I love yellowfoot chanterelles, they’re pretty, petite, and fragile. I only know of one place to pick them in Minnesota, its a mixed woods forest up north, with lots of rolling hills and a wide amount of varying terrain. In a couple places there are wet spots with puddles and tiny ponds. These damp spots are where I find them, hiding with the moss around the water.
I don’t usually find a ton of these, but when I do I like to save them for special occasions. Unlike golden chanterelles and hedgehogs, which should not ever be dried (just because grocery stores sell dried chanterelles doesn’t mean they taste good!) yellowfoot chanterelles, and their cousins the black trumpets have a much thinner, hollow frame, which allows them to dry and be reconstituted effortlessly for cooking. There is another way you can preserve them though, and I have been experimenting with it, it’s a fun one.
A while ago I found an old Italian recipe for preserving chanterelles in vermouth. I got to thinking that I should try preserving yellowfeet the same way, but vermouth contains other flavorings like herbs and such, so I figured I would use vodka since it’s mild flavor would allow me to taste only yellowfoot chanterelle and nothing else.

Don’t be afraid of a “floater” they are a little snack for after your shot.
If sipping mushroom flavored liqour sounds weird, thats ok. The biggest reason I wanted to make it was to use it in cooking. One of the most decadent sauces I’ve ever had is made by sauteing morels and chopped shallots in brown butter, then deglazing the pan with cognac or brandy, evaporating the alcohol and then adding stock, cream or veloute.
Now imagine that same morel sauce, but this time made by deglazing the pan with cognac in which dried morels have been steeped. Black trumpets will make a black liquor, or how about a chanterelle family infused liqour made with golden chanterelles, hedgehogs and yellowfeet?
I know for a fact Italians have been known to make a cordial with golden chanterelles too, For that all you would need to do is follow the recipe below and add some simple syrup to taste after the liquor has infused. Yellowfoot chanterelles do have a more earthy taste than golden though, so they will give a slightly different result.
That being said, after the alcohol has been infused, the flavor can deteriorate after a while, so use this stuff within a month or two. I also keep it in the fridge after infusing at room temperature for a while.
Update: 5 years later.
In the end, this is really kind of a novelty, but a good conversation piece for if you have some other mushroom hunters over. I’ve found I prefer mushroom vodka straight up, as a shot, all alone. Maybe with a salted or brined yellowfoot on the side. Cooking with it is fine, but it’s purity is lost and it’s hard to parse it from other flavors.
Here’s a simple proportion for the infused vodka.
Chanterelle Vodka
Ingredients
- 30 or so fresh yellowfoot chanterelles weight doesn't really matter, but if all the mushrooms you have are small, e.g. the size of pencil eraser, you should add more than twenty. My 30 yellowfeet chanterelles were all about the 3 inches tall.
- .75 litres of fine vodka the type which you would want to drink by itself. I used Prairie vodka, an organic vodka made around Benson Minnesota, its available in many liquor stores in the metro area.
Instructions
- Clean the chanterelles of debris using a small brush or if they are really filthy, by rinsing quickly under some cold running water.
- Combine the chanterelles and the vodka in an air-tight, nonreactive container, like a glass mason jar. An alternate method would be to just stuff the mushrooms in the bottle after taking a healthy pull, but then they'll be harder to remove.
- Store the mushroom vodka in a cool place away from sunlight for at least 1 week, then refrigerate to keep the aroma and enjoy. The vodka flavor will eventually smooth out and get mild.
My wife and I have been infusing mushrooms in vodka for about 5 years now so hopefully I can contribute some of that experience.
The first thing I’d offer is that most mushrooms do not have to be cleaned before infusion. We don’t rinse or even brush very aggressively – pine needles and duff add character and flavor to the final product and any dirt will settle out or can be filtered with cheesecloth.
Agreed that for infusion time, longer is usually better. Still, there is usually ample flavor to enjoy a sample even after only a week with most species so you can appreciate the development as they soak…
In addition to chanterelles, hedgehog mushrooms also work very well in a vodka infusion. These are one of our favorite eating mushrooms so we typically only make an infusion if there is a very large supply. A hotter vodka (one with more bite or sharper mouthfeel) works great with hedgehogs since that is sort of how they taste raw normally.
Yellowfoot chanterelles are probably our highest rated infusions but take a ton of time to collect due to their size so we do other individual species as separate infusions. Blends with chanterelles and hedgehogs and trimmings/crumbs from the collecting baskets added are delicious, if not quite as distinct.
In our experience, the greater the volume of mushrooms infused, the stronger the flavor of the liquor. Regular chanterelles become almost overpowering once past a certain percentage, so I recommend using no more than 50% coarsely chopped mushrooms by total volume of filled container (e.g. 1 quart would be 1 pint loosely packed chopped chanterelles then fill to top with vodka.)
The chopped chanterelles are still usable after extraction, try them pureed for a penne alla vodka or similar. That is assuming they were cleaned really well prior to infusion – no fun chewing on pine needles or whatnot. Yellowfoot mushrooms lose some of their robust texture but can still fill an omelette or round out a hash.
We typically drink the infusions neat to fully appreciate the flavors – a lot of the nuance is blown off with cooking so using them in a dish prior to serving seems like a waste. For a cooking mushroom vodka, do a super-infusion: fill a jar to the brim with coarsely chopped mushrooms and then fill the remaining space between the chunks with vodka. This results in a very strongly flavored liquor that should stand up better in a recipe.
Laccaria sp. and Clitocybe odora can also be infused into vodka but the results are strongly flavored and will probably not agree with all palates. We’ve not yet tried any bolete or lactarius species as infusions because those are some of our favorite eating mushrooms. If we get a large enough harvest this year we’ll give them a go…
I hope this helps!
I just made my first batch of yellowfoot (Craterellus tubaeformis)-infused vodka. I used Crater Lake Vodka (it’s good) and I used mostly yellowfeet but also some “regular” chanterelles (Cantharellus cibarius) as well. I estimate that I used no more than 30 chanterelles to a 750ml bottle of vodka. I combined the vodka and chanterelles in a mason jar and they have been infusing in the fridge for at least 3 weeks now.
To my surprise, however, the whole concoction is now a dark, nearly black, black tea color. Even the chanterelles have now turned nearly black (a dark brown) after infusing. I am curious what is causing this…
Interesting, haven’t seen that happen before.
Yellowfoot vodka almost always turns the color of weak black tea. Regular chanterelle vodka varies wildly, sometimes it is pale gold, other times more of an amber. Every so often I have a batch turn very dark brown. No difference in the vodka (monopolova) and sometimes it happens with just one jar out of a batch I made all at the same time.
I am guessing that it is some kind of oxidation reaction, but that doesn’t make perfect sense since none of the older bottles have ever changed even when decanting or repacking into little nip bottles for gifts.
I was initially reluctant to drink the dark vodka, but given several that turned were gallon jugs I found the courage to try. And…it tastes fine.
Other things to try:
Hedgehog infused vodka
Laccaria vodka – doesn’t matter if you use L. laccata or L. amythystio-occidental, it usually turns out sort of dingy gray/tan. Make small batches, it is not for everyone.
Leave the duff on – Sometimes we clean our chanterelles really well before making vodka. Other times they just get coarsely chopped into a jar. I mean, we do a decent cleaning in the field but in my experience a little dirt and moss and leaves and twigs and pine needles can really add depth to the infusion. An easy way to start is if you pull down a huge haul and, while cleaning them up for processing just do it on tea towels. After they are all cooked bagged frozen (or however you do) just tip the “crumbs” into a Mason jar and infused as usual. I do try to avoid questionable bits (waterlogged or dark pieces) in my infusion so if I trim those go in the compost rather than the vodka.
Good luck, don’t be afraid of the dark… ☺
Hi Alan- You used fresh chanterelles here, is it better at all to dry the mushrooms before infusing? I guess when I make tinctures and infusions with reishi, chaga, turkey tail, I always tend to dry them first, maybe I was worried a bit about a mold or something developing on the surface. If you haven’t had any trouble with this, I might give an infusion with fresh matsutake a try this fall… Feel like their super aromatic qualities would impart awesome flavor in vodka for a pretty neat wild cocktail, cordial, vermouth, or even a tincture with grain alcohol. Matsutake don’t dry super well and lose that magical fresh scent if they’re dried from my experience, so they might be a good one to infuse fresh…
For aromas, except for candy caps, it is really better to use them fresh since drying changes the scent.
For mushrooms you wouldn’t eat uncooked (whatever your personal practice is), would you have concerns about raw infusion? The alcohol will kill bugs, but it won’t degrade unstable compounds or remove volatiles (like fragrance!), so I wondered how you assess it.
Is the yellow foot infused vodka good for drinking straight or do you have cocktail recipes you and suggest? I have some fermenting in my liquor cabinet
I would use with salty garnishes, like olives, etc, not too much or you won’t taste it.
Great, thank you! 🙂
I have been doing this with dried Reishi for a medicinal cocktail!
Hey, love the article…sipping on my own few week old batch right now.
Curious if you have any info on whether or not the mushrooms themselves are good for eating straight up, once they’ve been in the vodka for a good amount of time? I feel like they’d be ok and one time cooked them into Vodka Yellowfoot Drunk Brownies but n’er have eaten them straight up out of the vodka.
Think they’d be good? Think you’d get indigestion? Drunk and both at the same time?
Thanks Forager Chef. Love using your resources as a digital sounding board for my mushroom dishes. Will likely check tomorrow for a cream of Morel recipe. Just to be sure its good! 🙂
Cheers,
Ben Dreamflayer
p.s. am illustrator.animator if need mushroom art for articles.
Thanks Ben
I filled a half gallon bell jar 1/4 full of sliced fresh golden chanterelles and then added vodka to the top. After two days in the dark at room temp, it’s heavenly. Thinking I might strain pretty soon. Since we aren’t supposed to eat uncooked chanterelles is this ok to drink?
For what my opinion is worth, I understand chanterelles can be eaten raw – it’s just that they are better cooked in most dishes because it brings out the flavour.
Infusing in vodka will do that anyway.
I used golden chanterelles in vodka and got an interesting amber, woody/apricot flavour schnapps. It won’t catch on commercially, I guess, but certainly interesting and palatable….