Here is a guide to MN mushrooms. It will apply to surrounding states but these are mushrooms worth eating. Use google for photos:
Morels - duh easy to identify, look alike: false morel (f***ed up looking red morel), mostly in early spring (May) around dead elms & 1000 other locations.
Golden Oysters - great eating, invasive, so take as much as you want. Grows on trees typically dying off elms. Easily spotted from far away in community parks, backyards. Look alike: jack - o - lantern (spring, summer, fall post rain)
Chicken of the woods - great eating but varies from species to species. Bright orange & yellow. Grows on dead, dying oaks and some elms. Grows in “fans” or large puffy leaves. Does not have gills of any kind. No stem of any kind. (Spring or fall after rain mostly, some summer) - no noteable look-a likes.
Lobster mushrooms -great eating! this one is a tricky mushroom to understand. Bright orange mushroom. No gills, hard to the touch and found on the ground. (Mid July-end of September). Basically, they show up where you find other traditional few inch wide mushrooms. For me, the brainered lakes area hiking trails. But I’ve found them in hot-beds across the state. Send pics and we will identify easily. Might be look - a -likes for beginners but really easy for a little experience.
Hen of the woods - great eating! Related to oak trees, not a pro at finding this one. They are large brown-grey masses of “fans” like the chicken of the woods but a very unassuming color. Just natural colors. It’s a large mushroom. Grows on the forest floor, typically surrounding the base of oak trees. Imo they have been picked over in most areas. (Fall mostly)
Chanterelles - good not great. these ones start to get a bit tricky. Essentially, primarily small-ish yellow ground mushrooms. Don’t prefer specific trees, love shady woods (kinda uncommon trait) for edible mushrooms. (late July-end of Oct) mostly after rain. Very fun to hunt. Easy to mistake, so document them well & don’t eat mushrooms you don’t know 1,000% what they are.
Puff ball, - 5/10 on taste. big white round balls. Don’t eat them if not white. Don’t eat them if they aren’t bigger than a softball.
Pheasants back - 1/10 on taste, addressing bc noobs find these and it turns them off to wild mushrooms. They look very pretty, found across the state in abundance. No look alike, but I leave all of them in the woods