Mushrooms from the garden

   / Mushrooms from the garden #1  

CalG

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We have had quite a spell of rain, and what do you suppose, but mushrooms have sprung up in the wood chip mulch that is placed as walkways between the garden beds.
Looked 'em up, and all indications were that the type is "Wine Cap" with the name due to the red wine colored "caps" when they first emerge.

I'm not a mushroom forager, never figured it was worth the effort, so the first of these that popped up I left to grow. Skeptic me.

But as more caps emerged, I read more from both books and on line. Seemed like they were not gonna kill me right away.
So I sauteed some the other night, with onion and garlic. Very earthy! The wife said "No More for me thank you". But I liked them.
Last night I had some in asparagus soup. Great addition!
Tonight we had burgers, and the red caps with onions sauteed in butter was a flavorful topping addition.
So, If you happen across them, do your home work, but enjoy!
A bit "stronger" than the button mushrooms you might find at the grocery. A step up from portobello/portabella, even when first emerged.

I hear they are healthy too.... go figure!
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden #2  
...noli facere...

I delivered morning newspapers as a boy and would read the front page headlines and stories as I folded and tucked the newspapers for delivery.

Headline: Family of 6 Dies From Foraged Poison Mushrooms

55 years later, the story is still fresh in my head when someone talks of eating wild mushrooms...

Good Luck!
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden
  • Thread Starter
#3  
...noli facere...

I delivered morning newspapers as a boy and would read the front page headlines and stories as I folded and tucked the newspapers for delivery.

Headline: Family of 6 Dies From Foraged Poison Mushrooms

55 years later, the story is still fresh in my head when someone talks of eating wild mushrooms...

Good Luck!
As My wife said just tonight, "these are not wild mushrooms, they came from our gardens"! ;-)

And as I responded....

"The coward dies a thousand deaths
The brave do die but once!"

Trust, but verify!

Ahgh! help, gasp....... I..

Can't..... brea....

every.. thing... is ...going..dark//

Tell... the //kids.. I ..love...them....

;-)
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden #4  
Mushroom foraging is very big in parts of Europe…

Every year there is a local story of non English speaker emigrant dying from Death Cap mushrooms here in the SF Bay Area.

Those that survive often need organ transplants.

I’ve also seen non English speakers gather ornamental poison oak for fall color…
 
Last edited:
   / Mushrooms from the garden
  • Thread Starter
#5  
Mushroom foraging is very big in parts of Europe…

Every year their is a local story of non English speaker emigrants dying from Death Cap mushrooms.

Those that survive often need organ transplants.

I’ve also seen non English speakers gather ornamental poison oak for fall color…
Ahh The Wine cap.. or Death cap!

Savor the difference!
\
;-)

Is it the english language which determines the action?
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden #6  
Glad you enjoyed them. ;)

I have a friend that gathered morels for decades. Then he poisoned himself, his wife, and 4 friends with false morels.

They enjoyed their dinner, then all noticed their lips getting numb and nausea. So off to the hospital they went. All recovered quickly.

I have another friend that had a yellow lab. The dog ate mushrooms in the yard and died a horrible, wrenching death within hours.

On that note, anything can kill you.

 
   / Mushrooms from the garden
  • Thread Starter
#7  
Though I plan to have my body cremated, I have directed my epitaph to read..

"Died suddenly, nothing serious!"
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden #8  
I genuinely wish I liked mushrooms. I can cook them well enough to make my wife happy, but I can't stand them myself.
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden #9  
The only mushrooms I ever eat come from the grocery store. I see them all over in our wet climate but I certainly am not going to eat any.
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden
  • Thread Starter
#10  
The only mushrooms I ever eat come from the grocery store. I see them all over in our wet climate but I certainly am not going to eat any.
It's the "all over" that is the danger!

NB

I have "tried" some other "edible" wild mushrooms.
Most of them taste a lot like DIRT.

As mentioned in the OP. Why bother?
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden #11  
It's the "all over" that is the danger!

NB

I have "tried" some other "edible" wild mushrooms.
Most of them taste a lot like DIRT.

As mentioned in the OP. Why bother?
You might try a morel some time. Even store bought dried they are, at least to me, pretty tasty.

All the best, Peter
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden #12  
I have grown shiitake in the past. And would never give up the chance to eat some morels, they are delicious. My neighbor across the street is a big mushroom forager. She eats all kinds of stuff. I have heard two mushroom foraging horror stories so I am very wary.
 
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   / Mushrooms from the garden #13  
NC state had a program where they provided the spores for Shiitake's. I cut 125 5 ft length sweet gum trees. FIL, Wife and I drilled inoculated and sealed em all, stacked into 5 ft 4x4 and rows. Then about 6-8 months later we got the blooms. The next blooms we got as much as 60#'s of mushrooms.

Couldn't hardly give them away. Around here folks think of any mushroom cept store bought as toadstools. We ate a lot, froze a lot and powdered a lot. Added to soups and such they were good.

I had a morel looking one pop up where I had cut down a black walnut last year. Was sooooo tempted to try it. It was about the time several experienced morel hunters got sick and or died. I couldn't bring myself to try it.

BUT if you want to grow your own, Forestry and Field has all the supplies and spore types you would need to get started.
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden #14  
WOW!! Yeah, 125 logs will grow A LOT of Shiitake. You need to get really creative to use that many.
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden #15  
Story about mushrooms
When I first started working at the Army Lab in 1975 there was a young researcher there who had been a refugee from Hungary. Now the lab is at Ft. Belvoir, Va. an ideal climate for mushrooms, and it had about 2 acres of well maintained lawn. He would pick mushrooms in the morning, then cook them for lunch in the lab. This went on until someone pointed out they maintain the lawn with plenty of chemicals.
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden #16  
...noli facere...

I delivered morning newspapers as a boy and would read the front page headlines and stories as I folded and tucked the newspapers for delivery.

Headline: Family of 6 Dies From Foraged Poison Mushrooms

55 years later, the story is still fresh in my head when someone talks of eating wild mushrooms...

Good Luck!
About 10 years ago after retirement my wife and I sitting on our front porch drinking iced tea and she brings out a large salad for us. It was fantastic and had everything...except mushrooms.
We had lots of rain and I saw some in the yard so I got my mushroom book and one the book had pictured said very delicious with almond flavor, so I picked it. It was delicious so I cut it up putting in salad. I tried coaxing wife to try it but she refused.
All was well for about half an hour then I felt weird. Dizzy and disoriented, finally about to collapse. Wife said go outside and force vomit which I did. I had just enough presence of mind to put that same type mushroom in a zip lock bag as she called 911.
We live close to a rescue squad, ambulance was there in minutes. I took sample and a 5 gallon bucket with me because I couldn't stop vomiting.
At the hospital I gave them sample to analyze before I passed out. A nurse came by for me to sign a Do Not Resuscitate form. There was a restroom nearby and wife helped me there, continuous regurgitation.
I asked about the mushroom sample and they said the almond flavor was cyanide and it contained "every poison known to man and then some". Apparently it wasn't my time to go and I credit my wife having me vomit.
Back home I looked at the mushroom book again. In small print it said do NOT confuse this mushroom with the deadly ******!
To this day my wife won't eat a mushroom and used to love them because it reminds her of the day she almost lost her husband.
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden #18  
Yes that was it, went by memory, the mind is a terrible thing to waste. ;)
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden #19  
I have a couple of good mushroom ID books and spend time looking at mushrooms saying "I think this is OK."
I only eat 2 wild species though; chantrelles, and Bear's Paw. i spent several years looking at the former, then asked a friend who has eaten them all of his life.You can hear all sorts of generalizations such as "if it grows on a hardwood log" So I will pass on the one rule I'm sure of; if it comes in a can it's safe to eat." I take that one step further and will only eat 'shrooms from the USA.
 
   / Mushrooms from the garden #20  
Just Morrels here, under our pine trees and not many get picked anyway. SE Michigan is big Morrell country.
 

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