Welcome to the Wild Foods Guide Page for: Beefsteak Fungus (Fistulina hepatica)

Wild Food Guide For: Beefsteak Fungus



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Mushrooms and Fungi

Beefsteak Fungus


This is the description page for Beefsteak Fungus (Fistulina hepatica) and includes a description as well as an image, if available and a selection of recipes from this site that relates to the wild foodstuff: Beefsteak Fungus.

Beefsteak bracket fungus (Fistulina hepatica)

The Beefsteak Fungus, Fistulina hepatica (also known as the Ox Tongue Fungus) is a species of agaric bracket fungus (gilled fungi) and is a member of the Fistulinaceae family of the Agaricales (agaricus) order that have pinkish-yellow spore prints. It can be found in Europe, North America and Britain but is, by far, most commonly found in Britain. It is a fairly common species that is typically parasitic on oak trees and sweet chestnuts (but in Australia grows on eucalypts). Typically if friuts initially in August but is most common October and speimens can be found for several months after. This is quite a large mushroom (it can grow between 20 and 40cm in diameter). The fungus starts out a pinkish-red and looks very much like a tongue (image, top left) as it matures it broadens, becoming a rough semicircle with a rough reddish-brown upper surface. The upper surface is slightly convex and the margins are slightly inflated — typically, there is no visible stem. The fungus' pores are cream to light yellow, with the tubes being separate and moist. The pores themselves both bruise and age a reddish-brwn and often exude a blood-red juice, especially if cut. The flesh is very firm, thick and succulent and when cut resemblesraw mat (hence the fungus' name). The smell is pleasant and mushroomy (but in no way meat-like) and the taste is mild, but can sometimes tend to be a little sour.

The firm flesh and pleasant flavour makes this an excellent eating fungus. Indeed, it is especially suited to stews and goulashes as it keeps firm even after prolongued cooking and is still sold in French markets for this purpose. The flavour can be somewhat variable though, and though the fungus can be sliced and eaten raw in salads, older specimens (especially if they grow on oak trees) are best boiled in several changes of water as this leaches out the bitter tannic acids that they can absorb from their host trees. After treating in this way beefsteak fungi are excellent for drying and pickling.

The colour, shape and location of this species and its exuding a red juice when cut means that the beefsteak is not similar to any other fungus and cannot readily be confused with anything else.


Recipes Utilizing Beefsteak Fungus

Mushroom Goulash
Beefsteak Mushroom and Hen of the Woods Risotto
Bracket Fungus with Red Chilli
Slow-simmered Beefsteak Fungus
Mushrooms in Lettuce Leaves




Welcome to the Celtnet guide to wild foods. As this recipe site has grown it has become obvious that to allow people to replicate some of the more ancient recipes on this site (especially from the Ancient, Roman and Medieval periods) it is necessary to list modern alternatives but also to produce a guide so that the curious can find the original (often wild) ingredients for themselves. These pages are an attempt at bringing all these potentially useful and often forgotten wild foods together into one place.

It is a sad fact that we have lost much of the knowledge we once had of the seasonal wild foods that we have on our own doorstep and which are not only safe to eat but which are also very tasty and fresh. This section of the site grew from the work I've done on the ancient recipes section of this site. After all, for our ancestors before farming wild foods were the only foods available. This guide therefor represents images lists and recipes for various wild foods you can gather and what you can do with them. For the most part the list contains edible plants. But I am beginning to add a new section on edible wild mushrooms and this part of the site will be expanding to include many other plants and species very soon. If you would like to know how to cook with these wild foods, then as well as having links to individual recipes on these pages you can also visit my Wild Food Recipes pages for many more (over 1000 and growing) recipe ideas.



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