Wild Rice Dressing With Mushrooms and Chile Crisp
Updated Oct. 28, 2020

- Total Time
- About 1 hour, plus soaking
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1cup mixed wild rice blend or wild rice
- 2garlic cloves, smashed and peeled
- 1(1-inch) cinnamon stick
- Fine sea salt
- 2 to 4cups low-sodium stock, preferably mushroom, plus more as needed
- 2tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- ¼cup diced white or yellow onion
- 1small carrot, peeled and diced
- 1celery rib, diced
- ¼cup sweetened dried cranberries
- 8ounces mixed wild mushrooms or button mushrooms, halved if large
- 1tablespoon chile crisp, plus more for serving
- 2scallions, green parts only, thinly sliced
Preparation
- Step 1
Discard any debris from the rice. Rinse the rice in a fine mesh sieve under cool water until the runoff is no longer cloudy. Add rice to a medium bowl with enough water to cover by an inch, and soak for 30 minutes. Drain and discard the soaking water.
- Step 2
Add the rice to a medium saucepan with the garlic and cinnamon and season with salt. Cook according to package instructions, substituting stock instead of water, until the rice becomes tender. Remove from the heat, cover with a lid and let sit.
- Step 3
In a large saucepan, heat oil over medium-high. Add the onion, carrot and celery, and sauté, stirring occasionally, until the vegetables start to turn golden brown, about 5 to 8 minutes. Add the cranberries and sauté until they plump, about 1 minute.
- Step 4
Add the mushrooms to the saucepan. Season with salt and cook, stirring occasionally, until mushrooms are tender and lightly browned, about 4 to 5 minutes. Remove from heat. Uncover the rice, remove and discard the garlic and cinnamon.
- Step 5
Fluff the rice with a fork and fold the rice into the vegetables in the saucepan. Sprinkle with chile crisp and fold to coat. Taste and season with salt, if needed.
- Step 6
Transfer the rice to a serving dish, garnish with the scallion greens and serve warm, with extra chile crisp on the side.
Private Notes
Comments
Chile crisp comes in a jar. It is oil with crispy chiles. Trader Joe’s sells it and you can find it in Asian food stores.
Spicy chile crisp is a fantastic condiment that includes garlic, shallots, spicy dried chiles, and an array of other deliciousness all sizzled in neutral oil and stored in a jar. Serious Eats has a DIY version that includes Szechuan peppercorns, cardamom pods, star anise, peanuts, and so on that you will find yourself stirring into everything — my favorites are with tofu and green beans (another NY Times recipe) or mixed into peanut butter and spread on toast. It’s worth making yourself.
-Takes much longer than an hour (including rice soaking wild rice took 1 hour to cook (Step 2?) -Decrease initial amount of stock when cooking rice so it’s not soggy
Used only 1 TBl of chili crisp and it was sufficient for our tastes.
Decent meal. We added in a can of chickpeas along with the mushrooms which made it a bit of a fuller meal. We also used 3tablespoons of sambal oelek, which was a tad too spicy for my wimpy taste buds, but for most people would be delicious!
Very good. Made it for Thxgvg ‘23.
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