Showing posts with label edible mushrooms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label edible mushrooms. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Edible Mushroom List





Edible Mushroom List

Chanterelles

The yellow or golden chanterelle mushroom (Cantharellus cibarius) is known as the glamorous mushroom, prized for its golden appearance and fruity aroma and flavor. These distinctive characteristics make it seem more like a fruit or flower then a fungus. In the wild, this edible mushroom is easy to identify by its bright golden yellow color. These are in season from June to September, growing in the forest under conifer or oak trees. They are smooth and firm, perfect whole in pasta dishes, stir-fry dishes or served atop steaks sliced thickly.

Morels

Morels, among the most common edible mushrooms in North America, are used often in cooking for their delicate flavor and versatility. These mushrooms are the first fungi to grow after flowers appear in the spring. They flourish in moist soil with a sandy consistency, by streams or under apple, elm and ash trees. These mushrooms can range from steel gray to creamy yellow, with colors such as tan and gold in between. These mushrooms, with a firm texture and large caps, are used in almost any type of cooking.

Black Trumpets

Black trumpets are some of the rarest and most valuable edible mushrooms, especially in French cuisine. The black trumpet is fragrant and aromatic, with a fine, delicate taste and texture. When you smell one, you will think you are sniffing grapes or apricots. These are in season during the summer months and grow rapidly under oak trees but never on wood. And don't let the name fool you: black trumpets can range from pink to gray to chocolate brown in color. These can be expensive, whether you buy them from a farmers market or to top a dish in a restaurant.

Porcini

These edible mushrooms have a different name wherever you go. In France, it is known as the cep. In Italy it is the porcini, and in the United states it is known as the king bolete. This variety is common, with a light, crisp flavor and the ability to stay firm after being cooked, unlike other mushrooms. They are in season from summer to early fall and are most recognizable by their growth of clusters. The color spans from dark red to brown, to creamy white. The top differs from other mushrooms as it is skinny and dome-shaped, with a spongy texture.


Edible Mushrooms.: poisonous-mushrooms-in-northeastern.


Monday, June 25, 2012

Edible Mushrooms Chart

Edible Mushrooms Chart
Edible Mushroom Chart for reference and knowledge, to distinguish from the poisonous mushroooms.


Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Commercially harvested wild edibles Mushrooms








Commercially harvested wild edible Mushrooms


Some edible mushrooms list are as follow :

Hydnum coralloides. Some species are difficult to cultivate, others (particularly mycorrhizal species) have not yet been successfully cultivated. When in season they can be purchased fresh, and many species are sold dried as well. The following species are commonly harvested from the wild:

Boletus edulis or edible Boletus, native to Europe, known in Italian as Fungo Porcino (plural 'porcini') (Pig mushroom), in German as Steinpilz (Stone mushroom), in Russian as "white mushroom", and in French the cep. Cantharellus cibarius (The chanterelle), The yellow chanterelle is one of the best and most easily recognizable mushrooms, and can be found in Asia, Europe, North America and Australia. There are poisonous mushrooms which resemble it, though these can be confidently distinguished if one is familiar with the chanterelle's identifying features.

Clitocybe nuda - Blewit (or Blewitt)

Cortinarius caperatus the Gypsy mushroom (recently moved from genus Rozites)

Craterellus cornucopioides - Trompette du Mort or Horn of Plenty

Grifola frondosa, known in Japan as maitake (also "hen of the woods" or "sheep’s head"); a large, hearty mushroom commonly found on or near stumps and bases of oak trees, and believed to have medicinal properties.

Gyromitra esculenta this "False morel" is prized by the Finns. This mushroom is deadly poisonous if eaten raw, but highly regarded when parbroiled (see below).

Hericium erinaceus, a tooth fungus; also called "lion's mane mushroom."

Hydnum repandum Sweet tooth fungus

Lactarius deliciosus Saffron milk cap - Consumed around the world and prized in Russia

Morchella species, (morel family), morels belong to the ascomycete grouping of fungi. Morchella conica var. deliciosa
Morchella esculenta var. rotunda
Tricholoma matsutake the Matsutake, a mushroom highly prized in Japanese cuisine.

Tuber species, (the truffle), Truffles have long eluded the modern techniques of domestication known as trufficulture. Tuber borchii
Tuber brumale
Tuber indicum - Chinese black truffle
Tuber macrosporum - White truffle
Tuber mesentericum - The Bagnoli truffle
Tuber uncinatum - Black summer truffle
Edible Mushrroms

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Commercially cultivated Mushrooms






COMMERCIALLY CULTIVATED MUSHROOMS

Edible Mushrooms

Home cultivated shiitake developing over approximately 24 hours. Mushroom cultivation has a long history.

Agaricus bisporus, also known as champignon and the button mushroom. This species also includes the portobello and crimini mushrooms.

Agaricus campestris - Meadow mushroom

Auricularia polytricha or Auricularia auricula-judae (Tree ear mushrooms), two closely related species of jelly fungi that are commonly used in Chinese cuisine.

Flammulina velutipes, the "winter mushroom", also known as enokitake in Japan
Hypsizygus tessulatus (also Hypsizygus marmoreus), called shimeji in Japanese, it is a common variety of mushroom available in most markets in Japan. Known as "Beech mushroom" in Europe.

Lentinus edodes, also known as shiitake, oak mushroom. Lentinus edodes is largely produced in Japan, China and South Korea. Lentinus edodes accounts for 10% of world production of cultivated mushrooms. Common in Japan, China, Australia and North America.

Pleurotus species, The oyster mushroom and king trumpet mushroom. Pleurotus mushrooms are the second most important mushrooms in production in the world, 25% of total world production of cultivated mushrooms. Pleurotus mushrooms are world-wide, China is the major producer. Several species can be grown on carbonaceous matter such as straw or newspaper. In the wild they are usually found growing on wood.
  • Pleurotus cornucopiae
  • Pleurotus eryngii
  • Pleurotus ostreatus (Oyster mushroom)
Rhizopus oligosporus - the fungal starter culture used in the production of tempeh. In tempeh the mycelia of R. oligosporus are consumed.

Sparassis crispa
- recent developments have led to this being cultivated in California.
Tremella fuciformis (Snow fungus), another type of jelly fungus that is commonly used in Chinese cuisine.

Tuber species, (the truffle), Truffles belong to the ascomycete grouping of fungi. The truffle fruitbodies develop underground in mycorrhizal association with certain trees e.g. oak, poplar, beech, and hazel. Being difficult to find, trained pigs or dogs are often used to sniff them out for easy harvesting.
  • Tuber aestivum (Summer or St. Jean truffle)
  • Tuber magnatum (Piemont white truffle)
  • Tuber melanosporum (Perigord truffle)
  • T.melanosporum x T.magnatum (Khanaqa truffle)
Terfezia sp. (Desert truffle)

Ustilago maydis
(Corn smut), a fungal pathogen of the maize plants. Also called the Mexican truffle, although not a true truffle.

Volvariella volvacea
(the "Paddy straw mushroom.") Volvariella mushrooms account for 16% of total production of cultivated mushrooms in the world.
Edible Mushrooms
conditionally-edible-mushrooms-species.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Conditionally edible mushrooms species










CONDITIONALLY EDIBLE MUSHROOMS SPECIES


There are a number of edible mushrooms that are considered choice by some and toxic by others. In some cases, proper preparation can remove some or all of the toxins.

Amanita muscaria is edible if parboiled to leach out toxins. Fresh mushrooms are hallucinogenic and may cause seizures or coma due to the presence of ibotenic acid.

Coprinopsis atramentaria
is edible without special preparation. However, consumption with alcohol is toxic due to the presence of coprine. Some other Coprinus spp. share this property.

Gyromitra esculenta is eaten by some after it has been parboiled; however, mycologists do not recommend it. Raw Gyromitra are toxic due to the presence of gyromitrin, and it is not known if all of the toxin can be removed by parboiling.

Lactarius spp. - Apart from Lactarius delicious which is universally considered edible mushrooms, other Lactarius spp. that are considered toxic elsewhere in the world are eaten in Russia after pickling or parboiling.

Verpa bohimica - Considered choice by some, it even can be found for sale as a "morel", but cases of toxicity have been reported. Verpas contain toxins similar to gyromitrin and similar precautions apply.
edible mushrooms:oyster-mushroom-pleurotus-ostreatus

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Oyster Mushroom (Pleurotus ostreatus)










Edible Mushrooms: Oyster Mushroom (Pleurotus ostreatus)


Description: Those hardy souls who take long winter walks are sometimes treated to the sight of a snow-capped mass of fresh oyster mushrooms growing on a tree or log.

This large white, tan or ivory-colored mushroom is named for its oyster shell-like shape. It has white gills running down a very short, off-center stem. Spores are white to lilac, and the flesh is very soft. Oyster mushrooms usually are found in large clusters of overlapping caps and always on wood. Size: 2" to 8" wide.

When and Where: Spring, summer, fall and during warm spells in winter. On trees and fallen logs.

Cautions: This mushroom has a number of look-alikes, (including Crepidotus and Lentinus spp.), but none are dangerous. they may, however, be woody or unpleasant-tasting. Check by tasting a small piece and by making a spore print. Watch out for the small black beetles which sometimes infest this mushroom.

Cooking Hints: Soak in salted water to remove bugs. Dip in beaten egg, roll in cracker crumbs and fry.
Edible Mushrooms.

Monday, August 8, 2011

Edible Mushrooms

EDIBLE MUSHROOMS
All of the edible mushrooms shown here are distinctive in some obvious way. Once you learn
their distinguishing features, you won't confuse them with any dangerously poisonous species.
Along with each illustration is a brief description of the mushroom, including where and when it can be found. Remember that where and when a mushroom grows can be very important in identification. If there are reasons for caution, they are noted. Also included are some cooking hints for each type of mushroom.



PUFFBALLS (LYCOPERDON spp. and CALVATIA spp.)


Description: Depending on their size, puffballshave been mistaken at a distance for everythingfrom golf balls to sheep. These round or pear-shaped mushrooms are almost always whitish, tan or gray and may or may not havea stalk-like base. The interior of a puffball is solid white at first, gradually turning yellow,then brown as the mushroom ages. Finally, theinterior changes to a mass of dark, powdery spores, Size: 1" to 12" in diameter, sometimes larger.

When and Where:
Late summer and fall; in lawns,open woods, pastures, barren areas. On soil or decaying wood.

Cautions:
Each puffball should be sliced from topto bottom and the interior examined. It should be completely white and featureless inside, like a slice of white bread. There should be no trace of yellow or brown (which will spoil the flavor) and especially no sign of a developing mushroom with a stalk, gills and cap (see Poisonous Mushrooms). Amanitas, when young, can resemble small puffballs, but cutting them open will quickly resolve the question.

Cooking Hints: Remove outer skin if it is tough, then slice, dip in batter and fry.



SHAGGY MANE (Coprinus comatus)

Description: The shaggy mane or lawyer's wig is so large and distinctive that with a little practice you can identify it from a moving car. The cap of a fresh specimen is a long, white cylinder with shaggy, upturned, brownish scales. The gills are whitish, and the entire mushroom is fragile and crumbles easily. Most important, as the
shaggy mane matures, the cap and gills graduallydissolve into a black, inky fluid, leaving only the standing stalk. Size 4" to 6" tall, sometimes larger.

When and Where: Spring, summer and fall, growing in grass, soil or wood chips. Often seen scattered in lawns and pastures.
Cautions: Shaggy manes are best when picked before the caps begin to turn black. However, until you become familiar with these mushrooms, check for the developing ink to be sure of your identification. (note: The shaggy mane is the largest of a group of edible mushrooms called inky caps.
Cooking Hints: Saute butter and season with nutmeg or garlic. Good in scrambled eggs or chicken dishes. Shaggy manes are delicate and should be picked young and eaten the same day.



CORAL FUNGI (Clavariaceae)

Description: These fungi appear as clumps of branching stems which point upward. They do look much like coral. Most are tan, whitish or
yellowish; a few are pinkish or purple. Also called club fungi, antler mushrooms or doghair mushrooms. Size: clusters may be up to 8" high.

When and Where:
Summer and fall; in wooded areas,growing on the ground or on decaying logs.

Cautions: A few coral fungi have a laxative effect,and some people seem to be particularly sensitive. Avoid coral fungi that taste bitter, bruise brown when handled or have gelatinous bases. These are most likely to case trouble. No serious poisonings from coral fungi have been reported.

Cooking Hints: Tips and upper branches are most tender. Saute and add to vegetables or white sauce.

MORELS

Description: Sponge, pinecone andhoneycomb mushroom-the nicknames of the morel-are all appropriate. Morels are easy to recognize and delicious to eat, making them the most popular wild mushroom in Missouri.
The surface of a morel is covered with definite pits and ridges, and the bottom edge of the cap is attached directly to the stem. Size: 2" to 12" tall.

There are three common species of morels:
The common morel (Morchella esculenta):
When young, this species has white ridges and dark brown pits and is known as the "white morel." As it ages, both the ridges and the pits turn yellowish brown, and it becomes a "yellow morel." If conditions are right the "yellow morel" can grow into a "giant morel," which may be up to a foot tall.
The black morel or smoky morel (Morchella elata): The ridges are gray or tan when young, but darken with age until nearly black. The pits are brown and elongated. These morels are best when picked young; discard any that are shrunken or have completely black heads.

The half-free morel (Morchella semilibera): This is the exception to the rule that morels have the bottom of the cap attached directly to the stem. The cap of the half-free morel is attached at about the middle. These morels have small caps and long bulbous stems.
When and Where: From spring to early summer. Morels are found on the ground in a variety of habitats, including moist woodlands and in river bottoms.

Cautions:
Morels are quite distinctive, but there is a small chance they could be confused with false morels. Half-free morels may be confused with a mushroom called the wrinkled thimble cap (Verpa bohemica). Fortunately, this mushroom is also edible in moderation. The cap of the wrinkled thimble cap is free from the stem except at the top

Cooking Hints: Cut morels in half to check for insects. Wash carefully. Morels can be breaded and fried, stewed, baked, creamed or stuffed with dressing. Their delicate flavor is brought out best by sauteing them in butter for about five minutes on each side.


Bearded Tooth - (Hericium erinaceus)

Description: With its clumps of hanging white "fur," this tooth fungus looks much like a polar
bear's paw. It is pure white when fresh and young, but yellows with age. The bearded tooth may grow quite large, as much as a foot across. Its size and whiteness make it easy to spot against the dark logs on which it grows.

Other names include bear's head, satyr's beard andhedgehog mushroom. Size 4" to 12" across.
When and Where: Summer and fall; always on trees, logs or stumps.

Cautions: The bearded tooth is distinctive and has no poisonous look-alikes. There are several closely related species which are more open and branched,but all are good edibles. Only young, white specimens should be eaten; older, yellowed ones are sour.

Cooking Hints: Slice, parboil until tender (taste a piece to test), drain and serve with cheese sauce.


Oyster Mushroom (Pleurotus ostreatus)

Description: Those hardy souls who take long winter walks are sometimes treated to the sight of a snow-capped mass of fresh oyster mushrooms growing on a tree or log.

This large white, tan or ivory-colored mushroom isnamed for its oyster shell-like shape. It has white gills running down a very short, off-center stem. Spores are white to lilac, and the flesh is very soft. Oyster mushrooms usually are found in largeclusters of overlapping caps and always on wood.
Size: 2" to 8" wide.
When and Where: Spring, summer, fall and during warm spells in winter. On trees and fallen logs.
Cautions: This mushroom has a number of look-alikes, (including Crepidotus and Lentinus spp.), but none are dangerous. they may, however, be woody or unpleasant-tasting. Check by tasting a small piece and by making a spore print. Watch out
for the small black beetles which sometimes infest this mushroom.

Cooking Hints: Soak in salted water to remove bugs. Dip in beaten egg, roll in cracker crumbs and fry.




Chanterelles (Cantharellaceae)

Description: Chanterelles are a great favorite of European mushroom hunters and are becoming more popular in the United States. These mushrooms are funnel-or trumpet-shaped and have wavy cap edges. Most are bright orange or yellow, although one, the black trumpet, is brownish-black. Fresh chanterelles have a pleasant, fruity fragrance.

To make sure you have a chanterelle, check the underside of the cap. Some species of chanterelle
are nearly smooth underneath, while others have a network of wrinkles or gill-like ridges running down the stem. The ridges have many forks and crossveins and are always blunt-edged. (True gills are sharp-edged and knifelike). Size 1/2" to 6" wide, 1" to 6" tall.
When and Where: Summer and fall; on the ground in hardwood forests. Usually found in scattered groups.
Cautions: When you can recognize those blunt-edged, crisscrossing ridges, you won't confuse
chanterelles with anything else. However, take extra care at first that you do not have the
poisonous jack-o-'lantern. Jack-o'-lanterns have knifelike gills and grow in the tight clusters on wood or buried wood, rather than on the ground.
Cooking Hints: Chanterelles are tough and need long, slow cooking, but when properly prepared their flavor is excellent. Saute slowly in butter until tender, season with salt, pepper and parsley, and serve on crackers.



Boletes (Boletaceae)

Description: If you can picture a hamburger bun ona thick stalk, you will have a good idea of what most boletes look like. These sturdy, fleshy mushrooms can be mistaken at first glance for
gilled mushrooms, but if you turn over a cap you will find a spongy layer of pores on the underside rather than bladelikegills. The pore layer can easily be pulled away from the cap.
Bolete caps are usually brownish or reddish-brown, while the pores may be whitish, yellow, orange, red, olive or brownish. Size: Up to 10" tall; caps 1" to 10" wide. There are more than 200 species of boletes in North America. The King Bolete (Boletus edulis) is probably the best edible.

When and Where: Summer and fall; on the ground near or under trees. Frequently found under pines.
Cautions: Boletes are considered a good, safe edible group for beginning mushroom collectors.
However, you should observe these cautions:
1. A few boletes are poisonous. To avoid these, don't eat any boletes that have orange or red
pores.
2. Some boletes, while not poisonous, are very distasteful. Check this by tasting a pinch of the
raw mushroom cap. If it is bitter or otherwise unpleasant, throw it out.
3. To make them more digestible, boletes should be cooked before eating. If the cap is slimy, peel off the slime layer; it sometimes causes diarrhea.
4. Bugs seem to like boletes as much as people do, so check your specimens carefully. Boletes also tend to decay quickly. Be sure to collect and eat only fresh specimens.

Cooking Hints: Remove tough stems, and peel off the pore layer in all but the youngest specimens. Saute in butter and add to any cheese dish. Dried boletes also are good in soups.



Sulfur Shelf (Laetiporus sulphureus)

Description: These mushrooms light up the forest with their brilliant orange-red caps and pale
sulfur-yellow pore surfaces. Some specimens fade to a peach or salmon color.
The sulfur shelf always grows on wood, usually in large masses of overlapping caps. It has no stem; the cap is attached directly to the wood. The pores are tiny.
Other names include chicken mushroom and chicken of the woods. Size 2" to 12" wide.
When and Where: Summer and fall; in clusters on living trees or dead wood.
Cautions: This is a distinctive mushroom with no poisonous look-alikes. It does cause a mild
allergic reaction (swollen lips) in some people.

Cooking Hints: Cook only the tender outer edges of the caps; the rest is tough and woody. Slice and simmer in stock for 45 minutes, then serve creamed on toast. When cooked, this mushroom has the texture and often the taste of chicken.


Hen-of-the-Woods (Grifola frondosa)

Description: This mushroom really does look something like a large, ruffled chicken. It grows
as a bouquet of grayish-brown, fan-shaped, overlapping caps, with offcenter white talks branching from a single thick base. On the underside, the pore surface is white.
A single clump of hen-of-the-woods can grow to enormous size and weigh up to 100 pounds. It often grows in the same spot year after year.
When and Where: Summer and fall; on the ground at the base of trees, or on stumps.
Cautions: Many gilled mushrooms grow in large clumps-remember that hen-of-the-woods is a pore fungus. This mushroom has no poisonous look-alikes, but there are some similar species of pore fungi that are tough and inedible. If what you have tastes leathery or otherwise unpleasant, you probably didn't pick a hen-of-the-woods.
Cooking Hints: Use only fresh, tender portions. Simmer in salted water until tender (requires long, slow cooking), and serve as a vegetable with cream sauce; or chill after cooking and use on salads.

There are many other good edible wild mushrooms available to Missouri mushroom hunters, including the popular meadow mushrooms. If you'd like to try collecting some of these, the references listed at the end of this article will help you do so safely.
history-of-edible-mushrooms.

Monday, August 1, 2011

History of Edible mushrooms

History of Edible Mushroom.

Edible mushrooms, or wild edible fungi, have been collected and consumed by people for thousands of years. The archaeological record reveals edible species associated with people living 13 000 years ago in Chile (Rojas and Mansur, 1995) but it is in China where the eating of wild fungi is first reliably noted, several hundred years before the birth of Christ (Aaronson, 2000). Edible Mushroom were collected from forests in ancient Greek and Roman times and highly valued, though more by high-ranking people than by peasants (Buller, 1914). Caesar’s mushroom (Amanita caesarea) is a reminder of an ancient tradition that still exists in many parts of Italy, embracing a diversity of edible species dominated today by truffles (Tuber spp.) and porcini (Boletus edulis).
China features prominently in the early and later historical record of wild edible mushroom. China is also the leading exporter of cultivated mushrooms.

The list of countries where wild edible mushrooms are reported to be consumed and provide income to rural people is impressive
The pharaohs of Egypt enjoyed edible mushrooms so much that they decreed mushrooms could only be eaten by royalty and that no commoner could even touch them, thus giving the royal family the entire available supply. In some parts of Eurasia, especially in Russia and Nordic countries, edible mushrooms are an important part of the diet. Several mushrooms are especially tasty and many are rich in nutrients.

Edible mushrooms are also easily preserved, and historically have provided additional nutrition over winter.Many prehistoric and a few modern cultures around the world used psychedelic mushrooms for ritualistic purposes. Edible mushroom cultivation reached the United States in the late 1800s with imported spores from Mexico. Mycophagy , the act of consuming edible mushrooms, dates back to the times of ancient Roman Caesars. They would have a food taster taste the edible mushrooms before the Caesar to make sure they were safe. edible-mushrooms: chanterelles-cantharellaceae.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Edible Mushroom:Chanterelles (Cantharellaceae)








Edible Mushroom: Chanterelles (Cantharellaceae)

Edible Mushrooms
Description: Chanterelles are a great favorite of European mushroom hunters and are becoming more popular in the United States.

These mushrooms are funnel-or trumpet-shaped and have wavy cap edges. Most are bright orange or yellow, although one, the black trumpet, is brownish-black. Fresh chanterelles have a pleasant, fruity fragrance.

To make sure you have a chanterelle, check the underside of the cap. Some species of chanterelle are nearly smooth underneath, while others have a network of wrinkles or gill-like ridges running down the stem. The ridges have many forks and crossveins and are always blunt-edged. (True gills are sharp-edged and knifelike). Size 1/2" to 6" wide, 1" to 6" tall.

When and Where: Summer and fall; on the ground in hardwood forests. Usually found in scattered groups.

Cautions: When you can recognize those blunt-edged, crisscrossing ridges, you won't confuse chanterelles with anything else. However, take extra care at first that you do not have the poisonous jack-o-'lantern (see Poisonous Mushrooms). Jack-o'-lanterns have knifelike gills and grow in the tight clusters on wood or buried wood, rather than on the ground.

Cooking Hints: Chanterelles are tough and need long, slow cooking, but when properly prepared their flavor is excellent. Saute slowly in butter until tender, season with salt, pepper and parsley, and serve on crackers.
Edible Mushrooms
commercially-cultivated-mushrooms

Bearded Tooth - (Hericium erinaceus)








Bearded Tooth - (Hericium erinaceus)

Edible Mushrooms
Description: With its clumps of hanging white "fur," this tooth fungus looks much like a polar bear's paw. It is pure white when fresh and young, but yellows with age.

The bearded tooth may grow quite large, as much as a foot across. Its size and whiteness make it easy to spot against the dark logs on which it grows.

Other names include bear's head, satyr's beard and hedgehog mushroom. Size 4" to 12" across.

When and Where: Summer and fall; always on trees, logs or stumps.

Cautions: The bearded tooth is distinctive and has no poisonous look-alikes. There are several closely related species which are more open and branched, but all are good edibles.

Only young, white specimens should be eaten; older, yellowed ones are sour.

Cooking Hints: Slice, parboil until tender (taste a piece to test), drain and serve with cheese sauce.
Edible Mushrooms..
Edible-mushrooms-morels

Edible Mushroom: MORELS









Edible Mushroom: MORELS

Edible Mushrooms
(Morchella spp.) Description: Sponge, pinecone and honeycomb mushroom-the nicknames of the morel-are all appropriate. Morels are easy to recognize and delicious to eat, making them the most popular wild mushroom in Missouri.

The surface of a morel is covered with definite pits and ridges, and the bottom edge of the cap is attached directly to the stem. Size: 2" to 12" tall.
There are three common species of morels mushroom:

1. The common morel (Morchella esculenta): When young, this species has white ridges and dark brown pits and is known as the "white morel." As it ages, both the ridges and the pits turn yellowish brown, and it becomes a "yellow morel." If conditions are right the "yellow morel" can grow into a "giant morel," which may be up to a foot tall.
2. The black morel or smoky morel (Morchella elata): The ridges are gray or tan when young, but darken with age until nearly black. The pits are brown and elongated. These morels are best when picked young; discard any that are shrunken or have completely black heads.
3. The half-free morel (Morchella semilibera): This is the exception to the rule that morels have the bottom of the cap attached directly to the stem. The cap of the half-free morel is attached at about the middle . These morels have small caps and long bulbous stems.

When and Where: From spring to early summer. Morels are found on the ground in a variety of habitats, including moist woodlands and in river bottoms.

Cautions: Morels have been known to cause mild poisoning symptoms when consumed with alcohol. Morels are quite distinctive, but there is a small chance they could be confused with false morels. See the poisonous mushroom page for ways to distinguish true morels from false morels.

Half-free morels may be confused with a mushroom called the wrinkled thimble cap (Verpa bohemica). Fortunately, this mushroom is also edible in moderation. The cap of the wrinkled thimble cap is free from the stem except at the top (see illustration).

Cooking Hints: Cut morels in half to check for insects. Wash carefully. Morels can be breaded and fried, stewed, baked, creamed or stuffed with dressing. Their delicate flavor is brought out best by sauteing them in butter for about five minutes on each side.
Edible Mushrooms
edible-mushrooms-gallery