Gluten-Free Slow Cooker Creamy Wild Rice, Chicken & Mushroom Soup (Instant Pot recipe!)

Gluten-Free Slow Cooker Creamy Wild Rice, Chicken & Mushroom Soup

This creamy soup with wild rice, chicken, and mushrooms is comfy, cozy, homeyness in a bowl. 

One of my favorite dishes from childhood was wild rice with a cream of chicken and mushroom. It was my dad's signature, and was super satisfying. This soup is the "grown up" version of that dish: it's made using whole, raw ingredients (no soup mix here!), which I think gives it even more flavor than the version I grew up with. And while most wild rice soups ask you to make a roux with flour, this recipes skips that step all together. I don't think you'll miss the roux... made in a slow cooker (I use the slow cooker setting on my Instant Pot), the rice in this soup gives it an extra creamy texture, and the addition of half-and-half at the end makes it stick-to-your-bones good. 

Gluten-Free Slow Cooker Creamy Wild Rice, Chicken & Mushroom Soup

Soup season is something I look forward to because soup is just the right sort of creative playground for trying different flavors. Specifically, creamy flavors. Yes, I have been on a bit of creamy soup kick: first this homestyle sausage & potato soup, and now this. Adding a little bit of cream to soups makes them infinitely more cozy... try coconut milk, like in this Lemongrass Chicken Soup, or cheese, like this artichoke provolone soup, or even puréed cauliflower, like this cauliflower & parsnip soup. And of course, make this wild rice concoction. This soup, I think, is one you need to make before the end of the month. Your Instant Pot is begging you. 

Gluten-Free Slow Cooker Creamy Wild Rice, Chicken & Mushroom Soup

Gluten-Free Slow Cooker Creamy Wild Rice, Chicken & Mushroom Soup

Published February 6, 2018 by

Serves: 6   |    Total Time: 30 active minutes



Ingredients:

  • 1 onion, diced
  • 2 stalks celery, diced
  • 2 carrots, diced
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced 
  • 1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon coconut oil
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt 
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper 
  • 1/2 teaspoon dried thyme 
  • 2 bay leaves 
  • 1 pound chicken thighs OR breasts - boneless, skinless 
  • 1 cup wild rice, uncooked
  • 1/2 c white wine
  • 6 cups chicken broth
  • 8 ounces mushrooms, sliced - (crimini, baby bella, and white mushrooms all work well)
  • 1 cup half-and-half 
  • To serve: 1/4 cup minced parlsey

Directions:

  1. Heat 1 tablespoon coconut oil in the bottom of your Instant Pot on the Sauté setting. Add diced onions, celery, carrots and garlic.
  2. Sauté until the onion is transparent, and then add the salt, black pepper, thyme, bay leaves, chicken, rice, white wine, and 4 cups of broth to the pot. Turn pot to “Slow Cooker” setting and cook on high for 8 hours with the vent in the sealed position.
  3. After 8 hours, release any steam and open the pot. Using tongs or a slotted spoon, remove chicken from soup and set in a large bowl. Use two forks to shred chicken. Then, return chicken to pot and stir.
  4. Cook the mushrooms: heat remaining 1 teaspoon coconut oil in a skillet until it glistens. Then, sauté the mushrooms until they are softened through and seared on both sides. Add cooked mushrooms to soup, along with 2 remaining cups of broth and 1 cup of half-and-half. Stir.
  5. Serve hot in bowls, topped with minced parsley.

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White Wine Cream Sauce Chicken & Thyme

White Wine Cream Sauce Chicken & Thyme

In France we saw endless fields of lavender, ornately designed royal gardens, and vending machines stocked by local farmers with the crop of the day. In France, we missed lunch almost every afternoon because in Bourgueil, shops close up after 2 and if you're just strolling into town for a bite to eat, you're fresh out of luck. 

We saw at least one Château a day, traveled almost exclusively by bike, and learned that a map really does you no good when roads have no signs or names. It flooded, and we drank plenty of wine.

White Wine Cream Sauce Chicken & Thyme

In France, we cooked coq au vin in our little apartment, when all of the restaurants were closed. We tried to eat like the French, even when we couldn't figure out their schedule! 

It's almost impossible to tell which parts of this dish are inspired by French cooking and which are just habits learned from my mom. This coq au vin-inspired dish has home cooking written all over it:

  • It starts with shallots: French shallots are French, aren't they?! Despite the fact that my mom virtually always has a shallot or two laying around, cooking with them always just feels a bit fancier to me than cooking with onions

  • After you sauté the shallots, pour on the wine (in this case, white). It sizzles and pops, and in true chef fashion you should probably take a sip or two from the bottle between stirs. Get a French wine if you want to feel extra French

  • Stir in the cream, and watch the sauce go from brothy to rich and creamy. Many a person has added cream to sauce... but is it very French? Maybe, or maybe not. But who cares! It's cream! And it tastes amazing. Just do it.

  • Finish with thyme, fresh and herbaceous. Any even if your thyme wasn't grown in France, you can pretend it was. Top off you glass of wine before you sit down to eat.

White Wine Cream Sauce Chicken & Thyme

White Wine Cream Sauce Chicken & Thyme

Published October 12, 2017 by

Serves: 4   |    Total Time: 35 minutes



Ingredients:

  • 1 pound chicken breast 
  • 1 shallot
  • 1 tablespoon coconut oil
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 3/4 cup white wine
  • 1/2 cup heavy whipping cream (for dairy-free, try canned full-fat coconut milk)
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon black pepper
  • 3 springs fresh thyme
  • Optional: 1 cup fresh baby spinach

Directions:

  1. Heat coconut oil in a skillet over medium heat.
  2. When the oil is hot, add the chicken breasts to the pan, and brown on each side until golden (about 5 minutes each side). Move chicken to a plate and set aside.
  3. Dice the shallot, and add to the pan. Sauté until soft. Add the garlic. Sauté for another minute. Pour wine into pan, and scrape bottom of the pan with a wooden spatula to deglaze.
  4. Pour cream into pan, and stir gently until incorporated. Add spinach, and stir in until wilted.
  5. Place chicken back in pan. Bring sauce to a slow simmer (if you turn it too hot, the cream may curdle). Add salt & black pepper, and leaves from 2 springs of thyme. Allow to simmer, covered, for about 20 minutes, or until chicken is cooked through. Garnish with thyme leaves from remaining sprig of thyme, and serve hot.

White Wine Cream Sauce Chicken & Thyme
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Roasted Corn & Chicken Salad with Avocado

Roasted Corn & Chicken Salad with Avocado

In my neck of the woods, the mountains seem to tower over you and the city in a way that makes both feel small. Driving towards them I often wonder what it was like to be a pioneer, venturing across the plains in a covered wagon and then (then!) laying eyes on the towering Rockies ahead. What a mixture of thoughts they must've had: awestruck by the peaks, worried about the journey ahead. And just imagine how many sunsets they watched, day after day moving no more than 15 or 20 miles ahead of where they started. What a life that was. 

You would never know it from my participation in history classes, but one of my favorite things to ponder is what happened "way back when". When I consider why I am so intrigued by history, two things stick out at me.

Roasted Corn & Chicken Salad with Avocado

First, I think of the afternoons my mom and I used to spend hopping from antique store to antique store. How proud I was when I bought my first antique! In proper Caitlin-fashion, it was a kitchen supply: a silver tray with matching silver glasses, meant for serving aperitifs (though in grade school I'm sure I just thought they kid sized glasses). 

But I also get hung up on something, and this is reason number two: I don't know my heritage. On my mom's side, there are guesses but nothing is fact. On my dad's side, everything has been over simplified. I want to know the details! As a teen I spent an absurd amount of time looking up surnames and piecing together random tidbits of information.  What I think I know is that most of my ancestors are Native American--something I quite enjoy thinking about. The original tenders of this very land I stand on now. But of course, this is just what I think I know. 

Roasted Corn & Chicken Salad with Avocado

What doesn't escape my wandering thoughts is the history of food: What did my ancestors eat? (As hunters and gathers, when did they first eat traditional crops, like corn?) What did ancient corn taste like? (Certainly not like the corn used in this dish) Did people like jalapeños when they first tasted them? How did they ever figure out how to ferment cacao pods and create xocoatl

Oh how I could ponder for hours on hours! Have you ever seeked answers like these? Have you taken any DNA test to learn more? Which one? What did you think? I have been debating taking one, just to satisfy my curiosity. 

Roasted Corn & Chicken Salad with Avocado

Roasted Corn & Chicken Salad with Avocado

Published July 6, 2017 by
   |     Print This Recipe

Serves: 4   |    Total Time: 30 minutes



Ingredients:

  • 1 tablespoon coconut oil
  • 1/2 pound chicken, diced to bite-sized pieces
  • 1 summer squash, diced
  • 1/2 of a medium yellow onion, diced
  • 2 cloves or garlic, minced
  • 3 cobs of corn, with the kernels sliced off and the cobs discarded
  • 1 red bell pepper, diced
  • Dash salt & pepper
  • Dash cumin 
  • Dash paprika 
  • 1/4 cup cilantro, minced 
  • 1 avocado, diced
  • 2 cups baby arugula (or chopped kale, or both) 
  • 1 jalapeño, sliced
  • 1/4 cup queso fresco or feta, crumbled

Directions:

  1. Heat coconut oil over medium heat until the oil glistens. Add the chicken, searing on one side. When the chicken pieces are browned on the bottom, flip and cook them on the other side until browned. Use a slotted spoon to move the chicken to a plate and set aside.
  2. Add diced summer squash, onion, minced garlic, corn, and red bell pepper to the pan. Sauté until the summer squash is cooked through, stirring occasionally. Add the chicken back to the pan, and stir to combine. Stir in the salt, pepper, cumin, paprika, and cilantro.
  3. To serve: lay the arugula on a serving dish in an even layer. Top with the chicken corn mixture. Then, arrange diced avocado and sliced jalapeño on top. Sprinkle with cheese and serve.

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