Volvariella volvacea explained

Volvariella volvacea (also known as paddy straw mushroom or straw mushroom) is a species of edible mushroom cultivated throughout East and Southeast Asia and used extensively in Asian cuisine. They are often available fresh in regions they are cultivated, but elsewhere are more frequently found canned or dried. Worldwide, straw mushrooms are the third-most-consumed mushroom.[1]

Description

In their button stage, straw mushrooms resemble poisonous death caps, but can be distinguished by several mycological features, including their pink spore print (spore prints of death caps are white). The two mushrooms have different distributions, with the death cap generally not found where the straw mushroom grows natively, but immigrants, particularly those from Southeast Asia to California and Australia, have been poisoned due to misidentification.[2] [3]

Uses

Straw mushrooms are grown on rice straw beds and are most commonly picked when immature (often labelled "unpeeled"), during their button or egg phase, and before the veil ruptures.[4] They are adaptable, taking four to five days to mature, and are most successfully grown in subtropical climates with high annual rainfall. No record has been found of their cultivation before the 19th century.[5]

Nutrition

One cup (182g) of straw mushrooms is nutritionally dense and provides 58order=flipNaNorder=flip of food energy, 27.7 μg selenium (50.36% of RDA), 699 mg sodium (46.60%), 2.6 mg iron (32.50%), 0.242 mg copper (26.89%), 69 μg vitamin B9 (folate) (17.25%), 111 mg phosphorus (15.86%), 0.75 mg vitamin B5 (pantothenic acid) (15.00%), 6.97 g protein (13.94%), 4.5 g total dietary fiber (11.84%), and 1.22 mg zinc (11.09%).[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Straw Mushrooms.
  2. Book: Money NP. . Mr. Bloomfield's Orchard: The Mysterious World of Mushrooms, Molds, and Mycologists . Oxford University Press . 2004 . 978-0-19-517158-7 . 153.
  3. Web site: Gardiner . Stephanie . 3 January 2012 . Two die after eating death cap mushrooms . The Sydney Morning Herald.
  4. Book: Tropical Mushrooms: Biological Nature and Cultivation Methods. S. T.. Chang. Shu-ting. Chang. T. H.. Quimio. 9 January 1982. Chinese University Press. 9789622012646. Google Books.
  5. Book: Hsiung, Deh-Ta . The Chinese Kitchen . 2006 . Kyle Cathie Ltd. . London . 1-85626-702-4. 186–87.
  6. Web site: Straw Mushroom facts and health benefits . Health Benefits Times . 2019-05-30 . 2019-11-05.