• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Forager | Chef
  • Home
  • About
  • Recipes
  • Interviews
  • Partnerships
  • Contact
menu icon
go to homepage
  • Home
  • About
  • Recipes
  • Interviews
  • Partnerships
  • Contact
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
  • subscribe
    search icon
    Homepage link
    • Home
    • About
    • Recipes
    • Interviews
    • Partnerships
    • Contact
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
  • ×
    Home » Wild Mushroom Recipes

    Marinated Honey Mushrooms

    Published: Nov 6, 2021 Modified: Feb 5, 2023 Author: Alan Bergo

    Jump to Recipe

    I like to cook honey mushrooms in all kinds of wild mushroom recipes, but these marinated honeys are the first thing you should make if you're new to them, or if you're a honey-harvesting veteran who's looking for something new tricks. They're delicious, addicting, and a fun compliment to a charcuterie platter.

    Marinated Honey Mushrooms recipe
    Honey mushrooms marinated with garlic, shallot, lemon, dill and hot chili. Feel free to switch up the dance partners.

    Most of us are probably familiar with little jars of "marinated mushrooms" which taste more like pickled mushrooms by necessity as the low amount of acid isn't stable enough for long term preservation on a shelf.

    Besides the heavy amount of acid, those little jars of marinated mushrooms are also made from boring white buttons. Honey mushrooms, especially the young buttons with their delicious, chewy texture, are a great stand-in for white buttons in a lot of different recipes, these being one of the best examples I've had to date. 

    Boiling honey mushrooms
    First the honey caps are boiled until wilted.

    The recipe is really simple. First, you need honey buttons, not opened caps, buttons. Next you give them a good boil, about 5 minutes or so until they're wilted, then rinse them, pat dry, and mix with a few herbs and seasonings, letting them sit for at least a few hours before you dig in. 

    Boiled honey mushrooms for marinating
    After boiling, you drain the mushrooms and pat dry.

    Adjusting the flavor profile

    This honey mushroom recipe is a nod to my friends in the Ukraine and Russia, where they love honeys. The flavors here reflect that, and I recommend it as a starting point. Once you make one batch, I'm sure you can tweak things to your liking. Here's the big ingredients. 

    • Sunflower oil (only Smude's oil will do here, other oils don't have the same flavor) 
    • Flavorful herb (dill, oregano, mint, chives, tarragon, etc) 
    • Garlic 
    • Chili 
    • Lemon zest 

    How to use them 

    Marinated mushrooms are more than something to just eat cold out of a jar. Here's a few ideas. 

    • Add a spoonful of caps to hot soup as a garnish, especially things like borcht and brothy soups. If you change the flavor profile up they'll be excellent with Asian noodle soups too. 
    • Warm them up and spoon them on top of a protein: fish, steak, chicken, pork-anything 
    • Toss them with pasta to warm them up, especially minimalist pastas like very simple tomato sauce, garlic and oil, or pasta with pesto. 
    • Warm or room temp with your favorite charcuterie and cheeses. 
    Marinated Honey Mushrooms recipe
    Marinated Honey Mushrooms recipe
    Print Recipe Pin Recipe
    5 from 4 votes

    Marinated Honey Mushrooms

    Simple marinated honey mushrooms. Excellent served with antipasti, olives and sausage, warmed and served over fish, tossed into salads, and used as a soup garnish, or pretty much wherever you’d like. Serves 4 as an appetizer
    Prep Time30 minutes mins
    Cook Time5 minutes mins
    Marinating time8 hours hrs
    Total Time8 hours hrs 35 minutes mins
    Course: Appetizer, Condiment
    Cuisine: American, Russian
    Keyword: Honey Mushrooms, Marinated
    Servings: 6 Servings
    Calories: 18kcal
    Author: Alan Bergo

    Equipment

    • 1 mixing bowl

    Ingredients

    • 10 oz fresh honey mushrooms preferably unopened buttons, stems trimmed down to 1 inch or less remaining
    • ½ teaspoon kosher salt plus more to taste
    • 1 medium 5 g clove of garlic, grated on a mandoline
    • 1 small 15 g shallot, diced as small as possible or minced
    • 10 cracks of the peppermill
    • 1 small lemon
    • 2-3 Tablespoons fresh lemon juice or your favorite vinegar or more to taste
    • ¼ cup Smude’s sunflower oil
    • Crushed red pepper or other hot chili to taste
    • Fresh chopped dill or your favorite soft herb like oregano, mint, etc basil, mint, etc, to taste, about 1-2 tablespoons

    Instructions

    • Bring 3 quarts of water with 1 tablespoon kosher salt to a vigorous, rolling boil in a large stock pot that can accommodate the mushrooms and water without boiling over.
    • Add the honey mushrooms, cover the pot, wait for the pot to come back to a boil, put the lid on, set a timer for ten minutes, keeping the pot at a rolling boil the whole time. Drain the mushrooms in a colander and allow to cool, then rinse.
    • Spread the mushrooms on paper towels or a cloth and press on them a bit to remove excess water.
    • Combine the mushrooms in a bowl with the remaining ingredients, zesting about half the lemon, and peeling 8-10 strips as thin as possible and cutting them into julienne (optional). Double check the seasoning for salt, acid and spiciness, adjust until it tastes good to you, then refrigerate.
    • The mushrooms will improve in flavor over time, and will last for a week or so.

    Notes

    This recipe is good for honeys, but also other mushrooms that will have their color preserved by blanching. Milk cap mushrooms, especially young ones, are a good substitute. 

    Nutrition

    Serving: 2oz | Calories: 18kcal | Carbohydrates: 3g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 0.2g | Saturated Fat: 0.03g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.002g | Sodium: 197mg | Potassium: 177mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 2g | Vitamin A: 0.4IU | Vitamin C: 2mg | Calcium: 6mg | Iron: 0.3mg

    More 

    Honey Mushrooms

    Vegetarian and Vegan Mushroom Recipes

    « Carpaccio with Beefsteak Mushrooms
    Why You Shouldn't Dry-Age Venison Backstraps »

    Reader Interactions

    Comments

    1. Nurit Sonnenschein

      September 03, 2023 at 9:17 pm

      5 stars
      Despite the weird coloring, I made these today and served them this evening and they were fantastic! I used a fernleaf dill olive oil instead of sunflower oil, and the dill flavor was perfect with the mushrooms! I boiled the mushrooms for probably 12 minutes and was amazed that they still had any crunch left, but they did! Fabulous!

      Reply
      • Alan Bergo

        September 09, 2023 at 5:58 pm

        Thanks Nurit.

        Reply
    2. Nurit Sonnenschein

      September 03, 2023 at 12:38 pm

      5 stars
      Just trying these for the first time. My mushrooms lost all their yellow color after 10 minutes and seem more grey/purple - has this happened to anyone else??

      Reply
      • Alan Bergo

        September 09, 2023 at 5:59 pm

        Honey mushrooms can vary drastically in color.

        Reply
    3. Linda

      December 20, 2022 at 6:58 pm

      5 stars
      Don't freak, but I've left pickled honeys in the frig for close to a year .... and still taste great. 🙂

      Reply
      • Alan Bergo

        December 21, 2022 at 8:57 am

        I know. Unfortunately my advice has to go through a filter here. We live in a litigious society.

        Reply
    4. Jacqui

      November 01, 2021 at 7:36 am

      The honeys have just started here and I brought home a bit over 2 kg, most of them perfect tiny buttons.
      So, a question: 5 minutes boiling feels like not enough for honeys we will then consume without further cooking.
      I am cautious with honeys and generally cook then for about 20 minutes when duxelling them for the freezer for later use in pierogi or burgers, or I use them in stews/goulash where they cook for a long time. I have pickled and canned them in the past but I cooked those ones pretty much to death too, and ... nobody has ever gotten sick from honeys I have prepared, which I consider a triumph.
      So ... you stand by the 5 minutes? I don't want to break a winning streak...

      Reply
      • Alan Bergo

        November 03, 2021 at 11:14 am

        Jacqui, thanks for mentioning that. I re-wrote the method there a bit for clarity. I do stand by the 5 min if they follow the directions *explicitly*, but after doing the recipe testing for my book, I know that user error is definitely a thing, and since these are eaten without cooking after, I'm going to change it to 10 as some people can get lax on following guidelines. Thanks again for bringing it up 🙂

        Reply
    5 from 4 votes (1 rating without comment)

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Recipe Rating




    Primary Sidebar

    Chef Alan Bergo

    HI, I'm Alan: James Beard Award-winning Chef, Author, Show Host and Forager. I've been writing about cooking wild food here for over a decade. Let me show you why foraging is the most delicious thing you'll ever do.

    More about me →

    Get The Book

    the forager chef's book of flora
    The Forager Chefs Book of Flora

    As Seen On

    An image showing many different brands and media companies forager chef alan bergo has worked with.

    Footer

    Privacy

    Subscribe

    Be the first to hear what I'm doing

    Contact

    As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

    Copyright © 2025 Forager | Chef LLC® Accessibility Statement

    Rate This Recipe

    Your vote:




    A rating is required
    A name is required
    An email is required

    Recipe Ratings without Comment

    Something went wrong. Please try again.