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

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Dry Sauteed Blewits With Shallots And Tarragon

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blewit bluefoot mushroom recipe

The first few times I eat something new I try to keep it very basic, so I can learn what the flavor is like and then begin to plan appropriately for it. There is varying information on the internet regarding the cookery of blewits, mostly just basic techniques and blewits being cooked in places where you might use any mushroom.

Some recipes say you should avoid using garlic with them, and I do agree it could have the potential to taste funny, or just overpower their flavor. They are a delicate mushroom, like chanterelles, so it’s natural that their flavor can be highlighted and magnified by cooking in cream, or in a simple saute like I have done here.

I was discussing various ways of cooking delicately flavored mushrooms with a chef friend of mine a while back who has worked with many varieties. We agreed that the mushrooms with subtle, sweet flavors are complimented nicely by the gentle flavor of shallots and sweet herbs.

This preparation is basic, and doesn’t really even need a recipe, but I’ll include one for posterity. Afterwords, you could eat them straight from the plate with your fingers, or they would love to put on top of a piece of meat as a garnish.

The Dry Saute

A useful technique is that of the “dry saute”. My blewits were quite damp from the rain the previous days, and I needed to find a way to make it so they would take a nice sear, without becoming soupy or stewed in their own juice. Blewits in particular seemed to contain much more water than others I have cooked. Dry sauteeing them in a pan without oil, then allowing their water to evaporate for a bit allows them to then caramelize beautifully when the oil is added to the pan.

All you have to do here is get your pan very hot, but not hot enough so that whatever goes into the pan will burn. If you are using stainless steel to cook in, you will need to hit the pan at just the right moment to avoid the mushrooms becoming glued to the pan and then sticking and ripping, leaving a nasty crust that takes up space in your pan and will inhibit the caramelization of the mushrooms due to their lack of contact with the steel.

A shortcut here is to use cast iron or teflon since they are naturally non stick, stainless will work too, but requires a bit of intuition as to the perfect temperature at which to add the ingredients.

  1. Simply heat the pan until hot, then add the mushrooms and don’t move them for a while.
  2. You will start to see liquid steaming off of them as they cook, when they have wilted and given up their water, now you may add the oil, a tsp at a time, until the pan is nice and moist with it.
  3. Now cook the mushrooms until they are lightly golden brown and colored, making sure to pay special attention to the stems, as undercooked blewits could make you sick, just like morels.
  4. If you add the oil too early before the water is cooked out of the mushrooms, geysers of water and fat may shoot out of the pan directly at your eyes, it can pop and burst like a cannon, depending on how hot the pan is. Often this happens to me when I get a pan of brown butter too hot and then deglaze with wine, which can make the pan explode oil and boiling, acidic water in your face. 
    sauteed blewit blue foot mushroom recipe
    Print Recipe
    4.8 from 5 votes

    Basic Blewit Recipe: Sauteed Blewits, Shallots And Tarragon

    Dry sauteed blewits with shallots and tarragon.
    Prep Time5 mins
    Cook Time10 mins
    Course: Appetizer, Snack
    Cuisine: American
    Keyword: Blewit, Dry Saute, Lepista nuda

    Ingredients

    • 4 oz Blewits quartered if large, halved or left whole if very small
    • 1 tablespoon Finely diced shallot
    • 1 pinch Fresh chopped tarragon
    • Salt
    • 1 tbsp unsalted butter
    • Flavorless oil for cooking such as grapeseed or canola

    Instructions

    • Begin by heating a cast iron pan until hot
    • When the pan is hot, add the mushrooms, season with salt, and cook them until they've wilted, lighlty browned, and released water. Add the butter to the pan with a little oil, if the pan gets dry, add a little more.
    • Add the shallots, then the tarragon and cook for a minute or two, double check the seasoning for salt, adjust as needed, and serve.

    More 

    Forager’s Guide to Blewit Mushrooms

Related

Previous Post: « Slippery Jack Escargot: With Garlic Butter, Parsley And Breadcrumbs
Next Post: Wild Mushrooms With Breadcrumbs, Garlic, And Chili »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Bob

    September 9, 2015 at 9:22 am

    Love your recipes. Here’s a mod for blewits and orzo pasta that my friends really love.

    Same as above but then…

    Add 3 T of good white vermouth (Ciazano or Noilly Prat) and cook down.
    Stir in freshly cooked orzo pasta and some pasta water as needed to help thicken
    Salt to taste

    Blewits seem to generate a thick sauce themselves unlike other mushrooms.

    Reply
    • Alan Bergo

      September 15, 2015 at 12:42 pm

      That sounds great Bob!

      Reply
      • April Thompson

        October 24, 2020 at 8:33 pm

        I did spaghetti and “mushballs” this week with blewits. Not bad flavor but doing part meat (Or impossible meat substitute) and part mushroom would have had a better texture probably.

        Reply
  2. Elizabeth Davidson

    December 16, 2020 at 5:54 pm

    5 stars
    I belly laughed so hard at that last step in dry sautéing! Your recipes are written for chefs, but there are these moments of pure connection in failure that make you so relatable to everyone. Not enough people share the things that went wrong, but that is truly the best tool to teach.

    Reply
    • Alan Bergo

      December 16, 2020 at 6:19 pm

      Heh. This is a very old post, and I cringed at some of the wording, but yes absolutely right. 🙂

      Reply
  3. Claudia Marieb

    October 14, 2021 at 5:58 pm

    5 stars
    Hi Alan,
    Found my first blewits today and came directly to your site to find a recipe. Thank you for including simple recipes for us non-chefs, that really highlight the taste of the mushroom. I was eating them straight off the plate with my fingers when I read the section where you suggested just that. We are on the same page : ). Also I loved reading the mistakes for the same reasons Elizabeth did. Your posts and thoroughly helpful and enjoyable and , wow, blewits are GOOD.

    Reply
  4. Anthea Holborow

    December 28, 2021 at 6:13 am

    5 stars
    Hello Alan
    I found a Blewit yesterday and went on line to check whether it was edible or poisonous and saw your post, together with a recipe. The result was lovely and I’m off to find some more. This mild damp weather must suit them.
    Thank you
    Anthea Holborow

    Reply
    • Alan Bergo

      December 28, 2021 at 7:31 am

      Glad the post was helpful, Blewits were one of the trickiest for me to identify at first.

      Reply

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Alan Bergo
I made vegan fish sauce from ramp juice. You tak I made vegan fish sauce from ramp juice. 

You take the pure juice of the leaves, mix it with salt, Koji rice, and more chopped fresh ramp leaves, then ferment it for a bit. 

After the fermentation you put it into a dehydrator and cook it at 145-150 F for 30 days. 

The slow heat causes a Maillard/browning reaction over time. 

After 30 days you strain the liquid and bottle it. It’s the closest thing to plant-based fish sauce I’ve had yet. 

The potency of ramps is a pretty darn good approximation of the glutamates in meat. But you could prob make something similar with combinations of other alliums. 

The taste is crazy. I get toasted ramp, followed by mellow notes from the fermentation. Potent and delicate at the same time. 

I’ve been using it to make simple Japanese-style dipping sauces for tempura etc. 

Pics: 
2: Ramp juice 
3: Juicy leaf pulp 
4: Squeezing excess juice from the pulp
5: After 5 days at 145F 
6: After 30 days 
7: Straining through Muslin to finish

#ramps #veganfishsauce #experimentalfood #kojibuildscommunity #fermentation #foraging
Oeufs de Gaulle is a classic morel recipe Jacques Oeufs de Gaulle is a classic morel recipe Jacques Pepin used to make for French president Charles de Gaulle. 

You bake eggs in a ramekin with shrimp topped with creamy morel sauce and eat with toast points. 

Makes for a really special brunch or breakfast. Recipe’s on my site, but it’s even better to watch Jacques make it on you tube. 

#jacquespepin #morels #shrimp #morilles #brunchtime
Morels: the only wild mushroom I count by the each Morels: the only wild mushroom I count by the each instead of the pound. 

Good day today, although my Twin Cities spots seem a full two weeks behind from the late spring. 2 hours south they were almost all mature. 

76 for me and 152 for the group. Check your spots, and good luck! 

#morels #murkels #mollymoochers #drylandfish #spongemushroom #theprecious
The first time I’ve seen fungal guttation-a natu The first time I’ve seen fungal guttation-a natural secretion of water I typically see with plants. 

I understand it as an indicator that the mushrooms are growing rapidly, and a byproduct of their metabolism speeding up. If you have some clarifications, chime in. 

Most people know it from Hydnellum 
peckii-another polypore. I’ve never seen it on pheasant backs before.

Morels are coming soon too. Mine were 1 inch tall yesterday in the Twin Cities. 

#guttation #mushroomhunting #cerioporussquamosus #pheasantback #naturesbeauty
Rain and heat turned the flood plain forest into a Rain and heat turned the flood plain forest into a grocery store. 

#groceryshopping #sochan #rudbeckialaciniata #foraging
Italian wild food traditions are some of my favori Italian wild food traditions are some of my favorite. 

Case in point: preboggion, a mixture of wild plants, that, depending on the reference, should be made with 5-23 individual plants. 

Here’s a few mixtures I’ve made this spring, along with a reference from the Oxford companion to Italian food. 

The mixture should include some bitter greens (typically assorted asters) but the most important plant is probably borage. 

Making your own version is a good excercise. Here they’re wilted with garlic and oil, but there’s a bunch of traditional recipes the mixture is used in. 

Can you believe this got cut from my book?!

#preboggion #preboggiun #foraging #traditionalfoods
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