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MushroomDan

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Everything posted by MushroomDan

  1. Suillus are delicious. We eat them all the time. We make like a mushroom dip or sauce from them since they never hold shape for anything else
  2. I also been eating red or orange Leccinum sp. for years. No ill effects.
  3. Insects eat them. They also wither. They decay. They dry out etc. As far as season goes, this depends on where you are in the world.
  4. Best shrooms for cream of mushroom soup. Yum
  5. These are delicious just sauteed in butter. One of the three musketeers.
  6. Looks a bit like Agaricus Campestris
  7. Same what Trout said, I have ansestors back in Russia and Belarus that have consumed Leccinums for generations. Pictures of these mushrooms are in folklore and history. We always take some if found fresh. Sauteed in butter like any regular mushrooms. Stalks can be tough like Dave mentioned. We sautee stalks first, then the caps. Most of the times caps are brown and light brown to pale brown. Only once found the orange red capped.
  8. Like Dave said the only bad look-alike are angel wings, and what you have in the photos are not angel wings. If the oysters are fresh, they are quite delicious!
  9. Yep looks like one of the edible oyster types. Not sure on exact species. Someone here will surely know.
  10. looks similar to liberty cap. I would not risk it.
  11. Thanks! Yeah thats what I figured. I find a lot of Marasmius Oreades also, but always leave them behind. Too paranoid with LBM's.
  12. agreed with everything svs said
  13. the honeys we found were all small and young
  14. That is a smart move. I also stay away from any little brown thingies. For example we found a boat load of young Armillaria (edible, honey mushrooms), I took some photos to ID them on here. We did not keep or eat any of the honeys because what if one deadly galerina slipped in? Not taking any chances.
  15. I heard that any brown Cort is deadly toxic
  16. looks like one of hundreds of species of smaller chanties. The ridges go right unto the stalk. Looks like a yellow foot chant but the colors are different. I hope some of the seasoned vets can chime in. This is definitely an interesting find. edit*** adding that Cantharellus tubaeformis has a yellow stalk.
  17. Need to see the underside, need to see the mushroom sliced longitute in half. need more detailed pics to ID
  18. I am not an advanced expert but I can see these are NOT chanterelles! They are definitely not golden chanterelles, they are not yellow foots and they are not cinnabar chanterelles.
  19. Caj, they are buttons. Overall all the mushrooms the photos are very young. I heard honeys can get huge.
  20. Thanks Dave! I researched further into Hypholoma sp. Apparently the 2 species Dave mentioned are edible. But there is one Hypholoma sulfur tuft that is toxic. Gonna stay away for now, looks like advanced species.
  21. Was this the only mushroom there? Usually honeys grow in clusters and even if you find them solo, there are always other honeys or honey clusters around. In other words, you will never find just 1 solo honey.
  22. thanks guys! yes the spore print was white
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