Oh god, its already the next year. The turkey videos last year feels like it came out yesterday. I feel like my youth is slipping away from me the more I think about it.
Dr Potato only have degree for teeth, but you don’t need degree to have Quarantine Party Fun by yourself ! Potato recommend: th-cam.com/play/PL64E6BD94546734D8.html
It's weird indeed. Everywhere I comment, people tell me how much they love me and my videos. Sometimes it is annoying. But right now it would be okay. So say something nice about my content, dear ana
Dressing also means that in the US. We will refer to things as "Ranch dressing" or "Italian dressing" and it's the liquid stuff. Generally, we distinguish it by saying "thanksgiving dressing" or "cornbread dressing".
it makes sense, like Adam said, that dressing generally has come to mean "things that you put on top/supplement of the main course", that is, a condiment. so it is natural that the term stuck to different things in different places, especially before the internet. (svenne här också)
In the Southern U.S. we typically eat "dressing" with our turkey at Thanksgiving and Christmas. (Dressing is also served on top of salad.) Dressing is baked in a separate pan and stuffing is baked inside the bird.
@@WolfeWrangle i usually say stuffing more than dressing, just based on where im from, but id add that if i were to use dressing and also my sense of how other ppl use it is that you can distinguish "salad dressing" from "turkey/thanksgiving dressing" but usually from context its p clear what you mean so u just say dressing in either context
I had never heard it called 'dressing' except in the context of my grandmother's joke "At the beginning of the meal its called dressing, midway through its filling, and by the end its stuffing."
Dressing is ubiquitous in the South. It is cornbread based and mixed with heavy doses of sage, egg, and served with giblet gravy. It is NEVER cooked in the turkey.
@@chris41952 No one cooks it inside the turkey in the North either but we still call it stuffing. No reason to change the name just bc the method of cooking it evolved
@@user-tg3jl1mt4e it's not just the cooking method; it's the ingredients. Southern dressing is nothing like bread stuffing. Nothing in this video is even close.
@@chris41952 : That all depends strongly on the family- with my bunch, we commonly have two or three. As for dressing vs stuffing, the dressing likely started as a distinct thing from stuffing, with stuffing being inside the bird, and dressing being in a large pan (ideally under the bird, to catch the drippings).
Adam, my family has an amazing Chinese-American recipe for a rice stuffing that would blow your mind. It's essentially a sticky rice stuffing with Chinese sausage, ground pork, green onions, shiitake mushrooms, water chestnuts. It's incredible with some turkey gravy over the top. Also delicious the next morning if you flatten it like a pancake, fry it up crisp in some vegetable oil, garnish with a little soy sauce. AMAZING.
@@marg200039 it's honestly the best part of the meal. Bread stuffing is terrible. Rice stuffing is the best. Edited the original comment to include ground pork.
Imagine going to an Adam Ragusea video and Justin Y. says a joke about Adam starting a dinner table debate about the definition of stuffing when you whip out the turkey.
Because of my French background, my mother and grandmother always made their stuffing with little to almost no bread. Basically it’s equal parts ground pork, veal, beef, with mirepoix, minced garlic, fresh thyme, paprika, fresh parsley for color, a blend of chicken and beef stock, Cognac, salt, pepper, and a touch of freshly made toasted bread crumb. Just enough to bind everything together with a handful of oven roasted chopped chestnuts or sometimes walnuts. My family’s stuffing is absolutely delicious! It’s nothing like the American bread stuffing and we always make as a side dish. My family and I never actually stuff the bird.
wow that sounds extremely different but also really nice , i doubt ill ever remember to come back ro this comment at an appropriate time but i would theoretically rlly like to try to make this one time
I'm from the UK and never heard it called dressing. It's interesting knowing differences like this, even if it's quite regional even in the US. Growing up we had stuffing every weekend with our Sunday roast dinner. We use a box mix of sage and onion. We always cooked it separately from the chicken partly because we don't always have chicken. You add water and butter to the box mix and cook it in a dish in the oven, sometimes like Christmas the stuffing would be rolled in to balls and cooked in the oven. We always have stuffing on the dry side and some times add in sausage meat to the stuffing mix, which tastes amazing. My brother like a to add chopped walnuts that tastes great aswell. Yourkshire puddings are also a must for a roast dinner in the UK.
Same here. As a brit its always been stuffing to me. Although I wander if this is another case of america holding onto traditional english words that the UK moved on from.
My grandma makes a stuffing with sausage and dried cranberries. I highly recommend adding cranberries to your stuffing sometime just to try it out. Who knows, you might like it.
One of my favourite dishes is to coat pork chop in flour, egg, and stuffing mix, pan fry with sliced apples till golden and then finish them off in the oven. Love the little shop of horrors reference at the end lol
In Sweden we have something called "dopp i grytan" at Christmas. It is also soggy bread. It's made to go, though. Basically slices of bread dipped for a few seconds in home baked ham juice.
Adam, you're becoming one of the best food academics on the internet. Thank you for always doing your due diligence. I really appreciate the attention to detail you adhere to.
I am incredibly appreciative of these videos. The personality and rationality displayed within is why I WANT to watch these. Also, the stategy and placement of the Sponsor messages is supreme; even if I'm not personally interested in the product or service, I am still happy to see how and when the advertisements are incorporated into each video. Thank you for your top notch material. I sincerely wish you and your family the absolute best.
Born and raised in Mississippi. I was 25 years old the first time I ever tasted "bread dressing." My wife's family is from Michigan. My family ALWAYS made CORNBREAD dressing. That was almost 30 years ago, and as sincerely as I've tried to love the bread dressing...well...I just cannot make the transition. Dressing/stuffing made from cornbread is just massively superior TO ME in taste, texture, and that "X factor" we all associate with the things we were raised with.
@@TheLionAndTheLamb777 It has so much to do with how and where one is raised. I will say this, though: IMO good cornbread dressing is harder to make than good "northern style." So chances are pretty good you haven't had some of the best cornbread dressing. My mom's is extraordinary, but when one of my cousins made it I didn't like it at all. Most people underestimate how much liquid is needed so it comes out dry and bland. My mom's was always super moist and incredibly delicious.
Here in Georgia, dressing is generally describing corn bread dressing, but stuffing would still be primarily normal white bread. I've personally never heard them used interchangeably. Dressing was always corn bread dressing (basically a corn bread based stuffing made outside of the bird), and stuffing was the white bread stuff.
Thank you Adam I live in the UK I am doing thanksgiving for my American Girlfriend. She told US stuffing is different to UK stuffing (a lot more pork in my stuffing) . When I asked her how to make it she said she always bought the packet stuff. Thank you for a quick and easy method!
@@SKyrim190 You can do this with anything you know. "Nihilists choose to believe that their beliefs don't matter." "Anti-authoritarians authoritatively enforce against concentration of power." Yada yada. It's not a contradiction or a hypocrisy, it's just the nature of taking a stance.
Great video. It explains why I was taught to put the "stuffing" in a single layer of cheesecloth in the bird. When the white meat was almost ready we pulled the stuffing out and threw it in a hot pan to finish cooking, dry out, and get a crispy crust.
Gotta give you props for how truly seamless yet jarring your sponsor bits are. Like, I thought it was weird you were talking about your knife, but then...oh, I see. Haha
Fun fact, in French this thing is called “farce” which is also the word for joke, though they might not be related. We use “farcir” to describe the action of stuffing a bird, and “fourrer” for the action of stuffing pastry. Now guess which one also means filling a body cavity? You’re right: both, because we’re Pepe le Pew.
"farce" means joke because back in the 16th century, the word was used to refer to short theatrical comedic interludes that were "stuffed" between the acts of longer dramas.
We have the term forcemeat in English, which is derived from the french farce and farcir. Swedish also has the related word färs, as in köttfärs (ground meat).
I love to use my very large roasting pan and put relatively dry stuffing mix on the bottom. The butter and bacon and all the stuff I use in my Turkey melts down and moistens it, caramelizes, and gives it an amazing flavor. I love super moist stuffing, but my mother doesn’t, so I also slightly tilt the pan by putting a bit of aluminum foil under one side. :)
Everyone probably has their own stuffing hacks. Mine: (in addition to the classic mirepoix) mushroom, diced apple, and some corn. Umami, sweetness, color, texture and deliciousness.
I’ve lived in Louisiana my whole life and we’ve always said stuffing. That being said, your reasoning for why more people might say dressing down here sounds incredibly plausible.
Maybe that map is inverted, and the reason more people google dressing down there is because they don’t know what the hell it is, and are trying to find out?!?
My parents refused to make stuffing even though I love it. I haven't had it in over a decade and this video was hard to watch without eagerly looking for that recipe.
do it! look for a recipe! stuffing is great and every once in a while i remember i can eat it outside of holidays too and im always v glad when that happens
Thanksgiving is the day a year where we spread a lie about how the pilgrims who came to america treated the american indians, and then ignore the genocide that occurred after, and thank each other for meaningless things.
I generally despise advertisements on TH-cam, but you a clever way of cutting them into your videos without the abrupt interruption. I actually find myself watching your nod to sponsors with interest instead of flipping screens elsewhere for a minute.
it's also worth noting that long ago, not everyone had an oven in their home; rather, many had to rent the use of a local oven in order to bake their holiday meal - thus, packing as much food as possible into a single dish baked in a single go would be advantageous
This is how I think of it as well, but I was never sure if i was just a correlattiton because the only family I knew that used corn bead was from he south
My oh my😂,steaching your meat! If "stuffing" gave our mothers the vapors .... Ps: Mom wouldn't have called what you made either as there was no cornbread 😂😌. Blessings from New Orleans.
I always hated stuffing. And once I grew up and got expected to make Thanksgiving dinner. One relative wanted chestnuts in the stuffing, one wanted applesauce, one wanted sausage. So I gave up and invented a seasoned combination of brown rice, Wehani (russet colored) rice, and wild rice. Everybody loved it!
My family is from the Cincinnati area and we had both. Specifically, "stuffing" was that which was actually stuffed into the bird and "dressing" was cooked in a pan because you couldn't fit enough in the bird to feed our massive family... Like about 2 dozen at Thanksgiving dinner. It's pure chaos. Christmas isn't much different. It wasn't uncommon to have 2 different kinds of "dressing" too. There was always the typical "dressing" and then there was another that had oysters in it... I wasn't a fan of that one but couldn't get enough of the regular stuff.
Welcome everybody to today’s White Wine Report! No non-negligible levels of White Wi... ERROR ERROR: IMPOSTER RAISIN WINE DETECTED AT 3:07 !!!!!! Thank you for tuning in to today’s analysis :) Don’t forget to tune in next time, stay safe out there.
Generally in Georgia what I've heard as the difference is that Stuffing is made with stale wheat bread and Dressing is made with stale cornbread. There is also some argument over stuffing in the bird vs. dressing in the pan, as you mentioned, but everyone I know who grew up here differentiates between the cornbread and wheat bread as the base ingredient. However, it is common to refer to it as "cornbread dressing" as to avoid confusion with "them yankees o'r yonder".
Where I'm from in Canada, stuffing is like how you are presenting it, made with bread and either stuffed or on its own. Dressing was made a little differently and had mashed potatoes as well as summer savoury added to it and was always served on the side
fact checking, academia, science and food, what a weird combination. Did anybody expect this when they watched that New-york style pizza at home video and subbed? Neither did I. What a gem of a youtube channel.
A few years ago I hosted a thanks giving for a few friends, one was gluten intolerant. So I used rice (I think it was a long time ago) bread instead of normal. I don't know if its true for all non gluten breads but it was crumbly enough straight out of the bag. turned out perfect i think i used 2 eggs though
I never really thought about the distinction between stuffing and dressing, but I like the semantic difference - seems to me to be a useful difference.
Here is my dream stuffing: homemade cornbread croutons or the ones from the Whole Foods bakery, chicken stock, turkey giblets, loads of butter, egg, chestnuts, Granny Smith apples, dried tart cherries, dried sage, thyme, black pepper, lightly caramelized onion. The chestnuts and cherries are crucial for me. The sweet stuffing with the salty bird and gravy is just a magical combo for me.
In my family, ours was always potato stuffing! Every Thanksgiving there were three potato dishes on the table. Potato stuffing from the turkey, candy sweet potatoes and then of course the masked potatoes! Yum!
Great explanation Adam. I call it stuffing as well being a northerner (New York) but my mother was from South Carolina and they called it dressing. I also use both terminology interchangeably. This year I made an all herb bread stuffing/dressing from scratch; normally I mix both herb and cornbread together but this year I just wanted an all bread herb stuffing. I have been known to use both Stove Top and Peppridge Farms brands as well.
As a Brit I was surprised to learn that US turkey stuffing is mostly bread based. Completely different to UK stuffing, even for turkeys at Christmas. Possible future video topic?
@@Oscar-vv6dn I may be biased by how my family does it, but our family recipe has very little bread in it and the Delia Smith recipe online (and does it get more British than Delia Smith? I think not) has no bread in. Possible other Brits do it differently though.
@@QuincelSC I imagine the traditional stuff has bread in it, but the more modern stuff doesn't and is quicker and just as good. Depends on the family I reckon.
@@QuincelSC My family use a Delia recipe for stuffing and the bulk is made up of stale bread and sausage meat. I was surprised by the lack of even a mention of sausage meat here
Stuffing is stuffing, whether it's inside or out. I'll give your oven recipe a try for this Christmas though, as Thanksgiving has already passed where I am this year.
So. My parents during my childhood would make sausage stuffing and stuff it between the skin and the meat of the breast. The fat from the sausage kept the breast moist, the cavity of the bird was still open (apart from perhaps a small onion/clementine with cloves that would pretty much disintegrate within the first 20min of cooking), and the last place to reach the right temperature was the middle of the breast meat, meaning it was still juicy when it came to carving time.
We call it stuffing in the UK, but ours is actually quite different! It uses breadcrumbs so when cooked it's quite crunchy on top and very mushy, yet kinda dry. This looks a lot nicer. Sometimes we'll have stuffing with meat in which you cook in a separate dish, and we'll have pork joints / chicken / turkey with stuffing already in to buy in most if not all supermarkets, etc.
We make our stuffing(dressing) slightly dry but form them into balls about the size of a baseball, then bake the stuffing balls. This makes for a lot of nice crispy bits on these little serving sized stuffing balls. They're also great for freezing if you have leftovers.(not very often though) and they're great for slicing and putting on a turkey sandwich with a bit of cranberry sauce. 🤪
Adam, Here in the Southeast US, "Dressing" when prepared, is more wet than stuffing before being baked, and usually comes out a little more dense after baking. Stuffing can also have sweet ingredients like fruit, nuts and berries in some countries. Also, in the Southeast US, dressing has cornbread or biscuits mixed in along with the bread. Sometimes Giblets and Chopped Hard Boiled Eggs are added as well. However, we still say "dressing" even when it's stuffed in the bird.
Oh this reminds me of something my step dad would make. Seasoning loaf he called it. Square uncut white load with the roof cut off. Take out all the bread inside leaving the walls and floor around half an inch thick. Rub beef lard all over the inner walls, floor and inside of the roof. All the bread goes in a blender along with more lard, a chopped onion and mixed herbs probably sage no idea what else. Blitz it then stuff the bread shell with it. Tie the roof in place then bake. Amazing sort of fried bread crust and soggy interior bread stuffing. Lush!
UK sage and onion stuffing is a classic. We all get it from a box, and I've seen it cooked outside of the box and then shoved into the bird. Always served on the side as a big lump of stuffing, here in the north (dont know about south ) we stuff it into our yorkshire puddings on the plate.
Love this episode. I'm a SC native and my parents and grandparents always made dressing outside the bird but it was really dense and not at all fluffy one bit. I didn't eat much as it wasn't a favorite for me.... I found the stove top stuffing and liked it then as I got into cooking found really good homemade "stuffing' recipes that were pan recipes that used homemade dried bread and veggies diced baked in a pan. The recipes called it stuffing and I do too although it's just stuffed in a pan. It's all really interesting especially since I may be going against the grain from where I grew up and live. Maybe it's all bc of the Stove-top marketing!
I live in the south we Collett dressing if it’s made in a pan by itself if it is made inside of the turkey then it is called stuffing or if it is made on the stove top it is called stuffing! Dressing also has different ingredients in it then a regular stuffing does
In turkey, we stuff the turkey or the chicken with flavoured rice called "iç pilav" we put chestnuts and currants in it and we cook it with beef stock, onions and butter, sometimes with a little olive oil.
In the UK, everybody calls it stuffing, and it's almost always made using powder from a packet that you just add water to. I've never seen any with carrots and onions added, although the packet flavour is normally sage and onion. To us Brits, dressing is almost always the thing you add to a salad, made from oil and vinegar (and whatever else you want, like feta cheese or avocado, but it's hard to know where that stops being the dressing and becomes the salad!)
@@andrew4363 Yeah, it's my family's favourite part too! Pigs in blankets a close second. We always end up doing two batches. It's even good cold. I've even made sausage rolls before with stuffing. Ahh so good...
Hmm, here close to you - northwest of Atl we use both terms, but to describe different things. They aren't used interchangeably. Stuffing is the mixture of dried bread with veggies, whether its in or out of the turkey. Dressing is specifically a subset of stuffing that uses cornbread instead of dried white bread, and it's always prepared separate from the bird. We fix both on Thanksgiving.
i always grew up with stove top stuffing from my mom on a semi-regular basis but on thanksgiving my grandmother has always made a cornbread dressing where in she cooks a big loaf of cornbread in her cast iron skillet and just crumbles all but the bottom crust (she lets my papa eat that) and the various other ingredients into a sage heavy dressing before baking it in a sheet pan. she prepares this with a "giblet" gravy made from the drippings of the turkey but without using any actual giblets, hence the quotes.
Oh god, its already the next year. The turkey videos last year feels like it came out yesterday. I feel like my youth is slipping away from me the more I think about it.
mood
Dr Potato only have degree for teeth, but you don’t need degree to have Quarantine Party Fun by yourself !
Potato recommend:
th-cam.com/play/PL64E6BD94546734D8.html
Same
Considering how awful 2020 has been, 2021 cannot come soon enough.....
Thought I was the only one
He had me at "come friends, let us seek these answers together".
That’s the exact moment I pressed ‘like’
@@sandman-Rahal Same. This guys a gem
It's weird indeed. Everywhere I comment, people tell me how much they love me and my videos. Sometimes it is annoying. But right now it would be okay. So say something nice about my content, dear ana
@@AxxLAfriku uh oh stinky
I lost nnn altogether when he said that
Personally, i like to eat dry bread and veggies, then stuff myself into turkey. I really love that maximum flavor.
*"That maximum flavor"*
I like to feed the turkey bread and veggies and stuff myself in the turkey
"Why Alien Potato stuffs himself, instead of his turkey"
I season my cutting board, with white wine, and stuff that into my turkey, and use the drippings from that to make the best tasting gravy.
Talk about efficiency
I’m always so pleasantly surprised that I get such an amazing explainer along with a recipe in these video.
omg Johnny is here 😂
Johnny is here
It's Johnny omg
holy shite its johnny
wait this is the guy from vox
As a Swede, the word "dressing" gets confusing in context, since in Swedish "dressing" means "stuff we put on food, usually semi-liquid, like Ranch".
Dressing also means that in the US. We will refer to things as "Ranch dressing" or "Italian dressing" and it's the liquid stuff. Generally, we distinguish it by saying "thanksgiving dressing" or "cornbread dressing".
For me, dressing has always meant a vinegar, olive oil and salt emulsion that you put on salad (svenne här också)
it makes sense, like Adam said, that dressing generally has come to mean "things that you put on top/supplement of the main course", that is, a condiment. so it is natural that the term stuck to different things in different places, especially before the internet. (svenne här också)
In the Southern U.S. we typically eat "dressing" with our turkey at Thanksgiving and Christmas. (Dressing is also served on top of salad.) Dressing is baked in a separate pan and stuffing is baked inside the bird.
@@WolfeWrangle i usually say stuffing more than dressing, just based on where im from, but id add that if i were to use dressing and also my sense of how other ppl use it is that you can distinguish "salad dressing" from "turkey/thanksgiving dressing" but usually from context its p clear what you mean so u just say dressing in either context
I had never heard it called 'dressing' except in the context of my grandmother's joke "At the beginning of the meal its called dressing, midway through its filling, and by the end its stuffing."
Oh thats actually very clever
Dressing is ubiquitous in the South. It is cornbread based and mixed with heavy doses of sage, egg, and served with giblet gravy. It is NEVER cooked in the turkey.
@@chris41952 No one cooks it inside the turkey in the North either but we still call it stuffing. No reason to change the name just bc the method of cooking it evolved
@@user-tg3jl1mt4e it's not just the cooking method; it's the ingredients. Southern dressing is nothing like bread stuffing. Nothing in this video is even close.
@@chris41952 : That all depends strongly on the family- with my bunch, we commonly have two or three. As for dressing vs stuffing, the dressing likely started as a distinct thing from stuffing, with stuffing being inside the bird, and dressing being in a large pan (ideally under the bird, to catch the drippings).
Adam, my family has an amazing Chinese-American recipe for a rice stuffing that would blow your mind. It's essentially a sticky rice stuffing with Chinese sausage, ground pork, green onions, shiitake mushrooms, water chestnuts. It's incredible with some turkey gravy over the top. Also delicious the next morning if you flatten it like a pancake, fry it up crisp in some vegetable oil, garnish with a little soy sauce. AMAZING.
THAT SOUNDS AMAZING WOAH SORRY
I can practically taste that description 😩
@@marg200039 it's honestly the best part of the meal. Bread stuffing is terrible. Rice stuffing is the best.
Edited the original comment to include ground pork.
This sounds awesome! But what is Chinese sausage?
@@rollychairs Lap Cheong, roughly pronounced "lop chong" is a dry sausage. It has a slightly sweet taste. You can buy it at any Asian grocery store.
"I sharpened my knife recently and it cuts great" also a bandaid on the finger... yikes
I got that Miesen knife he advertised, it's really good. My finger found out the hard way.
A sharp knife is a safe knife
@@Ananamitron - My Misen knife sliced through the tip of my thumb and the nail--had to get it stitched up.
The bandaid on the finger might be *why* he sharpened the knife. Much more likely to have a cutting accident with a dull knife.
@@JohnSmith-rf1tx Yep, came here to say this.
Adam saying "heaven forbid" while fanning himself is everything I want right now
I-
Beta male
@@FezCaliph VERY bold words for someone that looks like... That.
@@bellenesatan it's a compliment 😭 that pic is from 2009. I'm gonna go kms now
@@FezCaliph You go do that, I guess?
It still counts as stuffing, it just stuffs the human rather than the bird.
*i don’t like it*
Hold up
Stuffs into the mouth, right?
*Stuffs into the mouth, right?*
Heaven forbid!
this would be a wonderful thanxgiving SCP
Imagine going to a Thanksgiving dinner with Adam and he starts a dinner table debate about the definition of stuffing when you whip out the turkey
Of course you are here.
Hello Justin
how did you get here so quickly...
You’re everywhere
Imagine going to an Adam Ragusea video and Justin Y. says a joke about Adam starting a dinner table debate about the definition of stuffing when you whip out the turkey.
Adam: Makes educational content with plenty of research
Also Adam: *Makes monster noises with a bird's ass*
LOL that's why we love him.
that ending was fantastic, lol
He's educating the masses about musical theatre with the reference
"A mass of wet bread."
Thanks Adam. That's really what makes me want to eat stuffing this Thanksgiving.
Mmmm, delicious.
My mom would mix some instant mashed potato flakes into the stuffing to give it a firmer, silkier texture. It's really good, you should try it!
Hey, moistening dry things with a combination of animal fat and water is a tried and true cooking method! That goes for bread too.
Eh, it's all going to turn into poop anyway.
I prefer drier dressing. the soggy stuff in a bird is gross
Because of my French background, my mother and grandmother always made their stuffing with little to almost no bread. Basically it’s equal parts ground pork, veal, beef, with mirepoix, minced garlic, fresh thyme, paprika, fresh parsley for color, a blend of chicken and beef stock, Cognac, salt, pepper, and a touch of freshly made toasted bread crumb. Just enough to bind everything together with a handful of oven roasted chopped chestnuts or sometimes walnuts. My family’s stuffing is absolutely delicious! It’s nothing like the American bread stuffing and we always make as a side dish. My family and I never actually stuff the bird.
wow that sounds extremely different but also really nice , i doubt ill ever remember to come back ro this comment at an appropriate time but i would theoretically rlly like to try to make this one time
I'm from the UK and never heard it called dressing. It's interesting knowing differences like this, even if it's quite regional even in the US.
Growing up we had stuffing every weekend with our Sunday roast dinner. We use a box mix of sage and onion. We always cooked it separately from the chicken partly because we don't always have chicken. You add water and butter to the box mix and cook it in a dish in the oven, sometimes like Christmas the stuffing would be rolled in to balls and cooked in the oven. We always have stuffing on the dry side and some times add in sausage meat to the stuffing mix, which tastes amazing.
My brother like a to add chopped walnuts that tastes great aswell.
Yourkshire puddings are also a must for a roast dinner in the UK.
Same here. As a brit its always been stuffing to me. Although I wander if this is another case of america holding onto traditional english words that the UK moved on from.
damn stuffing balls sounds nice, one time i had some left over and made waffles from it, that was also really nice
My grandma makes a stuffing with sausage and dried cranberries. I highly recommend adding cranberries to your stuffing sometime just to try it out. Who knows, you might like it.
One of my favourite dishes is to coat pork chop in flour, egg, and stuffing mix, pan fry with sliced apples till golden and then finish them off in the oven.
Love the little shop of horrors reference at the end lol
you mind sending me that recipe please?
@@thefuzzize2975 pork chop
Flour
Egg
Stuffing mix
Sliced apple
Fry until golden and finish off in the oven
"I would like for that story to be true but I have no idea if it IS true." A sentence not said often enough.
How are these sponsor transitions so smooth almost as smooth as Harry’s shave gel
Whom I'll briefly thank
Harry's is a personal care brand That's reinvented the way I shave, helping me to shave in a premium and hassle-free way.
Honestly, I was originally drawn to Harry's because the products looked classy, But it's also about more than looks.
Adam, thank you so much for this video. I'm from Russia and this thing called "stuffing" in US always confused me. But now it's finally clear.
In Sweden we have something called "dopp i grytan" at Christmas. It is also soggy bread. It's made to go, though. Basically slices of bread dipped for a few seconds in home baked ham juice.
*"putting things inside meat is a very old practice"*
as old as mammals
So, you didn't wait until the golden sentence, "meat stuffed into other meats" at 3:08.
including meat inside meat
"stretching your meat"
"You just jam it in there and it absorbs a lot of the goodness"
Adam, you're becoming one of the best food academics on the internet. Thank you for always doing your due diligence. I really appreciate the attention to detail you adhere to.
the sponsor segment transition always catches me off guard
yo
if ur at these videos make a video that shows you making adam's pizza recipe
Oh hello Omnicron! Didn't expect you to be a fan of Ragusea.
i mean gamers gotta eat
so smooth
almost as smooth as your face when you use Harry's
I am incredibly appreciative of these videos. The personality and rationality displayed within is why I WANT to watch these. Also, the stategy and placement of the Sponsor messages is supreme; even if I'm not personally interested in the product or service, I am still happy to see how and when the advertisements are incorporated into each video. Thank you for your top notch material. I sincerely wish you and your family the absolute best.
Born and raised in Mississippi. I was 25 years old the first time I ever tasted "bread dressing." My wife's family is from Michigan. My family ALWAYS made CORNBREAD dressing. That was almost 30 years ago, and as sincerely as I've tried to love the bread dressing...well...I just cannot make the transition. Dressing/stuffing made from cornbread is just massively superior TO ME in taste, texture, and that "X factor" we all associate with the things we were raised with.
I have Family in the southern states and they have cornbread stuffing. I don't like it nearly as well as the northern style.
@@TheLionAndTheLamb777 It has so much to do with how and where one is raised. I will say this, though: IMO good cornbread dressing is harder to make than good "northern style." So chances are pretty good you haven't had some of the best cornbread dressing. My mom's is extraordinary, but when one of my cousins made it I didn't like it at all. Most people underestimate how much liquid is needed so it comes out dry and bland. My mom's was always super moist and incredibly delicious.
Adam: I just sharpened my knife, it cuts great!"
Also Adam: Bandaged finger during narration
So it would seem! :)
I genuinely thought he was gonna mention a knife sharpening sponsor but i did not expect harry’s
He actually killed the assumption because someone else made the same meme 😂
Likely scenario is he nicked himself before sharpening as dull knives are way more dangerous.
Being from the Middle-east, we cracked wheat and raisins for stuffing.
Man, I just finished a marathon of Lord of the Rings, and thought you said, "being from Middle-Earth."
@@thegoodgeneral And I'm sure my name will also strike a bell
@@rohanb2711 ROHIRRIM!!
Where r u from? In Palestine we stuff it with rice ground lamb and onion
@@lq3552 that sounds better than bread
Here in Georgia, dressing is generally describing corn bread dressing, but stuffing would still be primarily normal white bread. I've personally never heard them used interchangeably. Dressing was always corn bread dressing (basically a corn bread based stuffing made outside of the bird), and stuffing was the white bread stuff.
Thank you Adam I live in the UK I am doing thanksgiving for my American Girlfriend. She told US stuffing is different to UK stuffing (a lot more pork in my stuffing) . When I asked her how to make it she said she always bought the packet stuff. Thank you for a quick and easy method!
When I was a kid, raised in the South, I always thought stuffing was made from dried bread and dressing was made from cornbread. That was the line 😂
Yeah we still call stuffing made with cornbread, "cornbread stuffing", here in the North, and in the West as well.
I make all my dressing with cornbread, and stuffing if you call it that,
I was raised in the north and I legit thought the same thing. As well as my mom and other family members.
Gottaa love a corn bread "dressing" - and I grew up in Canada.
Was just about post a very similar comment. I thought the same and I know many of my family uses this as the contrast of the two.
Me a Chinese-American who has never had a traditional Thanksgiving meal: Interesting...
Turkey is overrated. Peking duck and cha siu is 10/10 for Thanksgiving.
I'm Russian-American. Welcome to the club!
Sameeee I always had dumplings from scratch (dad born and raised in Harbin)
@@kvnyayDefinitely. Peking duck is so much more flavorful and juicier.
stuffing sounds super weird but if you had it done good its really yummy
I WAS NOT EXPECTING THAT LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS REFFRENCE THERE AT THE END
“These people are speaking prescriptively, which is fine”
Tom Scott has entered the chat
Tom Scott is prescriptivelly against prescriptive grammar. Ironic
@@SKyrim190 He could save others from prescriptivism, but not himself.
@Savya Acharya not from a linguist.
@@SKyrim190 You can do this with anything you know. "Nihilists choose to believe that their beliefs don't matter." "Anti-authoritarians authoritatively enforce against concentration of power." Yada yada. It's not a contradiction or a hypocrisy, it's just the nature of taking a stance.
Great video. It explains why I was taught to put the "stuffing" in a single layer of cheesecloth in the bird. When the white meat was almost ready we pulled the stuffing out and threw it in a hot pan to finish cooking, dry out, and get a crispy crust.
Gotta give you props for how truly seamless yet jarring your sponsor bits are. Like, I thought it was weird you were talking about your knife, but then...oh, I see. Haha
Adam: Why am I saying stuffing and not dressing?
Me: Why do people mix things with mayo and call it a “salad”?
@@sim-nu9nf egg salad too.
With most menacing accent
"You have something against Russian Salad"
Also we have seliodka pod shuboy - basically potato salad with beetroot and herring
Mayo is just salad dressing. Oil, vinegar, a little egg. Why do you put salad dressing on your sandwich? 😆
Fries are actually salads then. Now I don’t have to worry about my health because I eat a lot of salad.
That meat that was roasting over the open flame looked really good.
Fun fact, in French this thing is called “farce” which is also the word for joke, though they might not be related. We use “farcir” to describe the action of stuffing a bird, and “fourrer” for the action of stuffing pastry. Now guess which one also means filling a body cavity? You’re right: both, because we’re Pepe le Pew.
"farce" means joke because back in the 16th century, the word was used to refer to short theatrical comedic interludes that were "stuffed" between the acts of longer dramas.
We have the term forcemeat in English, which is derived from the french farce and farcir. Swedish also has the related word färs, as in köttfärs (ground meat).
So.... literally, pardon your French?
I love to use my very large roasting pan and put relatively dry stuffing mix on the bottom. The butter and bacon and all the stuff I use in my Turkey melts down and moistens it, caramelizes, and gives it an amazing flavor. I love super moist stuffing, but my mother doesn’t, so I also slightly tilt the pan by putting a bit of aluminum foil under one side. :)
Everyone probably has their own stuffing hacks. Mine: (in addition to the classic mirepoix) mushroom, diced apple, and some corn. Umami, sweetness, color, texture and deliciousness.
I’ve lived in Louisiana my whole life and we’ve always said stuffing. That being said, your reasoning for why more people might say dressing down here sounds incredibly plausible.
Maybe that map is inverted, and the reason more people google dressing down there is because they don’t know what the hell it is, and are trying to find out?!?
I’m from KY and we usually say dressing (we never ate the in the bird version)
The Southern dialect has a lot of archaic features.
@@kokofan50 Maybe, but this is not one of them.
The moment he said the article was on the "History" Channel website, I began to doubt its veracity.
My parents refused to make stuffing even though I love it. I haven't had it in over a decade and this video was hard to watch without eagerly looking for that recipe.
do it! look for a recipe! stuffing is great and every once in a while i remember i can eat it outside of holidays too and im always v glad when that happens
As an Asian outside of America who has no idea what you guys mean every time you say those words on November, thank you for clearing things up
Thanksgiving is the day a year where we spread a lie about how the pilgrims who came to america treated the american indians, and then ignore the genocide that occurred after, and thank each other for meaningless things.
I generally despise advertisements on TH-cam, but you a clever way of cutting them into your videos without the abrupt interruption. I actually find myself watching your nod to sponsors with interest instead of flipping screens elsewhere for a minute.
it's also worth noting that long ago, not everyone had an oven in their home; rather, many had to rent the use of a local oven in order to bake their holiday meal - thus, packing as much food as possible into a single dish baked in a single go would be advantageous
To my Grandparents, who were from Tennessee, stuffing is wheat bread based and dressing is cornbread based.
This is how I think of it as well, but I was never sure if i was just a correlattiton because the only family I knew that used corn bead was from he south
Love the Pepperidge farm stuffing mix, that’s what my mom used!
“You’re looking for ways of stretching your meat”...😐
😂😂😂😂
My oh my😂,steaching your meat! If "stuffing" gave our mothers the vapors .... Ps: Mom wouldn't have called what you made either as there was no cornbread 😂😌. Blessings from New Orleans.
Lmaoooo
A weight hanging from it works, over time.....
@@curtisthomas2670 very funny. Point well taken😂😂
I always hated stuffing. And once I grew up and got expected to make Thanksgiving dinner. One relative wanted chestnuts in the stuffing, one wanted applesauce, one wanted sausage. So I gave up and invented a seasoned combination of brown rice, Wehani (russet colored) rice, and wild rice. Everybody loved it!
My family is from the Cincinnati area and we had both. Specifically, "stuffing" was that which was actually stuffed into the bird and "dressing" was cooked in a pan because you couldn't fit enough in the bird to feed our massive family... Like about 2 dozen at Thanksgiving dinner. It's pure chaos. Christmas isn't much different. It wasn't uncommon to have 2 different kinds of "dressing" too. There was always the typical "dressing" and then there was another that had oysters in it... I wasn't a fan of that one but couldn't get enough of the regular stuff.
@6:17 Thank you so much Adam. Easily the most informative part of the video.
This dude’s content is consistently amazing. Most slept on youtuber for sure.
'Slept on' ??
@@WilliamPitcher Slept on, as in people are "sleeping on" or unaware of his talents
Welcome everybody to today’s White Wine Report!
No non-negligible levels of White Wi... ERROR ERROR: IMPOSTER RAISIN WINE DETECTED AT 3:07 !!!!!!
Thank you for tuning in to today’s analysis :) Don’t forget to tune in next time, stay safe out there.
Bro we miss ur wine reports don't ever leave us
@@j-ving7304 Your patronage is always appreciated! The Doctor is in the house, at your service indubitably!
Generally in Georgia what I've heard as the difference is that Stuffing is made with stale wheat bread and Dressing is made with stale cornbread. There is also some argument over stuffing in the bird vs. dressing in the pan, as you mentioned, but everyone I know who grew up here differentiates between the cornbread and wheat bread as the base ingredient. However, it is common to refer to it as "cornbread dressing" as to avoid confusion with "them yankees o'r yonder".
Where I'm from in Canada, stuffing is like how you are presenting it, made with bread and either stuffed or on its own. Dressing was made a little differently and had mashed potatoes as well as summer savoury added to it and was always served on the side
fact checking, academia, science and food, what a weird combination. Did anybody expect this when they watched that New-york style pizza at home video and subbed? Neither did I. What a gem of a youtube channel.
This video is stuffing me with information, I'm very thankful for it
A few years ago I hosted a thanks giving for a few friends, one was gluten intolerant. So I used rice (I think it was a long time ago) bread instead of normal. I don't know if its true for all non gluten breads but it was crumbly enough straight out of the bag. turned out perfect i think i used 2 eggs though
I never really thought about the distinction between stuffing and dressing, but I like the semantic difference - seems to me to be a useful difference.
Here is my dream stuffing: homemade cornbread croutons or the ones from the Whole Foods bakery, chicken stock, turkey giblets, loads of butter, egg, chestnuts, Granny Smith apples, dried tart cherries, dried sage, thyme, black pepper, lightly caramelized onion. The chestnuts and cherries are crucial for me. The sweet stuffing with the salty bird and gravy is just a magical combo for me.
OMG Stuffing is my FAVORITE THANKSGIVING FOOD
In my family, we have a mixture of bread and non-sweet cornbread as our "dressing."
Adams bread: doesn’t dry or rot fast
My bread: “screw you”
In my family, ours was always potato stuffing! Every Thanksgiving there were three potato dishes on the table. Potato stuffing from the turkey, candy sweet potatoes and then of course the masked potatoes! Yum!
Great explanation Adam. I call it stuffing as well being a northerner (New York) but my mother was from South Carolina and they called it dressing. I also use both terminology interchangeably. This year I made an all herb bread stuffing/dressing from scratch; normally I mix both herb and cornbread together but this year I just wanted an all bread herb stuffing. I have been known to use both Stove Top and Peppridge Farms brands as well.
As a Brit I was surprised to learn that US turkey stuffing is mostly bread based. Completely different to UK stuffing, even for turkeys at Christmas. Possible future video topic?
Most British ones also have a base of bread. Maybe it's just less so? I'm not too sure as in truth I only really use the packet stuff.
Also US dressing is often made with cornbread...that’s how I grew up
@@Oscar-vv6dn I may be biased by how my family does it, but our family recipe has very little bread in it and the Delia Smith recipe online (and does it get more British than Delia Smith? I think not) has no bread in. Possible other Brits do it differently though.
@@QuincelSC I imagine the traditional stuff has bread in it, but the more modern stuff doesn't and is quicker and just as good. Depends on the family I reckon.
@@QuincelSC My family use a Delia recipe for stuffing and the bulk is made up of stale bread and sausage meat. I was surprised by the lack of even a mention of sausage meat here
Me, a Canadian who celebrated Thanksgiving a month ago: when is this gonna end!!!
I remember when someone at the dinner party had an allergic reaction because my mom put walnuts in the stuffing.
She didn’t use enough walnuts.
@@fordhouse8b 🤭
Stuffing is stuffing, whether it's inside or out. I'll give your oven recipe a try for this Christmas though, as Thanksgiving has already passed where I am this year.
So. My parents during my childhood would make sausage stuffing and stuff it between the skin and the meat of the breast. The fat from the sausage kept the breast moist, the cavity of the bird was still open (apart from perhaps a small onion/clementine with cloves that would pretty much disintegrate within the first 20min of cooking), and the last place to reach the right temperature was the middle of the breast meat, meaning it was still juicy when it came to carving time.
We call it stuffing in the UK, but ours is actually quite different! It uses breadcrumbs so when cooked it's quite crunchy on top and very mushy, yet kinda dry. This looks a lot nicer. Sometimes we'll have stuffing with meat in which you cook in a separate dish, and we'll have pork joints / chicken / turkey with stuffing already in to buy in most if not all supermarkets, etc.
Mom’s side of the family is Eastern European. Roasted Birds get ‘stuffed’ with apples, onions, garlic, and oranges…
Sounds good, till you get to the oranges (!?!)
@@DrRiq if you've never tries oranges inside poultry, you're missing out big time. Citrus goes absolutely amazingly with turkeys and chickens
@@DrRiq Sounds good, until there is no stuffing on the table.
damn so we're not getting "why i season my oven, not my meat"
It is amazing how seamlessly you went from history to recipe to sponsor all in the span of two minutes
Awesome explanation! I use wet fruit for stuffing, keeps things very moist, and the remnant juices are the selfish stuffing sauce!
After 29 years of living, this is the first I hear stuffing called dressing. Dressing is what I put on a salad. Give me that stuffing.
I rarely say stuffing. But we mostly use them interchangeably
As someone who never had turkey or stuffing, i have no idea what it tastes like
My family referred to it as dressing.
My grandmother used to call miracle whip "salad dressing", how about that.
@@rdizzy1 It does say that, last I checked, on the label.
Me: Can I get some stuffing?
Adam: *ASKS PHILOSOPHICAL QUESTION WHETHER STUFFING IS STUFFING OR DRESSING*
It has to just be stuffing because that is its name. If not, then why isn't it called stuffed?
Normal Thanksgiving gathering: Let's talk about politics
Adam: Let's talk about the origins of stuffing
Given he has a background in journalism, hes probably sick of politics
I would gladly talk about the history of stuffing than politics
We make our stuffing(dressing) slightly dry but form them into balls about the size of a baseball, then bake the stuffing balls. This makes for a lot of nice crispy bits on these little serving sized stuffing balls. They're also great for freezing if you have leftovers.(not very often though) and they're great for slicing and putting on a turkey sandwich with a bit of cranberry sauce. 🤪
Adam, Here in the Southeast US, "Dressing" when prepared, is more wet than stuffing before being baked, and usually comes out a little more dense after baking. Stuffing can also have sweet ingredients like fruit, nuts and berries in some countries. Also, in the Southeast US, dressing has cornbread or biscuits mixed in along with the bread. Sometimes Giblets and Chopped Hard Boiled Eggs are added as well. However, we still say "dressing" even when it's stuffed in the bird.
Adams son: hey dad what’s that
Adam:
*Yako's World song plays*
I literally have stuffing every Sunday cause my dad makes us roast dinner...
British life
Hey, remember, stuffing used to be called dressing.
Pepperidge farm remembers
Oh this reminds me of something my step dad would make.
Seasoning loaf he called it.
Square uncut white load with the roof cut off. Take out all the bread inside leaving the walls and floor around half an inch thick.
Rub beef lard all over the inner walls, floor and inside of the roof.
All the bread goes in a blender along with more lard, a chopped onion and mixed herbs probably sage no idea what else.
Blitz it then stuff the bread shell with it.
Tie the roof in place then bake. Amazing sort of fried bread crust and soggy interior bread stuffing. Lush!
UK sage and onion stuffing is a classic. We all get it from a box, and I've seen it cooked outside of the box and then shoved into the bird. Always served on the side as a big lump of stuffing, here in the north (dont know about south ) we stuff it into our yorkshire puddings on the plate.
Do you remember the stuffing wars? Pepperidge Farm Remembers.
You had me laughing out loud at 8:17 about the term "stuffing" conjuring scandalous images of an object penetrating a body between its legs.
"I don't need sleep. I need answers!!!"
My brain is full.
Love this episode. I'm a SC native and my parents and grandparents always made dressing outside the bird but it was really dense and not at all fluffy one bit. I didn't eat much as it wasn't a favorite for me....
I found the stove top stuffing and liked it then as I got into cooking found really good homemade "stuffing' recipes that were pan recipes that used homemade dried bread and veggies diced baked in a pan. The recipes called it stuffing and I do too although it's just stuffed in a pan. It's all really interesting especially since I may be going against the grain from where I grew up and live. Maybe it's all bc of the Stove-top marketing!
I live in the south we Collett dressing if it’s made in a pan by itself if it is made inside of the turkey then it is called stuffing or if it is made on the stove top it is called stuffing! Dressing also has different ingredients in it then a regular stuffing does
I would call it "Garnish", or "Compliment"
I was really distracted by the multi-coloured thing on the wall behind him, it made me think it was some kind of native American flag.
the legend says if you are this early you get a heart
The what- explain?
In turkey, we stuff the turkey or the chicken with flavoured rice called "iç pilav" we put chestnuts and currants in it and we cook it with beef stock, onions and butter, sometimes with a little olive oil.
I know. He's so much fun to watch. Must come from a well rounded life.
In the UK, everybody calls it stuffing, and it's almost always made using powder from a packet that you just add water to. I've never seen any with carrots and onions added, although the packet flavour is normally sage and onion. To us Brits, dressing is almost always the thing you add to a salad, made from oil and vinegar (and whatever else you want, like feta cheese or avocado, but it's hard to know where that stops being the dressing and becomes the salad!)
1 view, 153 comments, and 67 comments? Uploaded 1 minute ago? Somethin aint RIGHT MAN
was thinking the same xD
Ya'll need to try British stuffing. It's so much better. Sausagemeat, onion, chestnuts and some herbs. I
It’s AMAZING. I’m Scottish and it’s the highlight of Christmas dinner IMO.
@@andrew4363 Yeah, it's my family's favourite part too! Pigs in blankets a close second. We always end up doing two batches. It's even good cold. I've even made sausage rolls before with stuffing. Ahh so good...
No, Mike F, I don't think I will.
@@royalyugoslavrecords8939 Your loss, brotendo. Enjoy your soggy bread pieces. xoxooxo
@@royalyugoslavrecords8939 your loss
Hmm, here close to you - northwest of Atl we use both terms, but to describe different things. They aren't used interchangeably. Stuffing is the mixture of dried bread with veggies, whether its in or out of the turkey. Dressing is specifically a subset of stuffing that uses cornbread instead of dried white bread, and it's always prepared separate from the bird.
We fix both on Thanksgiving.
i always grew up with stove top stuffing from my mom on a semi-regular basis but on thanksgiving my grandmother has always made a cornbread dressing where in she cooks a big loaf of cornbread in her cast iron skillet and just crumbles all but the bottom crust (she lets my papa eat that) and the various other ingredients into a sage heavy dressing before baking it in a sheet pan. she prepares this with a "giblet" gravy made from the drippings of the turkey but without using any actual giblets, hence the quotes.