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Mushrooms to grow for meat substitute
#8636920
Yesterday at 05:29 PM
Yesterday at 05:29 PM
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Joined: Jul 2013
Amite county Mississippi
Wolfdog91
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Jul 2013
Amite county Mississippi
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Anyone mess with growing mushrooms? Looking at adding it to the ever growing list of random things I've tried lol. Is it easier to start indoors with the fancy grow tents and stuff or is it pretty easy to just try outs side with some long and the little spoor plug things ?
Also for y'all who eat mushrooms a lot ( I don't but never really had anything past the ones you get in the can or come with a steak) what's a good one that acts pretty close to meat ? I've seen people talking about using certain ones and cooking then like steak and and apparently some are a pretty decent substitute and good if your trying to do weight loss.
YouTube expert "The bird of Hermes is my name , eating my wings to keep me tame"
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Re: Mushrooms to grow for meat substitute
[Re: Wolfdog91]
#8636940
Yesterday at 06:04 PM
Yesterday at 06:04 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
St. Louis Co, Mo
BigBob
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
St. Louis Co, Mo
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Many chef's use Portabella's as a meat sub.
Every kid needs a Dog and a Curmudgeon.
Remember Bowe Bergdahl, the traitor.
Beware! Jill Pudlewski, Ron Oates and Keven Begesse are liars and thiefs!
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Re: Mushrooms to grow for meat substitute
[Re: Wolfdog91]
#8636955
Yesterday at 06:49 PM
Yesterday at 06:49 PM
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Joined: Feb 2020
Indiana
Providence Farm
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Feb 2020
Indiana
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Keith I didnt know i could do my chip piles. But they are in full sun.
Edit apparently i forgot about the oyster mushrooms my wife started in straw last year.
Wolfdog there is no such thing as a meat substitute.
Last edited by Providence Farm; Yesterday at 07:07 PM.
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Re: Mushrooms to grow for meat substitute
[Re: Wolfdog91]
#8636972
Yesterday at 07:45 PM
Yesterday at 07:45 PM
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Joined: Dec 2020
Wisconsin
Scott__aR
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2020
Wisconsin
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I was on a road trip with a friend. We stopped at a diner, I ordered a portabella burger. My buddy say "that sounds good, I'll have one too". When our lunch was served. First words out of his mouth after the first bite, " where's the beef"? We just chuckled ... Burger?? was still good.
Mushrooms aren't a substitute for meat, but they sure are good with meat!
Megapredator ... top of the food chain! Member of WTA Member of U.P. Trappers Member of NTA Member of FTA
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Re: Mushrooms to grow for meat substitute
[Re: BigBob]
#8636993
Yesterday at 08:43 PM
Yesterday at 08:43 PM
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Joined: Dec 2009
The Hill Country of Texas
Leftlane
"HOSS"
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"HOSS"
Joined: Dec 2009
The Hill Country of Texas
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Many chef's use Portabella's as a meat sub. Many idiots out there. Some think meat is murder, some think trapping should be banned, some think only police officers should have guns.
You can join em if you want to but I won't.
What"s good for me may not be good for the weak minded. Captain Gus McCrae- Texas Rangers
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Re: Mushrooms to grow for meat substitute
[Re: Wolfdog91]
#8637076
9 hours ago
9 hours ago
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Joined: Mar 2011
williams,mn
trapper les
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2011
williams,mn
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There’s no substitute for meat. Mushrooms are filler.
"Those who hammer their guns into plowshares will plow for those who do not."
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Re: Mushrooms to grow for meat substitute
[Re: Wolfdog91]
#8637113
6 hours ago
6 hours ago
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Joined: Nov 2017
Siberia
Tatiana
"Mushroom Guru"
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"Mushroom Guru"
Joined: Nov 2017
Siberia
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There’s no substitute for meat. Mushrooms are filler. This. Pretty useless nutritionally, too, heavy on the liver, tend to hyperaccumulate heavy metals meaning you have to be sure that the spots where you collect them are safe, and some "edible" species are allergenic or can cause rare but weird and nasty adverse reactions. We can't even digest the main structural protein of mushrooms (it's the same as cockroach wings). It comes out pretty much unchanged. Technically, maggots are the most edible and digestible part of mushrooms, for humans. So unless you really like the taste and texture, mushrooms are not worth bothering with as food. Sauteed morels, honey mushroom buttons pickled in spicy marinade and chanterelles in sour cream are pretty good, so are grilled portobello mushrooms and vareniki with potatoes and porcini, but pretending it's actual food is an "axe porrige" type of fallacy.
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Re: Mushrooms to grow for meat substitute
[Re: Tatiana]
#8637126
5 hours ago
5 hours ago
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Joined: Dec 2006
SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
SEPA
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Pretty useless nutritionally, too, heavy on the liver, tend to hyperaccumulate heavy metals meaning you have to be sure that the spots where you collect them are safe, and some "edible" species are allergenic or can cause rare but weird and nasty adverse reactions.
We can't even digest the main structural protein of mushrooms (it's the same as cockroach wings). It comes out pretty much unchanged. Technically, maggots are the most edible and digestible part of mushrooms, for humans. So unless you really like the taste and texture, mushrooms are not worth bothering with as food. That is the opposite of everything I've ever read about consuming mushrooms. Mushrooms have a lot of B vitamins, selenium, potassium, copper, zinc, riboflavin, niacin, and pantothenic acid. They can even have D vitamins if exposed to sunlight or ultraviolet light when they're growing. They are one of the best dietary sources of antioxidants such as ergothioneine and glutathione. And they contain good amounts of protein and fiber.
Eh...wot?
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Re: Mushrooms to grow for meat substitute
[Re: Lugnut]
#8637135
4 hours ago
4 hours ago
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Joined: Nov 2017
Siberia
Tatiana
"Mushroom Guru"
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"Mushroom Guru"
Joined: Nov 2017
Siberia
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That is the opposite of everything I've ever read about consuming mushrooms.
Mushrooms have a lot of B vitamins, selenium, potassium, copper, zinc, riboflavin, niacin, and pantothenic acid. They can even have D vitamins if exposed to sunlight or ultraviolet light when they're growing. They are one of the best dietary sources of antioxidants such as ergothioneine and glutathione. And they contain good amounts of protein and fiber.
Yes, there's plenty of such information but a lot of it is doctored to suit the vegetarian and food supplement market agenda. riboflavin, niacin and pantothenic acid are B vitamins. As for selenium and other microelements, mushrooms do contain some of them (so do other foods), but there's the catch that I mentioned. Fungi have weird proteins/enzymatic systems that often require various relatively heavy atoms as their functional core, so they have this property of superaccumulation of certain elements, which I mentioned. If you collect mushrooms where there's lead contamination (former roadside, or a rotted down doorframe shedding lead paint flecks buried under the leaf litter), the plants there will have a level of contamination comparable to the soil, while many mushrooms will have 100+ x times the substrate contamination level. It's true for lead, caesium 137 and some other elements you generall do NOT want in your system. Fungi do accumulate copper, this is actually why most fungicides are copper-based, because fungi can't help accumulating it and overdose on it. As for them containing "protein", the bulk of fungal protein is chitin. We can't digest it, we don't produce the enzymes for that nor does our normal symbiotic gut microbiota (some other mammals do), so it goes undigested, and if you overindulge, the wrong kind of bacteria in the gut get to it and begin rotting it down, causing intoxication. So in reasonable amounts, it acts as fiber substitute, sort of, but reality is you still need good plant fiber. Some fungi do have antioxidant properties (but it's hard to assess the value of these substances as components of food, not as extracts in vitro on cell cultures), and certain species (wood-decaying mostly) also produce substances that seem to have certain antiinflammatory and antiviral properties, but the effect is probably marginal unless we're talking about extracts. And like I said, there's also the allergenic/autoimmune flareup/other adverse reactions part, especially when it comes to wild mushrooms, although some cultivated mushrooms pose a risk, too. I'm attaching a picture of my friend/colleague, a mycologist, who had a bowl of shiitake soup at a restaurant and ended up in a hospital with a case of flagellate dermatitis that shiitake causes randomly in some people. Ironically she's the head of a research lab that currently focuses on mushroom cultivation. So, like I said, the nutritional value is pretty much limited to certain microelements and a little bit of vitamins. That doesn't mean I'm saying you shouldn't eat mushrooms, but they are definitely not a substitute for vegetables, meats, fish and dairy, not even close, and a lot of their health benefits are exaggerated.
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Re: Mushrooms to grow for meat substitute
[Re: Wolfdog91]
#8637152
3 hours ago
3 hours ago
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Joined: Dec 2006
Pa
Wright Brothers
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Pa
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Grandpap retired from the largest button cap (?) producer in the world. We ate them A LOT. Maybe that's why I'm so toxic.
To what Guru said. I found bulk chantarelles. Several of us ate lots. One friend was hospitalized. Toxin tests were negative (shrooms ok). No one at the hospital could explain.
I think I will just have a usda approved hot dog.
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Re: Mushrooms to grow for meat substitute
[Re: Leftlane]
#8637166
2 hours ago
2 hours ago
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Joined: Jan 2007
Georgia
warrior
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2007
Georgia
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Mushrooms are a compliment to meat not a substitute.
This exactly. Love mushrooms but they'll never be mistaken for meat.
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Re: Mushrooms to grow for meat substitute
[Re: Wolfdog91]
#8637180
1 hour ago
1 hour ago
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Joined: Dec 2006
SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
SEPA
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I love mushrooms! I've been eating many different varieties all my life; chanterelles, morels, portobellos, chagas, lion's mane, reishi, oysters and others. I have mushrooms almost every day in an omelet and/or a salad. i've never had an adverse reaction.
I've read studies published by medical personnel that back up everything I've said in my post above.
I ain't about to stop eating them! LOL
I agree that mushrooms are not a replacement for meat or veggies but, IMO, they are a very healthy addition to any diet.
Eh...wot?
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