Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
Sponsored Content
HomeIn BusinessZoom into ‘shrooms

Zoom into ‘shrooms

If you go down to the woods today, you’re sure of a big surprise … but it won’t be a teddy bears’ picnic. It could instead be a feast of fabulous fungi.

From around April (if it’s not scorching hot) through to August, the forest areas in the Otways and Bellarine Peninsula are treasure troves of mushrooms – from wood blewits, saffron milk-caps and pines et al, to the highly prized slippery jacks.

Unless you’re a fungi aficionado (bearing in mind that most of Australia’s fungi species don’t even have a name as yet), it’s vital that newbies to mushroom foraging have an expert in tow. What can be seen as beautiful and enticing can lead to an excruciating death, while the weird and ugly can be the most delectable. Those red-spotted toadstools, for example, straight from nursery books, look incredibly cute but are poisonous, and if magic mushrooms are accidentally selected, they will give you a potentially dangerous ‘trip’ you didn’t bargain on.

The best time to go mushrooming is in the early morning when low-lying mists wreathe eerily through a hushed forest, an atmosphere highly conducive to poking around tree roots, under pine trees and in likely nooks and crannies.

Take an open-weave basket for collection (which allows spores to fall through to the earth to keep the growing cycle going), wrap up in wet-weather gear, step into tall gumboots and keep your eyes peeled.

Mushies are up to 90 per cent water, and delicate, so handle them as little as possible. Transport them in a single layer and use them as soon as possible. If storing in the fridge, arrange in a single layer and cover with a slightly damp tea towel.

Chefs love the bounty of wild mushrooms to be found in their patch, so expect to see these culinary treats appear on menus as a ragu, in pasta dishes and piled on brekky toast.

Also, check out local foraging tours to join – these often culminate in a shared fungi feast.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Paramedic concerns as temps rise

Paramedics are urging the community not to leave children, pets or older people unattended in vehicles as temperatures continue to soar following a warm...
More News

A bigger than ever Festival of Sails

The nation’s ultimate sailing celebration returned for its 183rd year, as the Festival of Sails ventured into the Geelong waterfront from 24 to 26...

Anthony ready to defend title

Barwon Heads’ Jakara Anthony is aiming to be the first Australian to defend an Olympic title at the Olympic Winter Games in Milano...

Family violence court now open

A dedicated family violence court is now open in Geelong to give victim-survivors of family violence across the region better access to justice and...

Australia Day honours for 15 community members

Fifteen Greater Geelong people have received Australia Day honours. Three - Michael Betts, John Womersley and Dr Gillian Miles - received Member of the Order...

Tobacco license deadline approaching

The state government has issued a final call for tobacco retailers and wholesalers to secure a mandatory licence, with less than two weeks remaining...

Speedmouse on a whole new level

The Umbilical Brothers are coming back to Geelong to celebrate the 25th anniversary of their most beloved show. Comedy duo David ‘Dave’...

Chong connects with audiences

Playing the piano wasn’t always Kristian Chong’s dream, but little did his younger self know that he would become one of Australia’s leading musicians....

Embracing the ‘house’

The way locals have embraced everything on offer at Ocean Grove Neighbourhood House since its reopening shows just how important these spaces are for...

Fingers crossed for hoodies

The hooded plovers that inhabit the ‘dog beach’ at Ocean Grove between 6W and 7W are sitting on some eggs again. They hatched three...

Sealion 6 is impressive

BYD's Sealion 6 is one of the new breed of super hybrids. So called because they are plug-in hybrids with larger batteries that deliver...