Mushrooms ma tui i lugaSmall spikes can be seen on the surface of certain types of mushrooms: as a rule, most often such a spiked hymenophore has hedgehogs and puffballs. Most of these fruiting bodies are edible at a young age and can be subjected to any kind of culinary processing. If you collect prickly mushrooms in late autumn, then you can eat them only after a long boil.

Ezhoviki mushroom

Antennae hedgehog (Creolophus cirrhatus).

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

Aiga: Hericiaceae (Hericiaceae).

vaitau: fa'ai'uga o Iuni - fa'ai'uga o Setema.

Tuputupu aʻe: tiled groups.

faamatalaga:

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

The pulp is cottony, watery, yellowish.

The fruit body is round, fan-shaped. The surface is hard, rough, with ingrown villi, light. The hymenophore consists of dense, soft, conical light spines about 0,5 cm long.

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

The edge of the hat is wrapped or omitted.

Edible at a young age.

Ecology ma tufatufaga:

This spiked mushroom grows on dead hardwood (aspen), deciduous and mixed forests, parks. Occurs rarely.

Hericium coralloides.

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

Aiga: Hericiaceae (Hericiaceae)

vaitau: beginning of July – end of September

Tuputupu aʻe: toʻatasi

faamatalaga:

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

The fruit body is branched-bushy, coral-shaped, white or yellowish. In old specimens growing on a vertical surface, twigs and thorns hang down.

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

The flesh is elastic, slightly rubbery, with a slight pleasant taste and smell. Young mushrooms can grow in all directions at once.

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

The spiny hymenophore is scattered over the entire surface of the fruiting body. Spines up to 2 cm long, thin, brittle.

It is considered an edible mushroom, but due to its rarity, it should not be collected.

Ecology ma tufatufaga:

It grows on stumps and deadwood of hardwoods (aspen, oak, more often birch). Rarely seen. Listed in the Red Book of Our Country.

Blackberry yellow (Hydnum repandum).

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

Aiga: Herbs (Hydnaceae).

vaitau: end of July – September.

Tuputupu aʻe: singly or in large dense groups, sometimes in rows and circles.

faamatalaga:

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

The leg is solid, light, yellowish.

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

The hat is convex, convex-concave, wavy, uneven, dry, light yellow tones.

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

The pulp is dense, fragile, light, hardens and slightly bitter with age.

Young mushrooms are suitable for all types of processing, mature mushrooms require preliminary boiling so that they lose their hardness and bitter taste.

Ecology ma tufatufaga:

It grows in deciduous and coniferous forests, in grass or moss. Prefers calcareous soils.

Gelatinous pseudo-hedgehog (Pseudohydnum gelatinosum).

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

Aiga: Exsidia (Exidiaceae).

vaitau: Aokuso – Novema.

Tuputupu aʻe: taitoatasi ma vaega.

faamatalaga:

The stalk is expressed only in mushrooms growing on a horizontal surface. The hymenophore consists of soft short grayish translucent spines.

Fruit bodies are spoon-shaped, fan-shaped or tongue-shaped. The surface of the cap is smooth or velvety, grayish, darkens with age.

The pulp is gelatinous, soft, translucent, with a fresh smell and taste.

The mushroom is considered edible, but due to its rarity and low culinary qualities, it is practically not collected.

Ecology ma tufatufaga:

Grows on rotting, sometimes wet, stumps and trunks of various coniferous and (rarely) deciduous trees in forests of various types.

Mushroom puffballs with spikes

Puffball (Lycoperdon echinatum).

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

Aiga: Puffballs (Lycoperdaceae).

vaitau: Iulai – Setema.

Tuputupu aʻe: na o ia ma i vaega laiti.

faamatalaga:

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

The fruiting body is pear-shaped with a short stem.

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

The surface is covered with long (up to 5 mm) sharp, curved cream spikes, darkening to yellow-brown over time. With age, the fungus becomes naked, the pulp in young with a mesh pattern.

The flesh of young mushrooms is light, white, with a pleasant smell, later darkens to brown-violet.

E mafai ona 'aina le mushroom a o talavou.

Ecology ma tufatufaga:

It grows on soil and litter in deciduous and spruce forests, in shady places. Prefers calcareous soils. Occurs rarely.

Lycoperdon perlatum (Lycoperdon perlatum).

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

Aiga: Puffballs (Lycoperdaceae).

vaitau: mid-May – October.

Tuputupu aʻe: taitoatasi ma vaega.

faamatalaga:

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

The pulp is initially white, elastic, with a slight pleasant smell; as it matures, it turns yellow and becomes flabby.

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

The fruiting body is hemispherical, as a rule, with a noticeable “pseudopod”. The skin is white when young, darkens to grayish-brown with age, covered with easily separated spines of various sizes.

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

In the upper part, a characteristic tubercle often stands out.

Young mushrooms with white flesh are edible. Used fresh fried.

Ecology ma tufatufaga:

It grows in coniferous and mixed forests, on the edges, less often in meadows.

Pear-shaped puffball (Lycoperdon pyriforme).

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

Aiga: Puffballs (Lycoperdaceae).

vaitau: end of July – October.

Tuputupu aʻe: large dense groups.

faamatalaga:

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

In adult mushrooms, the surface is smooth, often coarse-meshed, brownish. The skin is thick, in adult mushrooms it easily “flakes off”.

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

The pulp has a pleasant mushroom smell and a weak taste, white, wadded when young, gradually turns red. The fruit body is almost round in the upper part. The surface of young mushrooms is white, prickly.

Mushrooms ma tui i luga

The false stem is short, tapering downwards, with a root process.

Young mushrooms with white flesh are edible. Used boiled and fried.

Ecology ma tufatufaga:

It grows on rotten wood of deciduous, rarely coniferous species, on the basis of trees and mossy stumps.

Tuua se tali