I’m sure I read it somewhere, but I just checked one of my books, and it doesn’t say that, and reading online, I can’t find anything with evidence either way. Seems like the main risk is of you don’t clean them very well and get a lot of plant matter encased in it. Doesn’t take much yew to make you sick.
Either way, though, thanks for calling me out! I don’t live near any yews, so it’s not something I’ve ever had to think about.
Seems like the main risk is of you don’t clean them very well and get a lot of plant matter encased in it. Doesn’t take much yew to make you sick.
I’ve heard that one is only supposed to eat the newest/youngest growth on chicken of the woods (the portion along the edge) [1.1][2]. The older/woodier growth towards the middle, and, by extension, the anchor to the substrate where the potentially troublesome plant matter might still be attached, shouldn’t be eaten as it has a higher likelihood of causing gastric upset [1.2].
References
“Foraging and Cooking Chicken of the Woods Mushrooms”. Paul Stamets. YouTube. Published: 2020-09-06 (Accessed: 2024-08-19T00:38Z). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9K8HuTHTyP8
T00:00:44
this mushroom is — it tastes like chicken […] especially on the first two inches of the margin.
T00:00:53
[Chicken of the woods] sours with bacteria very quickly. And so I caution you not to eat the interiors or where it’s discolored.
T00:01:00
here are signs of bacteria growing so this can cause GI upset
I’m sure I read it somewhere, but I just checked one of my books, and it doesn’t say that, and reading online, I can’t find anything with evidence either way. Seems like the main risk is of you don’t clean them very well and get a lot of plant matter encased in it. Doesn’t take much yew to make you sick.
Either way, though, thanks for calling me out! I don’t live near any yews, so it’s not something I’ve ever had to think about.
I’ve heard that one is only supposed to eat the newest/youngest growth on chicken of the woods (the portion along the edge) [1.1][2]. The older/woodier growth towards the middle, and, by extension, the anchor to the substrate where the potentially troublesome plant matter might still be attached, shouldn’t be eaten as it has a higher likelihood of causing gastric upset [1.2].
References