, cilantro, onion and garlic with prepared guacamole.

And speaking of guacamole, have you seen the price of avocados lately? It costs me like $12 to make a batch of homemade guacamole these days. That’s a lot of money for one little dip.

So guess what I figured out? While I’m completely satisfied with the prepared grocery store packs for my own use, when I’m having guests over, I like to have homemade stuff out.

So I cheat and use the prepared stuff as a base. I buy one pack for like four bucks and just one avocado (instead of 40’leven) and rock out a semi-homemade guacamole that’s chunky and fresh.

Semi-Homemade Party Guacamole! An unbelievably easy and inexpensive semi-homemade guacamole recipe using fresh avocado, cilantro, onion and garlic with prepared guacamole.

MORE PARTY APPETIZER RECIPES

  • Party Shrimp – Super easy shrimp appetizer recipe with just a few ingredients that cooks up quick in the oven.
  • Monte Cristo Party Sliders – Party sandwiches made with ham, turkey and cheese baked in a rich buttery topping dusted with powdered sugar.
  • Crispy Baked Jalapeno Popper Dip – Creamy, gooey cheese and jalapeno peppers baked under an extra crispy breadcrumb coating that crunches just like the famous fried appetizer.
  • Original Sausage Balls – The original recipe for sausage balls using Bisquick, cheddar cheese and sausage.
  • Cajun Crab Dip – Kick your party up a notch with this simple Cajun seafood dip recipe made with crab meat - serve hot or cold!
  • Pigs-In-a-Blanket Chili Cheese Dippers – Pigs-In-a-Blanket baked around an easy chili-cheese dip for dunking makes for bite-sized chili-cheese dogs!

Recipe for Semi-Homemade Party Guacamole

Semi-Homemade PARTY Guacamole

Semi-Homemade PARTY Guacamole

Yield: About 2.5 cups
Author: Mandy Rivers | South Your Mouth
Prep time: 5 MinTotal time: 5 Min
An unbelievably easy and inexpensive semi-homemade guacamole recipe using fresh ingredients like avocado, onion, cilantro and garlic with prepared guacamole!

Ingredients

  • 1 8-oz. package prepared guacamole
  • 1 avocado, peel and pit removed
  • 3/4 cup chopped red onion
  • 1 teaspoon minced garlic
  • A dash of garlic powder
  • Salt to taste
  • 1/4 cup chopped cilantro (optional)

Instructions

  1. Cut avocado into small chunks (about 1/2 inch in size).
  2. Gently combine avocado, prepared guacamole and remaining ingredients in a medium bowl.
  3. Cover tightly and refrigerate until ready to serve.

Notes

Don’t just wrap your bowl in plastic wrap or put a lid on it. Place plastic wrap directly on the surface of the guacamole to seal it so no air can get to it until ready to serve to prevent browning.

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appetizer
mexican
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8/25/14

No-Fail Buttercream Frosting

A foolproof buttercream frosting recipe with one box powdered sugar, one stick of butter and almost no measuring! Flavor with your favorite extract such as vanilla, almond, lemon, coconut or peppermint!

JUMP TO RECIPE

Here’s the thing with buttercream recipes… many of us don’t really use a recipe. You just mix butter, powdered sugar, some flavoring and a splash of milk or cream and keep adjusting until it looks right.

Well, that’s hard to document in a recipe. Another thing that’s hard for folks following recipes is measuring powdered sugar. Three cups at my house probably isn't the same as the three cups you measure at your house. In most recipes, that’s OK but when you’re making buttercream with just ounces of liquid, it matters.

That’s why I love this recipe. It uses one 1-pound box of powdered sugar. Ain't nobody got to measure anything. It’s a pound. Period.

No-Fail Buttercream Frosting! A foolproof buttercream frosting recipe with one box powdered sugar, one stick of butter and almost no measuring! Flavor with your favorite extract such as vanilla, almond, lemon, coconut or peppermint!

The only variance is whether you need 3 or 4 tablespoons of milk (half & half or cream) and that’s really about preference and climate. I usually use half & half because it’s what I have but cream makes for a waaaay more luxurious, silky buttercream so I definitely recommend using it if you have it!

This recipe makes enough for 24 normal cupcakes or 16 heavily frosted cupcakes (like these) or one 13x9 cake. If you’re making a layered cake, double the recipe to ensure you have enough.

Don't wait too long to add sprinkles if you're using them. I photographed these without sprinkles first then added them later. As you can see, the sprinkles didn't really stay put - they look like they're on really long slide or taking a drive through the Alps. 

No-Fail Buttercream Frosting! A foolproof buttercream frosting recipe with one box powdered sugar, one stick of butter and almost no measuring! Flavor with your favorite extract such as vanilla, almond, lemon, coconut or peppermint!

NOTES ABOUT NO-FAIL BUTTERCREAM FROSTING:

  • Flavor with your favorite extract such as vanilla, almond, lemon, coconut or peppermint!
  • You can use milk, half & half or cream (whatever you have - no need to make a special trip to the store or buy something you don't use just for a few tablespoons) BUT using the one with the highest fat content will give you the best buttercream.
  • Make chocolate frosting by sifting 1/3 cup cocoa powder into the powdered sugar (you’ll need about a teaspoon more liquid if adding cocoa powder).
  • According to the manufacturer of the box I used with this batch, one pound equals 3 3/4 cups powdered sugar but I can't confirm that.
  • This recipe yields enough for 24 normal cupcakes or 16 heavily frosted cupcakes (like these) or one 13x9 cake. If you’re making a layered cake, double the recipe to ensure you have enough.

Recipe for No-Fail Buttercream Frosting

No-Fail Buttercream Frosting! A foolproof buttercream frosting recipe with one box powdered sugar, one stick of butter and almost no measuring! Flavor with your favorite extract such as vanilla, almond, lemon, coconut or peppermint!

No-Fail Buttercream Frosting

No-Fail Buttercream Frosting
Yield: Frosting for 24 normal cupcakes or 16 heavily frosted cupcakes
Author: Mandy Rivers | South Your Mouth
Prep time: 5 MinTotal time: 5 Min
A foolproof buttercream frosting recipe with one box powdered sugar and one stick of butter and almost no measuring! Flavor with your favorite extract such as vanilla, almond, lemon, coconut or peppermint!

Ingredients

  • 1 1-lb. box powdered sugar
  • 1/2 cup salted butter (1 stick), at room temperature
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract (see notes)
  • 3-4 tablespoons milk or cream

Instructions

  1. Whip butter and vanilla extract (or whichever flavor extract you're using) on medium speed with an electric mixer until smooth and creamy (about 1 minute).
  2. Add 3 tablespoons milk or cream and powdered sugar then continue mixing on medium speed until well combined and fluffy (about 2-3 minutes).
  3. Add more milk or cream, 1 teaspoon at a time, until you reach your desired consistency.

Notes

  • Flavor with your favorite extract such as vanilla, almond, lemon, coconut or peppermint!
  • You can use milk, half & half or cream (whatever you have - no need to make a special trip to the store or buy something you don't use just for a few tablespoons) BUT using the one with the highest fat content will give you the best buttercream.
  • Make chocolate frosting by sifting 1/3 cup cocoa powder into the powdered sugar (you’ll need about a teaspoon more liquid if adding cocoa powder).
  • According to the manufacturer of the box I used with this batch, one pound equals 3 3/4 cups powdered sugar but I can't confirm that.
  • This recipe yields enough for 24 normal cupcakes or 16 heavily frosted cupcakes (like these) or one 13x9 cake. If you’re making a layered cake, double the recipe to ensure you have enough.
frosting, icing, buttercream, butter, cream, old fashioned, traditional, classic, bakery, easy, no fail, 1 box, 1 pound, powdered sugar, confectioners sugar, icing sugar, vanilla, almond, lemon, coconut, peppermint, cocoa, chocolate, cupcakes
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Fall-Off-The-Bone Baby Back Ribs

An easy recipe for baby back ribs baked low and slow in the oven on a bed of onions that are so tender the meat falls off the bone.


When I say these ribs are “fall off the bone” good, I mean it. My kitchen looked like a voodoo den today. There were bones everywhere. Without a scrap of meat on them.

It looked like some phantom from Scooby Doo had been through and left nothing in its wake but bones.

These ribs cook low and slow in the oven on a bed of on thick onion slices to keep them out of the pan juices (so they roast instead of boil). Then you finish them off with barbeque sauce and you’re ready to chow down.

Fall-Off-The-Bone Baby Back Ribs cooked low and slow on a bed of onions that are so tender the meat falls off the bone.

A friend of mine popped over when I was making these one day and I was somewhat apologetic about cooking them in the oven instead of on the grill. Because, I mean, we’re in the South so we’re all supposed to be grill masters, right?

[Cut to scene of me standing next to a giant grilling contraption (prolly made out of steel barrels on wheels with a trailer hitch) with a stack of hickory chopped and on the ready behind me with a Bud Light in one hand and a barbeque baster the size of a janitor’s mop in the other]

Fall-Off-The-Bone Baby Back Ribs cooked low and slow on a bed of onions that are so tender the meat falls off the bone.

He surprised me by saying he used to work at one of the big rib restaurants in town and the way I was cooking them was almost exactly the way they cooked them at the restaurant. They cooked them low and slow in the oven and only popped them on the grill when it was time to sauce them.

Get. Out.

I love it when I figure this stuff out on my own. And it sure beats standing out in the heat, sweating my gonads off, swatting mosquitoes for hours.


Fall-Off-The-Bone Baby Back Ribs


Yield: 4-6 Servings
Author:
prep time: 10 Mcook time: 4 hourtotal time: 4 H & 10 M
An easy recipe for baby back ribs baked low and slow in the oven on a bed of onions that are so tender the meat falls off the bone.

ingredients:

  • 2 racks baby back ribs
  • Salt
  • Pepper
  • Garlic powder
  • Paprika
  • Barbeque sauce
  • 3-4 onions, peeled
  • 1/2 cup beer (approximately)
  • 2 teaspoons liquid smoke (optional)

instructions:

How to cook Fall-Off-The-Bone Baby Back Ribs

  1. Remove the thin skin (or membrane) from the back of the ribs. Simply slip the point of a knife under the skin on one end then lift up to create a gap. Slide your fingers under the skin then pull the skin off. I can usually get a better grip if I use a paper towel to grab the skin.
  2. Season both sides of ribs liberally with salt, pepper, garlic and paprika; set aside.
  3. Slice onions into 1/2" rings and place them in the bottom of a large roasting pan (or two smaller ones – use whatever you need so that the ribs can cook in a single layer). This is to create a layer that will keep the ribs elevated so that they’re never sitting in (boiling in) the cooking liquid.
  4. Pour just enough beer into the pan to cover the bottom.  Add liquid smoke to the beer.
  5. Arrange rib racks in a single layer on top of onion slices. Cover pan tightly with two layers of aluminum foil (if your pan has a lid, cover with a layer of aluminum foil and the lid). Bake at 300 degrees for 4 hours. Remove ribs from oven and uncover.
  6. Increase oven temperature to 375 degrees. Drain pan juices from pan (either with a turkey baster or by carefully tipping the pan). Baste ribs with barbeque sauce then return to oven. Continue baking ribs, uncovered, for 5 minutes or until sauce is heated through and slightly sticky. Remove ribs from oven, tent with foil and rest for 15 minutes before serving.
  7. Discard onions.

NOTES:

Feel free to use apple juice, water, root beer or another cooking liquid if you'd prefer.
You can use carrots, apple rings or celery instead of onions if you prefer. The veg is there as an aromatic and to lift the ribs up out of the cooking liquid so they don't boil.
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This recipe was shared at the Weekend Potluck!

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8/19/14

Chicken and Dressing Casserole

A comfort food casserole recipe made with chicken (or leftover turkey) and Southern cornbread dressing with all the flavors of Thanksgiving that can be enjoyed year-round.

Photos and blog post updated 11/1/23  

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

  1. JUMP TO RECIPE
  2. FAQ ABOUT CHICKEN & DRESSING CASSEROLE
  3. NOTES ABOUT MAKING THIS RECIPE

Every year at Thanksgiving, I’d ask myself WHY do we only eat turkey and/or cornbread dressing once a year? 

And every year I’d tell myself I would start cooking one or both more often. But I never did.

And THEN I started making this recipe and haven’t had to chastise myself for not keeping my word about making turkey and dressing more often.

Because this, my friends, scratches both itches AND it’s delicious AND a bazillion times easier than recreating my Thanksgiving favorites.

Chicken & Dressing Casserole! A comfort food casserole recipe made with chicken (or leftover turkey) and Southern cornbread dressing with all the flavors of Thanksgiving that can be enjoyed year-round.

I first saw a recipe like this on Southern with a Twist, a Southern food blog my buddy Lynn runs. What drew my attention was Lynn puts chopped boiled eggs in hers – which I LOVE – but never really see very often on recipe sites.

Southerners (or at least my family) have been putting boiled eggs in our recipes forever. I never once saw a pot of Chicken & Dumplings at Nanny’s house that wasn’t loaded with sliced boiled eggs. And all the women in my family put chopped boiled eggs in our cornbread dressing.

Southerners sneak boiled eggs into stews, rice dishes, casseroles – really anything that makes a big batch. I suspect this was to add protein to dishes during lean times. 

Chicken & Dressing Casserole! A comfort food casserole recipe made with chicken (or leftover turkey) and Southern cornbread dressing with all the flavors of Thanksgiving that can be enjoyed year-round.

Food sources in the South were ravaged after the Civil War. Sherman ordered all the crops and livestock to be destroyed so folks got pretty creative working with what they had. That’s why collard greens (and mustard, turnip, etc.) and peas are so popular here.

The Yankees didn’t realize the peas and greens were food when they were scorching the earth so the two sustained much of the South in the years directly following the war. To this day, collard greens and black-eyed peas are eaten here on New Year’s Day for good luck.

I don’t include the boiled eggs in my recipe but you can certainly add them. You should add them! I messed around and somehow married a Canadian, so I tweak a lot of old school, deep South recipes for his sake. 

Chicken & Dressing Casserole! A comfort food casserole recipe made with chicken (or leftover turkey) and Southern cornbread dressing with all the flavors of Thanksgiving that can be enjoyed year-round.

FAQ ABOUT CHICKEN & DRESSING CASSEROLE

How much cornbread do I need?  Use a 6-serving mix or half a pan of most standard family-size cornbread recipes (which bake in a 13x9 pan). You can also use leftover cornbread muffins from your local meat-and-three restaurant or Cracker Barrel. 

Can I use Jiffy mix?  Yes, but I personally don’t love straight-up Jiffy cornbread in this because it’s a little too sweet but LOTS of people love it (I think most people make this with Jiffy mix). When I do use Jiffy mix, I add 1/2 cup sour cream to the batter which really knocks the sweetness down a bit.

Can I use leftover, canned or rotisserie chicken in this?  Yes, yes and yes! You’ll need to buy chicken broth to use since you won’t be making your own when you cook the chicken but I’ve done all three and they’re all great!

Is this a meal or a side dish?  I serve this as a meal but a lot of folks serve this at Thanksgiving as a side dish. It makes a GREAT potluck dish since it can be served as either.

Chicken & Dressing Casserole! A comfort food casserole recipe made with chicken (or leftover turkey) and Southern cornbread dressing with all the flavors of Thanksgiving that can be enjoyed year-round.

Can I use Stove Top or Pepperidge Farm stuffing in this instead of cornbread?  Probably. You will likely need to add more broth since both of these are somewhat dehydrated. If using Stove Top, reduce the salt since it’s already pretty heavily seasoned.

Don’t you want gravy with it?  Well, I ain’t never turned down gravy and I’m not about to start now but, no, I don’t make gravy to serve with this. This is super moist so it doesn’t really need anything but, gravy is never wrong. Ever. You could use a packet of gravy mix or a jar if you want something quick and easy.

Can I make this with turkey?  Of course you can!

Would cranberry sauce be good served with this?  Well, since I don’t like cranberry sauce, my answer would be heck no but I imagine folks who traditionally enjoy cranberry sauce with turkey and dressing would love it with this.

Chicken & Dressing Casserole! A comfort food casserole recipe made with chicken (or leftover turkey) and Southern cornbread dressing with all the flavors of Thanksgiving that can be enjoyed year-round.

NOTES ABOUT MAKING THIS RECIPE FOR CHICKEN & DRESSING CASSEROLE

  • The reason I specify to use a smaller saucepan when cooking the chicken is so you don’t have to use more water than necessary. The less water you use, the more flavorful the broth is.
  • Once the chicken is cooked, you will most likely have more than 2 cups of broth so you’ll definitely want to measure the broth. 
  • Feel free to use leftover, canned or rotisserie chicken and prepared chicken broth or bullion.
  • Diced boiled eggs are SCRUMPTIOUS in this and very much in keeping with the southern tradition of adding boiled eggs to cornbread dressing. 
  • This is very moist and doesn’t need gravy but feel free to serve gravy on the side. Gravy is never wrong. Ever.
  • I like Campbells Cream of Chicken with Herbs condensed soup best but regular cream of chicken is great too.
  • Substitute cream of mushroom, celery or onion for the cream of chicken if desired.

Recipe for How to Cook Grits

Chicken & Dressing Casserole! A comfort food casserole recipe made with chicken (or leftover turkey) and Southern cornbread dressing with all the flavors of Thanksgiving that can be enjoyed year-round.

Chicken & Dressing Casserole

Chicken & Dressing Casserole
Yield: 6-8 Servings
Author: Mandy Rivers | South Your Mouth
Prep time: 20 MinCook time: 40 MinTotal time: 1 Hour
A comfort food casserole recipe made with chicken (or leftover turkey) and Southern cornbread dressing with all the flavors of Thanksgiving that can be enjoyed year-round.

Ingredients

  • 2-3 large chicken breasts
  • 1 8x8 pan of cornbread, cooled
  • 2 cups water
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon pepper
  • 1 10-oz can cream of chicken soup
  • 1 cup diced celery
  • 1 cup diced onion
  • 1/4 cup butter
  • 1/2 teaspoon poultry seasoning

Instructions

  1. Add chicken breasts to a saucepan (the smallest pan you can fit them in so that 2 cups of water will cover or mostly cover them). Add water, salt and pepper. Cover then bring to a boil. Once, boiling, reduce heat to low then cook for 30 minutes or until cooked through (larger, bone-in breasts may take longer).
  2. Remove chicken from pot to cool, reserving 2 cups of broth.
  3. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  4. Combine 2 cups reserved broth, cream of chicken soup (do not prepare first) and poultry seasoning then whisk until smooth; set aside.
  5. Sauté celery and onion in butter for 5 minutes then add to a large mixing bowl.
  6. Shred or cut chicken into bite-sited pieces, add to bowl with vegetables then stir to combine.
  7. Crumble cornbread into bowl with chicken and vegetables then pour in broth mixture. Gently fold to combine all ingredients. Taste for seasoning then add more salt, pepper or poultry seasoning if desired.
  8. Spoon mixture into a 2-quart casserole dish. Bake, uncovered, for 40-45 minutes or until golden brown. All of the ingredients are cooked (and there are no raw eggs, etc.) so we really just need to heat everything through and get a little color on the top.

Notes

  • The reason I specify to use a smaller saucepan is so you don’t have to use more water than necessary. The less water you use, the more flavorful the broth is.
  • Once the chicken is cooked, you will most likely have more than 2 cups of broth so you’ll definitely want to measure the broth.
  • Add sage if you'd like! I'm a "less is more" kinda gal when it comes to sage and the Poultry Seasoning has just enough in it for me but if you love sage, go for it!
  • Feel free to use leftover, canned or rotisserie chicken and prepared chicken broth or bullion.
  • Diced boiled eggs are SCRUMPTIOUS in this and very much in keeping with the southern tradition of adding boiled eggs to cornbread dressing.
  • This is very moist and doesn’t need gravy but feel free to serve gravy on the side. Gravy is never wrong. Ever.
  • I like Campbells Cream of Chicken with Herbs condensed soup best but regular cream of chicken is great too.
  • Substitute cream of mushroom, celery or onion for the cream of chicken if desired.
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