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A handy sounding book Rodger, I may stick to the fungi that local tradition suggests won't kill me ( or send me off into the sky with young girls and expensive stones! ) Do you go out a collecting Rodger?
Quote from: mark smyth on October 13, 2009, 01:26:55 PMIs there any reason fungi are collected much more in Europe than the UK and possibly Ireland?Fear! In the UK, undoubtedly Raymond Briggs' novel "Fungus the Bogeyman"
Is there any reason fungi are collected much more in Europe than the UK and possibly Ireland?
Apart, no doubt, from a small handful of people in-the-know about such things, we in NZ eat almost no fungi at all except the bland and boring cultivated kinds. I'd love the opportunity to sample wild fungi but I feel the best way would be to share a meal with a friend, and wait until he/she had had a jolly good sample before trying them, myself.
we in NZ eat almost no fungi at all except the bland and boring cultivated kinds.
I'm not aware of any such tradition Rodger. More likely to eat their enemies (Paul!!!) than mushrooms I think, at least a couple of hundred years ago.Paul, I don't have any.
Do the Maoris have any tradition of eating fungi?
Quote from: Rodger Whitlock on October 16, 2009, 02:44:23 AMDo the Maoris have any tradition of eating fungi?Both the Maoris and the Aborigines in Australia did have a wild fungi eating tradition. In New Zealand, the Maori used at least a dozen species. Unfortunately, the early botanists were not particularly interested in fungi and a lot of the information was lost. Andrew Crowe (in Native Edible Plants of New Zealand) refers to a list of 16 Maori names of edible fungi (some duplicates) from 1859, but the identity of most isn't known. One which was known to be eaten is the Basket Fungus (Clathrus cibarius); the thick shell before it burst open was a delicacy. Beware though - a reference is given to the need to eat this species young saying that “when burst, its curious network is covered with filth, which is indeed the excrement of the thunder god, of Rangi-whenua” (it appears plentifully after thunderstorms) http://tinyurl.com/yzwdwkkOthers used included the Flower Fungus (Aseroe rubra) (MUST BE COOKED AS POISONOUS RAW), Fungus Icicles (Hericium - related to Hydnum repandum, the Hedgehog fungus used here in Norway and elsewhere in Europe; David Lyttle put out a picture of a NZ Hydnum recently); Harore (Pholiota aurivella syn Agaricus adiposus); it is very likely that the Maori also used the NZ Honey or bootlace fungus (Armillaria novae-zelandiae) as it was also probably called Harore (which meant edible mushroom); young puffballs were also eaten. There are a number of other NZ edible fungi in Crowe’s excellent book!Otherwise, Ear Fungus (Auricularia polytricha) which grows on Hoheria, Melicytus and Corynocarpus has been exported from NZ to China since the 1800s.