Showing posts with label FOOD::fungi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FOOD::fungi. Show all posts

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Final Mushroom Update

Things got hectic towards the end of the quarter, but I just wanted to show you the last few mushrooms we harvested in my edible mushroom cultivation class.

Pleurotus djamor - The pink Oyster mushroom:


. . . in the incubator . . .




. . . ready for harvesting . . .

Lentinula edodes - Shiitake:


. . . our mushroom, "browned in the bag" . . .


. . . in the incubator . . .


. . . ready for harvest . . .

Coprinus sp. - Lion's Mane mushroom:


. . . in the incubator . . .


. . . ready for harvest . . . (so cool looking!)


. . . harvested! . . .

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Yellow Oyster Mushrooms In My Mouth



Jaja and I made the oyster mushrooms with some rice that we seasoned with CA bay leaves (which are a little overwhelming). There's home-grown cilantro on top. A strange combo of tastes, and the verdict is still out on the mushrooms. But I have some shiitake and button mushrooms coming up, so we'll have to wait and see. Maybe I just don't really like oyster mushrooms.


Saturday, February 2, 2008

Blooming Shrooms



My yellow oyster mushrooms (Pleurotus sp.) are "breaking!" Once the fungus colonized the straw completely, mushrooms started to form. The tiny mushrooms are called "pins" and once this happens the bag needs to be moved to a humid environment and cut open. We're using a humidity-controlled incubator. The mushrooms will get much bigger than this, so stay tuned.


Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Fridays with Fungi

Oh man, you guys are going to love this. Though my schedule this quarter is unbearable (it's to the point where I don't know when I'm going to sleep), my Friday afternoon class is one that I don't mind going to, not at all. That's because it is . . .

Edible Mushroom Cultivation!

No, I'm not getting credit towards my master's degree by taking this class. But it's the only one of it's kind in the whole country, so I ask you: how could I resist?

Here are our current projects:



We are using jars of sterilized barley to grow the "spawn" of Pleurotus djamor, the pink oyster mushroom. This basically means that we are allowing the fungus to colonize the grain, and this jar will be the "master jar," providing inoculum for many future bags of mushrooms. This is what the colonized grain looks like:



Pretty sweet. After the master jar is colonized, you can mix the grain in a bag with a sterilized substrate like straw or sawdust, and these bags will eventually fruit to provide you with tasty edible mushrooms.

We inoculated these bags of straw with another Pleurotus species, the yellow oyster mushroom:





Once the fungi has colonized the bag (grown throughout the straw until it is cemented together into a kind of brick), we will move it to a humid incubator, cut slits in the bag, and the mushrooms will fruit out of the slits. I'll post pictures of that when it happens.

We also inoculated bags of sawdust with Shiitake mushroom spawn:



I'll keep you posted on the process, and if anyone wants to know about it in more depth, let me know. I'm going to be trying it myself soon, to see if I can do it at home. Weeeeeeeee!