The Best Slow Cooker Stuffing
This slow cooker stuffing is flavorful, perfectly moist, and brilliant if you need to free up oven space. However, it can also be baked in the oven, if needed.
My sister-in-law brought this stuffing to a family Thanksgiving celebration, and I am not kidding, no one could talk about anything else. It is literally the best stuffing EVER.
Best Bread to Use for Slow Cooker Stuffing
I’ve found the best bread is thick, sturdy sandwich bread. I use Grandma Sycamore’s brand. One loaf (17 slices) is the perfect amount for this recipe.
However, a sturdy homemade bread recipe like this sandwich bread or this French bread will work well, too.
Avoid bread that is super airy, thin, or kind of wimpy in texture.
- Trim the crust off the bread slices. Don’t use the heels/ends of the bread.
- You’ll need about 10 cups of 3/4- to 1-inch bread cubes before drying.
- The cubes will shrink a bit while drying in the oven resulting in a yield of about 9 cups (250-260 grams) dry bread cubes.
How to Make Stuffing with the Perfect Texture
The biggest tip to making the best stuffing is to add the liquid gradually. You can always add more, but it is VERY hard to rescue over-saturated, soggy bread.
For this slow cooker stuffing recipe, vegetables and herbs are sautéed in butter and then tossed with the dry bread cubes.
At this point, whisk together 1 cup of the broth with the egg. Pour this mixture over the stuffing and toss to combine.
Take a look and decide if more broth is needed. For this recipe, I add about 1/4 to 1/3 additional broth. If you like stuffing that is super soft, you’ll likely want to add a bit more additional broth.
Slow Cooker Details
A 6- or 8-quart slow cooker can be used for this stuffing recipe.
The cooking time in the recipe states to cook the stuffing for 4 to 6 hours on low. In a perfect world, all slow cookers would cook the same. But, unfortunately, some slow cookers cook at much hotter temps than others.
So keep an eye on the stuffing! It may need less time (but likely won’t need more).
For a more consistent texture throughout, you can stir the stuffing halfway through cooking. Personally we like the crispier outer bread bits with the softer middle, so I don’t stir it.
How to Bake the Stuffing in the Oven
To bake this stuffing in the oven instead of using a slow cooker:
- Scoop the stuffing into a greased 8X11-inch pan or similar-size casserole dish.
- Cover the dish with foil.
- Bake at 350 degrees F for 45 minutes to 1 hour. Uncover and bake 10-15 minutes longer until the top is lightly golden.
This stuffing recipe can easily be doubled. A double batch will fit in an 8-quart slow cooker or a deep 9X13-inch pan.
I am a finicky, picky snob when it comes to stuffing, and I’m not even ashamed to admit it. I spent years detesting the stuff because: soggy bread. #ew #EW
I have a few other go-to stuffing recipes in the archives (because I finally matured and realized I could control the level of sogginess in most stuffing recipes).
Best Stuffing Ever
However, this slow cooker stuffing is hands-down the best stuffing I have ever had. A Thanksgiving plate that is 90% stuffing? Yep. Hi, that’s me. I’m Mel, and I am head over heels in love with this stuffing.
Several of my kids who also usually turn their noses up at stuffing have become big fans of this slow cooker stuffing, too. In fact, when my teenage son was pilfering the minimal leftovers from the fridge, he said “I don’t even know who I am anymore.” 😆
It really is phenomenal. The slow cooker makes it brilliantly easy. The back up oven method makes it super approachable. And the perfect texture and crazy good flavors make it the only stuffing I ever want in my life forevermore.
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The Best Slow Cooker Stuffing
Ingredients
- 1 loaf sturdy white sandwich bread (17 slices for a yield of about 10 cups bread cubes) – see note for more details
- ½ cup salted butter
- 1 cup finely chopped onion
- 1 cup finely chopped celery
- ¼ cup minced fresh parsley
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon dried sage
- ¾ teaspoon poultry seasoning
- ½ teaspoon dried thyme
- ½ teaspoon dried marjoram
- ¼ teaspoon black pepper
- 1 to 2 cups low-sodium chicken broth (see note)
- 1 large egg
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 225 degrees F. Cut each slice of bread into 3/4- to 1-inch cubes. For Grandma Sycamore's bread, I trim off the crusts and cut each slice into 16 cubes. Scatter the bread cubes in a single layer on a parchment-lined baking sheet. Bake for 1 1/2 to 2 hours until the bread is dry and firm to the touch. Remove and cool completely. Store the dry bread cubes in a well-sealed bag or container. (This step can be done several days in advance.)
- In a 10- or 12-inch skillet, heat the butter over medium heat until melted. Add the onions, celery, and parsley. Cook for 6 to 8 minutes until the onions are translucent.
- Add the salt, sage, poultry seasoning, thyme, marjoram and black pepper. Stir to combine.
- Place the dry bread cubes in a large bowl. Scrape the vegetable mixture on top and toss lightly to combine.
- In a liquid measuring cup or small bowl, whisk 1 cup broth with the egg until well-combined. Pour this mixture over the stuffing and gently stir to combine. Add additional broth only as needed until the stuffing is the desired softness. I prefer stuffing that is soft but not soggy; I use about 1/4 to 1/3 additional broth. However, if you like really soft, moist stuffing, you may want to add a full additional cup of broth.
- Lightly grease the insert of a 6- or 8-quart slow cooker. Scoop the stuffing mixture into the slow cooker (don't compact the stuffing into a tight layer; it should be spooned in loosely).
- Cover and cook on low for 4 to 6 hours. Depending on how your slow cooker cooks, you may need to adjust the time up or down. For a consistent texture throughout, you can stir the stuffing halfway through cooking. (Personally we like the crispier outer bread bits with the softer middle, so I don't stir it.)
- Oven Method: scoop the stuffing into a greased 8X11-inch pan or similar-size casserole dish. Cover the dish with foil. Bake at 350 degrees F for 45 minutes to 1 hour. Uncover and bake 10-15 minutes longer until the top is lightly golden.
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: from Mel’s Kitchen Cafe (by way of my sister-in-law, Angela, and inspired by a recipe from allrecipes)
Get ready for a Compliment blast !!! Thanksgiving was easy peezy and delicious thanks to you. From the slowcooker turkey with easy gravy, life changing instant pot mashed potatoes, the Best slow cooker stuffing, autumn pear salad with maple balsamic dressing ( where have you been my entire life). Fresh Cranberry Chutney ( I don’t like cranberry sauce but I loved this) perfect flaky pie crust and pie boot camp, Magnolia lemon pie. Our entire Thanksgiving was from Mels Kitchen cafe. And the best thing…. The recipes are so easy that I was able to watch some football while dinner was a cookin. Thanks Mel
You’re the best – thank you, Jody!!
Made this for Thanksgiving to save oven space and it was a huge hit. Per Mel’s instructions I added a little more broth since we like more moist stuffing. Will make again! We made french bread for the recipe and it was perfect.
So happy you loved this one, Stephanie! I made a triple batch for Thanksgiving and it was devoured.
Made this for Thanksgiving this year – super delicious!
Yay! Thanks for letting me know!
This is an EXCELLENT stuffing recipe! I’ve never tried Grandma Sycamore’s bread, but I found it in my grocery store, and it worked perfectly. I ended up baking it in the oven for logistical/timing reasons, and it was delicious. My only regret is not doubling the recipe. We finished it on Thanksgiving Day, so no leftovers. Is it weird to make stuffing for dinner the week after Thanksgiving? I hope not, because it’s in the meal plan for next week!
I hope you and your family had a beautiful Thanksgiving Mel! I’m thankful for your recipes ❤️
Haha, not weird at all! So happy you loved this one, Tiffany. Thanks for the comment! I hope you had a lovely Thanksgiving as well.
This recipe did not turn out for us. It was way too dry. I’ve tried other stuffing recipes on this site that were fantastic, I think I’ll stick to those over this one.
Sorry this didn’t work out for you, Andrea.
This stuffing was the star of the show at our Thanksgiving meal. I made soft sourdough discard sandwich bread specifically for this recipe and I think that was the secret ingredient. I didn’t have a slow cooker so I opted for the oven method. Next time I would add a touch more broth.
Homemade sourdough bread sounds FANTASTIC in this, Nancy!
This was really good and easy. I used French bread. My only complaint is that it was done after 3 hours. I kept mixing it but some of the bread pieces were getting really dark so I turned it to warm until the rest of dinner was ready. I will make this again but try the oven method instead. Thanks for such an easy and delicious stuffing!
Thanks for the review, Maureen! Slow cookers can be finicky in that they all cook at different temperatures – glad you were keeping an eye on it!
I would like to make the stuffing to serve to our vegetarian son and wonder if anyone has made this with vegetable broth? Thank you in advance.
Maureen, I made this with vegetarian broth! I use Better Than Bouillon brand. It worked great! (For any vegans out there, I did use a real egg, so not sure about using egg substitute, though I’m sure it would work great as well).
Vegetable broth should work just fine!
I bought pan bollio, it’s a Mexican torta type bread. I’m worried cuz it is a lil wimpy. Do you think drying it really good will work? I’ve used it to make croutons and they have come out delicious and very crunchy!
If that bread has worked well for croutons, I think it will work fine in this recipe!
Thanks so much for answering my question about transporting the stuffing in a crock pot. Cooking it ahead of time is a great idea. Could I just leave it on warm u til we’re ready to eat—maybe an hour or two?
Yes, should work great!
Would it be ok to prepare this the night before and refrigerate overnight? I would cook it in the slow cooker the next morning.
Would French bread work in this? Love your recipes!
Hi Lisa, yes, French bread will work fine in this recipe. As for prepping the night before, I would prep all components but refrigerate them separately and then combine the cooked veggies, broth/egg mixture with the bread right before cooking in the slow cooker.
This stuffing is delicious! I did a test run, and we loved it. I don’t use my crock pot very much. Would it work to travel with the crock pot for about forty minutes in the middle of cooking and then cook it the rest of the way when we get there? I don’t want to ruin it!
Hi Kim – I’m only worried about because of the eggs and food safety. Could you cook it all the way, travel with it and then reheat when you get to your destination (it will likely stay warm if it’s just a 40 minute drive).
Can you use one of the many already dried bread pkgs ? I used the Grandma Sycamore bread but did not get 10 cups of bread. I usually use day old bread so I am not familiar with these already dried bread pkgs.
Thank you
I’m not super familiar with the dry bread packages either, but I’m sure you could use those if you need to.
I love a mix of white bread and your cornbread in my stuffing. Do you think adding cornbread would work in this one?
As long as the cornbread is quite sturdy, it should work fine!
I don’t know if you’ll see this before I make this tomorrow, but is the dried sage in this ground sage or rubbed sage?
I used dry rubbed sage.
Grandma Sycamore bread is not offered where I live. What Other brands would you recommend using?
Hi Mary, any sturdy white bread will work fine. An artisan loaf from the grocery store bakery, a homemade white sandwich bread or a storebought white sandwich bread with thick, sturdy slices.
It looks like Sara Lee white bread is similar (thick sliced), or Sara Lee Artesano if you have either of those available! That’s what I’m using for this recipe.
I see you recommend your sandwich bread or French bread if we can’t Grandma Sycamore’s brand, but have you tried it with either? And if not, which one would you try first?
Yes, either will work. If I had to recommend only one, I would say the French bread.
I made it over the weekend with homemade sourdough bread and we were happy with it. I even kept the crusts. I would lean toward her higher broth amounts for the sturdier, chewier bread.
I’m making this tomorrow for a Friends-giving? Do you think it’d taste good without the marjoram? It was hard to justify buying it for $5/bottle. I love all of your recipes!
Sure, you could leave that out if you don’t have it on hand.
I’m excited to try this! Do you think it would be ok to use a crockpot liner/bag? For easier clean up? Or would it lessen those delicious crispy outer edges?
That’s a good question – I think it would work fine if you want an easier cleanup! I’m not sure how it will affect the edges, but I definitely think it’s worth a try.
Would you ever dare make the recipe in a roaster for a large crowd? I have a very large family gathering for Thanksgiving and need to make a lot of stuffing.
Absolutely I would! I think it would work great (and it’s likely what I’m going to do for this Thanksgiving as well). I would just make sure the edges don’t get too crispy/burn as is sometimes an issue in electric roasters.
Hey I’m on stuffing this year and am totally making this (always SO thankful to have scratch made recipes that I can trust will be the best). My question is: I can’t find my crock pot, I might have given it away…(but we’re traveling with a decent sized group for Thanksgiving this year and I think not needing the oven for everything will be a good plan). Do you ever use the slow cooker setting on your instant pot? I feel kind of wasteful buying a slow cooker if the IP handles it the same way. I was hoping some others would comment on it but I don’t see any as yet.
Hi Mia! I have had terrible luck with the slow cooker function on my IP (wondering if anyone else has as well)? It is really finicky – sometimes cooking hot, sometimes barely warming. However, if you have had good luck using the slow cooker function on your IP and it has heated evenly, I’d say go for it!
Can I make this a day ahead and bake the day of thanksgiving?
I haven’t tried that…I think any make-ahead options are worth trying (for the sake of sanity) but for this, I wouldn’t add the broth/egg mixture until right before ready to bake (however you could toast the bread and saute all the veggies and have them ready to go in advance).
This is my new go-to Stuffing recipe! I made it this morning for a teacher luncheon and it was delicious. I followed the recipe exactly as written and added 1 lb of bulk pork sausage that I browned in the skillet before cooking the veggies. I ran out of time so I followed the directions for the oven, but for Thanksgiving I’m going to use the slow cooker. Thank you Mel! This recipe is so good!
So happy to hear this, Steph! Thanks so much for adding your review!
Hi. Think the flavors would meld if added sausage, walnuts and dried cranberries? When would you add these?
Thank you so much 😉
If you like those flavors, I think it would work fine to add them. I’d cook the sausage at the beginning with the onions and celery and then stir in walnuts and cranberries halfway through cooking.
I make everything from scratch on thanksgiving! Huge fan of homemade, with one exception… stuffing!! I ONLY like stove top! 🫣 I know, probably the absolute worst for you, but I hate the texture of homemade stuffing! How does this recipe compare to the texture/flavor of stove top?
Hi Tiffany, I’m probably not much help because I haven’t had stovetop stuffing in years. But I happen to be a huge fan of this stuff and think you could modify it to be similar especially with the amount of liquid you add?
The recipe looks great, similar to what I usually make. IMO the very best bread for stuffing is French rolls. Using them, most torn pieces of bread have some crust. It makes a firmer stuffing, far less likely to get soggy.
This is the exact same recipe for slow cooker stuffing I have been making for 20+ years. I hot the recipe off of Allrecipes.com way back then. The only difference I make is the removal of parley because I hate it and the addition of rosemary because I love it. I also stir the stuffing every 30 minutes or so for even cooking and let it go until it’s caramel used and darker.
I REALLY want to make this! Sad because we can’t get Gma’s bread here. Looking for recommendations on something more readily available off the shelf.
Grandma Sycamore’s bread is not the only bread that will work here! It’s just the one I’ve listed as my preference. Many other grocery-store loaves will work fine – just look for bread that has a tight, sturdy crumb (and isn’t super airy and wimpy in texture). Try the bakery section – an artisan loaf that you slice yourself will work well, too.
It looks like Sara Lee white bread is similar (thick sliced), or Sara Lee Artesano if you have either of those available! That’s what I’m using for this recipe.
I almost fell out of my chair reading the same recipe I’ve been making 20+ years and eating the 20+ years before that! There is pure magic in that butter and onion and celery step, I tell you! This is my favorite kind and I’m glad you have it on your site to now convert the world to the BEST stuffing.
Would sourdough be good in this recipe? I would love to get my hands on Grandma sycamore’s bread. I have brought several bags home on my trips to Utah. It doesn’t last long!
I think sourdough bread would be excellent in this recipe!
Yet another reason to be sad that we can’t get Grandma Sycamore bread here in Colorado!
Lots of other breads will work in this stuffing, Heidi!
It sounds great! We don’t have Gma Sycamore’s bread here & Im not a bread baker. Are you familiar with Pepperidge Farm Hearty White bread? I wonder if that would work.
Hi Darcie! I just did a quick google search of that bread. The slices look a bit thinner than what I use for this recipe, but as long as the crumb is tight and sturdy, it should work as long as you’re ok with smaller cubes! You could also try a rustic artisan loaf of bread from a grocery store or local bakery that you slice yourself (just make sure to trim the crusts).
Would it work to add sausage and sautéed mushrooms to this? If so, should I cook the sausage first?
Hi Becky! Yes, you could definitely add sausage and mushrooms. I would cook the sausage and mushrooms in the first step with the celery and onions.