In the subclass of high-mass X-ray binaries known as “microquasars,” relativistic hadrons in the jets launched by the compact object can interact with cold protons from the star's radiatively driven wind, producing pions that then quickly decay into gamma rays. Since the resulting gamma-ray emissivity depends on the target density, the detection of rapid variability in microquasars with GLAST and the new generation of Cherenkov imaging arrays could be used to probe the clumped structure of the stellar wind. This paper summarizes recent analyses of how the “porosity length” of the stellar wind structure can set the level of fluctuation in gamma rays.