Flies like them.
And no, this is one wild thing I will not be taking home for dinner. Though I have established that I am, at heart, a mushroomer. I like the rain. Nothing would please me more than foraging somewhere for morelles or chanterelles. A wonderful essay by Jim Barg on mushrooming in edible Jersey's Fall 2008 edition confirmed this.
One damp day in the pine forest of Tokai in Cape Town, I and my chestnut horse Cromwell came upon a massive patch of pine rings (Lactarius deliciosus). They went down the front of my white, long sleeved shirt and we carried them home proudly for dinner. That became a favourite foraging spot for years. The flat, apricot caps were unmistakable, but just in case, the stems were sliced with a sharp knife to reveal the distinctive ring.
One damp day in the pine forest of Tokai in Cape Town, I and my chestnut horse Cromwell came upon a massive patch of pine rings (Lactarius deliciosus). They went down the front of my white, long sleeved shirt and we carried them home proudly for dinner. That became a favourite foraging spot for years. The flat, apricot caps were unmistakable, but just in case, the stems were sliced with a sharp knife to reveal the distinctive ring.
It was a happy day when we discovered that the deadly-looking shaggy ink caps were edible. The young white ones like marrow on toast, with butter and a squeeze of lemon.
And the walk on the koppie across from our house in the Free State, when I was very little. My father and I spotted, beside the rusted barbed wire fence separating public land from the state president's residence, two huge cream-capped mushrooms with brown gills. A good sign. We picked them and my mother pronounced them "horse" mushrooms. She cooked them for my father, but would not let me eat them.
Better a dead husband, apparently.
Info (Why? There are old mushroomers, there are bold mushroomers, but there are no old, bold mushroomers):
All this rain is gonna turn us all into mushrooms!
ReplyDeleteI strongly object to the last sentence!
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure they're stinkhorns, Marie! from the family Phallaceae *g*. Here's a really fun site about them http://www.mushroomexpert.com/phallaceae.html
ReplyDeletephallaceae is right! How phallaceous. I've seen these before, stinky-flies like the "dead meat" odor
ReplyDeleteQuiltcat's nailed it. Definitely not to be added to the menu.But not quite in the same league as the "dead horse" lily.
ReplyDeletePine rings - oh yum. Due to undesirable elements, I never go there now. Did find a few under a single pine tree, one street away.
ReplyDeleteLisa - yes. But I don't mind!
ReplyDeleteBeence - different times :-)
QC - thank you! ...and eugh...
Frank - I ain' never seen them.
MIT -yech!
Hen - take my other brother's rottweilers. If they don't eat you first you should be OK.