Eating and Storing Oyster Mushrooms

After successful harvest of oyster mushrooms grown on coffee grounds, the enjoyable job of  cooking and storing the harvest begins!

Oyster Mushrooms Growing on Coffee GroundsOysters Growing on Coffee Grounds

The first thing to do was to eat them and see how they taste. Oysters change flavor a little when grown on different hosts, and I was curious how the coffee would affect it. The mushrooms were torn in small strips and fried in canola oil.

Oysters frying in oiloysters in oiloysters on platefryed oyster closeup

They were delicious! I think they were a little sweeter than the others I have eaten. The texture was firm but not woody at all. We decided to try them dusted with flour and cooked with a little butter added to the oil.

fryed oysters with flouroysters fryed with flour

They were delicious also and held up to the process very well. We will cover saving the excess next!

Oyster Mushrooms On Coffee Grounds

Was headed out camping and walked by my  coffee grounds bucket, and was shocked by what I saw!

This what the project looked like in April.

Oyster Mycelium On Coffee GroundsMycelium and Mold Battle

I had been around this area earlier in the week and didn’t notice anything!

Oyster Mushrooms Growing on Coffee GroundsOysters Growing on Coffee GroundsOysters Growing on Coffee GroundsOysters Growing on Coffee GroundsOysters Growing on Coffee Grounds

Beautiful luxurious Oyster Mushrooms! They are growing quite well, and I can’t wait to eat them. This marks a growing success for me, because this was the Oyster growing project I was most interested in.

Tons and tons of coffee grounds are wasted in our landfills each year. This proves that food can be produced using this waste product. Not only does it keep this valuable resource out of our landfills, but the mushrooms also neutralize the caffeine in the grounds.

Once again the process was low cost and not labor intensive. The spawn was just simply mixed into the coffee grounds and left to grow on it’s own. I can see a real use for these mushrooms in poor countries with shortages of food, and plenty of waste.

Thanks again to Wild Joe’s for the organic coffee grounds, and Garden City Fungi for the spawn.

Oysters on Cornstalks Update

I was checking on my mushroom beds and thought I should check on my cornstalk project. This project (check former posts on cultivation) was an experiment to see if oyster mushrooms could be grown on cornstalks cheaply with minimal work. The project started out in a tub in my garage and got booted outside because of fungus gnats. It had already fruited proving that it is feasible. The project was outside in the cold and snow when the tub, cornstalks and all , was tipped over in a snow bank. After the snow left, the tub was removed and the project was left to the elements. It did not look very good, but was left to see what it would do. The weather has cooled a little, and the wild oysters are flushing, so it is a good time to check on oyster projects.

Oysters on CornstalksOysters on CornstalksOysters on CornstalksOysters on Cornstalks

As you can see, it is hard to get a good mushroom down! These were a little past prime, but they survived, and the pile will be used to start some other projects. Notice that it looks like something else found them before I did. Those sure look like bite marks on the close up!

Fresh Mushrooms

My outdoor Oyster mushroom is starting to flush after a long winter of waiting. I  now can call myself a mushroom cultivator! I knew the bed would be successful, but just like planting any perennial in the fall, you wait impatiently to watch it come to life in the spring. This bed was a combination of tree branches, fallen apples and garden waste. I inoculated it with spawn from Garden City Fungi (see link on homepage) as part of a Bioneers workshop Glenn Babcock, from Garden City Fungi, gave in October. (see other posts on workshops and cultivation) The bed did not need much care and there isn’t much money involved. The pictures tell the story.

Oyster Mushroom BedOyster Mushroom BedOyster Mushroom BedOyster Mushroom Bed

Oyster Mushroom Bed

I now will attempt to grow some other types of  mushrooms through the summer and follow their progress on this site. Thanks again to the folks at Garden City Fungi and The Bioneers for teaching me ways to grow Mushrooms!

Montana Standard Guest opinion: Montana ‘shrooms

This is a guest opinion written in response to an earlier piece on Paul Stamets.  

http://www.mtstandard.com/articles/2009/05/15/opinion/hjjajeifhgfgif.txt

Guest opinion: Montana ‘shrooms

By Dean Robbins – 05/14/2009

Ever since The Standard published a Monday Musings column on how great mushrooms are (March 16), I’ve been wanting to add my two cents.

The importance of mushrooms in Montana can be summed up in one word: food! In a state famous for extreme weather and difficult growing conditions, we need mushrooms to produce food in short growing seasons and to lay dormant during dry spells. Mushrooms provide food for soil as a fungus that feeds plants in short, harsh growing seasons and food for people and animals living under the same adverse conditions. Our forests need them for both plants and animals.

Farming in Montana has the most to gain from mushrooms, because of unpredictable weather and marginal soil in most places. Add to this a tough economy and rising operating costs and farmers have it difficult in Montana. Mushrooms can help with extra income as well as food for the family.

They are also very adept at growing on waste and can turn waste into produce. Fungus is very useful at stabilizing, nourishing and helping to optimize the soil, allowing a farmer to produce more from less acreage. Mushrooms are also efficient, producing one pound of fresh mushrooms from every pound of dry wheat straw .They can be a great, cheap domestic food to sell or eat. All of this could help family farms financially and help make waste productive, while reducing run-off.

The forests in Montana have shallow soil and wash very easily. Along with minimal rainfall, insects and short growing seasons, our forests have a rough time recovering from natural disasters and harvesting. Our pristine waters, feeding blue ribbon trout streams as well as our drinking water, need plants to stay clean. Mushrooms, or the fungus that feeds them, stabilize soil, minimizing run-off and helping plants get a foot hold.

The importance of fungus for trees became obvious when growers took bare root pine trees to South America and they all died. It was discovered that the natural fungus these trees need to survive was missing there, and it must be present for them to live.

Mushrooms also thrive on stumps and could become a secondary income from logging operations or beetle kill stumps. Bears eat snowbank mushrooms right out of hibernation, and they are an important source of protein for them when little else is around. Deer and many forest animals also eat mushrooms.

And yes, we lowly humans also love mushrooms. They are an important part of my diet. I learned to hunt mushrooms at the knee of my grandfather, just as my grand- children learn about mushrooms with me. It is a family affair, and we love to gather a safe, wild meal. Traditions that are natural and seasonal are good for the family and important to children. In a time when most everything our youth sees is electronic and commercial, this is an activity that can bring them closer to nature.

I also think it is important to teach our youth survival and how to be self sufficient. Mushrooms can help us with that, too!

— Dean Robbins lives in Bozeman and has long been fascinated with mushrooms. Contact him via e-mail at montanamushrooms@gmail.com and visit his Web site at www.MontanaMushrooms.com.