Want to customize this content for your business?

Learn More

Categories

  • Home
  • Decor
  • Real Estate
  • Life & Culture
  • Food & Recipes
  • Holiday & Entertaining

  • Printables
  • Videos


General

  • About the Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Copyright
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Careers


Editorial

  • Editorial Calendar
  • Issue Archive
  • Contact Us
  • Pitch an Idea

American Lifestyle Magazine Logo
  • Food & Recipes Categories
    • All Recipes (797)
    • Appetizers (147)
    • Breakfast (68)
    • Cooking Tips (38)
    • Desserts (242)
    • Dinner (256)
    • Drinks (59)
    • Gluten Free (9)
    • Healthy (77)
    • Lunch (19)
    • Quick & Easy (67)
    • Vegan (39)
    • Vegetarian (62)
All Recipes | Jul 15, 2026

Summer Squash Omelet with Ricotta

  • Holiday & Entertaining Categories
    • Celebrate (5)
    • Christmas (111)
    • Easter (17)
    • Entertaining (57)
    • Fall (67)
    • Father’s Day (5)
    • Halloween (34)
    • Hanukkah (26)
    • July 4th (31)
    • Mother’s Day (7)
    • New Year’s (24)
    • Spring (32)
    • St. Patrick's Day (14)
    • Summer (63)
    • Thanksgiving (55)
    • Valentine’s Day (8)
    • Winter (84)
All Recipes | Jul 15, 2026

Summer Squash Omelet with Ricotta

  • Decor Categories
    • Crafts & DIY Projects (288)
    • Curb Appeal (5)
    • Decorate (98)
    • Interior Design (119)
Decorate | Jun 17, 2026

An Unmatched Palm Beach Beauty

Decorate | Jun 5, 2026

Embrace the Shades of Summer

Interior Design | Apr 21, 2026

A Soothing Office-Space Redesign

  • Real Estate Categories
    • Buying & Selling (172)
    • Home Trends (16)
    • Staging (19)
    • Your First House (30)
Moving truck
Buying & Selling | Mar 25, 2025

The Proper Way to Unpack

Historic home
Buying & Selling | Aug 15, 2024

Living in History

Flower
Buying & Selling | Jul 31, 2024

Four Ways to Increase Your Home’s Value

  • Life & Culture Categories
    • Editorial (360)
    • Family & Pets (233)
    • Finances (33)
    • Health (171)
    • Travel (333)
Travel | Jun 29, 2026

Double Days: A Celebration of Twins

Travel | Jun 24, 2026

Reviving Dude Ranches

Health | Jun 10, 2026

Small Morning Rituals for Big Daily Joy

  • Home Categories
    • Cleaning (48)
    • Organizing (56)
    • Home Improvement (96)
    • Outdoors & Gardening (80)
Cleaning | Jul 1, 2026

Don’t Toss That!

Home Improvement | Jun 15, 2026

Step Up Your Style

Outdoors & Gardening | May 4, 2026

Grill Prep Made Easy

Follow us on social media today!

Facebook Twitter LinkedIn

Regional Twists on a Thanksgiving Side Dish Staple

SHARE
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn More

Regardless of what you call it—stuffing, dressing, or filling—a Thanksgiving meal is not complete without this favorite starchy side dish. But there’s a reason behind the different names, a regional reason that is. In fact, each part of the country boasts their own recipes that are deep-seated in tradition and regional ingredients.   

 

Loaf of sourdough bread in basket

Pacific Northwest
Forget white bread: West Coasters utilize sourdough bread, giving their stuffing a unique tang of flavors that’s more than memorable for taste buds.

 

Field of rice crops

Midwest
While Northern Midwesterners refer to the side dish as stuffing, their specialty forgoes any type of bread, and wild rice steals the show. In fact, Minnesota is one of the few locations where wild rice still grows today.

 

Traditional cornbread stuffing

South
What’s stuffing? Ask any Southerner, and they only refer to the side dish as dressing. Thanks to their infatuation with cornbread, they’ve invented the signature cornbread dressing, adding the perfect hint of sweetness to an overall savory meal.

 

Baskets of oysters

New England
A region that is both rich in Thanksgiving history and fresh seafood, New Englanders don’t hold back when it comes to their stuffing recipe. Their signature dish includes chopped oysters, which adds texture and moisture to the cubed pieces of bread.

 

Pile of potatoes

Mid-Atlantic
Ah, this is where the term filling comes into play. The Mid-Atlantic region has quite a bit of Pennsylvania Dutch influence, meaning they love their potatoes! Many substitute the traditional bread for another equally delicious starch—mashed potatoes.

 

Table with thanksgiving foods and decorations

14421 Views

Share on Social Media

,