Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Laetiporus cincinnatus, for real this time

Spilling out of a tree

Laetiporus cincinnatus white pore surface

In between things

A friend called me on the Mushroom Hotline to tell me about some mushrooms growing in his yard (not these--some great Omphalotus illudens, coming soon), and I could see this in his neighbor's yard. 

My friend wasn't home yet and the neighbors weren't home either, so I couldn't ask them if I could have it, and it took a LOT of strength of will for me to not just harvest it and run. But it all worked out--I found a perfectly ripe pawpaw on the ground nearby which I DID take without asking anyone because I've had a long-running issue with pawpaws, namely, that I've heard about them and was intrigued by them and I've never seen one fruiting (I see the pretty blue-green trees in the woods all the time, with blooms) and never eaten one and people keep telling me, "Oh, they had them at the Farmers Market last week!" and I had just talked about them again two days earlier so I decided that pawpaw had my name on it, and I took it. I saw it lying there, wondered what it was, the leaves of the tree registered, the decision was made, it was in my bag. Look, know, take. That's how long it took.

When I got home I called my foodie friend down the street, and we shared it, and it was magnificent. Totally made my day.

And since then, my friend did talk to his neighbors who said I could have the Chicken with their blessing, so tomorrow I'm going back over there to take more pics of the Omphalotus and hopefully those little girls a few houses down haven't messed up the chicken too bad (they got curious when I was taking pics, and by the time I was leaving they were poking it with sticks or something).

Note: this is an atypical form of L. cincinnatus, they usually grow near the base of trees or a little distance from the tree, seemingly from the ground, but really on an underground root. And usually in a rosette pattern, not overlapping shelves like this. Several people reported atypical growths of these this year.

The title of this post is referring to the previous post where I was getting all whipped up about some mushrooms I found that I thought were Laetiporus cincinnatus. I found them when they were quite small and I was tracking them, and on the 3rd visit I harvested them, and even showed them to people at work (oh, great! now people with even less familiarity with mushrooms have been given the wrong information by someone they think knows things!), until I finally realized they weren't Chicken mushrooms at all. I was chagrined (also taken aback, also brought up short. Chicken mushrooms are supposed to be one of the easiest ones. I just need to slow down).

Anyway--how 'bout those shapes, eh?

6 comments:

  1. Great photos! Chickens do indeed have some great shapes to them.

    The thing that intrigues me the most about this one is that L. cincinnatus tends to grow at the base or next to a tree in a rosette, while L. sulphureus tends to grow on the tree itself in the shelf form.

    It's been a strange year for them anyway...your white bottomed chicken here in an atypical shelf form and me finding a yellow bottom in an atypical rosette...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Yeah, I know about that tree-base/ground/root thing too, but there you are. Up is down and down is up.

    ReplyDelete
  3. a wild foods BONANZA! I was gonna hopefully go Pawpaw fruit hunting/mushroom hunting sometime this weekend. I'm having withdrawals from the out-of-doors.

    ReplyDelete
  4. When I went back for the Chicken, I scoured around for any more pawpaws (nada), and I didn't see any more on the tree, either. What is UP with pawpaws.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I think Pawpaws like taunting us. What else is a tree going to do?

    ReplyDelete