Pcsx2 screen tearing12/3/2023 This weekend I’ll be working on editing a couple of little mushroom videos I just recorded on some of the boletes, puffballs, chanterelles and other fungi I gathered (and consumed) this week. That edible mushroom can’t be mistaken for anything poisonous, unless perhaps you’re colorblind! I still don’t mess around with gilled mushrooms except for the easy-to-ID Lactarius indigo, also known as indigo milk cap. Once you really nail down how to avoid poisonous mushrooms, it’s pretty safe to go hunting for good wild fare for the table. My bet is that these would be better in soup than fried in butter.īy the way, the bright orange patches in the photo are chanterelle mushrooms, which have returned in our local neighborhood patch of these delicious wild gourmet mushrooms. Sauteed they were rubbery and the centers of the mushrooms were really too tough to eat. The flavor isn’t bad, but the texture leaves a lot to be desired. So, here’s the important part: what does Polyporus tenuiculus taste like? Unfortunately, I don’t have photos of them growing on the log since I was camera-less at church. Hat tip to Greene Deane for the final “yes, that’s it!” piece of my quest for fungal knowledge. After some mushroom ID work, I narrowed it down to the Polyporus genus, then finally down to Polyporus tenuiculus. The mushrooms have been up again in profusion thanks to all of our rain.Īt church this week I stepped out the back door and saw the above mushroom growing in rubbery ears all over a stump… so I harvested a goodly amount of them to bring home.Īt first glance I thought they a flush of oyster mushrooms but then realized the gills were all wrong, since they were pores rather than actual gills. NOTE: Don’t go eating wild mushrooms unless YOU KNOW WHAT YOU’RE DOING! And don’t blame me if you either:ī: Spend time on a rocket ship with the ghost of Jerry Garcia visiting the Land Of Magical Unicorns.
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