Eat Your Medicine. an herbalist’s kitchen

Mushroom Congee

This is a pretty loose interpretation of congee, a brothy rice preparation spanning cultures & continents. It’s always revered as a convalescent food to be relied upon during acute ailments & leaned on in times of perceived immune threat—like cold season & the changes of all seasons. It is warming, grounding & easy on the digestion. It’s often eaten in the morning & will often feature sweet & warming fruits & cinnamon. This recipe is savory. We can eat it in the morning, but it would fit more typically in the lunch or dinner categories.

That essential broth part of congee is where herbal medicine can really shine! And here, I incorporate the usual suspects of ginger, garlic & pepper…but I got to include juniper berries, fresh turmeric, burdock & dandelion roots as well.

The Broth (cont’d)

1 tbsp crushed juniper berries

2 tbsp burdock root (chunks)

2 tbsp dandelion root (chunks)

2 tbsp crushed juniper berries

These all go in a tea ball or teabag to be removed from the broth.

Total Time for 45 mins

* Soak Rice over night

*Suntan Mushrooms 30 mins to 3 hrs

The Mushrooms

6-8 oz oyster

6-8 oz shitake

6-8 oz portobello

1 tbsp miso paste

1/4 cup peanut sauce

2 tsp tamari sauce

2 tbsp corn starch

Toppings

Cilantro

Jalapeno

pumpkin seeds

pistachios

toasted black sesame seeds

The Broth

8 cups water

1 cup jasmine rice

2 large fingers of ginger

2 fingers of fresh turmeric

2 garlic cloves (minced)

1/2 onion (sliced & diced)

1 serrano pepper (sliced & diced small)

1/2 jalapeño pepper (sliced & diced small)

People-First Approach

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Reliability You Can Count On

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A Focus on Quality

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People-First Approach · Reliability You Can Count On · A Focus on Quality ·