Wild Rice and Berries With Popped Rice

- Total Time
- About 1 hour
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1¼cups long-grain wild rice (about 8 ounces), rinsed (see Note)
- ½cup mixed dried berries (any combination of cranberries, blueberries or sour cherries)
- 3tablespoons maple syrup
- ¼cup whole hazelnuts, crushed
- 2tablespoons hazelnut oil
- Fine sea salt
- Whole chive stems (or scallions, thinly sliced on the diagonal), for garnish
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat the oven to 350 degrees.
- Step 2
In a large saucepan, bring 5 cups water to a boil over high. Stir in 1 cup wild rice along with the dried berries and maple syrup. Once the mixture comes back to a boil, reduce the heat so the liquid is just simmering, cover and cook until the grains begin to open, 20 to 40 minutes, checking doneness after about 20 minutes. (The rice is done when it has opened slightly, is tender and has quadrupled in size.)
- Step 3
Drain the excess liquid from the rice. (The cloudy cooking liquid tastes sweet and nutty and can be sipped on its own, reserved for use in the roast turkey with berry-mint sauce and black walnuts, or used as a stock substitute.)
- Step 4
Meanwhile, toast the hazelnuts: Heat the oven to 350 degrees. Arrange the hazelnuts in a single layer on a baking sheet and toast them until the skin blisters and cracks, and they begin to smell nutty, 10 to 12 minutes. Transfer the nuts to a clean dish towel and massage them aggressively to remove most of the skins. Crush the nuts directly in the towel using the flat side of a knife or the bottom of a small, heavy frying pan.
- Step 5
Add the remaining ¼ cup rice to a dry medium skillet and cook the rice over high heat, shaking the pan, until it begins to darken and about half of the kernels have popped, 2 to 3 minutes. Remove from the heat.
- Step 6
Drizzle the boiled rice with the hazelnut oil and season to taste with salt. Divide among bowls and garnish with the popped rice, hazelnuts and chives.
- Hand-harvested wild rice that has been gathered by tribal members according to traditional methods is available for order online from Native Harvest.
Private Notes
Comments
It’s a bit more labor intensive than I’m used to for wild rice, but worth every step. I used half dried cranberries/cherries and added some flat leaf parsley in lieu of chives. It’s sweet, savory, nutty, crunchy and so delicious. My husband said it was the best wild rice he’s ever eaten, I agree. I will absolutely make this again and add to my thanksgiving menu.
This seems similar to some Persian rice dishes, which often use dried barberries. I tried it with salmon, simply steamed in a bag with herbs and lemon. The last of my slender French beans from the garden were nice with it.
I made this is dish for a special event and it was so great! The hazelnut oil gave it depth, and the chives added a savory dimension. I had issue popping the wild rice. But I really loved it! I want to see more Sam Sherman recipes, and especially recipes from first nations in the Midwest!
This was very good. I made it for Thanksgiving & used pine nuts instead of hazelnuts because that was easier & I had them on hand, they worked well. We didn't think the hazelnut oil added anything, maybe mine was just not very flavorful.
I confess I used Lundberg, because I didn't get the idea for my menu until today (Indigenous People's Day) and had to go with what was available. It came out great except for the popped rice, of which I couldn't get more than a couple of grains to pop. Maybe the Native Harvest rice will work better and I'll order some anyway. Any other tips for popping the rice?
A bit of salt sprinkled on top of a serving gave a better flavor balance. Other than that, loved the dish! Yes, ordered from Native Harvest. It's a different strain of wild rice instead of the normally sold commercial kind, and the flavor is fantastic.
