You Should Never Use Stale Bread For Stuffing (2024)

Here's the much easier, quicker technique.

By Gabby Romero
You Should Never Use Stale Bread For Stuffing (1)

If you've made nearly any stuffing recipe, the idea of using stale bread has likely been drilled into your mind. Cookbooks, TV hosts, and grandmas everywhere will tell you that stale bread is the only way to achieve a fluffy stuffing. Your days-long Thanksgiving meal prep might begin with leaving a loaf of bread out on the counter. Stale bread is as quintessential to stuffing as turkey is to Thanksgiving.

Except...it shouldn't be. In fact, using stale bread and fresh bread will both leave you with equal amounts of mush. The longstanding tip to use old, stale bread for the perfect stuffing is actually a myth.

Letting bread go stale doesn't actually dry it out. After sitting out on your counter, bread goes through the process of retrogradation. The starch molecules crystallize and make your bread appear dry and hard. However, that moisture didn't leave the bread—it became trapped inside.

"Whether your bread is fresh or stale," says Delish Food Director Rob Seixas, "the water content is the same."

But how does that affect your stuffing? A perfect stuffing should achieve a delicate balance between moisture and texture. Too dry, and your stuffing will be crumbly and bland. While too much liquid will leave you with a soggy, unappetizing dish.

"If you’re using stale bread and adding liquid, there will be nowhere for the liquid to go," says Seixas. "It's like when you're trying to cram more people into a fully booked flight. There's no space for extra moisture to fill."

As a result, your stuffing will have a soggy texture. And even worse—it'll taste less delicious. All of the broth, aromatics, herbs, and butter you add will be diluted by the flavorless moisture from the bread.

Thankfully, there's an alternative to stale bread that makes a show-stopping stuffing, and it doesn't require days to prepare. Drying your bread in the oven takes less than an hour, and will actually remove the moisture we want to avoid.

"Dried bread has had all of the moisture evaporated, so it can absorb and hold any liquid you add to it," Seixas says.

Simply chop (or even better, tear) your bread into bite-sized pieces, spread them on a baking sheet, and cook them in a 250° oven for about 45 minutes. All of that moisture will be gone, the bread may even take on a slight toasty flavor, and your stuffing will be the perfect texture.

So there you have it. Now check out our favorite stuffing recipes for all that dried bread, and plan the rest of your Thanksgiving menu.

You Should Never Use Stale Bread For Stuffing (3)

Gabby Romero

Associate Editor

Expertise: TikTok Trends, Drinks, Pop Culture

Education: B.A. in Journalism and B.S. in Communications from NYU, Culinary Arts degree from The Institute of Culinary Education

About Me: As an associate editor at Delish, Gabby works on everything from features to recipes to content on our social media channels. Before joining the team, she wrote for StarChefs Rising Stars Magazine, Mashed, and Food52. When she’s not developing co*cktail recipes, she’s making co*cktail-inspired dishes like Dirty Martini Pasta and Aperol Spritz Trifle. Her features cover online trends like the Millennial Shopping Cart, rank everything from hard seltzers to frozen French fries, and answer some of your most pressing food safety questions. You can also find her posting content on Delish’s TikTok, including her about cooking like influencer Nara Smith that garnered over 3M combined views. She loves eating spicy food, collecting cookbooks, and adding a mountain of Parmesan to any dish she can.

Watch Next

You Should Never Use Stale Bread For Stuffing (4)

Advertisem*nt - Continue Reading Below

From Delish for The Home Depot6 Ways to Keep Your Kitchen Well OrganizedThe 5 Best Store-Bought Cold BrewsThere Are Some Foods You Should Never Refreeze

Advertisem*nt - Continue Reading Below

Here’s Why You’re So Anxious When You’re HungoverIs It Safe To Store Olive Oil In Plastic Bottles?These Are The Best Vegan Hot Dogs You Can BuyYou're Probably Mispronouncing These Food Words
The Best Plant-Based ProteinsThe 13 Best Tequila Brands For MargaritasHow To Tell If Your Chicken Has Gone BadIs There Really A ‘Bad’ Day To Buy Seafood?

Advertisem*nt - Continue Reading Below

You Should Never Use Stale Bread For Stuffing (2024)

FAQs

You Should Never Use Stale Bread For Stuffing? ›

"If you're using stale bread and adding liquid, there will be nowhere for the liquid to go," says Seixas. "It's like when you're trying to cram more people into a fully booked flight. There's no space for extra moisture to fill." As a result, your stuffing will have a soggy texture.

Is it better to use stale bread for stuffing? ›

Follow this tip: Stale, dried-out bread makes the best stuffing. Either dry out your bread starting a few days before you plan to make the stuffing by letting it sit out or, if you don't have the extra time, cut the bread into cubes, and then toast over a low heat in the oven until dry.

What is the best bread to dry for stuffing? ›

You can use any kind; store-bought white bread works well and would probably be my #1 suggestion for stuffing. You could also try using cut up dinner rolls, sourdough bread (actually this would be my personal first pick), challah, or anything else you want to experiment with.

Does it matter what bread you use for stuffing? ›

You can use almost any type of bread when you are making bread cubes for stuffing! Old French bread loaves, buns that weren't eaten, a few slices of bread from a homemade or store-bought loaf all work in this recipe. What is this?

How old can bread be for stuffing? ›

You can either proceed immediately into implementing the rest of your stuffing recipe or store the dried bread for up to four or five days at room temperature before doing so.

Can I leave bread out overnight for stuffing? ›

A day or two before you assemble your stuffing, cut the bread into cubes. Then, lay the cubes onto sheet pans and let them dry out at room temperature for 24 to 48 hours.

How wet should stuffing be before baking? ›

The stuffing should be moist but not wet. If there is a puddle of broth at the bottom of the bowl, you've added too much. Add more bread to soak up the excess moisture. If the mix is still dry and crumbly, add more liquid and toss gently until it starts to clump together.

How to quickly stale bread? ›

Giving your bread a quick bake in a 350ºF oven will starve it of its moisture—which is exactly what you're looking for. Cut your loaf into evenly sized cubes or slices (depending on what you're making), and toast them, dry, for 15 to 20 minutes, or until lightly golden brown. Proceed with your recipe.

Can you freeze stale bread for stuffing? ›

Recipe Tip – a few days or even weeks in advance of making stuffing – watch the day old bread shelf at your local market. You can often find high quality artisan loaves reduced from $4.99 to $0.99. Just pop them in the freezer until ready to make cubes.

How to make stuffing without stale bread? ›

Here's some good news: You can totally dry your bread for stuffing in the oven a few days ahead—just store the cubed bread in an airtight container at room temperature until ready to use. Once you've dried your bread, stuffing can go any way you like. Here's a vegetarian version that's a reader favorite.

Is bread stuffing unhealthy? ›

Stuffing is essentially bread, salt, and butter, so it probably comes as no surprise that it isn't the healthiest food served on Thanksgiving. But you can cut its sodium and saturated fat, and pump up its nutritional profile.

How much stuffing per person? ›

Plan to serve about 3/4 cup of stuffing per guest. That amounts to roughly 4 cups of prepared stuffing for 5 guests and 7-1/2 cups for 10 guests. However, if you have grand plans for using leftovers in Stuffin' Muffins or turkey potpie with a stuffing crust, feel free to make a little bit more.

Is stale bread better for stuffing? ›

Most recipes recommend using stale bread to make stuffing. Since bread is the base of the dish, it will give the dish its shape, structure, and texture, according to Kitchn.

Can I eat 2 week old stuffing? ›

Stuffing/dressing: If stored properly in the fridge, stuffing or dressing is good to eat up to three to four days after you cooked it. But it'll last about a month in the freezer.

Can you use 2 week old bread? ›

Store-bought bread will typically last five to seven days at room temperature, but can last one to two weeks in the refrigerator.

Does baking stale bread make it softer? ›

If you want to make stale bread soft again, wrap the bread in foil. If the crust of the bread is very hard, sprinkle a little water on the outside before you close the foil. Place the bread in a 300°F oven for 5-15 minutes or until the bread feels soft.

Why does toasting stale bread make it better? ›

The trick is to heat the bread up so that water can be reabsorbed into the starch granules once again so it can revert to its springy, fresh-bread state. Now, if you have sliced bread you want to do this too. You can simply pop it into the toaster for a few seconds.

Is stale bread the same as dry bread? ›

Dry bread is not the same as stale bread

But if you can't buy it within hours of baking or you can't eat it all the same day you buy it, you will have to deal with 'staling' or 'going stale'. This is a chemical and physical process that makes bread less tasty and makes it have a leathery texture.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Delena Feil

Last Updated:

Views: 6639

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (65 voted)

Reviews: 80% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Delena Feil

Birthday: 1998-08-29

Address: 747 Lubowitz Run, Sidmouth, HI 90646-5543

Phone: +99513241752844

Job: Design Supervisor

Hobby: Digital arts, Lacemaking, Air sports, Running, Scouting, Shooting, Puzzles

Introduction: My name is Delena Feil, I am a clean, splendid, calm, fancy, jolly, bright, faithful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.