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scarecrow
Joined: 15 Dec 2004 Posts: 115 Location: Manchester, Up North
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Behemoth
Joined: 01 Dec 2004 Posts: 19023 Location: Leeds
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scarecrow
Joined: 15 Dec 2004 Posts: 115 Location: Manchester, Up North
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cab
Joined: 01 Nov 2004 Posts: 32429
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Posted: Thu Dec 23, 04 10:53 am Post subject: |
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Scarecrow, there aren't any mushrooms that you will find in the woods taht are going to poison you by merely touching them. If that were true, I'd be dead hundreds of times over
If you're fairly new at this, you can't do any better than actually having the specimen there in your hand. Pictures are never as good. And if you really want to take a specimen home to help you ID it, then do so, but I'd reccomend keeping old paper bags or carrier bags to put unknown specimens in. What might look like a really firm, tough mushroom on the ground may well disintegrate to little bits in your basket, and the very last thing you want is a nice basket full of tasty Agaricus and Boletus covered in the detritus of a broken up panther cap, death cap or destroying angel!
I'd reccomend that a beginner is best off sticking to a few easy species; unfortunately, you've picked a bugger of a time of year to get into this sort of thing. Only a few species of edible mushroom are really common at this time of year. The best ones are probably blewits and oyster mushrooms, although you may also find winter chanterelles. Have a look at the two articles that cover this:
https://www.downsizer.net/Projects/Wild_Food/Top_Ten_Wild_Foods_to_Gather_in_Winter/
https://www.downsizer.net/Projects/Wild_Food/Top_Ten_Wild_Mushrooms_for_the_Beginner/
The Roger Phillips book that's already been reccomended is a cracker for good identification; I'd also reccomend just as highly the classic book 'Food for Free' by Richard Mabey. Phillips tells you how to identify down to the species level, Mabey tells you when you really don't have to. |
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scarecrow
Joined: 15 Dec 2004 Posts: 115 Location: Manchester, Up North
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cab
Joined: 01 Nov 2004 Posts: 32429
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jema Downsizer Moderator
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 28238 Location: escaped from Swindon
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scarecrow
Joined: 15 Dec 2004 Posts: 115 Location: Manchester, Up North
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cab
Joined: 01 Nov 2004 Posts: 32429
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jema Downsizer Moderator
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 28238 Location: escaped from Swindon
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cab
Joined: 01 Nov 2004 Posts: 32429
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jema Downsizer Moderator
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 28238 Location: escaped from Swindon
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3mariners
Joined: 20 Dec 2004 Posts: 16 Location: East Devon
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Posted: Thu Dec 23, 04 2:53 pm Post subject: |
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I'd be interested to no if Cab agrees, but from my limited experience, there are actually very few good eating mushrooms, by that I mean big, tatsty and 'meaty' enough to bother with.
I was advised by my local Iti. mush guru to recognise a few quality examples and stick to those e.g. st Geoges, field, chanterelle (as opposed to falsies), hedgehog, blewits, types of puff ball, ceps, funnel caps et al.
I've seen and been tempted to pick many small varieties but not bothered simply because of the potential quantity required and the flavour. |
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jema Downsizer Moderator
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 28238 Location: escaped from Swindon
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Posted: Thu Dec 23, 04 3:04 pm Post subject: |
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3mariners wrote: |
I'd be interested to no if Cab agrees, but from my limited experience, there are actually very few good eating mushrooms, by that I mean big, tatsty and 'meaty' enough to bother with.
I was advised by my local Iti. mush guru to recognise a few quality examples and stick to those e.g. st Geoges, field, chanterelle (as opposed to falsies), hedgehog, blewits, types of puff ball, ceps, funnel caps et al.
I've seen and been tempted to pick many small varieties but not bothered simply because of the potential quantity required and the flavour. |
This has been my impression as well.
jema |
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Bugs
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 10744
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