Chicken and Mushroom Clay Pot Rice is a picture-perfect Chinese comfort food dish. It has an incredible earthy flavor, courtesy of the classic combination of Chinese black mushrooms, wood ear mushrooms and lily flower. It also has the silkiest chicken you ever tasted.
Note: This recipe was originally published in September 2014. We have since re-tested and re-photographed it, and republished it with clearer instructions, metric measurements, and more!
Remembering My Mother’s Clay Pot Meals
I just had a hankering for a warming clay pot meal, and decided to adapt one of my mother’s best.
My mom used to prepare this dish all the time in the steamer (without the rice) and served it family-style. In Cantonese, it’s called “waat gai” (滑鸡). The only literal translation I could muster up is “slippery chicken.”
(If you’d like to just make the chicken dish without the rice, check out our steamed chicken and mushrooms recipe.)
Basically, by steaming the chicken, it ends up with a great silky texture and flavor. Our family always looked forward to dinner when we smelled it in the air, and as kids, we just loved to drown our rice in the soupy deliciousness at the bottom of the plate.
So as you can imagine…the minute I tasted this, it transported me back to childhood:
Well it wasn’t quite that dramatic, but you get the point.
Key Ingredients
Now, a word about the dried shiitake mushrooms, wood ears, and dried lily flowers.
These ingredients are readily available in the dry goods section of your local Chinese grocery store, and you can compare them with the picture provided below (clockwise from top left: dried shiitake mushrooms, lily flowers, and wood ear mushrooms).
They will have to soak before use. Once re-constituted, there are a few additional steps for each.
Lily flowers can have tough ends that you must trim away. Wood ears come in varying sizes and quality levels. Some may need to be rinsed to remove dirt and grit, and some may need to be cut into smaller pieces.
The shiitake mushrooms take the longest to reconstitute. After soaking, remove any tough stems. They can also have quite a bit of dirt and grit, so rinse them as necessary before using.
Passing On This Recipe To the Next Generation
I’m doing my duty in passing this family recipe from my mother to the next generation by documenting it here.
So get your clay pot out now, hightail it to the local Asian store to get one, or have Amazon deliver a clay pot to your doorstep! (This is an affiliate link, so any purchase will help support TWOL!)
If you don’t have a clay pot, you can either use a small 2-qt Dutch oven, or simply make the steamed chicken and mushrooms separately, and serve it with steamed rice on the side!
You can also try out our Hong Kong Style Clay Pot recipe or Sarah’s recent Chicken & Soft Tofu Casserole.
Ok, here’s how to make this chicken and mushroom clay pot rice!
Chicken & Mushroom Clay Pot Rice: Recipe Instructions
OK, on to the dish:
Add the dried mushrooms, dried lily flowers, and dried wood ears to 3 separate bowls. (To measure the wood ears, fill a quarter cup measure halfway or measure by weight using the metric toggle below the ingredients list in the recipe card.) Cover with boiling water, and soak for 2 hours, or until rehydrated.
Squeeze excess water out of the soaked shiitake mushrooms, trim away any tough stems, and cut them in half. Trim the tough ends off the soaked lily flowers, and cut them in half crosswise. Rinse the wood ears well of any dirt or grit, and trim away any tough parts. If they’re very large (larger than say, a half dollar coin or 3cm across), cut in half.
Add the rehydrated mushrooms, lily flowers, and wood ears to a medium mixing bowl.
Add the chicken, cornstarch, light soy sauce, oyster sauce, dark soy sauce, Shaoxing wine, sugar, sesame oil, salt, and white pepper.
Toss all the ingredients to combine, and set aside to marinate for at least 30 minutes (can do this up to 1 day in advance).
Add the rice to the clay pot, and cover with 2 inches of water. Soak for 25 minutes.
Then pour off all the water (as best you can; leaving a little bit behind isn’t a big deal), and then add the 1 cup chicken stock (or water), salt, and oil. Mix well.
Even out the layer of rice. Stir the chicken and mushroom mixture until the chicken has absorbed all of the liquid in the marinade, and distribute the mixture evenly on top of the rice.
Sprinkle the julienned ginger and the white parts of the chopped scallion over the top, and cover the pot.
Place over medium-high heat for about 3 minutes, until the liquid in the pot is simmering. Then turn down the heat to the lowest setting. Cook for about 25 minutes, until the chicken and the rice are cooked through.
Garnish with the green parts of the scallions and serve!
The first time I tried this chicken mushroom clay pot rice recipe, I was worried if it would be worthy of my memories.
It was!
Chicken and Mushroom Clay Pot Rice
Ingredients
For the chicken and mushroom mixture:
- 6 dried shiitake mushrooms (small to medium size)
- 1/3 cup dried lily flowers
- 1/8 cup dried wood ear mushrooms
- 8 ounces boneless skinless chicken thighs (or 6 chicken drumettes and wingettes/flats)
- 1 tablespoon cornstarch
- 1 tablespoon light soy sauce
- 2 teaspoons oyster sauce
- 1 teaspoon dark soy sauce
- 1 teaspoon Shaoxing wine
- 1/2 teaspoon sugar
- 1/2 teaspoon sesame oil
- 1/4 teaspoon salt (or to taste)
- 1/8 teaspoon white pepper
For the rice:
- 1 cup jasmine rice
- 1 cup low sodium chicken stock (or water)
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1 tablespoon oil
- 1 slice ginger (finely julienned)
- 1 scallion (finely chopped; green parts and white parts separated)
Instructions
- Add the dried mushrooms, dried lily flowers, and dried wood ears to 3 separate bowls. (To measure the wood ears, fill a quarter cup measure halfway or measure by weight using the metric toggle below the ingredients list in the recipe card.) Cover with boiling water, and soak for 2 hours, or until rehydrated.
- Squeeze excess water out of the soaked shiitake mushrooms, trim away any tough stems, and cut them in half. Trim the tough ends off the soaked lily flowers, and cut them in half crosswise. Rinse the wood ears well of any dirt or grit, and trim away any tough parts. If they’re very large (larger than say, a half dollar coin or 3cm across), cut in half.
- Add the rehydrated mushrooms, lily flowers, and wood ears to a medium mixing bowl, along with the chicken, cornstarch, light soy sauce, oyster sauce, dark soy sauce, Shaoxing wine, sugar, sesame oil, salt, and white pepper. Toss all the ingredients to combine, and set aside to marinate for at least 30 minutes (can do this up to 1 day in advance).
- Add the rice to the clay pot, and cover with 2 inches of water. Soak for 25 minutes, then pour off all the water (as best you can; leaving a little bit behind isn’t a big deal), and then add the 1 cup chicken stock (or water), salt, and oil. Mix well.
- Even out the layer of rice. Stir the chicken and mushroom mixture until the chicken has absorbed all of the liquid in the marinade, and distribute the mixture evenly on top of the rice.
- Sprinkle the julienned ginger and the white parts of the chopped scallion over the top, and cover the pot. Place over medium-high heat for about 3 minutes, until the liquid in the pot is simmering. Then turn down the heat to the lowest setting. Cook for about 25 minutes (or 30 minutes for bone-in chicken), until the chicken and the rice are cooked through. Garnish with the green parts of the scallions and serve!
I don’t own a clay pot. Despite the fact that I will loose the bubbling at the table experience is their any reason I can’t make this in my Wok?
A wok may get too hot and cause the rice to burn—I would try a cast iron pan or small Dutch oven!
Hi I have been wanting to purchase a clay pot and wanted your advise on doing the same, I read that some glazes contain lead or toxins… I have found many good looking ones on Aliexpress… What is your advice for finding a good one, glazed, unglazed, clay or ceramic etc. Please let me know
Hi Neil, not sure about the lead or toxins in glazes; our clay pots are family items, so we’re unsure of where they came from or what exactly they’re made of. I will say that they are unglazed on the outside and glazed on the inside, and look like clay, rather than some other type of ceramic.
This dish claypot rice is good to eat. Try it.
Thanks Angeline!
I love this recipe, have used it so many times. So Great to be able to make one of my fave dished at home. Thank you so much
You’re welcome, Nicola! So happy to hear that!
Hi it says 2 cups of low sodium chicken stock or water in your ingredient list but in your instructions it says 1 cup. Do I add the 2 cups or 1 cup to the rice? Thanks
It actually says 1 cup stock in our recipe—you may have used the sliding scale feature in the recipe card to scale up the recipe to double? (If you hover over the serving # in the recipe card, you’ll see what I mean.) Perhaps that’s what’s leading to the confusion.
Just made this tonight and my caucasian husband and son-in-law raved over it. My plant-based daughter even ate some chicken and lap cheong (I added lap cheong because I was craving it.) My three grandchildren gave it three thumbs up. This is a great recipe and brought me such great memories of true comfort food. Thank you!
You’re welcome, Josephine! So happy to hear it was a hit!
Can I use a stainless steel pot instead of a clay pot for this? I have an electric coil stovetop and I read that you shouldn’t use clay pot on electric stove tops. Thanks!
The rice may stick to a stainless steel pot, James. I cast iron pan or dutch oven with a tight fitting lid would work better.
Ooh I have a cast iron dutch oven so I will just use that! Thanks a lot for your reply :)
Of course, James!
This is one of my mother’s favorite dishes so I want to learn to cook it for her. If we increase the number of servings to 4 or 6, does the cooking time change on the stove? My clay pot is not large enough so I might have to use a cast iron Dutch oven. Any thought about whether this would work in the oven? I’ve seen recipes for say Latin or Persian rice dishes done in the oven. Thanks!
The cooking time may change, depending on the thickness of the layer of rice. I have never tried this in an oven, but I’m not sure that would work. A Dutch oven would work.
really good, and even better when I remembered the sesame oil!
Thank you Rosemary!
A simple to prep dish. Very tasty and versatile dish. I used pork leg as we were tired of chicken. I baked this in an old clay baker at 350 for about an hour. Rice was perfect as were the various mushrooms, meat, etc. A dutch oven could be used as well.
I have way too many pots and pans to justify space for the clay pot you used, but if you keep posting recipes using that pot, maybe……….
Thank you, Linda! Sounds like the pot you used as totally fine! No need to buy a new clay pot if what you already have worked!