Meat without legs - Mushroom Hunting 2023’

sacklunch

WKR
Joined
Dec 12, 2022
Messages
412
Yup, gotta wing shoot it before is flies away from you!

(But definitely worth keeping an open eye for big orange yellow masses on hard wood trees) very good eating if you find the right one. So much so you can cover in olive oil & salt to grill. All mushrooms take a deep fry well too if health isn’t of interest!
Is there a preferred method for putting them down humanely before cooking, or we’re just grilling them alive?
 
OP
ProStaffSteve
Joined
Apr 26, 2022
Messages
318
Is there a preferred method for putting them down humanely before cooking, or we’re just grilling them alive?

Learning experience here :) mushroom pickers typically aren’t the first creatures to find the mushroom. Bugs love em. Unless your mushrooms are very fresh & clean, drown em in saltwater for a couple hours!

For long term storage, rinse the water entirely and let em sit in the fridge, shrooms hold up well for weeks. For longer term you can fry em in front of a fan for 24 hours and jar em
 
OP
ProStaffSteve
Joined
Apr 26, 2022
Messages
318
Here’s one that looks like a scale hedgehog maybe….?
View attachment 567964View attachment 567965

Interesting find! I’m thinking amanita of some sort. Depends on your location. Hedge-hogs are edible but have “brittle teeth” instead of gills. The vail, the little collar on the stem, is common for amanita family, don’t eat that because amanita are notoriously toxic. To note, “the angel of death” falls in that family.
 

feanor

WKR
Joined
Aug 15, 2018
Messages
1,224
Interesting find! I’m thinking amanita of some sort. Depends on your location. Hedge-hogs are edible but have “brittle teeth” instead of gills. The vail, the little collar on the stem, is common for amanita family, don’t eat that because amanita are notoriously toxic. To note, “the angel of death” falls in that family.
Oh yeah -that’s some good information. Im on the front range at about 7,500 ft elevation. Ponderosa pines everywhere. This is a great thread! Thanks!
 

roosterdown

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Feb 8, 2022
Messages
220
Location
Afton, MN
Interesting find! I’m thinking amanita of some sort. Depends on your location. Hedge-hogs are edible but have “brittle teeth” instead of gills. The vail, the little collar on the stem, is common for amanita family, don’t eat that because amanita are notoriously toxic. To note, “the angel of death” falls in that family.
Indeed - close enough to possibly be a Destroying Angel. A spore print would tell for sure, but if it were me I'd wash my hands if I had touched it.
 
Joined
Jul 25, 2022
Messages
62
Location
St. Louis MO
Crazy you guys are still finding morels out west. They've been done in MO for 2 months!
Chanterelles are about to pop any day now here, and they're probably my favorite. Easy to find, lots in each spot, and delicious!
I've got logs innoculated with shiitake and oyster spawn.
 

Felton

WKR
Joined
Nov 28, 2021
Messages
476
The chanterelle is about the only mushroom I mess with. I’ve opened my horizons to a couple more but I’m too scared of messing up.

I found a couple oak trees in the middle of an old food plot that get loaded with these beautiful shrooms.
54A62844-D331-4CC9-9460-004DA2262238.jpeg

Obviously not chanterelles..
688164E7-9EE8-4051-A98C-39160BF7D7B8.jpeg
 

idahomuleys

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Oct 26, 2015
Messages
260
Crazy you guys are still finding morels out west. They've been done in MO for 2 months!
Chanterelles are about to pop any day now here, and they're probably my favorite. Easy to find, lots in each spot, and delicious!
I've got logs innoculated with shiitake and oyster spawn.
We've had some crazy weather this year, very unusual. I picked a grocery sack full in about an hour last weekend in central Idaho. Left because we had enough, but they were still everywhere.

Sent from my SM-G981V using Tapatalk
 
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