T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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968.1 | What Kind? | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Tue Feb 02 1988 07:54 | 9 |
|
Shiitake/Black Joyce Chen, Acton
Porcini, Morel, Chilean Idylwilde Farms, Acton (all types not always
available)
- JP
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968.2 | J. Bildner | HPSVAX::MANDALINCI | | Tue Feb 02 1988 12:09 | 3 |
| All the J. Bildner and Sons carry dried mushrooms. The one in Boston
on Mass Ave has the best selection and can often order them if they
do not carry them.
|
968.3 | Try Bread & Circus | SOFBAS::RHODES | | Tue Feb 09 1988 13:47 | 2 |
| I have seen various varieties of dried mushrooms at Bread and Circus
in Wellesley, also.
|
968.4 | ROSE LEE'S IN WESTBOROUGH | ATREUS::NELKE | | Tue Feb 09 1988 16:11 | 5 |
| At Rose Lee's (Rt 9, Westborough), I saw several different kinds
of dried mushrooms, including the semi-hard-to-find "Clouds Ears."
Good luck!
|
968.5 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Paul S. Winalski | Sun Feb 28 1988 16:53 | 4 |
| In Boston itself, all of the Chinese grocery stores in Chinatown stock dried
mushrooms.
--PSW
|
968.6 | Polish mushrooms? | MURPHY::CORMIER | | Mon May 06 1991 10:33 | 10 |
| CAn anyone shed some light on the dried mushrooms? I saw the Frugal
Gourmet do a show on Polish cooking this weekend, and he used dried
Polish mushrooms in a recipe. He never mentioned a particular "type"
of mushroom, such as shitake, chanterelles, etc. Is there only one
kind of Polish mushrooms? Are they significantly different from French,
Italian, Chinese, etc, dried mushrooms? Most recipes call for a
specifically-named mushroom.
Sarah
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968.7 | many smelly mushrooms will work | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Mon May 06 1991 10:45 | 6 |
| Most Eastern European recipes call for a dried mushroom which might be
sold in stores as a dried Hungarian mushroom (at least I've never seen
anything labelled as a Polish mushroom). I don't know exactly what
variety it is. It's got a strong flavor, and you could substitute
dried Chinese, shiitake, cepes or porcini mushrooms if you couldn't
find the Hungarian variety.
|
968.8 | Chilean | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Mon May 06 1991 11:56 | 7 |
| His book says any variety will do (cepes, boletus, porcini). It also
recommends getting them from an ethnic market that imports them from
South America rather than from Europe. The price will be LOTS cheaper.
There are real inexpensive ones that looked just like the ones he
showed on TV, labeled Chilean Mushrooms. I bought some at Pickety Place,
and have since seen them at a few other places. Very strong flavor,
and they smell strongly, too (earthy musty scent).
|
968.9 | Different aspect of dry mushrooms. | SUBURB::MCDONALDA | Shockwave Rider | Fri Jan 29 1993 15:13 | 15 |
| This year I intend search our local woods for Morel mushrooms. A friend
of mine is a mushroom hunter (the swine found a cache of Ceps near
where he lives) who can provide me with some help, but if in doubt he
knows some sort of government run agency that will help you identify
your bounty.
So, what if I am ever so lucky and find lots of Morels? Well apart from
eating the little beauties, I thought I would have a bash at drying
some (this presumes I'll have some spare) for those lean out of season
months. Apart from the simple technique (may be the best) of put them
on a tray and stick'em in the airing cupboard, has the team any
experience of drying mushrooms.
Angus
PS Does everyone know what an airing cupboard is?
|
968.10 | | ENABLE::glantz | Mike @TAY 227-4299 TP Eng Littleton | Fri Jan 29 1993 16:36 | 4 |
| An acquaintance who dries all sorts of things has mentioned that
mushrooms are among the easiest things to dry, providing you clean them
well first with a gentle brush (no water, obviously). The main concern
is apparently insect eggs.
|
968.11 | Re -.1 Thanks, good point about the insect eggs. | SUBURB::MCDONALDA | Shockwave Rider | Mon Feb 01 1993 08:35 | 5 |
| My mycological friend says he slices his 'wild' Ceps very thin. He does
this to check for bugs and insects :-} Aparently they (the bugs) love
Ceps.
Angus
|
968.12 | The Airing Cupboard | NWD002::KASTENDIC_JO | | Tue Feb 16 1993 14:57 | 17 |
| To answer the airing cupboard question... I used to hide in the airing
cupboard when I was young - it was the warmest place in the (stone,
Northern English) house.
The airing cupboard was built around the hot water cistern, and served
as a linen closet. Back before the days of clothes dryers, when
linens were dried inside on racks in front of the fire during winter,
it was not unusual for fabric items to be put away not quite bone dry.
If you put them in the airing cupboard, they would finish drying and be
nice and warm when you wanted to use them.
The cistern was copper and not insulated at all, so building an airing
cupboard around it used the "waste" heat - as though there is any such
thing as waste heat in an antique English house!
Joan
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968.13 | Experiment time | SUBURB::MCDONALDA | Shockwave Rider | Wed Feb 17 1993 05:33 | 18 |
| I decided to experiment drying some ordinary cultivated mushrooms. This
Sunday gone I popped a dozen or so medium sized mushrooms on to a baking
tray and stuck the whole lot into the airing cupboard. I checked them
last night. They were all shrivelled up and practically bone dry. Not
bad for two days.
One interesting thing that happened was that some of the mushrooms
appeared to have dropped their spores i.e. around some (about 30%) of
the mushrooms there was a ring of fine brown dust. I dried the
mushrooms caps up and gills down.
I know its a rathole, so I'm prepared to start a new topic, but has
anyone experience of taking such spores and 'infecting' a suitable
growing medium, then going on to produce mycelea (sp) and thence
fruiting bodies?
Angus
PS Last sunday's search of the 'wild wood' turned up no morels :-(
|