Paleo Cornbread Dressing š„
Are you absolutely sick of Thanksgiving food yet? I understand if youāre just over it. Most people are. Me, however? Iām still in love with holiday grub. Especially with this dressing.
Every year, I wonder to myself why I only make it on Thanksgiving. I suspect it is because when I was younger and more ambitious, I asked my grandma how to make her cornbread dressing.
(Side note: I didnāt even know stuffing made with bread was something people ate until I was an adult. All the people I knew ate dressing.)
Her instructions began āFirst you take a duckā¦ā and went on, and on, and on for what seemed like ages. I decided any dish which required me to make two whole other dishes first didnāt make a whole lot of sense, and decided I would just enjoy it at her house.
As the years went by, I changed states. I also changed my mind about how much trouble stuffing was worth. Going home to Chicago was sometimes impossible, so I had to learn how to make a decent substitute. While I never equaled my grandmotherās dressing ā she just had a way of āputtinā her foot in it,ā as folks used to say ā I came close enough to satisfy my yearning for that flavor.
Since we are eating paleo these days, the main ingredients in cornbread dressing are off the list. My big project, therefore, was to make something that came close. I had planned to test it a couple of times before Thanksgiving, but that didnāt end up happening. On Thanksgiving Day, I found myself rushed and needing to improvise. With a cranky six year old and a starving spouse, I needed to get dinner on the table in the next 30 minutes.
(This did not fill my heart with joy. I am slightly obsessive about special occasion menus in general, and this one in particular. Most years, I spend the month of November planning and re-planning this meal because I enjoy it so.)
Shockingly, the quick-and-dirty version was pretty darned good. My very particular husband ate nearly the entire pan. However, I suspected I could do better. The version here is Dressing 2.0; still quick while having even more flavor.
Following the wise advice of gluten-free girl and the chef (Shauna and Danny Ahern, who have written a multitude of lovely cookbooks), I created my own gluten-free flour mix. Using their recommended ratio of 40% protein/60% starch, and attempting more algebra than I had since the eighth grade, I made a mix of almond, coconut and tapioca flours. Although I measured it precisely with my (new!) kitchen scale, you might not want such a big batch. For those of you who want to make a bit less, I used roughly 2 parts coconut/3 parts almond/8 parts tapioca. A store-bought GF mix would work, too.
Ingredients š
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