Langsung ke konten utama

Bell's Seasoning & Potato Stuffing


One thing I really missed when I loved over here to the UK, was a good all purpose poultry seasoning mix.  I used to bring some back with me whenever I went over to visit, but I have not been home in over 6 years now.  When I lived in New Brunswick we used to buy Bell's all natural seasoning whenever we went shopping in Maine.  Its pretty much a New England/Maritime constitution!



It was especially great this time of year when we would be cooking turkeys and making stuffing's etc. I recently ran across a copycat recipe for it here on Chow Hound.



It was very easy to make.  As easy as measuring the different herbs into my spice grinder and pushing a button.


It uses dries rosemary, oregano, sage, marjoram, thyme, ginger and black pepper, and with just a few pulses of the spice grinder  . . .



Like magic, there it was.  Bell's seasoning, or poultry seasoning has always been a holiday classic in my home.  I used it for stuffing's, seasoning my turkey's, and even meatloaf and burgers.  It really has a lovely flavour.



I had completely run out of Poultry seasoning, so I was really, really pleased to find this recipe.


And really pleased with the end result. 



Now I will never be without poultry seasoning again, and that makes me very happy.  Of course with Thanksgiving at the door, it will come in really handy.  I did a trial run of it with my  mother's potato stuffing recipe.




It was perfect!  As soon as I had mixed it into the stuffing with the remaining ingredients, the resulting smell returned me to a time when I was a child back in my mother's holiday kitchen.  Food memory heaven.

Yield: 1/2 cup

Copycat Bell's Seasoning

The taste of my childhood when it comes to holiday dinners.  Perfect for seasoning your stuffing's, soups and birds. this is also great in meatloaf, burgers, with fish, etc.

ingredients:


4 1/2 tsp dried rosemary
4 tsp dried oregano
3 3/4 tsp dried sage
3 1/2 tsp dried ground ginger
3 tsp dried marjoram
2 3/4 tsp dried thyme
3/4 tsp ground black pepper

instructions:


Put all of the ingredients into a spice or coffee
grinder and grind to a fine powder.  Transfer to a glass jar with a
lid.  Seal tightly and store in a dry cool place for up to six months.
Created using The Recipes Generator



This is the stuffing that we had in our home all of my growing up years.  It is made from using potatoes, onions, celery, and bread crumbs, and of course some butter and a healthy pinch of the poultry seasoning.


It is largely a maritime thing and I am not sure where it comes from, or where it's culinary roots lay.  My mother's father was of German Dutch descent, hailing from the New Germany area of Nova Scotia.



My ex MIL also made a version of this, which was only slightly different to my grandmothers. Whereas my grandmother used torn up bread in hers, as did my mom . . .  my MIL used fine dry bread crumbs.  Both are equally as good.  



Yield: Makes enough to stuff a 10 to 12 pound turkey

Potato Stuffing

prep time: 20 minscook time: 30 minstotal time: 50 mins
This is the stuffing of my childhood.  It would not be the holidays without it.

ingredients:


5 TBS butter
1 large onion, peeled and minced
1 large stalk celery, trimmed and diced
1 TBS celery leaves, chopped
3 pounds potatoes, peeled and quartered
(you want to use one which is good for mashing)
180ml warm milk (3/4 cup)
1 1/2 tsp bells (or poultry) seasoning
355g coarse bread crumbs from a sturdy loaf of white bread (6 cups)
salt and black pepper to taste

instructions:


Place the potatoes in a pot of lightly salted water
to cover.  Bring to the boil and cook until fork tender.  While the
potatoes are cooking melt the butter in a saucepan. Add the onion, Cook,
 over medium low heat, stirring frequently, until the onion is softened
and translucent without browning.  Stir in the celery and cook for a few
 minutes longer. Remove from heat.

Drain the
potatoes and return to the pan, Shake over the heat of the burner to dry
 out.  Mash together with the warmed milk.  Stir in the onion and
celery, and celery leaves.  Add the bell's seasoning and the bred
crumbs, mixing all together well.  Season to taste with salt and black
pepper.  Cool and use to stuff a turkey.  Alternately pile into a
lightly buttered dish, dot with butter and bake in the oven along side
the turkey for the last half hour of cook time. 
Created using The Recipes Generator



For me the stuffing has always been one of my favourite parts of the holiday meal.  There was never enough. I hope you will try this potato stuffing recipe, and I am sure that if you do, you will fall completely and totally in love with it!!  Mom never stuffed her turkeys, but always baked it in a casserole dish on the side of the turkey.  And she never cooked the onion in it.  I cook the onion as not a lot of people like raw onion, but like my mother, I prefer to bake it in a casserole dish on the side.  Its fabulously tasty!  I could eat a plate of this and nothing else!






I used the Cookhouse 300watt Electric Coffee and Spice Grinder to make my Bell's Seasoning. This stylish kitchen appliance boasts high precision calibration for a consistent chopping and grinding experience.

 

With a 70g capacity and wet/dry functions this all-purpose 300W grinder is a really handy piece of equipment to have in the kitchen.

I had been on the look out for a good grinder for a long time. I wanted something that was attractive and yet did a great job and was easy to use.  


 


This attractive machine is perfectly sized for a small kitchen and is a great little workhorse.  It is as easy to use as pushing a button. It features a transparent lid, which  allows you to keep an eye on your ingredients, and, thanks to its removable stainless steel bowls, cleaning it isn't that hard either!  



  
It is made of ergonomically designed stainless steel and comes with two easy clean removable brushed stainless steel bowls, each with a stainless steel blade system.  There is an inner transparent cover and an outer cover.  It is very easy to use. 

  • Add your coffee or spices to the metal chamber.
  • Fit the lid on.
  • Push the button. 
  • Wait.
  • You're ready to go!  



I am very pleased with its performance.  You can grind anything from coffee beans, to rice, to nuts, to spices. You can also make wet spice pastes such as curry pastes with it. You can find them here on Amazon. If you have a coffee lover, or a foodie in your life, this would make for an excellent Christmas gift, presented in a basket along with their favourite coffee beans, and spices.  You can also use this machine to grind nuts and seeds.  I just love it! I highly recommend.


Komentar

Postingan populer dari blog ini

Angel Cake

  Angel Cake is a completely different cake over here in the UK as compared to what I thought of as an Angel Cake when I was growing up. (Angel Food Cake)  North American Angel Food Cake is very light and airy, made with only egg whites, sugar, flour and no fat, and baked in a straight sided tube tin!  Angel Cake here is a  sponge cake about the size of a loaf, with three distinct and separate coloured layers.  White, pink and yellow.  Sandwiched together with vanilla butter cream.  Its quite nice, and something we quite like in our home from time to time.   Its really not that difficult to make, but you will need either 3 loaf tins the same size, or a larger cake tin that you can divide into three.   Children love this cake because of the colours . . .  and basically it is the same cake batter for each, just tinted separately for each layer.  The power of suggestion makes it taste better than a normal cake.  What is it they sa...

Classic English Scones - A Complete Tutorial

  No English Tea Party would be complete without a tray of beautiful Scones.  Is it scone that rhymes with on, or is it scone that rhymes with stone??  Who knows. It sounds mighty delicious no matter which way you say it. If asked what the difference between a scone and a North American baking powder biscuit is, I would have to say first and foremost, it is in the preparation.  I thought it would be fun today to do a tutorial for you on how to prepare and bake the classic English scone.   North American baking powder biscuits generally use all vegetable fat, and sometimes cream . . . scones usually use all butter, and sometimes butter and cream.  The two things are not the same thing at all, no matter how similar they might look.  Scones are sweeter as well, which makes them perfect for enjoying with a hot cuppa.   The first thing you will want to do is to sift your flour baking powder and salt into a bowl  I find that aerating the flou...

The Great British Sausage - A Tutorial

  Sausage wasn't something I enjoyed very much when I was growing up. I am not sure why.  I never really began to enjoy them at all until I was a grown woman and cooking my own.  I liked them almost burnt on the outside with catsup for dipping. My father enjoyed them dipped in mayonnaise.  As a child growing up in Canada, in my experience at least, there was only one kind of sausage.  Ordinary breakfast sausage, long thin cylinders of meat, stuffed into skins, fatty and flavoured with nutmeg and poultry seasoning. That was it. Growing up in the 50's /60's and early 70's in small communities meant that we were not exposed to outside flavours or choices.  We had what we had, and that was that. It was not until I was an adult that I experienced another kind of sausage. My sister-in-law who lived in Toronto had studied at the Cordon Bleu and was considered to be an expert in cooking.  We spent the weekend at hers once, and she cooked sausages for us for br...