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I made the mistake of thinking I had more onions than I did (those orange bags filled with old onion skins look fuller than they are), and now I don't have any onions left for my savory dressing. Can I use onion soup mix (with those little dehydrated onion flakes), or would this goop up when I mix in melted margerine? What about onion powder for the flavor? I have some mushrooms. Could I combine this with onion powder?

My concerns are that the chicken will be lacking in onion flavor, that the drippings might be bland, or powder substituted in for moist onion might dry out the stuffing.

The recipe* calls for Breadcrumbs, summer savory, margarine/butter and diced onion. When it's put into the chicken carcass and cooked it absorbs the chicken's essence. It makes a nice stuffing, but the onion tends to be a key part of the flavor.

Also, I don't have shallots or any other reasonable onion alternative.

*by recipe, I mean "mix them together until it looks/feels right".

Update: I ended up using the onion soup mix and a bit of celery I had left over. It started out goopy when I first mixed it togther, but the end result was flavorful and moist.

Peach
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    My gut tells me that you'd be okay with powdered of some form ... but it might be worth adding other vegetables if you're concerned about the moisture. Celery's the only other common vegetable I can think of that'll release a similar amount of liquid, but too much could throw off the flavors. – Joe Jan 20 '11 at 02:43
  • Good point about the liquid/flavor balance, @Joe. I'll give it a try! – Peach Jan 20 '11 at 02:51
  • Interesting using summer savoury instead of sage, I hear that is a common substitution on the eastern side of Canada. Never tried it. – Orbling Jan 20 '11 at 12:34
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    @Orbling, you're right about the region, I am in eastern Canada (Newfoundland, actually). Summer savory is much more common here than sage. – Peach Jan 21 '11 at 01:02
  • Dried chopped onion is preferable once reconstituted as compared to a powder, but you do have the same moisture difference. – zanlok Jan 21 '11 at 01:06
  • @Peach: I grow winter savoury in the garden, for use with pulses, I think I have some summer savoury somewhere growing, but have not used it much in cooking. Apparently it complements sausages well, as one might expect if it is a good sage substitute. Sage is used plentifully in English cookery, so I guess we have not had the exposure. – Orbling Jan 21 '11 at 01:13

3 Answers3

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I use dehydrated onion soup mixture as a substitute to many preparations calling for onions. I have never stuffed chicken with it, but I would do it without any doubt.

The trick is to get to the appropriate moisture and salt point. I use both water and some other sweet liquid (7up, sprite, coke...) to rehydrate and reduce the slight salty taste of the dehydrated onion.

For your case, besides the sweetening, the soft drink will as well add some carbonic which may also help in aerating a bit the stuffing.

PA.
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Try Hing (Asafoetida), an Indian spice. But make sure you fry it in butter or oil first because it goes under a pleasant transformation.

In Ayurvedic diets it is an onion garlic replacement.

  • Interesting suggestion, @Christopher. I'll have to see if I can find this and try it out. – Peach Jan 21 '11 at 01:04
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Use onion powder in a pinch. It'll give off a mild onion flavor and you won't taste the slimy onions that I couldn't stand. Or extra garlic, celery or mushrooms.

Jen Evans
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