Can I eat them?

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Now he tells us!



This one was in my garden last summer. There was a smaller one as well, edible but not particularly tasty.


As I mentioned a page or two ago, they're not really worth the effort. I suspect the poncy restaurants flog them for their novelty value as opposed to their actual culinary worth...
 
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theclaud

Openly Marxist
Location
Swansea
You've got to pick them very young, before they open, and eat very quickly afterwards as they tend to dissolve into an inky mess if left. I always preferred them raw.
Some people can have a reaction to them if they drink alcohol at the same time - basically nausea - but I've never experienced this.
It's common ink caps, not shaggies - the alcohol thing. But I agree shaggy ink caps are one of the best mushrooms to eat and very easy to ID.
 

smutchin

Cat 6 Racer
Location
The Red Enclave
Just took the dog for a walk in the woods - should have taken a basket, it was mushroom heaven in there this evening. Only trouble is it would have been like playing Russian roulette when you have no idea how many of the barrels are loaded...

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smutchin

Cat 6 Racer
Location
The Red Enclave
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smutchin

Cat 6 Racer
Location
The Red Enclave
Loads more shrooms spotted on today's dog walk, including these specimens that I'm 99% certain are edible boletus* - it's just that 1% uncertainty that puts me off actually trying them...

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*I checked under the caps and they were definitely spongey, not gilled.
 
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theclaud

Openly Marxist
Location
Swansea
Loads more shrooms spotted on today's dog walk, including these specimens that I'm 99% certain are edible boletus* - it's just that 1% uncertainty that puts me off actually trying them...

View attachment 368865 View attachment 368866

*I checked under the caps and they were definitely spongey, not gilled.
That's either a brown birch bolete or an orange bb in a light that makes it look brown. Lots of people eat both but they have been known to upset some people, and having tried a bbb I wouldn't bother again!
 

smutchin

Cat 6 Racer
Location
The Red Enclave
That's either a brown birch bolete or an orange bb in a light that makes it look brown. Lots of people eat both but they have been known to upset some people, and having tried a bbb I wouldn't bother again!

Thanks for the identification. Looking at pictures on the web, I reckon they're more likely to be the orange rather than the brown. I might even risk eating them next time I see some - this site reckons they're safe as long as they're well cooked: http://www.wildfooduk.com/mushroom-guides/orange-birch-bolete-mushroom/
 

gbb

Squire
Location
Peterborough
Now he tells us!



This one was in my garden last summer. There was a smaller one as well, edible but not particularly tasty.

I took a small, one home and cooked it. Couldn't see what the fuss was about..very subtlety woody taste, not memorable in any other way, wouldn't waste my time again.
 

gbb

Squire
Location
Peterborough
I love mushroom season, but stick to a few varieties that I can identify reliably (and even then, spend some time paging through my big mushroom book if there's anything 'different' about them).
Here's one that we had for breakfast in Brittany a couple of weeks back
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As kids we lived on a disused airbase and mushroom season would see us walking the airfield at daybreak finding many monsters like that, the white flesh on ours were about 1 inch thick.....oh and the black juice you got when frying them :hungry:.

Button mushrooms....not even on the same page.
 
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