Top 20 Edible Mushrooms Popular in Alicante

Introduction: Discover the unique biodiversity of Alicante, a region gifted with an exceptional climate and varied terrain, yielding a diverse array of 20 most common edible mushrooms. Each mushroom boasts distinguishing features, from their noteworthy appearances to distinctive tastes. Whether you're a mushroom enthusiast or culinary explorer, delve with us into Alicante's exquisite fungal world. This comprehensive guide uncovers the varied habitats, culinary uses, and flavors, enabling you to fully appreciate the mushroom marvels hidden in this rich terrain.
* Disclaimer: Content feedback CAN NOT be used as any basis for EATING ANY PLANTS. Some plants can be VERY POISONOUS, please purchase edible plants through regular channels.

Most Popular Edible Mushrooms

Bloody milk cap

1. Bloody milk cap

Bloody milk cap (Lactarius sanguifluus) has a distinctive appearance with its pale exterior but a deep blood-red interior, for which it is named. This mushroom can be found in pine forests where it grows in a mycorrhizal relationship with the trees. Bloody milk cap is known to accumulate large quantities of toxic heavy metals.
Blushing beard truffle

2. Blushing beard truffle

Pine truffle

3. Pine truffle

The roughly spherical fruit bodies grow underground. Ranging from 2 to 8 cm (0.8 to 3.1 in) in diameter, they are yellow-brown to darker brown with a fuzzy, furrowed external surface. The inside of the fruit body comprises deeply folded and convoluted tissue with some internal open spaces between them. Young pine truffles ooze a whitish juice when they are cut. The odor of the internal flesh is usually mild, but David Arora has noted the existence of a form in the Western United States that smells similar to fermented cider. Geopora cooperi fruit bodies are edible. The smooth, elliptical or roughly spherical spores measure 18–27 by 13–21 µm and have an oil droplet. The asci (spore-bearing cells) are typically eight-spored. They are arranged as a palisade of cells forming a hymenium that covers the inner surfaces of the internal folds.
Yellow morel

4. Yellow morel

The yellow morel (Morchella esculenta) is one of the most iconic and sought-after species of edible mushrooms. It is often one of the first species that novice mushroom gatherers will hunt for. Yellow morels have elongated caps that are "honeycombed", being filled with roughly polygonal holes. Splitting them down the middle reveals them to be hollow on the inside, a key feature that distinguishes them from toxic false morels. Experts recommend cooking or boiling this mushroom before consumption, as raw morels may cause an upset stomach.
Lurid bolete

5. Lurid bolete

Once considered a member of the Boletus genus, the lurid bolete is a mushroom that is best avoided. Inexperienced mushroom hunters could easily confuse it with the severely poisonous European species Satan's bolete (Rubroboletus satanas) or its North American cousin Rubroboletus eastwoodiae. When cut, the stem of this bolete goes dark blue. Its smell is a bit sour.
Iodine bolete

6. Iodine bolete

The name of Iodine bolete gives you a good tip on how to identify this mushroom because it gives off a strong iodine smell when it is damaged. Iodine bolete is a widely-distributed mushroom that is always found in association with broad-leaved trees, especially oak, with which it has a symbiotic relationship.
Red cracking bolete

7. Red cracking bolete

The red cracking bolete mushroom is considered difficult to accurately identify, due to its similarity in many ways to others of its genus. It seems to occur only rarely around the northern hemisphere, but it may have been misclassified in some sources. In spite of the name, the surface of the red cracking bolete's cap only rarely appears "cracked."
Sordid blewit

8. Sordid blewit

The sordid blewit is a beautiful and attractive mushroom of the northern temperate zones around the world. The flesh is pink or purple when young, and it turns brownish as the mushroom matures. It forms so-called fairy rings. Although the sordid blewit is easily identified, inexperienced mushroom hunters can confuse it for certain Clitocybe species.
Horse mushroom

9. Horse mushroom

The horse mushroom is a large species of Agaricus whose fruitbodies feature bulbous white caps and pale or gray gills. They are a cosmopolitan species, boasting a global distribution and thriving in a variety of settings, including lawns, lots, and gardens.
Aniseed funnel

10. Aniseed funnel

The aniseed funnel (Clitocybe odora) is a distinctive mushroom, boasting an aquamarine or seafoam coloration on its cap, although this may fade to white with age. It's species name, odora, is suggestive of another distinguishing quality - individuals usually give off a strong, star-anise like smell (similar to black licorice).
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