Not a bad fungus, but definitely impolite

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rich59

Maker
Aug 28, 2005
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A few days ago I went on a fungal foray. I brought along to it a bolete

BOLETE1.JPG


that I was a little puzzled about. From a wider knowledge of the boletes I knew it wasn't poisonous. I thought it might boletus badius. It turned out to be one of the star attractions for a number of reasons.

The leader of the foray is outgoing and works well with a crowd. He used it as an example of the boletes in general and proclaimed it to be boletus edulus - the cep and one of the best fungi for eating. It was passed round and generally revered by all and sundry.

Then the real experts - 4 of them - got hold of it and puzzled mightily over it for about 10 minutes, before passing it back to me. A few minutes later they asked for it back and spent another 15 minutes puzzling over it - cutting it, sniffing it, tasting it (with a lot of practiced spitting), pouring over pocket books, and so on. Finally they gave up but said could they take it away for further thought.

I got a phone call a few days later. They had detected an iodine smell when storing it in a lunch box for a while, and they had consulted an expert on boletes. There was a confident identification - boletus impolitus. Also known as the "iodine bolete" - good eating, and rare.

So, everyone got something out of it although for different reasons. But the worms had the last laugh.
 
Interesting story, it is fun when you get something rare.
You can tell that they are proper mycologists because none of them would give a definite ID on their own and they are very good at spitting. Your story does show how much detail you have go to get a absolute ID with some species.
 

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