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Enokitake



Flammulina

Cultivated Flammulina velutipes

Wild Enokitake, Flammulina velutipes
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Homobasidiomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Marasmiaceae
Genus: Flammulina
Species

Flammulina callistosporioides
Flammulina elastica
Flammulina fennae
Flammulina ferrugineolutea
Flammulina mediterranea
Flammulina mexicana
Flammulina ononidis
Flammulina populicola
Flammulina rossica
Flammulina similis
Flammulina stratosa
Flammulina velutipes

Flammulina velutipes
mycological characteristics:
 
gills on hymenium
 

cap is convex

 

hymenium is adnexed

 

stipe is bare

 

spore print is white

 

ecology is saprophytic

 

edibility: choice

Enokitake (Japanese: えのき茸, Chinese: 金针菇, Pinyin: jīnzhēngū; Korean: 팽이버섯 Revised Romanization: pengi beoseot) are long, thin white mushrooms used in Asian cuisines, particularly those of Japan, Korea, China, and Vietnam. These mushrooms are cultivars of Flammulina velutipes also called golden needle mushroom. Wild forms differing in color, texture, and sliminess are called winter mushrooms, velvet foot, or velvet stem among other names.

The mushroom is available fresh or canned, the fresh mushroom being preferred by many. They are traditionally used for soups, but can also be used for salads and other dishes. They have a fruity flavor and a crisp texture. The mushroom can be refrigerated for about one week. When purchasing fresh enoki, look for specimens with firm, white, shiny caps; avoid those that have slimy or brownish stalks.1

The mushroom naturally grows on the stumps of the Chinese Hackberry tree, called enoki in Japanese, but also on some other trees as for example mulberry and persimmon trees. There is a significant difference in appearance between the wild and the cultivated mushrooms. Cultivated mushrooms are not exposed to light resulting in a white color, whereas wild mushrooms usually have a dark brown color. The cultivated mushrooms are grown in a high CO2 environment to produce long thin stems, whereas wild mushrooms produce a much shorter and thicker stem.

The variety available in the supermarket is always cultivated. The mushroom is cultivated in a plastic bottle or a vinyl bag for 30 days at 15°C and 70% humidity, on a substrate of saw dust or corn cobs, and a number of additional ingredients. Afterwards, the mushroom is grown for another 30 days in a slightly cooler but more humid environment. The growth is constricted in a paper cone to force the mushroom to grow long and thin. The mushroom available in the supermarket often still shows the impression of the bottle around the base of the mushroom.2

The mushroom is very easy to cultivate, and has been cultivated in Japan for over 300 years, initially on wood, and later in the bottles as described above. Home cultivation kits are also available.

In North America, a second species, Flammulina populicola has been cultivated and may be available in kits.

References

1Purchasing and Preparing Enoki Mushrooms
2Cultivation of Flammulina velutipes

See also

  • Edible mushrooms
  • Japanese cuisine
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Enokitake". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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