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St. Marie's Wild Chicken Soup
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Cooking Time
60 minutes
Serving Size
10 cups
Kettle Size
4 quarts
Ingredients
White rice, wild rice, dehydrated celery and carrots,
herbs and spices, chicken base.
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Great Ideas for Dressing up your St. Marie's Wild Chicken
Soup
| Add |
Your favorite vegetables
Try zucchini or summer squash |
| Serve with |
Dumplings |
| Vegetarian |
Remove yellow chicken base
packet and use vegetable broth |
Tid Bits of Wild Rice History
Centuries ago, wild rice grew naturally in the soft, muddy
bottoms of shallow lakes and rivers of Minnesota, Ontario
and southern Manatoba. Sioux and Chippewa Indians depended
on wild rice, or "Manomin" meaning good berry, to
meet their vegetative dietary needs. Manomin's value lay in
the high protein content and indefinite storage capabilities.
Often these qualities made the difference between life and
death during the harsh winter months. During the fall, tribes
would set up camps along the lakes and rivers in anticipation
of the harvest. Many wars among the Indian tribes ensued over
the wild rice stands.
The responsibility of harvesting wild rice fell upon the
Indian women. Explorers reported observing the women moving
through the water in birch-bark canoes while grasping wild
rice stalks. Afterwards, the wild rice would be cured. By
curing the wild rice, the Indians would be able to store the
grain without the threat of it spoiling.
Three methods could be employed to cure wild rice. First,
wild rice could be spread out on blankets or mats in the sun.
Second, wild rice could be spread out on racks under a fire,
which served as the source of curing heat. Last, wild rice
could be poured into a large kettle, placed over a slow fire,
and stirred constantly. Once the curing process was completed,
the men would thresh the tough hulls. On average, one family
produced five bushels of wild rice, each weighing 300 pounds.
In the 1600s, French fur traders and voyagers began commercializing
wild rice, the seed of an annual aquatic grass. During the
early 1900s, wild rice started drawing the attention of white
settlers and businessmen. In the 1920s, the first large scale
processing and packaging factory was developed in Minnesota.
In the 1940s, the annual production of wild rice stood at
200,000 pounds. By 1973, the annual production rose to 1,500,000
pounds.
Minnesota boasts more acres of naturally occurring wild rice
than any other state in the U. S. Wild rice grows in forty-five
of the eighty four counties and is spread through all sections
of the state.
St. Marie’s Wild Rice grows in the lush fields of Northern
Idaho. At the turn of the 20th century, bird hunters brought
the grain from Minnesotato the Pacific Northwest in hopes
of increasing the bird population of the area. They believed
the rice would turn prosper in the deltas of this area, and
in turn nourish the local wild life.
When cooked, wild rice weighs four times more than when it
is dry.

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