Backroadlogic
Songster
Correct lol I've got much better luck with pawpaws than morels lol on my property I have found 5 pawpaw trees in flower and probably a dozen more seedlings that will be producing in just a year or 2!
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Cool!! We only have one pawpaw tree on our property, we go to a local reserve to collect them. We usually have much better luck with morels, but haven't found any yet this year.Correct lol I've got much better luck with pawpaws than morels lol on my property I have found 5 pawpaw trees in flower and probably a dozen more seedlings that will be producing in just a year or 2!
It’s a magical place! I moved from Brooklyn a few years ago and i don’t think I can go back to city living full timeI have a bunch of family in the Hudson valley!!
Whoa! I’m curious about the chocolate covered acorns.. what sort of treatment, if any, did you give the acorns? I’ve been curious about collecting them but it seems like so much work to process them/mitigate the astringencyI tried taking a mushroom foraging class a while back; it was informative but not in the way I had hoped. (Apparently inky cap mushrooms were used to combat counterfeiting. Great! But I wanted to know if the mushrooms growing in my area were edible and I still don’t know!)
I have successfully collected nuts. I tried making some chocolate covered acorns out of the ones I foraged but they were rock hard, do not recommend. If I gather more this year I’ll just try the traditional use as flour and see if that works out better. I need to get a better nut cracker for the hickory nuts, there are shagbark near me and they’re supposed to be the best of the local varieties, but all I’ve got are cheap claw crackers that can’t manage their shells.
I took a botany class at the local community college. There I learned how to identify the edible meadow mushroom. I must have learned because I am still alive, and I picked a lot of mushrooms. I never liked morels, so I never bothered with them.I tried taking a mushroom foraging class a while back; it was informative but not in the way I had hoped. (Apparently inky cap mushrooms were used to combat counterfeiting. Great! But I wanted to know if the mushrooms growing in my area were edible and I still don’t know!)
I have successfully collected nuts. I tried making some chocolate covered acorns out of the ones I foraged but they were rock hard, do not recommend. If I gather more this year I’ll just try the traditional use as flour and see if that works out better. I need to get a better nut cracker for the hickory nuts, there are shagbark near me and they’re supposed to be the best of the local varieties, but all I’ve got are cheap claw crackers that can’t manage their shells.
Cold leeching.Whoa! I’m curious about the chocolate covered acorns.. what sort of treatment, if any, did you give the acorns? I’ve been curious about collecting them but it seems like so much work to process them/mitigate the astringency