Italian Spinach Stuffing Recipe (2024)

Recipe from Lisa and Carmela Conte

Adapted by Julia Moskin

Italian Spinach Stuffing Recipe (1)

Total Time
1 hour 45 minutes
Rating
4(72)
Notes
Read community notes

This is an Italian-American turkey stuffing that was invented in New Jersey by Pietronilla Conte, who emigrated from the Italian region of Molise in the early 20th century. Ms. Conte's granddaughter Lisa shared the recipe (which her mother, Carmela, also prepares) with us. "She must have used a stuffing that she knew in Italy," Lisa Conte said of her grandmother. "And she just looked at the turkey as a larger thing to stuff." The gizzards give the stuffing its depth of flavor (like giblet gravy), but you could leave them out, or substitute an equal amount of livers, or 6 ounces of pancetta or bacon. —Julia Moskin

Featured in: The American Thanksgiving

  • or to save this recipe.

  • Subscriber benefit: give recipes to anyone

    As a subscriber, you have

    10 gift recipes to give each month. Anyone can view them - even nonsubscribers.

    Learn more.

    Subscribe

  • Print Options

    Include recipe photo

Advertisem*nt

Ingredients

Yield:12 to 14 servings

  • 5tablespoons olive oil
  • 2cups chopped sweet onion (about 1 large onion)
  • 8cloves garlic, minced
  • 4(10-ounce) boxes frozen chopped spinach, thawed, drained and squeezed dry
  • 2cups chopped white mushrooms caps
  • Salt and black pepper
  • 2pounds well-trimmed chicken or turkey gizzards
  • 4large eggs
  • cups grated Parmigiano-Reggiano
  • 1cup unseasoned bread crumbs
  • ½cup chopped parsley

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (14 servings)

263 calories; 13 grams fat; 4 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 6 grams monounsaturated fat; 2 grams polyunsaturated fat; 13 grams carbohydrates; 3 grams dietary fiber; 3 grams sugars; 24 grams protein; 541 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

Powered by

Italian Spinach Stuffing Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Heat 3 tablespoons olive oil in a large pot over medium-high heat. Add onions and sauté, stirring, until translucent, about 5 minutes. Reduce heat to medium and add garlic, spinach and mushrooms and cook, stirring often, until well mixed and heated through, about 5 minutes. Season mixture to taste with salt and pepper; set aside.

  2. Step

    2

    Finely mince chicken gizzards. (You can do this by hand or in a food processor, but be careful not to overprocess.) Season gizzards all over with salt. Heat 2 tablespoons olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add gizzards and sauté, stirring often, until cooked through, 5 to 7 minutes. Drain off any drippings, then stir gizzards into spinach mixture. Let cool to room temperature.

  3. Step

    3

    Heat oven to 350 degrees. When spinach mixture is cool, add eggs, cheese, bread crumbs and parsley and stir until well combined. Transfer stuffing to a 3-quart casserole dish and bake, covered, 1 hour.

Tip

  • If you like, about half the stuffing can be loosely stuffed inside the cavity of a 12-pound turkey. Be sure to cook until both the turkey and the stuffing register 165 degrees on a thermometer.

Ratings

4

out of 5

72

user ratings

Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Note on this recipe and see it here.

Cooking Notes

Denise

My family (also Italian American, from Naples and the Piedmont region) uses a similar stuffing recipe, although we eschew the mushrooms and use ground sausage instead of turkey gizzards. I never knew anyone else who used such a similar recipe!

Stephanie

Similar to Denise's family, my Nonno was from Piedmont and a chef. His recipes used sausage and chestnuts. We thought the "green stuffing" was unique to our family -- who knew it was all over Italy!

Jamie

Does anyone else feel like two pounds of gizzards is an awful lot for one dish? Looking at the handwritten recipe, it says "3 pkgs" which is crossed out and then at the right she has written "use only 2" which to me indicates using two PACKAGES of gizzards (that come out of a turkey)? And if it calls for 2 pounds of an ingredient then says you can "leave it out"—doesn't that seem odd? I feel like the gizzards should be the flavoring, not the major ingredient.

Lisa Rockelli Gordon

My grandmother made this, and we have all tried to re-create it over the years! I halve the recipe, add half a stick of cream cheese, and use chicken broth instead of gizzards, so delicious!

Stephanie

Same! Grandmother from the Piedmont, very similar recipe that we were always told was her ravioli stuffing recipe that she repurposed for Thanksgiving.

Rami

I made 1/2 the recipe using the giblets, neck and back meat from my spatchco*cked Turkey. Did not have mushrooms. Used homemade stale whole wheat sourdough bread to make bread crumbs. Was fantastic. It's nice having a more vegetable based dressing with a little bread instead of a bread based dressing with a little veggie. Will definitely make again.

Sisuanna

Substitute savory Italian sausage for gizzards and mushrooms. Halve the recipe.

Kimberly Werner

I used less spinach & added eggplant, yellow squash & rainbow chard (aka a bunch of vegetables I had in the fridge & wanted to use up.) Roasted the yellow squash, eggplant and onion in the oven and sauted the spinach with the rainbow chard, mushrooms & garlic. Also used more bread crumbs (which were from some rather heavy whole wheat/ rye bread I had made) & less cheese. No gizzards but used the mix to stuff a turkey. Turned out great. Will make it - or something like it - again.

Barbara

I’ve been looking for years for someone else using this recipe my Italian family used to stuff turkey, ravioli, lasagna. We called it “ping”

Joyce

Isn't the difference between stuffing and dressing this: Stuffing is "stuffed" into the bird. Dressing is cooked outside the bird. So, prepared according to these instructions, this is dressing, not stuffing. This seems likely to be too moist to go into the turkey.

Tony Matos

Tried with gizzards. It was god awful. Second time I replaced gizzards with 2lbs Italian fennel sausage and it was spectacular.

Lorraine

My mother was from Brescia & made this stuffing as everyone else I believed we were the only ones.She only used what came with the bird gizzards & heart. She would rinse thoroughly & sauté cool chop add. Lots of fresh grated Parm & fresh sage.Baked in casserole dish.

Lauren

My Sicilian family also has a similar recipe. We use ham and rice in it though. No gizzards. Cheers!

Elisabeth

My Italian family (also from the Piedmont region) do a spinach and sausage stuffing, and it is beloved and famous both within our family and amongst friends! We use italian sausage vs. turkey gizzards and fresh spinach instead of frozen. I've always been partial to our "special" stuffing (just like Stephanie, we thought ours was a family recipe ha!) but will have to try this delicious-sounding version sometime. Salute (cheers!), Italia!

Jamie

Does anyone else feel like two pounds of gizzards is an awful lot for one dish? Looking at the handwritten recipe, it says "3 pkgs" which is crossed out and then at the right she has written "use only 2" which to me indicates using two PACKAGES of gizzards (that come out of a turkey)? And if it calls for 2 pounds of an ingredient then says you can "leave it out"—doesn't that seem odd? I feel like the gizzards should be the flavoring, not the major ingredient.

Nina

I agree with Jamie (thank you for pointing this out!). Also, the handwriting says "gizzerts"—could mean "giblets." Two pounds of gizzards would be forty chickens' worth.

Jamze

I'm just a caveman and "...2 pounds of gizzards..." seemed excessive - recipe looks good otherwise. Cheerio!

Prakash Nadkarni

RE: Gizzards - You can buy frozen chicken gizzards in 1 lb packs in groceries catering to a significant ethnic/ African-American clientele: they're a cheap ($1-1.25/lb) protein source, but typically need pressure cooking to tenderize, if you don't want to mince them. They also need an umami source (e.g., stock, bacon, sausage). The prototypical poor-person's food, Louisiana dirty rice, was originally, and still is, made with chicken giblets (gizzards, livers,hearts).

Candice

My mother and her many sisters made Stuffing with ricotta and parmigiana cheese , eggs and spinach. Her family originated from a small town near Naples. It was delicious. Has anyone heard of this?

John McCutchen

Add oysters with a splash of Pernod for a Rockefeller riff?

Note from someone else

Can this be made the night before and the turkey stuffed the following morning?

Private notes are only visible to you.

Italian Spinach Stuffing Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How to make stuffing Gordon Ramsay? ›

Make the stuffing, melt butter in a large frying pan and gently sauté onion and garlic for five minutes until soft. Stir in the herbs for one minute then add breadcrumbs to absorb butter. Mix in zest, pine nuts and seasoning and cook over medium heat for about seven minutes until crumbs start to brown and crisp.

Why put eggs in stuffing? ›

Vegetable broth – To moisten the bread. Eggs – They add richness and moisture, helping to create the stuffing's irresistible gooey center.

What is the difference between stuffing filling and dressing? ›

"Stuffing is cooked in the cavity of the turkey, so the juices soak into the ingredients, making it more flavorful. Dressing gets cooked on its own and needs extra liquid to make it flavorful." So stuffing is cooked inside the bird. Dressing is cooked outside the bird, usually in a casserole dish.

Should stuffing be soggy before cooking? ›

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.

What is traditional stuffing made of? ›

Turkey stuffing was popularized in the early days of Thanksgiving, as it is written in many 16th-century Boston area documents. Stuffing most often uses dried bread, herbs, and vegetables that are reconstituted with liquid, stuffed into the turkey cavity, and baked until it is firm and finished cooking.

What can you use as a binder instead of eggs in stuffing? ›

16 egg substitutes
  1. Mashed banana. Mashed banana can act as a binding agent when baking or making pancake batter. ...
  2. Applesauce. Applesauce can also act as a binding agent. ...
  3. Fruit puree. Fruit puree will help bind a recipe in a similar way to applesauce. ...
  4. Avocado. ...
  5. Gelatin. ...
  6. Xanthan gum. ...
  7. Vegetable oil and baking powder. ...
  8. Margarine.
Mar 30, 2021

What is the best bread to use for stuffing? ›

Breads such as sour dough, French bread or Italian loaves are for the best bread for stuffing. Their soft-but-sturdy interiors are the perfect texture for stuffing. The pieces retain their shape without crumbling.

Why is stuffing called dressing in the South? ›

But for the Thanksgiving side dish in the South, the term dressing was adopted in place of stuffing, which was viewed as a crude term, during the Victorian era. Although dressing and stuffing are interchangeable terms, the signature ingredient of this Thanksgiving side dish in the South is cornbread.

Is it better to make stuffing with fresh or dry bread? ›

Any attempts to make stuffing with soft, fresh baked bread will result in a bread soup with a soggy texture. Follow this tip: Stale, dried-out bread makes the best stuffing.

What is the most popular Thanksgiving side dish? ›

mashed potatoes! Rising from second place in 2022, mashed potatoes take the crown for America's favorite Thanksgiving side dish. Creamy, rich, and comforting, they're the perfect accompaniment to turkey and gravy, so it makes sense that mashed potatoes came out on top.

Is it better to make stuffing the day before? ›

The short answer to whether you can making stuffing ahead of time is yes. "Making stuffing ahead saves time, allows stove and oven space for other things, and making it ahead gives time for the flavor to fully develop," Chef David Tiner, Director at Louisiana Culinary Institute in Baton Rouge, tells Southern Living.

Is it better to stuff a turkey or not? ›

The United States Department of Agriculture ( USDA ) recommends cooking the stuffing out side of the bird. Bacteria can survive in stuffing that has not reached 165 F, possibly resulting in foodborne illness. Some people feel that stuffing has a better taste and is moister when prepared in the turkey.

Why can't you refrigerate uncooked stuffing? ›

USDA recommends that you never refrigerate uncooked stuffing. Why? Remember, stuffing can harbor bacteria, and though bacteria grow slower in the refrigerator they can cause problems because stuffing is a good medium for bacteria growth, therefore a higher risk food in terms of cooking safely.

Do you cook stuffing before you stuff? ›

Cook stuffing and immediately place it in your turkey's neck and body cavity.

What is homemade stuffing made of? ›

Classic stuffing made with bread cubes, seasonings, and held together with chicken stock and eggs. A holiday staple!

What recipe did Gordon Ramsay make? ›

Gordon Ramsay recipes
  • Rack of lamb with warm salad of mixed beans & slow-roast tomatoes. ...
  • Pan-fried sea trout, peas & chorizo fricassée. ...
  • Frozen banana & praline parfait. ...
  • Spaghetti with seafood velouté ...
  • Beef bourguignon with celeriac mash. ...
  • Chocolate marquise. ...
  • Beef wellington. ...
  • Lemon tart with summer berries.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Eusebia Nader

Last Updated:

Views: 6289

Rating: 5 / 5 (60 voted)

Reviews: 83% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Eusebia Nader

Birthday: 1994-11-11

Address: Apt. 721 977 Ebert Meadows, Jereville, GA 73618-6603

Phone: +2316203969400

Job: International Farming Consultant

Hobby: Reading, Photography, Shooting, Singing, Magic, Kayaking, Mushroom hunting

Introduction: My name is Eusebia Nader, I am a encouraging, brainy, lively, nice, famous, healthy, clever person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.