Sanpaku t1_j537ubz wrote
Reply to comment by ascandalia in Carnivorous oyster mushrooms can kill roundworms with “nerve gas in a lollipop” | Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry ID'd the culprit as the volatile ketone 3-octanone by Hrmbee
I presumed they were cultivated because 'porcini' powder is sometimes reasonably priced ($40/lb), which implies a price for fresh mushrooms with ~90% water content of around $4/lb.
Thanks for the correction, and now I'm wondering how much adulteration is going on with the powder products, and how many consumers would know if they were getting porcini or some mix from cultivated ones.
ascandalia t1_j539ti1 wrote
As former a professional in the field, I find most mushroom products very suspect and many of the claims lacking. I felt proud to grow and sell fresh mushrooms. People should eat fresh mushrooms. They're obviously healthy.
Any kind of extract, supplement, tincture, powder, or whatever could very well be mostly sawdust. Any health claims about what a mushroom can do for you should be read with a skeptical eye and not assumed to be true very every form you may get the mushroom in
I wish people would stop trying to turn perfectly good, healthy food into a cure all
Sanpaku t1_j53j4b0 wrote
I agree here. I haven't bought any porcini powder, though I do regularly use a Taiwanese product Po Lo Ku (powdered shiitake & salt) as an umani ingredient.
I'm just miffed my local Chinese grocer has raised the price on fresh oyster mushrooms from $4/lb to $8/lb over the past 3 years. They remain my favorite for flavor. At least they still offer king oyster/trumpet (which has similar ergo levels), and which is a really interesting starting point for faux meats, at $5.
If I didn't have other plans for my life, I'd really look into growing oyster mushrooms commercially, which evidently do very well on pasteurized straw and spent coffee grounds. There was an outfit in Exeter UK which collected 30 tonnes of grounds from local cafes to upcycle to 7 tonnes of oyster mushrooms, though I think the people involved mostly do training/consultancy as GroCycle now.
ascandalia t1_j53jo2y wrote
That's a great price for king! We were pretty small but our production costs never got below $4/ lbs. With sales, marketing, packaging, $8 is the lowest we could go, interesting that's the going rate now even at grocery stores near you
Even button mushrooms don't go for much less than that near me
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