Showing posts with label Panera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Panera. Show all posts

Monday, November 6, 2017

Creamy Chicken and Wild Rice Soup

First of all, we have a cover reveal!



This is the cover for my next Love Inspired Historical, coming out in March 2018. This story is one that practically wrote itself. I loosely based the hero 's character on my grandfather. Since he passed away before I was born, I never met him. But I knew his story, and I've read some of the diaries he kept as a young man. I love this story, and I hope you do, too! It's available for pre-order from Amazon. Just click here. :)

Now, on to the recipe. Today I'm sharing a copycat recipe.

What's a copycat recipe? That's where a talented person takes your favorite dish from your favorite restaurant and re-creates it for the home cook. Most of these recipes are close to the restaurant original. Not quite the same, but they do help satisfy cravings!

Several years ago, I shared a copycat recipe from Olive Garden...I still love this soup! You can find the recipe here.

Today, I'm sharing a copycat from another one of my favorite restaurants - Panera.

When we first moved here, the closest Panera was a 5 1/2 hour drive away. :(  But now there's one less than 10 minutes from my house! It doesn't get much better than that. :)

Except that going out for lunch every day is a bit spendy, both in time and in cash, so I like having this soup waiting for me in the freezer.

I make this soup in my Instant Pot, but I'm including "top of the stove" directions, too!


Creamy Chicken and Wild Rice Soup

ingredients:

1/2 cup finely diced carrots
1/2 cup finely diced celery
1/4 cup finely diced onion
1 Tablespoon oil or butter - I use coconut oil, but you can use your favorite
1 1/2 teaspoons garlic powder
32 ounces broth - chicken or vegetable
2 cups water
2 cups milk - divided
1/2 teaspoon pepper
1/2 teaspoon dried organo
1 bay leaf
2 cups cooked, diced chicken
1/3 cup flour
1 box (approx. 6 ounces) Uncle Ben's Long Grain and Wild Rice, original 
salt and pepper to taste


On the Stove:

In a six-quart Dutch oven or 6-8 quart stock pot, saute the onions, carrots, celery in the oil or butter over medium heat for about 10 minutes, or until the onion is translucent.

Add the garlic, broth, water and 1 cup of milk and stir.

Add the pepper, oregano, bay leaf, and chicken.

Simmer over medium heat for 15 minutes.

Whisk together the remaining 1 cup milk and the 1/3 cup flour. Add to the soup and stir until combined.

Add the long grain and wild rice, with the seasoning packet, to the soup and let simmer until the rice is tender, about 20 minutes.

Add salt and pepper to taste.



In the Instant Pot:

If you don't have cooked diced chicken, you can use your Instant Pot to cook it quickly. Place 1 or 2 (depending on size) frozen boneless, skinless chicken breasts in the Instant Pot with one cup of the broth. Cook on high pressure for 20 minutes, and use the natural pressure release (15 to 20 minutes more). Remove the chicken and reserve the broth in a separate bowl.

Put the tablespoon of oil in the Instant Pot and use the saute setting to cook the onions, carrots and celery until the onion is translucent.

Add the garlic, broth, water, and 1 cup milk and mix.

Add the pepper, dried oregano, bay leaf, and diced chicken. Seal the Instant Pot and pressure cook on low for 5 minutes. Let the pressure release naturally (5-10 minutes). Once the pressure is released, change the setting to slow cook until 20-30 minutes before serving.

Before serving, whisk the 1/3 cup flour into the second cup of milk and add to the soup. Add the long grain and wild rice with the seasoning packet, and stir. Cook on low saute for 20 minutes . Add salt and pepper to taste.


If you've been reading carefully, you'll notice that in this recipe the Instant Pot requires more steps and can take longer to cook. So what is the advantage? For me, it's the ability to switch from saute, to pressure cook, to slow cook, and back to saute. This means that I can start the soup when I have time (in the morning, during lunch, or during my afternoon break), and then finish it up just before supper.

And when I'm on a deadline, that versatility is golden!!!


Speaking of deadlines, my current one is in nine days. I won't even tell you how many words I have left to go! But I am on target, and should finish in time.

But writing is hard work, and I'm sure the other authors here at the Cafe will agree with me! After a long day at the computer, my little gray cells are begging for relief.

For me, the best cure for my overworked brain is counted cross stitch. After a day of taxing my creativity, counted cross stitch allows me to use someone else's ideas, someone else's design. I don't have to think. I just follow directions.


This is one of my current projects. An hour spent lost in these colors refreshes and recharges my creativity like nothing else!

And what will this beautiful piece look like when if it gets done?

To learn more about this design, go to A Stitching Shelf

I have finished three pages out of the 184 pages in this design. If you look carefully, you can see the three pages I've done in the top left-hand corner. Call me crazy. My husband says I'll never finish it, and he might be right. At my stitching pace it takes me about two months to do one page. Do the math. I won't finish this until I'm ninety years old.

So why do I do this???

It's the process. Tiny stitches, one at a time, add up to make a beautiful design and recharges my creative energy for another day of writing.

And I do have hope that my stitching speed will increase. A lot of people can finish a page in a week or two!

To get a glimpse of why this style of counted cross stitch has become such an addiction for me, visit the Heaven and Earth Designs website, http://heavenandearthdesigns.com/ But beware. You just might find a design you can't live without!

What is your favorite way to recharge your creative energy?





Jan Drexler lives in the Black Hills of South Dakota with her husband and growing family. When she isn't writing, she loves hiking in the Hills or satisfying her cross stitch addiction.

You can find Jan on Facebook, Jan Drexler, author, or her website, Jan Drexler.com.