Home Dinner One-Pan Chicken & Wild Rice Stuffing

One-Pan Chicken & Wild Rice Stuffing

by Ann
2 comments

Who says stuffing is only for the holidays? Why can’t we have stuffing for an every-day kind of meal, like on a snowy January day when the wind is howling and it’s just too dang cold to do anything outside.

So I’m here to tell you: you don’t have to wait for Thanksgiving for turkey and stuffing. You don’t have to cook a huge turkey or goose, either. You can do a simple bake with stuffing underneath, pieces of chicken on top, and it all comes out simply marvelous, perfectly cooked. The chicken is wonderfully juicy, the stuffing full of good flavors and textures.


I’m having a lazy snow day alone in my house. I’m not really alone, but my (young adult) kids and cats are all asleep so I might as well be. The snow in the driveway needs shoveling AGAIN (even though we just did it last night) and I feel like I should go out and clean it up, but hey, the snowplows still haven’t arrived and the wind is still blowing and what’s the point of shoveling when the wind is just going to blow it right back where it doesn’t belong? And anyway, it’s nice and warm inside and this kind of day is just screaming for some comfort food.

So instead of shoveling, I’m puttering about the house and drinking hot tea and eating chicken and wild rice stuffing. Later I think I’ll read my book for a while, under a nice warm blanket.

I got to practice my “inside” food photography skills today, because this is what my outdoor photography space looks like right now:

Snowy day on my back patio

It’s pretty, but also not so pretty. Not only do I have to shovel the driveway, I need to shovel my way to my little food photography platform that’s completely buried! A little “tunnel”, so to speak. And how is that going to be better than indoor shots? Usually it is, but well, I might not be going out there for a while.

But I digress … back to the recipe: this stuffing is the real-deal, my friends, not some boxed up mix. This is your opportunity to use up any failed loaves of bread you might have laying around (or some stale bread you’re tired of eating). Mix that old bread up with some mushrooms, onion, celery, wild rice, garlic, spinach and seasonings and watch your old bread turn into something sublime.

For this recipe I highly recommend real Minnesota wild rice (not one of those boxed “wild rice mixes” or a cultivated variety)–get the real WILD rice. It costs a little more, but it’s totally worth it. The wild rice adds a nice nutty flavor and a slightly chewy texture to the stuffing.

The funny thing about wild rice is it’s not really rice at all. It IS an aquatic grass, much like rice, and it cooks like rice, but it is much healthier and has a more robust flavor. It’s also lower in carbs and higher in protein than regular old rice, and eating wild rice can also reduce your LDL cholesterol levels. Woohoo!

I put lots of veggies in this stuffing, too, so you don’t HAVE to have another vegetable, but feel free to add some green beans or steamed broccoli or perhaps some roasted butternut squash. I actually ate my green beans BEFORE the meal, so I could simply chow on stuffing and chicken during the meal. Seriously, what else do you need?

Oh except for wine, yes wine. A nice glass of Pinot Grigio – or your favorite white – is the perfect way to polish off this delightful one-pan meal.

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Chicken & Wild Rice Stuffing

  • Author: Ann
  • Prep Time: 30
  • Cook Time: 1.5 hrs
  • Total Time: 2 hrs
  • Yield: 46 servings 1x
  • Category: Dinner
  • Method: Roasted

Ingredients

Scale

For the stuffing:

  • 3 cups cubed whole wheat or sourdough bread
  • 1 1/2 cups cooked wild rice
  • 3/41 cup chopped onion
  • 3/41 cup chopped celery (include the leaves)
  • 2 cups sliced fresh mushrooms
  • 23 cloves garlic, peeled & chopped
  • 10 oz. cooked spinach (I used frozen, thawed), with juices
  • 1/4 cup melted grass-fed butter or olive oil
  • 3 fresh sage leaves, chopped or 1/2 teaspoon ground
  • 3 fresh basil leaves, chopped or 1/2 teaspoon dried
  • Salt & freshly ground pepper, to taste
  • 1/21 cup chicken broth (or juices from cooking the wild rice)

For the chicken:

  • 2 Tablespoons grass-fed butter or avocado oil
  • About 3 lb. chicken pieces (I used leg quarters)
  • Trader Joe’s 21 Seasoning Salute (or your favorite unsalted seasoning blend)
  • Salt & freshly ground pepper

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350 F. In a large mixing bowl, stir together all the stuffing ingredients except the broth. Taste and add salt & freshly ground pepper to your liking. Pour the broth over top and stir to mix it in. Set aside.
  2. Season both sides of the chicken pieces with seasoning, salt & pepper. In a large saute pan over medium heat, melt the butter or add oil, then sear the chicken pieces until golden brown on both sides.
  3. Remove the chicken and set it on a plate. Pour any excess fat out of the pan, then add the stuffing to the bottom of the pan, spreading it evenly. Nestle the chicken pieces on the stuffing. 
  4. Cover the pan and bake for 30 minutes to an hour (depending on how large your chicken pieces are … mine were large so I baked covered for an hour) or until the chicken looks fairly well cooked. Uncover and bake for 15 – 30 minutes longer or until the internal temperature of the chicken is 165 F. Remove from the oven, cover and let sit for 20 – 30 minutes for the chicken to absorb the juices. Serve hot and enjoy!

Notes

You can tell if chicken is getting cooked when the flesh turns all white, juices run clear and the bones start to poke out from under the skin.

© Copyright 2020, Sumptuous Spoonfuls. All images & content are copyright protected. I love it when you share, but please do not use my images on your own site/page without prior permission. If you want to publish any of my images, please ask first. Sharing, pinning, and tweeting is always appreciated as long as the shares and pins link back to here for the recipe. If you want to republish this recipe as your own, please re-write the recipe in your own words or link back to this post for the recipe.


Nutrition

  • Calories: 500
  • Fiber: 4.1 g
  • Protein: 36g

Keywords: Chicken, Stuffing, Wild Rice

Nutrition varies depending on the chicken pieces used and whether you eat the skin and fat.

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2 comments

Christine January 23, 2020 - 4:19 pm

I’m sure this taste really good.

Reply
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