Wildly Different
It’s always nice to experiment with different ingredients and flavors in a dish, and I don’t see wild rice being utilized that often so I wanted to feature it in this soup. It’s firmer than your average white rice and accordingly takes longer to cook. It retains rice’s ability to absorb flavor, but adds it’s own earthy lightly buttery flavor to everything it touches. It’s very chewy and even when fully cooked it’s more akin to the texture of an al dente risotto type of rice than the soft white rice you have become accustomed to.
Mushrooms
Mushrooms are great, and there are plenty of different types you could add in to this recipe that would work! I opted for some typical brown Crimini mushrooms, but Portabello, Shiitake, or even some King Oyster Mushrooms would be right at home in the wild rice soup. Just make sure you take into account how fast your mushrooms could break down as they cook. The Criminis I used can cook for a long time without becoming pure mush, but Enoki mushrooms wouldn’t last the same amount of time. If you do want to use a less firm mushroom you could still do it by tossing it in right at the end.
Soup Consistency
This soup by nature of having all that starchy black rice in it is pretty thick, but you have some control over how thick. If you’re looking for a thinner broth then add more water and vegetable stock to start. Omit the blending of the ingredients near the end and finish the dish as normal. If you’re lactose intolerant you could leave the cheese and milk out as well which would make a thinner consistency. You may want to add a little more salt or perhaps some brewers yeast if you’re going that route though.
Variations
There’s plenty of other ways to tweak the dish to your taste. I added in some turkey I’d cooked earlier for a little extra protein. It’s a pretty starchy soup already, but a little bread to soak it all up goes real well. Also final little mention, but the amount in the recipe I made is quite generous. It filled the entire pot I was cooking it in for awhile until it cooked down some. You could do 2/3rds or 1/2 of the recipe and still have leftovers. I happened to have guests coming over when I made it this way so be warned!