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The only thing I would caution anyone on with cooking the stuffing in the bird is the final cook temperature. With adding the stuffing to the inside you have now made a solid mass that needs to get to 165 degrees F. You run the risk of making your turkey dry and if you don't get the stuffing in the very center to 165 degrees you run the risk of a food borne illness.
What I do during the holidays is this. I buy the turkey I am going to roast or fry. Remove the neck and gizzards out. I will also buy a couple of the breast only turkeys. They have the rib cage and the breast attached, no dark meat on them. I remove the breast and either smoke them or roast them with the whole bird. A day or two before I will take the bones and roast them with onion, carrots and celery. After they are nice and roasted, I will make a stock out of that to make my stuffing with, in place of the chicken stock you buy. You can also put the roasting pan on the stove (medium heat) and add a little water or wine to deglaze the pan (scrapping all the yummy bits stuck to the pan as the water or wine lossen them up) to use for your pan gravy. This way you get the roasted flavor in the stuffing and you run less of a chance a food born illness from not getting the stuffing to 165 degrees.
dog - that onion or garlic bagel stuffing sounds really good, as well ~ might have to try that this year, rather than using pre-packaged stuff!