The name of mushrooms growing in a pine forest. Edible mushrooms - photo and name for the mushroom picker

21.06.2020 Internet

The forests, in which spruce grows predominantly, are very dense and poor in undergrowth. In spruce forests, the soil consists of dense layers of needles that slowly rot. Thanks to this, a large number of mushrooms can be collected in the spruce forest during the season.

Spruce plantations are slightly different from dense spruce forests. There is a lot of sunlight in the plantings, which penetrates to the very soil, so they have an undergrowth of mosses and herbaceous plants. The edge of the forest also abounds in mushrooms. There is always more moisture that flows from the trees after rain, which means it is easier for mushrooms to grow.

There are few varieties of mushrooms in pure spruce forest belts. The mushroom world is represented not only by mushrooms growing exclusively in spruce forests, but also common to coniferous forests.

Along with the pine camelina, spruce camelina grows in the spruce forest, which is distinguished by its subtlety and paler color. By the way, this fungus secretes carrot-red milky juice.

Talker mushrooms, also growing in spruce forests, often form the so-called "witch circles". In the spruce forests of middle age comes across a white fungus, called white spruce.

Some types of russula prefer spruce forests to other types of forests. Groups of blue and blue-yellow russula grow under adult fir trees. Spruce forests of mature age often become home to yellow milk mushroom and spruce moss, these mushrooms prefer mossy places with high humidity, among moss or heather.

in number poisonous mushrooms growing in a spruce forest, includes the royal fly agaric - a fairly large mushroom with a bright yellow-orange hat. Wet places abound with cobwebs, their species are very difficult to distinguish from each other, and there are edible and inedible ones, so it is better not to touch these mushrooms at all.

Along ravines and streams, often choosing places next to mushrooms, grows poisonous mushroom red talker. Thin pigs grow at the edge, and sometimes in large quantities.

The main mushrooms in the spruce forest: white stinky fly agaric, grebe fly agaric, panther fly agaric, gray-pink fly agaric, thick fly agaric, red fly agaric, forest mushroom, dark red mushroom, blushing parasol mushroom, spruce moruha, thin pig, spotted collibia, ocher -yellow russula, whole russula, camelina, milkweed, white mushroom, gall mushroom, Polish mushroom, speckled oak, motley flywheel, green flywheel, real chanterelle.

Pure pine forests grow on very poor sandy soils. The composition of the species of fungi found in them depends not so much on the geographical location of the forest, but on its age.

In young pine plantations, starting from the second year, a late oiler appears, growing in the grass between rows or under separate trees. The yield of oiler increases every year and becomes the highest when the planting age reaches 10-15 years, and then begins to fade. When plantings grow so much that the grass disappears in them and the soil is covered with a layer of fallen needles, oil plants can be found by tubercles of raised needles. Late oiler abundantly bears fruit almost all summer in the same places, giving 3-4, and in favorable years 5-6 crops per season.

When the pine plantations grow up, another abundantly fruiting mushroom, the greenfinch, appears to replace the late oiler. Greenfinches grow in large groups, found in young, middle-aged and adult pine forests, in lowlands among dense shady pine forests, where they can be found on slightly raised tubercles of fallen needles, and in sunlit forest glades. On flat places in pine plantations, a gray row is often found, and a pine variety of white fungus with a yellow-brown cap and a relatively thin, almost cylindrical leg also grows. White fungus usually grows along the edge of plantings, along small depressions and ditches, but is also found among pines.

In pine plantations, especially young ones, autumn honey agaric, or real honey agaric, abundantly bears fruit, whose families grow around trunks or on stumps left during the sanitary clearing of pines. In young and middle-aged pine forests, groups of camelinas can be found. They grow in damp places in small depressions, in clearings, forest clearings and edges, less often in the aisles of pines. At the end of summer and autumn, purple moss appears in such places. Sometimes in young pine plantations you can find motley blackberry. This mushroom is edible at a young age, while old mushrooms become tough and bitter.

In damp pine forests, on the outskirts of sphagnum swamps overgrown with pine forests, various flywheels and goats grow. Here you can also find marsh butterdish, marsh russula, gray-pink milkweed. In damp places, among the moss, various rows grow in small groups. In young, middle-aged and old pine forests with a small admixture of birch, real chanterelles are massively found, which bear fruit in the same places throughout the summer. In adult pine forests, gall fungus is found. It is not poisonous, but very bitter. At a young age, the gall fungus is easily mistaken for a white one, so you can lick the flesh of a suspicious fungus with the tip of your tongue to check.

In pine forests of middle and older age, various varieties of russula appear in abundance - yellow, blue-yellow, greenish, marsh, brittle, fragrant. In autumn, in moderately humid, mossy places, you can find a black podgruzok. In mature pine forests, the Polish fungus is found, and in clearings with rare adult pines, the granular oiler is found. In forest glades, edges, among the sparse forest, a motley umbrella mushroom grows - one of the most delicious mushrooms - and a blushing umbrella mushroom is also an edible and tasty mushroom, especially at a young age. Along the edges of old pine forests, a gray-pink fly agaric is often found - a conditionally edible mushroom. In pine forests overgrown with weeds, various types of talkers grow abundantly, often forming "witch rings". Most of them are edible, although of low quality, but there are also poisonous ones.

Of the poisonous mushrooms in pine forests, there is a pale grebe and fly agaric - panther, red, grebe. On the stumps, around the withered trees, the poisonous sulfur-yellow false honeycomb is found in large groups.

A pine forest, even with a small admixture of other tree species, is much richer in fungal diversity than a pure pine forest. With an admixture of birch, boletus, boletus, bruises, russula, volzhanka, whites and other milky ones appear there. If there is an admixture of aspen and oak in a pine forest, an oak form of porcini mushroom appears there, a variety of russula increases, there is a white load, black and other types of mushrooms.

Quote message Learning to collect mushrooms.

Collect only people you know mushrooms!
Mushrooms which raise doubts it is better not to take!

Therefore, in this review, we will limit ourselves to describing the most common edible mushrooms, which will slightly expand (hopefully) the knowledge of lovers of "taking mushrooms".

White mushroom (boletus)

Exceptionally high quality edible mushroom. It is considered one of the most valuable types of mushrooms. Porcini can be used fresh (boiled and fried), dried, salted and marinated. At the same time, when dried, the pulp of porcini mushrooms, unlike the rest, remains white.

The white mushroom cap is tubular, cushion-shaped, it can reach 20 cm in diameter. The color of the cap is very diverse: whitish, light gray. It can be yellow, brown or brown tones, purple, red, black-brown. Often, the cap of the porcini mushroom is unevenly colored - towards the edge it can be lighter, with a white or yellowish rim. The skin is not removed. Tubules white, later yellowish-olive or yellowish-greenish.

The leg is thick, thickened at the bottom, solid, with a mesh pattern, sometimes only in the upper part. The color of the stem often has the same shade as the mushroom cap, only lighter.

The pulp is dense, white, with a nutty taste and no special smell. On the cut, the flesh does not change color.

growing White mushroom throughout Eurasia in the temperate and subarctic zones. Fruits in June - October.

confuse White mushroom with poisonous inedible mushrooms difficult. But the white fungus has an inedible counterpart - the gall fungus. Its pulp is so bitter that even one small fungus caught in the cauldron will spoil the whole dish. It simply cannot be eaten. The color of the tubules of the gall fungus is dirty pink, and the flesh turns pink on the cut.


Ginger

edible mushroom exceptionally high quality. Some European peoples give it preference over the porcini mushroom. In many countries camelina considered a delicacy. Particularly good camelina fried in sour cream. It is not recommended to dry mushrooms.

grow up mushrooms, mainly in coniferous forests, especially in pine and spruce. They prefer lighted places: glades, edges, young forest. Distributed in the forests of Europe, the Urals, Siberia and the Far East. Fruiting from June to October.

The cap of an adult fungus is lamellar, funnel-shaped with a slightly wrapped, and then a straight edge. Most often, the hat of the camelina is orange or orange-red, but there are green-ocher or grayish-olive hats. Darker concentric zones are clearly visible on the cap. The plates are frequent, thick, orange or orange-yellow. When pressed or at a break, they turn green or turn brown

The stem of the camelina is cylindrical, hollow, smooth, of the same color as the hat or slightly lighter.

The flesh is orange, turns green on the cut, with a characteristic pleasant resinous odor. An orange-yellow or orange-red milky juice stands out on the cut. In the air, it gradually turns green.

In addition to the usual camelina, in our forests there is camelina red (with wine-red milky juice, which turns purple in the air), salmon camelina (its milky juice is orange and does not change color in the air) and pine red camelina (its milky juice is orange, and in the air it becomes wine red) .

Boletus (birch, obabok)

edible mushroom High Quality.

boletus- a very common species, forms a community with various types birch. Distributed in the Arctic, forests of Europe, the Urals, Siberia, the Far East. Grows in birch and mixed forests, swamps and tundra. Fruiting from June to September.

The cap of the boletus is at first hemispherical, later cushion-shaped. The color can be grayish, whitish, gray-brown, mouse-gray, brown, dark brown, almost black. The tubules are whitish, brownish-gray at maturity.

The leg is cylindrical or slightly thickened towards the base, solid, fibrous, whitish, covered with dark scales (grayish, dark brown or almost black). The pulp is white, dense, on the cut does not change color or turns pink.

This mushroom can be consumed boiled or fried, without pre-treatment. This mushroom is suitable for all types of preparations. If there is a need to avoid bluing that appears during processing, the mushroom should be soaked in a 0.5% solution citric acid. The boletus is processed similarly. The boletus is especially good in freshly fried or boiled form.

boletus can be confused with the inedible gall fungus.


Boletus (aspen, redhead)

edible mushroom High Quality.

boletus- one of the most common edible mushrooms in the temperate zone of the northern hemisphere. In terms of nutritional value and taste, together with the boletus, it occupies an honorable second place after the porcini mushroom and camelina.

boletus distributed in the forests of Europe, the Urals, Siberia and the Far East. Fruiting from June to September.

The cap of the boletus reaches 20 cm, at first hemispherical, then flatter. Coloration varies from red and red-brown to whitish-brown or white. The tubules are off-white, cream or greyish. The leg is cylindrical or expanding towards the base, covered with fibrous scales. The flesh on the cut turns blue, later blackens, in some species it becomes reddish or purple.

There are quite a few subspecies of boletus. It is processed in the same way as boletus.

Good edible mushroom.

common polish mushroom in coniferous, rarely deciduous forests. Prefers mature pine forests. It grows among mosses, at the base of trunks or on stumps. Common in the forests of Europe, the Urals, Siberia, the Far East, Central Asia, the Caucasus. This fungus owes its name to the fact that it is widely distributed in the coniferous forests of Poland, from where it was widely exported to other countries.

Fruits in August - September.

The taste of the Polish mushroom resembles a boletus, although it belongs to the genus of mossiness mushrooms. It is recommended to cook, fry, dry, salt, marinate.

Hat at Polish mushroom reaches 12 cm. The hat is first cushion-shaped, convex, later almost flat. The color of the cap of the Polish mushroom can be brownish or chestnut-brown, in young mushrooms with a matte suede surface. The tubules are yellow-green, turn blue when pressed.

The flesh is yellowish, turns blue at the break, then turns brown, with a pleasant smell and taste.

The leg is cylindrical, solid, sometimes with dinner or slightly swollen towards the base. The color of the legs is light brown, at the base it is lighter, fawn.

The inedible twin of the Polish mushroom is the gall mushroom.


Dubovik ordinary (Poddubovik)

poddubovik- an edible mushroom that can be used without prior boiling for cooking hot dishes, for pickling, pickling, drying. The whole mushroom is used: cap and leg. In its raw form, the mushroom is poisonous, and in combination with alcohol can cause severe poisoning.

poddubovik(common oak), belongs to the genus of tubular fungi, grows in oak-mixed, not dense forests. Very often grows on the edge of the forest.

The boletus can be found from mid-summer to autumn. This is one of the most beautiful appearance and colors of mushrooms middle lane. His hat grows up to 20 cm in diameter, thick, fleshy, hemispherical, then convex, velvety, olive-brown, dark brown, yellow-brown, dry. The pulp is dense, lemon-yellow, very blue when broken, without a special smell and taste. The tubular layer is finely porous, yellow-green in young mushrooms, later dark red, turns green on the fault, turns blue when pressed. Leg up to 15 cm long, up to 6 cm in diameter, tuberous-thickened below, cylindrical, solid, yellow, yellow-orange under the hat, reddish below, reddish mesh above. Spore powder brown-olive.

edible mushrooms High Quality.

Fungi of this genus are distributed throughout the pine range in the northern hemisphere. Some types of oil are found even in the tropics. Only in the territory of the former Soviet Union, 15 species are known.

Oily is characterized by a smooth, sticky or slightly slimy hat. Less common are butterflies with a fibrous cap. Usually the skin on the hat is well removed. A private cover on the bottom of the hat is either present or absent, and if the hat is not sticky, then the cover is always absent. The leg of butter is smooth or granular, sometimes with a ring. The only drawback of this delicious mushroom is that it must be cleaned, which after a long transition can be very tiring.

Oil can ordinary(late, real, yellow) - the most common among oilers. It has a slimy brown, dark brown or chocolate cap. Less common is a yellow-brown or brownish-olive hat. Well developed veil, tubes are yellow. The leg of this butter dish is cylindrical, short, with a membranous ring. It bears fruit in July-September, often in large groups. It grows in pine forests, in lighted places, loves sandy soils. Distributed in the forests of Europe, the Urals, Siberia, the Far East, the Caucasus.

Oiler late fry, boil, marinate, salt and dry well.

This mushroom bears a resemblance to the inedible pepper mushroom.

Larch butter dish- grows in the larch forests of Siberia, prefers young forests.

Its cap is lemon yellow, yellowish orange or golden brown, sticky with easily removable skin. The size of the cap is from 4 to 13 cm. The tubules are yellow, later olive-yellow. The flesh is slightly pink. Fruits in July - September.

This oiler well cooked and marinated.

Oil can granular(summer, maslyuk, zheltyak) - grows in the subzone of mixed and coniferous forests. Prefers pine forests, often grows in dry places, on roads, glades and in pits, rarely singly and for the most part in groups from late May to early autumn.

His hat is slimy and shiny when dried, it can be from yellow-brown to brown-brown. The skin is easily removed. The lower surface of the cap of a young mushroom is light yellow in color, covered with a white film, which in an adult mushroom comes off the cap and remains at the stem in the form of a ring. The pulp is thick, dense, light yellow, yellow-brown, does not change color when broken, with a pleasant taste and fruity smell. The tubular layer is finely porous, thin, white, light yellow, then sulfur yellow, with drops of a milky white liquid. The leg is short, up to 8 cm long, up to 2 cm in diameter, solid, cylindrical, light yellow, granular at the top.

Summer butterflies- high-yielding, tasty, edible mushrooms, used without prior boiling for hot dishes, pickling, pickling, drying. The summer butterdish should be distinguished from the pepper fungus, which is part of the butterdish genus.


In fact, mossiness mushrooms are 18 species distributed in temperate latitudes in both hemispheres. The most common are: swamp flywheel, green flywheel and yellow-brown flywheel. They are all consumed boiled, fried, dried and pickled and salted.

Bog moss its structure resembles a boletus. It grows in moss places of coniferous forests. The cap and stem are yellow, with a brown tinge. The spongy layer is green or yellow-olive. The flesh is yellowish, turns blue on the cut.

Flywheel green widely distributed in various forests of Europe, the Caucasus, the Urals, Siberia and the Far East. His hat is pillow-shaped, dry, velvety, grayish or olive-brown. The tubules are yellowish-green with wide pores, sometimes descending to the stem. Leg continuous fibrous, yellowish or with a reddish tint, with brownish reticulation, the intensity of which is expressed to varying degrees. The pulp is dense white or with a yellowish tint, does not change color or turns blue. Fruiting in June - October.

Flywheel yellow-brown. Look like polish mushroom. Cap from hemispherical to cushion-shaped, dry, velvety. In young mushrooms, it is grayish or dirty yellow, becoming olive or reddish yellow with age. The skin is not removed. The pores are yellow, then with a greenish or olive tint, turn blue when pressed, then turn brown. The leg is cylindrical, solid, yellow or ocher-yellow, brown with a reddish tint towards the base. The flesh is yellow, becoming bluish-green in air. It grows in moist pine forests, often among blueberries and mosses. Fruits in July - October.

edible mushroom good taste but small nutritional value. It is used without pre-boiling. Chanterelle is distributed throughout the forests of the temperate zone of the Old World. Fruits in July - October, often in large groups.

The cap of the chanterelle is convex or flat, funnel-shaped by maturity, with a thin often fibrous edge, smooth. The entire fruit body of the chanterelle is egg-yellow, with a reddish tinge or pale orange. The pulp is dense, rubbery, whitish, with a pleasant taste and smell. Used chanterelles fresh, marinated, salted.


Often found in our forests. However, it is difficult for an inexperienced person to navigate their diversity. In addition, many species are not ubiquitous. Representatives of the genus russula distributed in the European part of Russia, in Siberia, on Far East. In addition, russula are found in North America, East Asia.

These mushrooms have large or medium-sized fruiting bodies; caps of their various colors, depending on the pigmentation of the skin. are very diverse and represent a very difficult genus to define and limit species. Differences between species are sometimes very small, making it difficult to identify these fungi.

These mushrooms appear in July, but there are especially many of them in August and September. Russula are found in a wide variety of forest types. Most russula are edible mushrooms, mainly of the 3rd and 4th categories. Sometimes mushroom pickers eat some russula in fresh with salt (hence their name). Only a few of the russula are poisonous, inedible or mushrooms without practical value. The economic importance of russula is reduced due to the fragility of the fruiting bodies. Mushrooms of some species are not used by mushroom pickers because of the pungent taste. The pungent taste disappears with salting.

They make up about 45% of the mass of all mushrooms found in our forests. The best mushrooms are those that have less red color, but more green, blue and yellow. The cap of russula is initially more or less spherical, hemispherical or bell-shaped. Later, as it grows, it is prostrate, rounded, flat or funnel-shaped, depressed in the middle. The cap diameter is on average 2-20 cm. Some species have a characteristic cap edge. So, in some species, the edge of the cap is long and strongly twisted. But the edge of the cap may also be straight, especially in cases where the cap is prostrate early. Sometimes the edge of the cap is striped or tuberculate, wavy. The hat is covered with leather. The skin of the cap is dry, it can be shiny or matte. After rain and dew, the skin of russula caps is sticky and shiny. In some russula, the skin is easily torn off, in others it is torn off only along the edge of the cap, etc. The skin is very diverse in color, very variable, but also stable in many cases. It must be borne in mind that the color of the skin of young, developed and aging fruiting bodies can be different. Sometimes under the influence of the sun the color fades. Simultaneously with the blanching of the skin, the coloring of the pulp of the cap is observed. Pigments are also destroyed when mushrooms are cooked. The plates of russula are free, adherent. The color of the plates ranges from white to ocher. The plates of young fruiting bodies are white, as an exception, lemon-yellow.

Grows from June to October, on birch stumps or lying trunks, sometimes on stumps of other deciduous, rarely coniferous, trees.

The cap of the summer honey agaric is up to 7 cm in diameter with thin pulp, in young mushrooms it is convex with a tubercle in the center, covered with a cobweb cover, then flat-convex, sticky during rain. The color of the cap is yellow-brown, the cap is lighter in the center. The flesh is light brown, the smell and taste are pleasant. The plates adhering to the stem, sometimes slightly descending, are light yellow in young mushrooms, and rusty-brown in old ones. Leg up to 8 cm long, up to 1 cm in diameter, hollow, cylindrical, curved, hard, brown, with membranous brown ring, dark brown below the ring, with scales. Spore powder is dark brown.

- delicious, delicacy mushroom, the caps of which can be used without prior boiling for hot dishes, for drying, pickling, pickling. This mushroom, which is not known to all mushroom pickers, is very productive, it is found in Russian forests often and in large groups. The late-autumn edible mushroom hyphaloma head-shaped looks like a summer honey agaric. In contrast to the summer honey agaric, the head-shaped hyfoloma does not have a ring on the leg, the color of the plates is gray, it grows on pine stumps.

It is necessary to distinguish summer honey agaric from poisonous sulfur-yellow honey agaric, bitter in taste, without a ring with sulfur-yellow plates, and also from brick-red agaric, bitter in taste, without a ring, the hat of which is darker in the center, the plates of old mushrooms are gray or dark grey.


Autumn mushroom (real)

edible mushroom.

The honey agaric is real (autumn), is included in the genus of honey agarics of the family of ordinary lamellar groups. This popular and highly productive mushroom grows in large groups from late August until late autumn on stumps, roots, dead and living trunks of deciduous, mainly birch, less often coniferous trees, sometimes in nettle thickets. Caps up to 13 cm in diameter, in young mushrooms are spherical, with an edge bent inward, then flat-convex with a tubercle in the center. The color of the cap is gray-yellow, yellow-brown with shades, darker in the center, with thin small, sometimes absent brown scales. The pulp is dense, white with a pleasant smell, sour-astringent taste, in old mushrooms it can be a little bitter. The plates are slightly descending, white-yellow, then light brown, in old mushrooms with dark spots, with a white coating from spores. Leg up to 15 cm long, up to 2 cm in diameter, cylindrical, slightly thickened below, with a white membranous ring in the upper part, light at the cap, brown below, with fibrous pulp in young mushrooms, hard in old mushrooms. Spore powder is white.

High yielding edible mushroom. In young mushrooms (with a private veil without a ring), the entire mushroom is used, in mature mushrooms with a ring, only a cap. Honey agaric is good for cooking hot dishes, drying, pickling, pickling. For hot dishes, these mushrooms must be boiled for at least 30 minutes, since cases of poisoning by undercooked autumn mushrooms are known. Autumn mushrooms usually appear in early autumn on short term up to 15 days, after which they disappear. Under favorable conditions, when it is not hot and there is enough moisture, autumn mushrooms occur in July or early August, while they may not appear in the fall or bear fruit a second time.

A favorite place for autumn mushrooms are old birch forests with dry birches, on which mushrooms grow at a height of up to 5 m and above, swampy birch forests with many lying trunks and stumps, birch clearings with stumps, swampy alder forests with dry standing alders and lying trunks.

Winter mushroom (Winter mushroom)

edible mushroom.

It is found on the edges of the forest, in bushes, alleys and parks. It always grows on trees: on dry trunks and stumps, as well as on dried parts of living trees. It grows in small tufts, preferring willow and poplar, as well as other hardwoods. It is a widespread mushroom. It appears in autumn, but can also be found in winter, as it is well preserved under snow.

The hat of the winter mushroom is 2-6 cm in diameter, slightly convex, sticky or slippery, the color of the hat varies from pale yellow to brown; in the center it is darker, along the edges it is lighter, in freshly cut mushrooms, stripes are visible along the edges of the cap. The plates are white or yellowish-brown, the same shade as the cap, attached. Spore powder is white. The leg is elastic, velvety-hairy Brown, lighter at the top. At first, the leg of the winter honey agaric is light, but quickly darkens, starting from the base. The leg is 3-10 cm high, 3-7 cm in diameter. Under a magnifying glass, hairs are visible on the surface of the leg. The pulp is whitish. The taste is mild. The smell is weak.

Only caps are eaten, the legs are too hard. winter mushroom it is used in soups and stews, but does not differ in special taste qualities.

Winter honey agaric can always be recognized by a fleecy leg, of course, it is best to use a magnifying glass for this. Very few mushrooms grow in late autumn and winter, so it is difficult to confuse it with anything. In October, when winter honey agaric appears, it can be confused with other varieties of mushrooms, including inedible ones, but the leg of these mushrooms is smooth, the plates are darker, and the cap is not slippery.

edible mushroom.

Raincoat common grows in deciduous and coniferous forests, meadows from June to autumn on the forest floor, manured soil or rotten stumps.

The fruit body of the puffball of variable shape is round-shaped, pear-shaped, ovoid, up to 10 cm long, up to 6 cm in diameter, white, gray-white, yellowish, sometimes with small spines, covered with outer and inner membranes. The pulp of young mushrooms is white with a strong pleasant smell, in old mushrooms it is brown-olive. False leg up to 5 cm long, up to 2 cm in diameter may be absent. Spore powder is dark brown.

The mushroom is edible when young, when the flesh is white. It can be used without pre-boiling for hot dishes, for salting and drying.

Need to distinguish raincoat edible, from young pale grebes of the white variety with unopened common veil. If you cut a young pale grebe, then under the common coverlet, the leg and plates are clearly visible, which are always absent from raincoats.


edible mushroom.

Ryadovka violet grows in mixed and coniferous forests, more often in open places, along ditches, forest roads, on edges, glades from September to late autumn, singly and in groups, often large.

The hat of the row is purple with a diameter of up to 15 cm, fleshy, in young mushrooms it is convex, with an edge wrapped down, then prostrate, smooth, moist, brown-violet, fading. The flesh is firm, slightly watery, at first bright purple, then fading to white, with a mild pleasant taste and an aromatic aniseed smell. The plates are free or slightly adhering to the stem, wide, relatively frequent, first purple, then light purple. Leg up to 8 cm long, up to 2 cm in diameter, cylindrical, sometimes expanded at the bottom, solid, at the top with a flocculent coating, at the bottom with purple-brown pubescence, first bright purple, then whitish. Spore powder is pink-cream.

- productive edible mushroom. However, it is best to salt this mushroom, since during the fermentation process its dense pulp becomes softer. This mushroom is also advisable to use for the preparation of mushroom caviar.

Sometimes this mushroom is also called a mouse.

Grows in forests from September until frost. Often this mushroom grows in rows, for which it got its name.

The cap of the row is dark gray or ashen in color with a lilac tint, darker in the center, with radiant stripes, radially fibrous, sticky, fleshy, cracking at the edges. The skin comes off well. Pulp with a slight pleasant smell, loose, brittle, white, slightly yellow in the air. The plates are rare, wide, slightly grayish-yellowish. The leg is strong, smooth, white or slightly yellowish, sits deep in the soil, so the cap stands out slightly above it.

- edible, quite tasty mushroom. It is used boiled, fried and salted.


edible mushroom good quality.

It usually grows on sandy soils under pine trees, usually along paths. True, sometimes it is difficult to notice it, since only its hat is visible on the surface of the earth. Therefore, look closely at the bumps and elevations in the sand - greenfinch can hide there. The fungus is quite common. Less commonly, greenfinch can be found under an aspen, but here it grows a little higher, so it is sometimes mistaken for another mushroom. Greenfinch grows in October - November. In the same places, red pine mushrooms are found, and where there is enough lime in the soil, there are noble mushrooms.

The main distinguishing features of greenfinch are yellow, notched plates, it grows under a pine tree. The greenfinch's hat is 4-10 cm in diameter, convex, sticky, the color varies from light yellow to yellow-brown. The hat is unevenly colored, often needles or sand stick to it, since it is straightened already underground. The plates are bright, sulfur-yellow, frequent and notched. Spore powder is white. The stem is 4-8 cm high, 1-2 cm in diameter, cylindrical in shape, usually covered with sand at the base. Very often, the entire leg is in the ground, only the mushroom cap is visible on the surface. The flesh is pale yellow color. The taste is mild. The smell is weak, mealy or cucumber.

- a good edible mushroom, but you need to collect it carefully so as not to pick up a lot of sand. When cutting off the mushroom, it is necessary to hold it vertically, immediately remove the base of the leg with adhering sand; the hat should be cleaned with a brush or scraped with a knife. Now the sand will not get between the plates, and the mushroom can be safely put in the basket. Zelenushka can be dried, frozen and salted. When dried, the taste of these mushrooms intensifies. Salted greenfinches retain their beautiful color. Freeze them in the same way as other mushrooms.

There are no dangerous twins of greenfinch. Ryadovka is also yellow in color, but her hat is cone-shaped, not so frequent plates and a rather pungent taste. It grows under firs and pines. In deciduous forests, poisonous varieties of cobwebs similar to greenfinch can be found. They are yellowish in color, but have a tuber at the base of the stem and the remains of a mucous film between the stem and the edges of the cap. These mushrooms never grow under pine trees.

You can confuse a yellow-red row with greenfinch. It grows in pine forests on or near stumps. Heavily faded specimens resemble greenfinches and are also edible.

Grows on stumps, dead and weakened trunks deciduous trees, most often birches, aspens from May to autumn, often in large groups, growing together with legs in bunches.

The cap of oyster mushroom is lateral, semicircular, ear-shaped, with a curved down edge in young mushrooms, up to 15 cm in diameter, white-gray, fading to white. The flesh is white, the taste and smell are pleasant. Records descending along the stem, rare, thick, white. The leg is short, up to 4 cm long, 2 cm thick, hairy, eccentric.

Young mushrooms are edible, without preliminary boiling they can be used for cooking hot dishes, for drying, pickling, pickling.

edible mushroom High Quality. Champignon common is often found in large groups from early summer to late autumn in fields, meadows, pastures, gardens, vegetable gardens, forest glades, forest edges.

The champignon cap is up to 15 cm in diameter, hemispherical, then rounded-convex, the edges are bent down, fleshy, white or grayish, dry, with small brownish fibrous scales. In young mushrooms, the edges of the cap are connected to the stem with a membranous white coverlet. With the growth of the fungus, the cover is torn, remains on the leg in the form of a white ring. The pulp is dense, white, turns pink at the break, with a pleasant mushroom smell, not bitter. The plates are frequent, free (not attached to the stem), in young mushrooms they are white, then turn pink, darken, turn brown, almost black. Leg up to 10 cm long, up to 2 cm in diameter, cylindrical, solid, white, in adult mushrooms with a single-layer white ring. Spore powder is dark brown.

Champignon- delicious edible mushroom, used without pre-boiling for hot dishes, pickling, salting and drying.


edible mushroom.

It grows in various forests, in glades, along forest roads, on forest edges, in fields, pastures, gardens, orchards from July to October, singly and in groups.

The hat at the umbrella is up to 25 cm in diameter, at first ovoid, then flat-convex, prostrate, umbrella-shaped, with a small tubercle in the middle, whitish, white-gray, gray-brown, with lagging behind large brown scales, darker in the center, without scales. The pulp is thick, friable, cotton-like, white, with a pleasant nutty taste and a slight smell. The plates are free, fused at the stem with a cartilaginous ring, first white, then with reddish streaks. Leg up to 30 cm long, up to 3 cm in diameter, cylindrical, hollow, swollen towards the base, hard, light brown, covered with concentric rows of brown scales, with a wide, white top, brownish ring below, often free. Spore powder is white.

- Delicious edible mushroom. It is used without preliminary boiling for preparation of hot dishes, for drying. It is sometimes fried whole (hat) like a steak, rolled in breadcrumbs. It is better to dry cut mushrooms, including a tough leg, which gives dishes a special flavor.

edible mushroom good quality. He prefers humus soils in forests, pastures, where there are thickets of shrubs. It occurs in many places, for example, in small forests, as well as in forests on humus and limestone soils. Does not give preference to any certain types of trees. Often forms "witch rings". It first appears at the end of April, the peak of the season falls on May, in June (depending

To collect edible mushrooms, it is not necessary to wait until the end of summer. Many appetizing species have inhabited the forest since June, and especially early ones - already from spring. Knowing the species of some edible mushrooms will help distinguish them from dangerous ones.

Mushrooms that appear before everyone else, when properly prepared, are no less tasty than those picked in summer and autumn. The main thing is to distinguish them from poisonous species, which also grow immediately after the snow melts.

Morels

They appear in areas well warmed by the rays of the sun. Their hat is dotted with folds and indentations, giving the morel a wrinkled appearance. The mushroom has several common varieties, so the shape of the cap may vary.: be pear-shaped, elongated, conical.

Subpricot

Scientific name - thyroid rosacea. It has brown legs and a hat. The diameter of the latter is from 1 to 10 cm. The white pulp, which tastes good, is traditionally used in canning. Grows in gardens and wild groves with apricot.

Subpricot

oyster mushrooms

They grow in limbo on stumps, attaching to them with a thin leg. The color of the hat, often growing up to 30 cm in diameter, varies from snow-white to brown. Oyster mushrooms usually form whole flocks, which makes them easier to collect.

Meadow mushrooms

These are thin agaric mushrooms, appearing in May in glades and forest edges in the form of "witch's rings". The diameter of the chestnut hat is quite small: less than 4 cm.

Champignon

These valuable forest dwellers appear in mid-May in warm climate regions, choosing well-lit open spaces. The globular hat is painted white, and the leg may have beige shades. It is widely used in cooking, including for the preparation of gourmet dishes.

Gallery: edible mushrooms (25 photos)





















boletus

They appear everywhere at the end of May. It is the loving sun. Boletus usually grows in "families" around trees. Their hemispherical cap can be either white or dark brown, depending on the age of the find. It is important to distinguish between boletus and: the latter has a burning taste with bitterness and a pink layer of spores, while in boletus spores the spores are gray.

boletus

Oilers

Appear simultaneously with boletus, but prefer pine forests. hallmark a butter dish is a brown hat covered with a sticky film.

How to pick mushrooms (video)

summer edible mushrooms

In the summer they grow and, to which new ones join. avid amateurs silent hunting they go to the forest from June itself, and in August, which is the peak of fruiting, everyone else joins them.

Porcini

The first place in the list of summer species is, of course, white. This is a very valuable species, because it has not only excellent taste, but also healing properties: it contains substances that kill bacteria.

The appearance of "white" is difficult to confuse with others: a fleshy hat, dyed in warm shades of brown, pink or even white, is attached to a plump leg. The pulp has a pleasant taste and aroma.

For its positive properties, it is called the "king of mushrooms." You can find "white" in forests with birches and pines, in open areas. But the fungus itself prefers to stay in the shade, hiding under fallen trees or thick grass.

Porcini

mokhovik

Grows in forests that have oaks or pines. At first glance, the flywheel resembles a butter dish, but the surface of its brown or olive cap is dry and has a velvety texture. Their diameter does not exceed 10 cm, but in a favorable environment, this figure can become larger.

Russula

This is a small and very fragile mushroom, which grows everywhere in in large numbers. The color of the hats is the most diverse: yellow, pink, purple, white. White flesh, easily broken when pressed, sweet in taste. Russula grow until late autumn mainly in the lowlands of any forest, and are undemanding to the soil. Despite the name: fried breaded, boiled, added to soup and potatoes, or salted for the winter.

Russula

bittersweet

They grow in large "families" in well-moistened areas of mixed and coniferous forests. This agaric does not exceed 10 cm in diameter. His hat in a young bitter is almost flat, with time it turns into a funnel-shaped one. Both the leg and the skin are brick-colored. The pulp, like that of russula, is fragile; when damaged, white juice may appear from it.

Chanterelles

These are mushrooms loved by many, making an excellent duet with potatoes when frying. They appear in June among moss in birch or pine forests.

Chanterelles grow in a dense carpet or bright yellow (for which they got their name). The funnel-shaped hat has a wavy edging. A nice feature of the fungus is that it is almost always untouched by worms.

Varieties of edible mushrooms (video)

Edible autumn mushrooms

The beginning of September can be called the most productive time for when the most diverse varieties grow in the forest. different types: starting with boletus, which appeared in May, and ending with autumn mushrooms.

Honey mushrooms

Perhaps the most beloved inhabitants of the mushroom kingdom that appear in the fall are honey agarics (they are also called honey agarics). Some varieties begin to grow as early as late summer.

Honey mushrooms never grow alone: ​​they "attack" stumps, logs and even healthy trees in whole colonies. One family can have up to 100 pieces. Therefore, collecting them is easy and fast.

Honey mushrooms are brown and red hat mushrooms.. The diameter of the brown cap, darkening towards the middle, is from 2 to 10 cm. These are mushrooms that smell and taste good, so they are used for cooking in almost any form. Especially tasty are miniature young mushrooms with legs, marinated in spicy brine.

Ryadovki

A large family whose representatives grow in orderly rows in pine or mixed forests. Can sometimes form ring-shaped colonies . They have many species, most of which are edible. But there are also poisonous rows.

These are medium-sized mushrooms (average diameter is 5-13 cm), the caps of which are painted in various colors. Their shape changes over time: old specimens are usually almost flat, with a knob in the middle; young ones can be cone-shaped.

Mokrukha

This edible kind, which is often confused with grebes. Its cap is usually covered with mucus, but may be dry. There are different types of mokruha, for example, spruce and pink.

How to distinguish edible mushrooms from inedible

The task of a lover of quiet hunting is not only to find mushrooms, but also to distinguish edible from inedible and even poisonous ones. Knowledge and practical experience help in this. The easiest way to avoid mistakes is to know the characteristics of the species. But there is still general rules, allowing you to determine how safe the fungus is for health.

edible mushrooms

They have the following properties:

  • pleasant “edible” smell;
  • the bottom of the cap is covered with a tubular layer;
  • they were chosen by bugs or worms;
  • the skin of the cap is characteristic in color for its species.

There are general rules to determine how safe a mushroom is for health.

inedible mushrooms

If there is any doubt about the suitability for eating the find, then it is better to leave it when the mushroom:

  • has an unusual or bright color;
  • a sharp and unpleasant odor emanates from it;
  • there are no pests on the surface;
  • the cut acquires an unnatural color;
  • there is no tubular layer under the cap.

The variety of species does not allow us to derive an axiom of how to determine by appearance whether a mushroom is dangerous or not. They successfully disguise themselves as each other and almost do not differ. Therefore, the main rule of all mushroom pickers says: "If you're not sure - don't take it."

The main rule of all mushroom pickers is: If you're not sure, don't take it.

What mushrooms appear the very first

The first ones usually appear from under the ground of a small size. They are thin, fragile and unremarkable; grow literally everywhere: in forests, parks and lawns along with the first grass.

The very first edible morels will appear a little later, from about mid-April in the middle lane.

The importance of edible mushrooms in human nutrition

Mushrooms are widely used in cooking. Their taste and smell are determined by extractive and aromatic substances. The product is used mainly after heat treatment: as an addition to vegetable and meat dishes, salads and snacks. Dried caps and legs are added to soups to give them a characteristic flavor and aroma. Another common cooking method is canning, in which spicy spices and plants are added.

Spruce forests are very dense, quite little light penetrates through the paws of fir trees, and therefore such forests are poor in undergrowth.

The soil in these forests consists of a dense layer of needles, which rots very slowly, and therefore quite a lot of mushrooms can be collected in the spruce forests at the peak of the mushroom season.

Spruce plantings are somewhat different from dense spruce forests. They are very well illuminated by sunlight, the soil is covered with moss and various herbaceous vegetation. All this creates favorable conditions for the growth of various mushrooms.

Quite a lot of mushrooms can be found on the edges of the forest. Here, additional moisture flows onto the ground from the trees standing along the edge, which favorably affects the growth, development and reproduction of fungi.

The list of mushrooms growing in spruce forests is presented in the table (tab.).

Russian name

Latin name

Fly agaric white smelly

Fly agaric

A manita citrina

Fly agaric panther

A manita pantherina

Fly agaric gray-pink

A manita rubescens

Fly agaric thick

A manita excelsa

Fly agaric red

A manita muscaria

forest champignon

Agaricus silvaticus

Champignon dark red

A garicus haemorroidarius

Mushroom-umbrella reddening

M acrolepiota rhacodes

Mokruha spruce

Gomphidius glutinosus

Pig thin

Paxillus involutus

Collybia spotted

Collybia maculata

Russula ocher-yellow

Russula ochroleuca

Whole russula

Russula Integra

L actarius deterrimus

Milker

Lactarius volemus

Porcini

gall fungus

Tylopilus felleus

polish mushroom

Xerocomus badius

Dubovik speckled

Boletus erythropus

Mokhovik motley

Xerocomus chrysenteron

Flywheel green

Xerocomus subtomentosus

Chanterelle real

Cantharellus cibarius

Updated: 2019-07-10 00:08:16

  • The formation of freckles depends on the deposition of a special coloring matter in the skin. It is very difficult to destroy them, especially if they

Chanterelle false

Hygrophoropsis aurantiaca

Chanterelle trumpet

Cantharellus tubaeformis

sheep mushroom

A Ibatrellus ovinus

hedgehog motley

Sarcodon imbricatum

Ramaria golden

Raincoat prickly

Lycoperdon perlatum

Veselka ordinary

phallus impudicus

Grow on trees

False honeysuckle gray lamellar

Hypholoma apnoidecs