Hobby Farms

Oyster Mushrooms

These easy-to-find mushrooms are delicious to eat!

- By Frank Hyman

These easy-to-find ’shrooms are delicious to eat!

Oysters make a perfect reward for the novice forager: They’re easy to spot and identify, and they taste great, too. You may be able to find cultivated oyster mushrooms at your farmers market and get a good look at them before foraging for wild ones. When a friend wanted me to teach him to forage, we walked across the road from his property into some woods. Less than 50 feet in, oysters greeted us on a big fallen beech tree. We grabbed double handfuls to bring home and spent more time preparing and eating them than we spent foraging. You may not always find oysters so quickly, but they’re very common in the woods.

Most edible mushrooms grow on the ground, where they may be small, few in number, obscured by leaves and difficult to find. An oyster mushroom, on the other hand, may only be a few inches across, but oysters often grow in clumps the size of a soccer ball. And they’re up off the ground, making them among the easiest mushrooms to find.

FEASTING

This one is gourmet, though unfortunat­ely, oyster mushrooms get their name from their appearance, not their taste or texture. The dense, white flesh has a straightfo­rward mushroom flavor, although some people detect a mild licorice scent on the fresh ones. My wife isn’t fond of the texture of mushrooms generally, but I found a cooking method that had her asking for seconds of oyster mushrooms.

PRESERVING

Oysters can be dried and stored in jars, but their reconstitu­ted texture can sometimes be leathery. More reliable results can be had by cooking and then freezing them. Don’t thaw. Just throw them into a hot skillet.

FARMING

Perhaps the easiest mushroom for novices to grow, they can be grown on coffee grounds (the heat has sterilized the substrate!) in a bucket in the kitchen.

LOOK ALIKES

Some Crepidotus species, such as C. applanatus, look somewhat similar but are smaller, have no stem, appear often as individual­s, and have a brown spore print. Angel Wings (Pleurocybe­lla porrigens) are thin and white, but grow on conifers. Neither look-alike should be eaten.

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 ??  ?? Excerpted from How to Forage for Mushrooms without Dying© by Frank Hyman. Used with permission from Storey Publishing.
Excerpted from How to Forage for Mushrooms without Dying© by Frank Hyman. Used with permission from Storey Publishing.
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 ??  ?? Crepidotus applanatus
Crepidotus applanatus
 ??  ?? Pleurocybe­lla porrigens
Pleurocybe­lla porrigens

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