Is this edible or would it require a trip to A&E if eaten!

Discussion in 'Edible Gardening' started by hailbopp, Sep 13, 2024.

  1. hailbopp

    hailbopp Gardener

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    F6E5D702-3DCB-45D1-A192-822B8ADEFB7E.jpeg Not sure if this is the right forum. Please move admin if I should have put it elsewhere.
    I have a large variety of Mushrooms/ Toadstools growing in my little wood and in the field. This huge specimen ( have another 4 of these!) appears every year. It will have been caused by burying some huge tree stumps in the field some years ago.
    I am very fond of mushrooms but not so keen on visiting the loo with speed etc. I know zero about fungi.
    I was told that puff balls were edible. One appeared about the size of a football so dug it up cut it into large slices and fried it in butter. Lord alive Dunlop would probably have paid good money for it and sure it would have bounced, absolutely terrible and a waste of butter!
    So would be grateful if someone could identify it and tell me whether to get the frying pan out or not. It weighs about 3 kg, specs there to show how big it is.
    I have various other fungi appearing so if there is someone who “knows their onions” or fungi more to the point, would you mind if I bombard you with other photos as the fungi appear?
     
    Last edited: Sep 13, 2024
  2. NigelJ

    NigelJ Total Gardener

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    My first thought was why would you think it might be edible?
    Second thought was put it on it's feet, put it's glasses on and let it wander off.
     
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    • NigelJ

      NigelJ Total Gardener

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      Could be a giant polypore they look equally tough and inedible.
       
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      • JWK

        JWK Gardener Staff Member

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        I have zero knowledge and have never seen such a thing. I would not rely on an identification online, people have died eating fungi that were deemed safe by so called experts on foraging trips. You are very adventurous to even consider it. I remember my Mum saying puff balls were edible but that doesn't mean they tasted nice.
         
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        • hailbopp

          hailbopp Gardener

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          You’ve made my day @NigelJ, had a good chuckle to myself. Cheek but love it! Having taken your advice it and its 4 relatives are now on the bonfire pile!
           
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          • NigelJ

            NigelJ Total Gardener

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            My father got a puffball sliced it and fried it in butter, it was edible and my mother hit the roof when she found he'd used a whole pat of butter (8 oz) on it.
            Many fungi can be eaten without ill effects, but turn out to be inedible because of texture, bad taste or size.
             
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            • Selleri

              Selleri Koala

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              Whoo-a @hailbopp , that's one impressive life form you have there! :yikes: If it tries to make a contact, please call United Nations immediately. I understand that it would be the Secretary- General's job to reply. :biggrin:

              On a serious note, do not eat any mushroom you are not 150% sure of. Loo dashes or AE trips are nothing, the real risk is to eat something with toxins that permanently damage your liver.

              Some light reading: Mushroom poisoning - Wikipedia

              In Finland False Morel is a known and desired mushroom often found in spring and also sold in supermarkets. The trouble is that while all Finns know they must be carefully boiled twice, or soaked several times to allow the poison to dissolve, foreigners don't.

              Without first soaking the poison off this gastronomic treat is deadly. Nowadays supermarkets must by law hang warnings, sticker the boxes with warnings and provide instructions but it wasn't always that way.

              Gyromitra esculenta - Wikipedia
               
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              • ArmyAirForce

                ArmyAirForce Gardener

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                • hailbopp

                  hailbopp Gardener

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                  Glad my posting has caused such merriment. Yes, these whatever they are, are sizeable. Thanks for giving me a good giggle and I will accept best to buy my mushrooms from a reputable source rather than risking a visit to the local hospital after consuming some of my various home growns:).
                   
                • noisette47

                  noisette47 Total Gardener

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                  Apart from other considerations, you tend not to find fried slugs in supermarket mushrooms :biggrin:
                   
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                  • Songbird

                    Songbird Gardener

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                    Urgh, I can see a sleeping face at the bottom of " the thing" @hailbopp :yikes:
                     
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                    • hailbopp

                      hailbopp Gardener

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                      Oh thanks a bunch @noisette47:yikes:. I thought I was done with the subject of slugs for one day as I, to my horror discovered 1 on a lettuce leaf which I was just about to consume tonight. How the hell it managed to hang onto the leaf despite being hurled round in a salad spinner god only knows. I may say post the discovery I went off the rest of the salad and made do with cheese and biscuits being a safe bet!
                       
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                      • pete

                        pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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                        As they say, what's worse than finding a maggot in your apple.

                        Half a maggot in your apple.:biggrin:

                        I'm totally off those sugar snap peas since one came open on my plate and revealed a gigantic maggot.
                         
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                        • noisette47

                          noisette47 Total Gardener

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                          Not cheese with pretty blue mould running through it, by any chance? :biggrin: :whistle:
                           
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                          • hailbopp

                            hailbopp Gardener

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                            Don’t start:loll:, now feeling decidedly green about the gills and no I have not tried any of that monster fungi.
                             
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