Play music from laptop over WiFi to existing audio system: how?


I want to play music from my laptop to my existing stereo system over WiFi instead of a USB cable. I find plenty of systems designed to stream music from the Internet but I'm not interested in that. I want to play the music from my laptop. I also find plenty of USB DAC's but I don't want to have a USB cable. I also don't favor Bluetooth because WiFi offers my bandwidth and options.
I looked at the Yamaha MusicCast WXC-50 and while I see that it can access files over the network using NFS (my preferred network file share protocol), it appears that in this case the laptop act as be a passive storage device. I am hoping instead to use the music player on my laptop to send music to my DAC/preamp as if it were connected by USB cable. But, of course, I want to do this wirelessly.
Is there a solution similar to what I am looking for?
lowoverdrive
Here's something else I just learned about:
https://hifiberry.us/Those are not much more expensive than a Chromecast Audio and much more flexible. I'm not a big Google fan.
It's amazing to see the price range of the various solutions. From almost nothing to over $2000. The HiFiBerry and the Auralic Mini both interest me.
But I would imagine the audio quality of wifi connection would be inferior to that of USB simply because of the unstable nature of wireless connection.  
Interesting Auralic Mini review here:
https://darko.audio/2016/02/audiophile-grade-streaming-with-the-auralic-aries-mini/

If I was an Apple person, I think the Auralic Mini and the upgraded power supply would be a great choice. But not being able to (not wanting to) use one of its best features, the Lightning DS software, deters me from the Mini just a bit.

Also, am I right that that listing is a bit overpriced? The new price for the Mini is $549 with a 1 year Tidal subscription ($240 value). Without Tidal, the Mini is $399 (outside US). The power supply is $299 (I think). Without Tidal, it seems $550 is a bit high for a used one. Or am I wrong?

One interesting thing is that this shows the hardware I want can be built and it is in the price range I had in mind. Surely some other companies must build hardware like this too, and I'd like to find some of those offerings.
Specifically, a WiFi enabled device that connects via USB to an external DAC.

From another review of the Mini:
Here’s the big question: does it sound better than my DIY Raspberry PI streamers? Hmm, I’d say they are about the same with the PI being a whole lot cheaper. But if you want a ready-made solution, nothing beats the Aries with its great software ...
https://www.musicservertips.com/product-reviews/auralic-aries-mini/

So that gives me yet more reason to think about the HiFiBerry or even something a couple steps up from that. All these Pi solutions will let me run Linux, which is what I like.
If the HiFiBerry sounds about as good as the Auralic Mini like the reviewer says, then it is by far my preferred choice over a Chromecast Audio too.
Interesting thread. Thank you all for the ideas.


But I would imagine the audio quality of wifi connection would be inferior to that of USB simply because of the unstable nature of wireless connection. 

I cannot hear any difference. My WiFi handles up to about 1 Gbps. CD quality PCM audio over TCP/IP requires only 1.4 Mbps I think. I know it's not just bandwidth, but jitter that matters too.

I am using my PulseAudio "free" solution right now and it streams PCM audio over the network. It sounds the same as the USB cable to me. My speakers are Magneplanar 1.7i. My DAC is Onkyo P-3000R. WiFi playback has been flawless all day since I got this working.
It is wild that one can do this correctly and cost effectively so many ways using the right software on the right general purpose computing devices or buy expensive dedicated devices designed just for streaming that can cost so much more. I’ve found just use the right DAC that sounds good to you and good quality streaming software and you are in business with very high sound quality these days. Son much easier and cheaper than getting a good quality phono setup and keeping it that way. All my records and tape go straight to my music server when played these days and then they then get the nice retirement that they well deserve.