Ingredients
The following ingredients have 6 Servings
- 4 slices low calories bread (I used multigrain WW bread)
- 1 Tbsp light butter (I used Gay Lea)
- 1/4 cup chopped celery
- 1/3 cup diced onion
- 1 garlic clove diced
- 1/2 Tbsp dried parsley
- 1 tsp sage
- Dash of salt & pepper
- 3/4 cup chicken broth
- 2 cups cooked and cubed turkey
- 1 cup frozen hash browns (see my product reviews week 1 to see my brand)
- 1/2 cup cooked carrots (I used frozen and cooked in microwave)
- 1 7.5 oz packet of biscuits
- 1/2 cup canned turkey gravy (see pic)
Instruction
- First, we need to make the stuffing. Preheat oven to 375F, place the 4 slices of bread on a baking sheet, bake in oven for 10 minutes, flip over then bake another 6 minutes.
- Remove from oven but leave the oven on. Cut bread into small pieces.
- In a pan on the stove over medium heat melt your butter.
- Add in garlic, celery and onions and stir, cook for 5 minutes. Add chicken broth, parsley, sage and salt/pepper and stir. Bring to boil, as soon as it is at a boil add in the bread and stir quickly, remove from the stove and cover, let sit for 5 minutes then fluff with a fork.
- Cut your 10 small biscuits into 6 pieces each. Spray a 9x13 casserole dish with cooking spray and spread biscuit pieces on the bottom of the dish.
- Because the topping is heavy we need to pre-bake the biscuits for 7-8 minutes (375F)
- Meanwhile in a bowl mix together your turkey, dressing, carrots, hash browns and stir in your gravy.
- Spoon your mixture over top of your pre-baked biscuit pieces and divide evenly.
- Cover with foil and bake in the oven for 35 minutes, remove foil and bake another 10-15 minutes until biscuits are baked through.
- Divide into 6 equal servings, each serving weighing 5.5-6oz.
- *Note.. you can use leftovers from Thanksgiving dinner just be aware there might be a point difference, if using leftover carrots account for any butter that might have been used in them, my frozen hash browns were 5SP for 1 cup, my stuffing was 8SP and the gravy 2SP, just to give you an idea of where the points came from.