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Chorizo Corn Bread Stuffing

5.0

(8)

Chorizo corn bread stuffing distributed between a rectangular baking dish and an oval serving dish.
Chorizo Corn Bread StuffingChris Gentile

This corn bread stuffing is a stroke of genius. It's so easy, you'll be making it far more often than once a year for Thanksgiving! Shelley Wiseman, author of Just Tacos, knows a thing or two about corn—and not just in tortillas—and she decided to skip the process of drying the cubes of corn bread in the oven. That alone is a huge time-saver. To enliven the corn bread, she balances the flavor punch of chorizo with the sweetness of onions and corn kernels. When it comes time to bake it in a dish (not inside the turkey), she forgoes the old process of covering the stuffing—which allows steam to soften the dried bread—because the bread isn't dry. She simply bakes it uncovered, so that the top gets golden with crispy brown edges, while the interior stays moist.

Cooks' Notes:

•Spanish chorizo is a dry-cured pork sausage that gets its distinctive smoky flavor from pimentón de la Vera, a sweet red chile grown in the La Vera valley of western Spain, and slowly smoke-dried before being ground into a powder. There are many different brands of Spanish chorizo and they vary surprisingly in looks, texture, and flavor. Some are imported from Spain and some are made in the United States. A Spanish brand we particularly like is Palacios, which is available in some specialty markets, Latino markets, and by mail order from tienda.com.
•Corn bread can be baked 1 day ahead and kept covered at room temperature.
•Stuffing can be assembled without stock 4 hours ahead and kept, loosely covered, at room temperature.

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