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HopeHoops

(47,675 posts)
Sun Jan 29, 2012, 05:17 PM Jan 2012

Favorite cooking mushroom?

Black funnel for me. Haven't seen them in years, but they're incredible.

As for just looking at, I once saw a Destroying Angel and it was mesmerizing. Don't even lick one of those.

Let's try to keep it clean and avoid the psilocin and psilocybin varieties.

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HopeHoops

(47,675 posts)
2. They're also nearly without taste until cooked.
Sun Jan 29, 2012, 05:46 PM
Jan 2012

THEN they pack a punch!! I like to lightly saute them and use them in anything that will make them the dominant flavor.

On edit: they can be mildly toxic when eaten raw, and even after cooking for that matter but to a lesser degree. False morels are also a problem. Unless you trust the gatherer or see the stem yourself it can be difficult to tell them apart and you really don't want to eat the false morels.

 

izquierdista

(11,689 posts)
3. They all taste the same to me
Sun Jan 29, 2012, 06:01 PM
Jan 2012

Regular agaricus, oyster, chantrelles, ink caps, shiitake, maiitake, straw mushroooms, boletes, they all taste like just plain old mushrooms to me. Except giant puffballs. Sliced, breaded, and sauteed in butter, they taste like a piece of paper towel breaded and sauteed in butter.

Oh, except wood ears. They actually have a taste and texture of their own that is different from "all of the above". So I would vote for wood ears.

 

HopeHoops

(47,675 posts)
4. Taste the same? TASTE THE SAME? BLASPHEMY!!
Sun Jan 29, 2012, 06:17 PM
Jan 2012


Ever make oyster mushroom soup? Nothing else will work for that. I agree with the wood ears - very different. I've never tried truffles because I refuse to pay $400+ per pound for something a pig dug up.

 

izquierdista

(11,689 posts)
5. Tastes like regular mushroom soup
Sun Jan 29, 2012, 07:11 PM
Jan 2012

So did that shelf fungi I hacked off a walnut stump and put in the soup pot (although they were quite chewy....like an insole). As far as truffles, they taste like mushrooms rolled in dirt IMHO -- but good rich dirt, if that is any consolation.

If I want a treat for the taste buds, I'll look for some plant flavonoids and leave the saprophytes for the compost heap.

 

HopeHoops

(47,675 posts)
6. "regular mushroom soup" tastes like salt and not at all like mushrooms.
Sun Jan 29, 2012, 07:21 PM
Jan 2012

Now REAL mushroom soup is another story! You can't get that in a can.

I believe that would be saprotrophic organisms. I've never heard the term "saprophytes" before. I studied mycology 35 or so years ago, so maybe the terms have changed since then. Now I just eat them.

 

izquierdista

(11,689 posts)
10. Saprophyte?
Sun Jan 29, 2012, 10:09 PM
Jan 2012
saprophyte
[sap-ruh-fahyt] ?
sap·ro·phyte
? ?[sap-ruh-fahyt] Show IPA
noun
any organism that lives on dead organic matter, as certain fungi and bacteria.
Also called saprobe.

Origin:
1870–75; sapro- + -phyte


Hmmm, 1870s, that's even older than you, ya geezer

flvegan

(64,426 posts)
7. Baby bellas.
Sun Jan 29, 2012, 08:30 PM
Jan 2012

I put them in everything. Stir fry for fajitas, cooked with onions and spice to add to my homemade spaghetti sauce or raw in my nightly salad.

 

HopeHoops

(47,675 posts)
8. Also known as "crimini" - hell, what we call "canola oil" comes from rapeseeds.
Sun Jan 29, 2012, 09:22 PM
Jan 2012

I guess that just didn't fly well in our "can't mention such things" society so they invented the word "canola".

LeftyMom

(49,212 posts)
9. I have a badass mushroom stroganoff recipe using those and maybe some dried shitakes,
Sun Jan 29, 2012, 09:28 PM
Jan 2012

It has no redeeming nutritional value, and it is delicious.

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