Wild Rice and Mushroom Soup

- Total Time
- 2 hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ½ounce (½ cup) dried porcini mushrooms
- 2cups boiling water
- 1 to 2tablespoons extra virgin olive oil, as needed
- 1large onion, chopped
- 2medium carrots, diced
- 2ribs celery, diced
- ½pound cremini or button mushrooms, cleaned, trimmed, and sliced thick
- 2large garlic cloves, minced
- Salt to taste
- ⅔cup wild rice
- 2quarts chicken stock, vegetable stock or water
- A bouquet garni made with a few sprigs each thyme and parsley, a bay leaf and a Parmesan rind
- 1cup frozen peas, thawed
- Freshly ground pepper to taste
Preparation
- Step 1
Place the dried porcini mushrooms in a bowl or a Pyrex measuring cup, and pour on 2 cups boiling water. Let sit for 30 minutes. Set a strainer over a bowl and line it with cheesecloth. Lift the mushrooms from the water, and squeeze them over the strainer. Rinse in several changes of water, squeeze out the water and set aside. Pour the soaking water through the cheesecloth-lined strainer, and set aside.
- Step 2
Heat the oil in a large, heavy soup pot or Dutch oven over medium heat. Add the onion, carrot and celery. Cook, stirring often, until just about tender, about five minutes. Add the sliced fresh mushrooms. Cook, stirring, until the mushrooms are beginning to soften, about three minutes. Add the garlic and a generous pinch of salt. Continue to cook for about five minutes until the mixture is juicy and fragrant. Add the reconstituted dried mushrooms, the wild rice, bouquet garni, mushroom soaking liquid, stock or water, and salt to taste. Bring to a boil, reduce the heat, cover and simmer one hour. Add the peas, and simmer another 10 minutes. Remove the bouquet garni, taste and adjust salt, add a generous amount of freshly ground pepper and serve.
- Advance preparation: The soup will keep for about three days in the refrigerator, but the rice will swell and absorb the liquid, so you will have to add more to the pot when you reheat.
Private Notes
Comments
When I don't have the porcini, I let the cremini and button mushrooms cook, unstirred, until they begin to caramelize. Adds anumami note.
Because mushrooms love lemon, this soup would not be hurt by adding a little squeeze when served.
I was excited to try this, always looking to expand my soup repertoire, and this had the added bonus of meeting all requirements of my partner's new dietary restrictions. It's promising, but as written, I felt that the porcini liquid overwhelmed everything else in a way that made the flavors muddy. However, the peas and carrots gave a pleasant sweetness, and the rice made it hearty and enjoyable. I'd try it again with a reduction of the porcini liquid and a different mushroom mix, but until them
I was excited to try this, always looking to expand my soup repertoire, and this had the added bonus of meeting all requirements of my partner's new dietary restrictions. It's promising, but as written, I felt that the porcini liquid overwhelmed everything else in a way that made the flavors muddy. However, the peas and carrots gave a pleasant sweetness, and the rice made it hearty and enjoyable. I'd try it again with a reduction of the porcini liquid and a different mushroom mix, but until them
The reader who suggested lemon was dead right. Every bowl came with some fresh lemon to squeeze. This is a good recipe. I had to use half home-made vegetable stock and half home-made chicken stock, which was fine. Plus the mushroom soaking water. Will make again. Not sure how the shrimp or prawns would play out — didn’t seem necessary. The parmesan rind added depth — that is necessary. I cooked the soup with the cover off because I wanted less liquid, and I don’t regret it.
What a delicious winter recipe. We had it with challah, really good contrast of flavor. A total win as recipes go.
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