
Yellowfeet are generally small mushrooms.
Yellowfoot chanterelles are another great, easy to identify mushroom to add to your basket. Like their cousins, the golden chanterelles, yellowfeet (formerly Cantharellus tubaeformis, now Craterellus tubaeformis and close relatives) have a pleasant and slightly fruity smell, although, like hedgehogs, these are definitely more mushroomy in flavor.
They’re very delicate, and they will get crushed in a mushroom basket if you’re not careful. They have a hollow stem and are quite small, sometimes no bigger than a stick of Chapstick, or smaller, as you can see in the picture above.

Craterellus tubaeformis from the Pacific Northwest are available in the Winter and are sold commercially. They’re relatively cheap as far as mushrooms go, and can be purchased for about 10-15$/lb.
There’s a number of different species of these, and so far I’ve only worked with two: Craterellus tubaeformis, and what I suspect to be Craterellus ignicolor, which I harvest in Minnesota. I’ll let you guess which one I prefer. 🙂
Habitat
Look in the late summer near decaying and putrid hardwood, and in swampy forested areas. I bring a small hard sided plastic container with holes punched in it for air flow to put them in so they don’t get squished by other mushrooms if I’m going to an area and expect to see them. Just like trumpets, these have a saprotrophic tendency, meaning that they help compose dead matter.
I see them every year in the same place as I would chanterelles, but these really like wet, swampy areas near moisture and decaying wood, moss, etc.

Yellowfoot chanterelles in Minnesota, I pick small amounts of these every year in a very wet woods, the same place I pick black trumpets. These should be Craterellus ignicolor, a more brightly colored species than tubaeformis.
Use containers to separate delicate mushrooms in the field
You have to be resolved to pick yellowfeet, and you need to know how to treat them. I usually have some sort of container along with hard plastic sides, which could be a tupperware, or small restaurant deli containers (my preference) along with my mushroom gear in the car, specifically for delicate things like flowers, or mushrooms I want to keep separate from others as they stain/bruise, or will stain or bruise others like black trumpets and various boletes.
Tossed in a basket, with other, more chunky mushrooms like chanterelles or lobsters that fruit at the same time, or worse, a backpack, all you’ll end up with are crumbles of what used to be mushrooms when you finally get home, reinforcing how useless it is to pick such small mushrooms.

A very large yellowfoot, from MN, this one was the size of a golden chanterelle.
Cleaning
Just like black trumpets, these can be a bit of a pain as the orifice on the top of the cap can pick up all sorts of things, the most common being pine needles, which are the perfect size to slide right into the cap. If I get these from the Pacific Northwest, I rarely have to wash them, but I do check them over well for needles.

Yellowfeet would love to be tossed with some homemade noodles and a simple sauce.
Yellowfeet I pick from the Midwest are generally pretty clean, unless there’s been a rainstorm recently. I wash these with a quick swish in water only as a last resort, and then allow them to dry between a layer or two of paper towels.

Yellowfeet dry like a dream
Preservation
Since their hollow, these are an easy mushroom to dry, just use a low heat dehydrator setting or place them on a wire cookie rack in an airy place until they are cracker dry. If it was dry when you were picking, if you leave them on the counter, just like black trumpets, they’ll probably dehydrate naturally.
Since they’re hollow, just like black trumpets, these are among some of the best mushrooms for rehydrating and keeping in larger pieces, although the stems can get a bit long sometimes.
Cooking

My yellowfoot chanterelle lefse inspired by a Swedish food truck is a really good way to use these. See a link to that recipe below.
Culinary wise, these little guys pack a great mushroom flavor, and a delicate texture. The first time you try some, you might try just having them plain to have them by themselves. Heat a pan with some butter or oil, when it starts to sizzle, add the yellowfoot chanterelles and then turn off the heat until they’re heated through and wilted.

Fried yellowfoot chanterelles with curry is a great way to treat the larger ones of these you might come across, especially if you live in the Pacific Northwest. Yellowfeet rarely get this large in the Midwest.
The first time you enjoy them, I would suggest only eating them with salt, to gauge their flavor for yourself. They would also make a wonderful sauce simply cooked in cream, as do most mushrooms. With their long stems, especially with the larger species I see from the Pacific Northwest, they make a great pairing for noodles, especially homemade ones.
Recipes
Here’s some recipes where I’d use these, or that I’ve made specifically using them.
Sole With Yellowfoot Chanterelles
Dried Yellowfoot Broth With Dumplings
Mixed Wild Mushrooms With Garlic And Parsley
Parisienne Dumplings With Chanterelle Broth
Thanks cor that info. I foraged some today. First time I harvest wild mushrooms other then shaggy mains many years ago. I am in coastal SW BC. Came across thousands of these mushrooms while walking off track. They will be going in the pan tonight.
Congratulations. This is a mushroom that will serve you well. I’m jealous here, it’s -8 F in St. Paul.
Also from SW BC. I usually find yelloww foot in late November thru December. In the same habitat, I find Chanterelles, The Chanterelles finish in October with stragglers still around in nov.
I found some I think. Same descriptions but mine have no gills. Smell fruity and very delicate and small, fine. I can’t seem to find info on these.
Tisch mills Wisconsin
They are widespread in WI
Today I went on a hike in the forest of Fontainebleau, a place not too far from Paris, France. Since I came across some of these magnificent little guys, and since I was with an American friend who doesn’t have a clue when it comes to fungi, I looked up their name in English on the Internet. This is the page that came up, and I must say, it’s a great website! I’m Italian and we typically use these mushrooms in a risotto, but now I feel inspired to try new recipes. Thank you!
pretty sure these gave me the shits today. I probably ate 25 larger ones from the seattle area.
Seth, thanks for sharing. It is pretty common for people to have sensitivities to individual mushrooms. I’ve only heard of that sort of problem with Ramaria though, so this is a first.