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Cream of Wild Mushroom Soup

Cream of Wild Mushroom Soup

Last spring I discovered with delight wild morel mushrooms popping up in our backyard. After two winters of biking the American River bike trail looking for edible mushrooms, having been bit by the wild porcini bug on forays in Northern California, here they were, growing right in the yard! I consulted my trusty Mushrooms Demystified handbook, sent photos to my mycological society friend Beth, and was assured that these indeed were morels, which are not only safe to eat, but are considered a delicacy.

Tonight we finally got around to eating those morels picked last spring, in this exquisite cream of mushroom soup. Many thanks to local chef Evie Lieb for this wonderful recipe.

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Cream of Wild Mushroom Soup Recipe

Ingredients

½ cup dried porcini (1 oz.)
½ cup dried morels (2 oz.)
3 cups hot water
½ lb fresh mushrooms of choice
3 cloves garlic, finely chopped (1 heaping Tbsp)
1/3 cup finely chopped shallots
5 Tbsp butter
8 Tbsp flour
Salt and Pepper
4 cups good quality chicken stock (or vegetable broth for vegetarian version)
½ -1 cup heavy cream
splash of Madeira
¼ cup finely chopped parsley
¼ cup snipped chive

Method

1 Soak dried porcini and morels separately in 1 ½ cups hot water each for 30 min. Line strainer with paper towel and drain porcini liquid, reserving 1 cup. Drain morels, cut off stems and rinse well under running water. Discard morel liquid. Wipe fresh mushrooms, cut off ends and slice thinly. Set aside.

2 Heat butter in heavy saucepan and sauté shallots with garlic until well coated and slightly transparent (about 3 min.). Add fresh mushrooms and cook a few minutes more. Add dried mushrooms, place a round of buttered parchment paper over pan, cover and sweat over low heat for 10 min.

3 Uncover. Add flour to mushrooms, blending well. If mushrooms seem too dry after a minute or so, add a small mount of butter. Add stock and reserved cup of porcini liquid. Bring to a boil, lower heat, cover and simmer for 20 min. Season with salt and pepper.

4 Add cream to taste, Madeira, chopped parsley and chives just before serving.

Chef's note: Mushroom soup may be prepared ahead. For best appearance, be sure to add cream and garnish just before serving.

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17 Comments

Wow. That sounds sooooo good. I think you are brave to pick and eat your own morrels, but it sounds like you took all the necessary precautions, and then some. Alton Brown had a funny episode on mushrooms, which featured Death looming over the shoulder whenever he spoke of picking wild mushrooms. :)

Posted by: Andrea on November 1, 2005 8:08 AM

Emmm... Interesting... I'try to cook it =)

Posted by: John Beale on November 1, 2005 9:58 AM

Yum, that soup looks gorgeous!!!! I love mushrooms in anything and everything but especially in soup. So this is one I'll definitely try - except for the picking myself part.

Thanks for sharing and be careful when picking mushrooms.

Posted by: Ruth on November 2, 2005 5:31 AM

Lucky you to find wild morels. The soup sounds just wonderful.

Posted by: Kalyn on November 2, 2005 6:01 AM

I'm such a mushroom fan and I'm so impressed that you identified these and such. I'm always afraid with wild mushrooms; too easy to make a mistake. Your soup looks delicious, though.

Posted by: Lady Amalthea on November 2, 2005 10:18 AM

Ahhh...MORELS...The Best mushroom, Anymone can learn to identify these delicious treats. I recommend taking a mushroom hunter into the woods with you the first few times, after that it should be no problem. Furthermore, I won the NATIONAL MOREL HUNTING CHAMPIONSHIP held in Boyne City,MI. In 1999 I was crowned the National Morel Hunting Champion. Anyone can learn to HUNT these treats! I said "hunting" because you don't just wander into the woods and find them. Although, I've found them in the most unsual places.

Posted by: Charles Richmond on November 22, 2005 12:51 PM

This has a wonderful flavor. Couldn't find morels for the life of me, so I substituted fresh baby bellas. Not quite the same flavor, but still darn good. We did find that 20 minutes wasn't enough time to reduce the liquid before adding the cream. Next time I'll either add less chicken stock or increase the simmer time, or perhaps both. Thanks! This one will become a regular on our family menu.

Posted by: Andrea on December 4, 2005 12:27 PM

I have had this recipe since 1995 and I have made it many times. It's my favorite soup for mushrooms.

Bobbie

Posted by: Bobbie on February 1, 2006 11:58 AM

I want to make this recipe for a thanksgiving party that I'm going to for American students studying abroad. How many servings do you think this will yield? Thanks!

Posted by: Douglas on November 21, 2006 6:21 AM

You can alternatively soak the porcini in the chicken broth directly and strain it later. The broth will have a mushroom flavor, so spend less time simmering it down in the end.

Posted by: David on March 10, 2007 11:33 PM

Personally, I liked this recipe much more than similar ones using chicken broth.

Posted by: Joyti on October 31, 2007 1:52 PM

Does anyone know how many servings this recipe yields? Urgently need to know for a dinner party for 8 tomorrow night! :D Many thanks in advance---

Posted by: Victoria on December 19, 2007 11:02 PM

Hi Victoria, there are only 6 cups of liquid by the time the soup is done, so I would say, serves 4.

Posted by: Elise on December 19, 2007 11:07 PM

Elise, thank you so much! I went ahead and made this recipe and doubled the ingredients and made a LOVELY soup for 8. I am in my late 20's just starting out in the wonderful world of cooking, and your website is the best best best recipe site ever. So comforting and REAL, not commercial like a lot of the big sites! This is what it's all about, cooking with and for family and loved ones. So, hats off to you. The soup was a SUCCESS and I substituted yellow boletus and chanterelles for morels. It came out SO lovely. Thank you thank you thank you. You have won my heart. I can't wait to try out ALL the recipes on your site. Happy holidays to you and your family. :)

Posted by: Victoria on December 23, 2007 10:21 AM

This is an awesome soup! I love mushroom soup & this one met all my expectations. Served it with a crusty bread, that's all we needed for dinner. It will be included with my other favorites in recipe box.
Looking forward to checking out others on this website.

Posted by: Denise on December 27, 2007 4:55 PM

How detrimental would it be to the recipe if I used all dried porcini mushrooms? I will also add fresh oyster mushrooms and regular white mushrooms, but I only found dried porcini in the store.

I'm sure it will be delicious. ~Elise

Posted by: Anna on February 16, 2009 11:06 AM

You were right, it was delicious!!! I love this soup. It is so deep rich and flavorful. However I must ask, how do you get the color to be orange? mine was still creamy white...

It's the lighting. The table and incandescent bulb cast a warm hue over everything. ~Elise

Posted by: anna G on February 16, 2009 9:32 PM

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