Something Completely Different

Community section => Sports & Health => Topic started by: Guybrush on Aug 17, 2023, 08:14 PM

Title: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: Guybrush on Aug 17, 2023, 08:14 PM
Hey you fun guys!

Yesterday, we went to a lake to have a swim and coincidentally, we found some edible mushrooms in the area.

Unfortunately, the shrooms came real early this year and snails and other crawlies had already gotten to these, but sometimes you can still salvage parts of them.

We pick toadstools every autumn and I figure maybe some of you guys do as well? I thought a thread might be fun.

So here are some of the things we found yesterday:


Boletus edulis

(https://drive.google.com/uc?id=12Z4tdpxcHjK9xLTyhUr14OdOHm2VpfPS)

One of those we always search for, this is one of our favorites. It might be called a Penny bun in English? We call them rock shrooms. Supposedly, it's the only fungi you can eat raw here, although we're of the opinion that eating fungi raw is generally a nono.


Cantharellus cibarius

(https://drive.google.com/uc?id=12eNQbLVmRtbNDjp4XYZfefJgZUJgSoVK)

The golden chanterelle is another favorite, sometimes referred to as forest gold here.

It's also one of the most common fungi for people to pick as it's easy to recognize, seldom appear alone and the risk of confusing it with something poisonous is relatively tiny.


Hydnum rufescens

(https://drive.google.com/uc?id=12c-18TZeC8ZnAFeAoY2DwuoO28sTwOph)

We call this yellow reddish spine-shroom due to the soft spines on the spore producing underbelly. This is yet another favorite with Norwegians, though maybe not quite as highly prized as the two above. Still very nice.


Suillus variegatus

(https://drive.google.com/uc?id=12diBizPIIHAC22HwQOP-P9pgxf3EWSiY)

We call this sandshroom. Wikipedia says it's called Velvet bolete in english. This is another good one for eating, although most people don't seem to pick it here.

It's often more common than the more prized shrooms people look for so it's a good one to know.


Russula sp.

(https://drive.google.com/uc?id=12w8o01nVuN6nL0spRPNnO6yQYtkdcUxB)

This is a small, edible fungi of the genus Russula. Beginners usually stay away from these sort of mushrooms because they can be hard to pinpoint to species and can, due to their general shape and white gills, be confused with deadly poisonous Amanitas.

The usual way to check if what you got is good for eating is to have a little nibble of the raw shroom. If it tastes very spicy/peppery, it's best to avoid.

We ate some Russulas last year, but to be honest, I'm not sure they're worth it. At least I don't rank them highly in terms of taste.

But they're often very pretty and less bug-eaten than other shrooms.


So are you a mycophile? Which ones do you pick?

Share a picture of your toadstool!
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: degrassiknoll on Aug 17, 2023, 11:35 PM
The area I live in produces an extraordinary variety of mushies throughout the year, and my stepdad is an absolute expert on hunting and identifying them - and he is particularly at cooking with them. Here are some lovely shots from last winter:

Chicken of the Woods - Laetiporus

(https://i.imgur.com/ZiIOLpW.jpg)




Pigs Ear - Gomphus clavatus

(https://i.imgur.com/rS0ctYb.jpg)
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: Guybrush on Aug 18, 2023, 12:15 AM
Ooh, very interesting!

I'd guess that's Laetiporus sulphuraeus which we also have here. It's not a popular fungi for eating here, but I might try it if you'd recommend it. Any tips in that regard?

I've never seen anything looking like your Pig's Ear here. Very cool!

This was the single best find of last year. A big penny bun / rock shroom. Yes, they do get bigger, but this one didn't have a scratch on it. Beautiful!

(https://drive.google.com/uc?id=12ymTxeNwDd7g6oRbLbKQTn0qUQ2VJ--y)
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: DJChameleon on Aug 18, 2023, 11:31 AM
Quote from: Guybrush on Aug 17, 2023, 08:14 PMCantharellus cibarius

(https://drive.google.com/uc?id=12eNQbLVmRtbNDjp4XYZfefJgZUJgSoVK)

The golden chanterelle is another favorite, sometimes referred to as forest gold here.

It's also one of the most common fungi for people to pick as it's easy to recognize, seldom appear alone and the risk of confusing it with something poisonous is relatively tiny.

Idk jack shit about mushrooms but I was always under the impression to stay away from colorful mushrooms. I would never touch a mushroom out in the wild since I know nothing about them and don't wanna get poisoned or high unknowingly.
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: Lexi Darling on Aug 18, 2023, 01:00 PM
Ooh, this thread is right up my alley!

I first became fascinated by fungi a few years ago when I discovered this guy's Youtube channel. He uses a phenomenon called biosonification which involves taking organic material and hooking it up to a synthesizer to use the innate patterns and frequencies in the living tissue to control the parameters of the synth. It just so happens that mushrooms make really good organic material to do this. I've always wanted to do this myself, but modular synthesizers are expensive. :(

Here's a performance by his mushrooms...
And here's a very nerdy video of him going through his setup.

This stuff absolutely mesmerizes me, it's like techno-witchcraft and I love it.
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: degrassiknoll on Aug 18, 2023, 09:13 PM
^ very cool

Reminds me of an artist that somehow "biosonified" a molding film reel, then paired the audio with the video from the damaged film. Absolutely ethereal.
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: Guybrush on Aug 19, 2023, 02:27 AM
Weird what some people think of 🙂 and cool!

Quote from: DJChameleon on Aug 18, 2023, 11:31 AMIdk jack shit about mushrooms but I was always under the impression to stay away from colorful mushrooms. I would never touch a mushroom out in the wild since I know nothing about them and don't wanna get poisoned or high unknowingly.

AFAIK, color is a poor indicator of how poisonous a mushroom is. There's the red Fly Amanita and a red Russula, but at least the most poisonous shrooms here that cause the most trouble are a little more anonymous, like the deadly webcap.

I would assume the reason for the advice is the Fly Amanita. I took this picture of one last year:

(https://drive.google.com/uc?id=12lz9UcZTaGj0qAW9LfngoYuFh_7Nz3fp)

So pretty!

Eating it will likely make you throw up and have a trip, but won't kill you. Its cousin Amanita virosa (Destroying Angel) certainly can, though.

They're very common here, so I took this pic a couple of weeks ago.

(https://drive.google.com/uc?id=12fGNa-o6X77s-nlfI3ZjOQ7UdfXT37nJ)

I believe it's the cause of most shroom related poisonings in Norway. I think the most common problem is some immigrants mistaking the very young ones for delicious Agaricus fungi, even though Agaricus have darker gills.
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: DJChameleon on Aug 19, 2023, 09:45 AM
Quote from: Guybrush on Aug 19, 2023, 02:27 AMI believe it's the cause of most shroom related poisonings in Norway.

The fact that this sentence exists is why I just choose to steer clear unless I go mushroom picking with someone clearly more knowledgeable than me but even then I'm still a bit cautious.
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: Guybrush on Aug 19, 2023, 10:47 AM
Quote from: DJChameleon on Aug 19, 2023, 09:45 AMThe fact that this sentence exists is why I just choose to steer clear unless I go mushroom picking with someone clearly more knowledgeable than me but even then I'm still a bit cautious.

I understand you completely. In my uni courses, mycology was taught by two professors. One of them came into biology from being doctor who worked with and was interested in fungi poisonings, so there was a lot of focus on that in the curriculum. I had some health related anxieties back then and was basically just scared of shrooms, particularly if they were picked by someone else.

I don't have those exaggerated anxieties anymore, but a little bit isn't a bad thing to have. For example, we're two biologists picking shrooms. I think we're able to identify Russulas from Amanitas. Yet, I was still a little worried as I was eating those Russulas last year. The worrying makes me check and double check again and that's probably a good thing 🙂
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: degrassiknoll on Aug 20, 2023, 12:42 AM
A woman in Australia I believe recently was charged with murder for doctoring the meals of her ex husband, mother-in-law, and someone else while having brunch at a restaurant with Destroying Angel (I've also heard it referred to as Deathcap, Angel of Death, Dark Angel, etc). She literally sprinkled them on the meal and was like "actually I'm not hungry" and they were all three dead within the week!
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: Guybrush on Aug 20, 2023, 01:27 AM
^Holy shit, that's cold. And kinda clever too.

Some Amanitas are of course edible. Some years ago, we found lots of beautiful Amanita rubescens (called Blushers in english?) which are edible after cooking and probably good. Here's a picture I took.

(https://drive.google.com/uc?id=14mscgXETvLmRTFv48J2wilr-h2yB0jPX)

But even though we knew what it was, we basically noped it for fear of confusing it with A. pantherina (Panther cap).

We're probably going picking tomorrow and if we see some, I'll consider grabbing it this time.. especially if I can get a professional controller to look at it.
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: FETCHER. on Oct 04, 2023, 09:57 PM
Has anyone grown their own? I don't feel confident in picking wild mushrooms, I would definitely end up in hospital.
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: Guybrush on Oct 04, 2023, 11:39 PM
Quote from: FETCHER. on Oct 04, 2023, 09:57 PMHas anyone grown their own? I don't feel confident in picking wild mushrooms, I would definitely end up in hospital.

I haven't tried it myself, but one of our friends have tried just buying a kit for growing shiitake or some other fungus popular in Asian cuisine and said it was real simple.

I think you just set it on the kitchen counter and wait basically, perhaps watering it now and then.
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: FETCHER. on Oct 05, 2023, 12:04 AM
That is interesting. This thread might give me the nudge to try growing some.

I'll try my best to remember and take pictures to share from my walks as well. It would be cool to see if everyone gets similar ones or not.
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: Lexi Darling on Oct 05, 2023, 12:07 AM
I have a pretty crazy story about me growing mushrooms actually. Its a long'un and I have to get started on dinner now so watch this space.
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: Guybrush on Oct 05, 2023, 12:15 AM
Oo, @Mrs. Waffles . I'm intrigued 🍄🍄🍄

Quote from: FETCHER. on Oct 05, 2023, 12:04 AMThat is interesting. This thread might give me the nudge to try growing some.

I'll try my best to remember and take pictures to share from my walks as well. It would be cool to see if everyone gets similar ones or not.

Do it!! It's been a crap autumn for shrooming here, so I'd love an opportunity to live out my mycophilia by proxy 😄

BTW despite the disappointing autumn, I did see this lovely Amanita last Saturday:

(https://drive.google.com/uc?id=1Qlfw_VXoVXI0SLlZb4wm2fnu_y2is7x3)
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: FETCHER. on Oct 05, 2023, 12:51 AM
Quote from: Guybrush on Oct 05, 2023, 12:15 AMOo, @Mrs. Waffles I'm intrigued 🍄🍄🍄

Do it!! It's been a crap autumn for shrooming here, so I'd love an opportunity to live out my mycophilia by proxy 😄

BTW despite the disappointing autumn, I did see this lovely Amanita last Saturday:

(https://drive.google.com/uc?id=1Qlfw_VXoVXI0SLlZb4wm2fnu_y2is7x3)

@Mrs. Waffles . I'm intrigued as well! I'll keep a close eye for your story haha.

That is one beautiful mushroom Guybrush!! I have only seen red ones similar to that when I was on the west highland way. I'll need to dig photos out of them. It'll give me a little challenge on my walks this week, the weather here has been horrible so it'll maybe make them more fun 😂
Title: Re: Calling all mycophiles 🍄
Post by: Lexi Darling on Oct 05, 2023, 02:57 AM
Okay, so this story might get a bit icky for some. Reader discretion is advised.

Spoiler
So in April 2017, I nearly died from an appendix that was on the verge of bursting. That event has some crazy stories of its own, but in the weeks following the appendectomy surgery, I was basically just sleeping and taking painkillers all day. I had left my apartment in a hurry to get to the hospital, and somehow a 2 liter coke bottle with some small amount of soda inside had been left under my sink. It would be two-three weeks before I next opened the cabinet below the sink. So apparently the lighting, moisture and overall conditions were exactly right for a bunch of oyster mushrooms to grow in that coke bottle, and that was what I was greeted with when I opened the cabinet.

Bizarrely I wasn't disgusted at either the mushrooms or my own negligence to notice the bottle, I was just kind of awestruck at what I had wrought, haha. I was, however, an idiot, and threw the thing out without taking a picture. So to answer your question, @FETCHER. , I have grown mushrooms, just by complete accident, haha. Never tried since, I'm not even sure what other conditions I satisfied by leaving the coke bottle in there since I don't remember the state of it when I left it there, and from what I've read online since, mushrooms would need some other substance in order to grow in the bottle. So until they invent time travel, I'll probably never know my own accidental mushroom-growing plans.  :laughing:
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