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FORAGER | CHEF

Award-winning chef, author and forager Alan Bergo. Food is all around you.

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Meadow Mushroom

Meadow Mushrooms

Agaricus Campestris, also known as the meadow mushroom.

In my experience, this isn’t a mushroom that you will really hunt for, I tend to just see them around randomnly. They start to fruit in the early Summer, and like open places like fields, yards, and forest edges. When you do find some though you’re likely to find a bunch. After you find a place where they grow you can come back days after you picked the first ones, and probably find some more. The next year around the same time too, you can be pretty sure of them coming up again around the same area.

Cooking

Cooking wise, these are a great, all around mushroom. They’re closely related to the button mushrooms in the supermarket and taste similar, but I’d say more mushroomy.

If you want to preserve them, you have a couple options. These can be dried, sauteed in butter and frozen, or pickled in a recipe for conserve like I posted here. Making powder from them to make broth and seasonings is also a good choice if they had bug damage, which is common with these. Just make sure that you don’t freeze them raw, aside from taking up too much fridge space, mushrooms get damaged by the freezer if they’re not cooked first. Even after cooking freezing and then thawing, they’re still not the same as if they were fresh.

Meadow Mushrooms

Note the slightly pink gills which will turn brown with age, and lack of yellow staining on cut areas.

 

 

Identification and Look a Likes 

As far as look a likes,  there are some. There is one in particular that is bad, not deadly, just bad. They’re, rare, but they also have pink gills too which can be confusing, but I’ve never seen them in Minnesota where I pick. Here’s some general information and tips that should help you avoid bad guys, the most important things to notice are their smell and if they discolor when cut:

  • Cut the stem of the mushroom, then wait 15 minutes.  if the cut stains yellow, throw it out!
  • Put the underside of the mushrooms cap close to your nose and smell it deeply. Is it mushroomy and good smelling? Great. Does it smell like embalming fluid? Bad.
  • There will be a ring right around the middle of the stem.
  • Pay close attention to the size of the mushrooms, if there are some that are young and older growing together, make note of their sizes throughout their life span. These mushrooms are usually large, like portobellos from your grocery store when mature, when small, they will be about the size of a cultivated white button.
Agaricus Campestris Meadow Mushroom Minnesota

Older mushroom, whose gills are beginning to turn brown. Note the thick stem, pink gills, and lack of a sack around the base.

 

Recipes

Recipes where these could be used and or substituted

 

  • Wild Mushrooms With Garlic And Parsley
  • Wild Mushrooms With Breadcrumbs, Garlic, And Chili
  • Hedgehog Mushroom Conserve
  • Hedgehog Mushroom Duxelles
  • Bison-Black Barley Stew, With Wild Mushrooms

 

Related

Previous Post: « Boyd’s 100 Dollar Morel Soup
Next Post: The Bigfoot Morel/Morchella Crassipes »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. lwhy

    October 28, 2015 at 12:59 am

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts about agaricus campestris.
    Regards

    Reply
  2. Dina Tsirelson

    October 14, 2019 at 10:14 am

    It would be really helpful if you mentioned the bad lookalike species, so I could look them up and read more about them to be more confident of my ID. Eg. Which mushroom does the yellow stain rule out? Which smells like embalming fluid?

    Reply

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FORAGER | CHEF®
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Author: The Forager Chef’s Book of Flora
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Alan Bergo
I liked the staff meal I made for Mondays shoot so I liked the staff meal I made for Mondays shoot so much we filmed it instead of the original dish I’d planned. 

Cooked natural wild rice (not the black shiny stuff) is great hot, cold, sweet or savory. It’s a perfect, filling lunch for a long day of berry picking. 

I make them with whatever I have on hand. Mushrooms will fade into the background a little here, so I use a bunch of them, along with lots of herbs and hickory nut oil + dill flowers. 

I’m eating the leftovers today back up in the barrens (hopefully) getting some more bluebs for another shoot this week w @wild.fed 

#wilwilwice #wildrice #chanterelles #campfood #castironcooking
Baby’s first homegrown mushrooms! Backyard wine Baby’s first homegrown mushrooms! Backyard wine caps on hardwood sawdust from my lumberjack buddy.

Next up blewits. Spawn from @northsporemushrooms

#winecaps #strophariaaeruginosa #allthemushroomtags
It’s wild cherry season. I’ll be picking from It’s wild cherry season. I’ll be picking from my favorite spot tomorrow a.m. and have room for a couple helpers. It’s at an event on a farm just south of St. Cloud. 

If you’re interested send me a message and I’ll raffle off the spots. Plenty of cherries to go around. I’ll be leading a short plant walk around the farm too. 

#chokecherries #foraging #prunusvirginiana #summervibes
Special thanks to the beach in Ashland for hooking Special thanks to the beach in Ashland for hooking it up with on-site garnishes. Beach pea flowers taste strong and leguminous, similar to vetch, or like a rich tasting pea shoot. 

#lathyrusjaponicus #beachpeas #peaflower #foraging #northshore #bts
Great, long day of filming in near the south shore Great, long day of filming in near the south shore of Lake Superior yesterday. 

Blueberries were sparse, and some kind of blight seems to be affecting the serviceberries. Chanterelles weren’t as good as 2020, but they were there. 

Quick dip in the Lake Superior after we broke set was a bonus. 

W/ @barebonesliving  @misterberndt @jesseroesler

#barebonesliving #foraging #lakesuperiorrocks #serviceberries #chanterelles #bts
Green ramp seed make a great lactoferment. Just pu Green ramp seed make a great lactoferment. Just put the green seeds in brine in a jar, leave for 2 weeks. 

After they’re sour they can be water bath processed, although I’ve stored them at room temp without an issue too. 

Finished product is great minced or puréed into places where you’d like garlic, capers, or both. 

Makes a great tzatziki with a little crumbled, dried bee balm. 

#tzatziki #ramps #rampseeds #foraging #fermentation
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