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Sautéed wild mushrooms

Updated: Tue, 30 August, 2022

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Wild mushrooms are best cooked simply: sauteed with a little butter, seasoned with just salt and pepper and a sprinkling of fresh parsley.

sauteed wild mushrooms cuisinefiend.com

Ceps or porcini or penny buns are the elite of wild mushrooms. Milkcaps, chanterelles and girolles are the middle stratum, and then there are pied de moutons aka hedgehog mushrooms and king oysters. But whatever mix you can forage or buy, they will be superior to cultivated mushrooms.

Wild mushroom paradise

I went to Munich one October a while ago and in the famous Viktualienmarkt I saw paradise. Stalls and stalls of wild mushrooms, nothing else but the most beautiful fungi. There must have been a tonne of them.

There were beautiful ceps, white hedgehogs, sunny chanterelles, murky trumpets, milkcaps – I could have lived there. Right there in the market, at least until the end of the wild mushroom season.

Of all things foraged, mushrooms are the best; in fact, wild mushrooms are my food heaven. I think I could just LIVE on wild mushrooms, or at least eat them every day, throwing in a scrap of bread or cheese every now and then.

Sadly, I can’t put it to the test as the wild mushrooms you can forage in England are very few and far between. Somehow the types of English forests and the forest floor are not conducive to fungal growth, or at least the consumable varieties.

porcini and pied de moutons cooked with butter cuisinefiend.com

Plenty inedible mushrooms

Apparently there are about 15,000 types of wild fungi in the UK but I have only ever come across the inedible ones. There are plenty of those springing up in my garden each autumn.

Edible fungi in England are scarce and not the choicest: there are no ceps or morels, nor even many native chanterelles.

Scotland fares better so every autumn I spend a small fortune on Scottish chanterelles, the only variety in relative abundance and one that survives transport.

I get my fix. I treat them with respect: cooking as simply as possible, with not too much seasoning.

Ceps (porcini or penny buns) are actually perfectly safe to eat and delicious raw, sliced into a salad.

ceps and pied de moutons side dish cuisinefiend.com

How to clean wild mushrooms?

This recipe features a mix of chanterelles and pied de moutons.

Don’t wash them: if they soak up water, they will become soggy and shrink to nothing in cooking.

Wild mushrooms are clean beasts with just a little soil or pines, or sand on them; there are obviously no pesticides or nasty stuff on the wild things.

wild mushrooms cuisinefiend.com

Cooking wild mushrooms: simply does it

Chop up the larger ones roughly or keep them all whole, whichever you prefer. They only need a little butter and when it foams in the skillet, in they should go.

how to clean wild mushrooms cuisinefiend.com

‘Sautéing’ means ‘jumping’ so the best way to stir the mushrooms is to toss them in the pan in a cheffy fashion. If that’s not your forte, stir them with a spatula.

They will release an amount of juice depending how wet the weather they grew in. That’s of course a feature of non-cultivated produce.

how to cook wild mushrooms cuisinefiend.com

If they are rather wet, cook them longer until the juices are re-absorbed. And then finish the dish off simply and elegantly: with just a touch of crème fraiche and a sprinkling of parsley.

More wild mushroom recipes

It’s a starter fit for a king’s feast: fresh, raw porcini (cep) wild mushrooms, thinly sliced and barely seasoned with fine salt, finer olive oil and a feather of best Parmesan.

Also seasonal, pan-fried guinea fowl breast with fresh wild mushrooms is the epitome of an autumnal dish.

Chanterelles or girolles, the former more precise as derived from the Latin name of the species, are the little sunny autumnal pots of flavour. No fuss cooking, serve them on toast for an amazing treat.

More mushroom side dish recipes

Creamy mushrooms, lovely as a side dish paired with steak. An easy recipe for velvety creamy and garlicky shiitake mushrooms.

Flat iron mushrooms, a mix of cultivated mushrooms pressed flat whilst cooking, to concentrate and wonderfully enhance their flavour.

Garlic mushrooms with parsley - simple and delicious. Season them generously and fry them with garlic - so tasty just with a chunk of bread. This is a suggestion for a lovely side dish.

sauteed ceps and pieds cuisinefiend.com



Sautéed wild mushrooms

Servings: 4Time: 20 minutes

INGREDIENTS

  • 400g (about 1 pound) wild mushrooms: chanterelles, pied de mouton (hedgehog mushrooms), morels, ceps (porcini), or a mix of any available
  • 2 tbsp. unsalted butter
  • salt and black pepper
  • a small bunch of parsley, finely chopped
  • a squeeze of lemon
  • 1 tbsp. crème fraiche


METHOD

1. Thoroughly clean the mushrooms with a soft brush and paper towels. If they’re very dirty and you need to wash them, try to dry them as much as possible on paper towels.

2. Slice the mushrooms roughly, as small or as thick as you like. Melt the butter in a pan, add the mushrooms, season well and add half the parsley. Sauté over medium heat for about 5 minutes.

3. They will release some juices and when they absorb almost all back, stir in the crème fraiche. Let the crème cook for a minute, then take them off the heat, add the remaining parsley, a squeeze of lemon and serve.

Originally published: Mon, 24 November, 2014


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Anna @ CuisineFiend
Hi Phil - the addition of bacon and egg is inspired. But kilos of ceps??? I wish I knew where those secret diferent places were :-)
2 years ago
Phil
I shall try the recipe tonight - I have a load of freshly foraged hedgehog mushrooms I need to use as I get the feeling they don't dehydrate/rehydrate all that well. I shall proabbly have them alongside some streaky bacon and an egg :) I have to strongly disagree with the notion that England doesn't produce any amount of edible mushrooms. Indeed, I bring home kilos of prime ceps, chanterelles, cauliflower fungus, milkcaps and more every year. I think you need to look in some different places :)
2 years ago
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Hello! I'm Anna Gaze, the Cuisine Fiend. Welcome to my recipe collection.

I have lots of recipes for you to choose from: healthy or indulgent, easy or more challenging, quick or involved - but always tasty.


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