A vegan goes stalking wild mushrooms in the Pine Barrens

kayak karl

Explorer
Sep 18, 2008
495
79
68
Swedesboro, NJ
I met a botanist from Princeton gathering mushrooms at Apple Pie Hill. He was from Italy and told me there is an old saying. "There are old mushroom gathers and there are bold mushroom gathers, but there are no old bold mushroom gathers"
 

GermanG

Piney
Apr 2, 2005
1,112
436
Little Egg Harbor
From my encounters, it seems that foraging for wild mushrooms is more common among those raised in the "old country". A few I have met have indicated they have not been in this country a long time and when asked about how they honed their I.D. skills, they replied they learned back home. That kinda frightens me just a bit. Many mushrooms are easy to identify, others, not so much. Throw in an ocean to separate the species and it could turn out to be a problem!
 

Sue Gremlin

Piney
Sep 13, 2005
1,279
236
61
Vicksburg, Michigan
I admire people with that skill because wild mushrooms are heavenly. My sense of self-preservation, however, is too strong to even pursue knowledge of edible mushrooms. I currently have a stand of chicken-of-the-woods in my back yard that is two feet across, I am pretty sure it's the right thing, but I am still not going to risk eating it. Mushroom toxicity is a bad way to go. "Pretty sure" is not good enough.

There is a woman who collects and sells wild mushrooms at the farmer's market here, and I bought some. On my way home, I realized that I don't know this woman, and I am trusting her with my life. I ended up not using them. I am confident in my ability to identify morels, which grow in abundance here. That's as far as I am willing to go.
 

Spung-Man

Explorer
Jan 5, 2009
978
666
64
Richland, NJ
loki.stockton.edu
Central and Eastern Europeans are big on mushroom hunting in the Pines. I’m always amazed how European mushroom hunters can go anywhere in the world and pick with confidence. Russian colleagues do this all the time. One recently took an academic position in southeastern Brazil, where he and his family forage mushrooms on weekends. My grandmother tried to teach me the basics, like to avoid the ones without insect holes.


Honey mushroom (Armillaria mellea) or “popinki” (Ukrainian; opinki in Polish) were her favorite – especially relished around Christmas. Collected from and by tree stumps after the first frost, they were then canned, frozen, or dried and hung on strings behind the coal stove. My mom wasn’t so keen on popinki’s flavor, so that delicacy dropped from my foraging repertoire. As much as my family enjoys mushrooms, its time to relearn how to pick them.
 

46er

Piney
Mar 24, 2004
8,837
2,143
Coastal NJ
Central and Eastern Europeans are big on mushroom hunting in the Pines. I’m always amazed how European mushroom hunters can go anywhere in the world and pick with confidence. Russian colleagues do this all the time. One recently took an academic position in southeastern Brazil, where he and his family forage mushrooms on weekends. My grandmother tried to teach me the basics, like to avoid the ones without insect holes.


Honey mushroom (Armillaria mellea) or “popinki” (Ukrainian; opinki in Polish) were her favorite – especially relished around Christmas. Collected from and by tree stumps after the first frost, they were then canned, frozen, or dried and hung on strings behind the coal stove. My mom wasn’t so keen on popinki’s flavor, so that delicacy dropped from my foraging repertoire. As much as my family enjoys mushrooms, its time to relearn how to pick them.

My Grandfather would being me along on his gathering trips when I was much, much, much younger than I am now. He immigrated from what was known as Czechoslovakia in the early 1900's. He would pick baskets of them, then dry them. Made a bitter tasting soup with them. But it wasn't in the Pines, but Willowbrook Park on Staten Island, a ferry and bus ride from home.
 

turtle

Explorer
Feb 4, 2009
653
213
a village...in the pines
My great-grandmother, born and raised in Poland would take my mother (age 6-12) from their home in Phila. to NJ via the ferry. Once in NJ they would harvest mushrooms and pick wild blueberries. It would amaze my mother that her grandmother was so familiar with the edible mushrooms of the US after living for most of her life in Poland.... the harvest was a staple of their regular diet.
 

Old Crazy

Explorer
Oct 13, 2007
481
94
Stinking Creek, NJ
DSCF0342 (Small).JPG
I saw this unusual looking mushroom growing on the underside of a downed tree trunk today. Anybody know what it is?
 
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