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A mushroom crêpe stuffed with button, crimini, maitake, oyster and portabella mushrooms. Photo courtesy of MushroomInfo.com. The recipe is on the website.
   
          
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                  |   CAITLIN BARRETT is a member of THE NIBBLE editorial staff. She wishes that she could make a joke here about being a “fun guy.” KAREN HOCHMAN is Editorial Director of THE NIBBLE.   |  |   November 2005 Last Updated May 2013
 |  | Product Reviews  / Main Nibbles  / Vegetables Mushroom Types For Cooking Page 4: Mushroom Glossary D To K
 
This is Page 4 of a six-page article. Click on the black links below to visit other pages. See all of our delicious food glossaries. Wild & Specialty Mushroom Glossary D To K 
  
    | My Name | Get To Know Me |  
    | EGG MUSHROOM  See chanterelle mushroom. |  |  
      | ENOKI MUSHROOM  These long and slender mushrooms are almost too pretty to eat. They have a mild flavor, often called fruity, and can be used raw instead of sprouts for crunch in a sandwich; or, toss them into a salad (trim the spongy base) or stir fry. We like to tie them into a bouquet with a chive and use them as a garnish, or float a few delicate mushrooms atop soups. They are cultivated year round. Other names include enokitake, enokidake, nametake, snow puff mushroom, velvet foot mushroom and winter mushroom. |  Enoki mushrooms. Photo by Kelly Cline | IST.
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    | ERINGI or ERYNGI MUSHROOM  See king eryngi, below.  |  |  
      | FOREST NAMEKO  or CINNAMON CAP MUSHROOM This handsome, long-stemmed mushroom is great in light soups like miso or wonton soup. They have a firm texture and slight crunch, with mushroomy earthiness. Nameko is often found pickled, for use in sauces and noodle dishes. They are available October through February.  |  Forest nameko mushrooms. Photo courtesy of Gourmet Mushrooms, Inc.
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    | GIROLE MUSHROOM See chanterelle mushroom.  |  |  
    | HEDGEHOG or PIED DE MOUTON  MUSHROOM This mushroom gets its name from the small toothlike projections  underneath its cap, rather than gills. (Other people see it differently: pied de mouton means sheep’s leg.) It is similar to the chanterelle in color and flavor; the cap is often  tawny with a pale stem; the flesh is firm and dense with  a very buttery flavor.  |  Hedgehog mushrooms. Photo courtesy of MarxFoods.com.
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      | HEN OF THE WOODS OR MAITAKE  MUSHROOM The word “maitake” is Japanese for “dancing”; it is rumored that these mushrooms got their name because a discovery of maitake mushrooms was something to dance about. You can see why it is called “hen of the woods” in English. With a flavor that is bold and similar to a portobello, it is excellent baked, braised or sautéed with butter. Not to be confused with chicken of the woods, a different species with a texture similar to chicken. |  Hen of the woods or maitake mushroom. Photo courtesy of Bahasajapen.com.
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    | HORN OF PLENTY MUSHROOM See trumpet royale mushroom.  |  |  
    |  JAPANESE BLACK MUSHROOM See shiitake mushroom. |  |  
    | KING BOLETES  MUSHROOM See cep mushroom.   |  |  
    | KING ERYNGI or KING OYSTER or KING TRUMPET MUSHROOM Now cultivated indoors, this impressive-looking mushroom can grow to four inches in height. It has a firm and meaty texture and a mild and elegant flavor.   Its scientific name is Pleurotus eryngii; the mushroom is also known as  argonane, boletus of the steppes, bouligoule,  cardarello, cardoncello, champignon de garrigue, French horn mushroom, and pleorote du panicaut and trumpet royale. | 
 Photo of organic king trumpet mushrooms by Claire Freierman | THE NIBBLE. |  Continue To Page 5: Mushroom Glossary L To P  Go To Article Index Above    Lifestyle Direct, Inc. All rights reserved.  Images are the copyright of their respective owners.  
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