There is a great grocery chain in Minneapolis that has very nice dining rooms. This is probably their most popular menu item. Every time we visit there, we make a point of eating wild rice soup at a Byerly’s. They use ham in their recipe, we like it better with canned chicken or turkey. I often cook the rice a day ahead, or even cook a larger batch and freeze the extra to use next time; it freezes very well.
Byerly's Wild Rice Soup
1/2 cup Wild Rice -- uncooked
4 tablespoons Onion -- minced
4 tablespoons Celery -- finely chopped
1/2 cup Carrots -- very thinly sliced
3 cups Chicken Broth -- (homemade or made with water and chicken base)
2 tablespoons Sherry
2 Cups ham, chopped OR
1 Pint Canned Chicken or Turkey-- or 12 ounces purchased or 2 cups cooked
1 cup Heavy Cream -- or half and half
4 tablespoons Flour, All-purpose
- Cook wild rice in 1 cup of water or broth for 40-50 minutes; drain well. (I often do this during dinnertime the day ahead and refrigerate.)
- In a saucepan, combine broth, sherry, vegetables and chicken; simmer about 15 minutes. Add rice. Combine flour and cream, add to saucepan and cook, stirring constantly, until mixture comes to a boil; boil and stir 1 minute more until thickened.
Yield: "1 1/2 quarts" About 4 servings.
Per Serving: 491 Calories; 30g Fat (55.6% calories from fat); 27g Protein; 27g Carbohydrate; 2g Dietary Fiber; 132mg Cholesterol; 1017mg Sodium. Exchanges: 1 1/2 Grain(Starch); 3 Lean Meat; 1/2 Vegetable; 0 Non-Fat Milk; 4 1/2 Fat.
This is also a favorite at our house. I first had it at Byerly's in St Louis Park, Minnesota. I agree with Susan, we like the chicken better, but the ham is good also. I might just have to make some when, if, the weather cools off.
ReplyDelete<3 My son-in-law makes this! Love it! I have some wild rice so I should make some. Perfect day for it today, but alas I have too many other things to do. I did buy sherry this morning to make the meatballs and am noticing it is in this recipe too! :-)
ReplyDeleteBoth Sue and I use it in many recipes. We both use brandy also. Sherry keeps well so I tend to use it more than wines.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to try this one!! Thanks again for sharing. Diane
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