There are two
places, mid-Appalachia and the mitten of Michigan, in which I have lived long
enough and have been sufficiently at leisure to know what the countryside is up
to. In both of these places there are three occasions each year when the land
itself—not the promoters of tulip festivals, drumbeaters for caves with
electric organs or advance men for state parks—draws big crowds. These are the
times when it is hard to find parking space along certain back roads and when
the usually empty boondocks are alive with sporting types from far away. In the
fall there is the deer hunting season, and in the spring, through a somewhat
overlapping period, there is the attraction you guessed—trout fishing—and the
one you did not—wild-mushroom collecting.
All three of these
enthusiasms are similar, in that they are ostensible exercises in food
gathering. However, the pursuit of deer and trout has been elevated (or should
it be degenerated?) to sport. There is an army of publicists, philosophers,
manufacturers and merchants who have a considerable stake in seeing that these
pursuits become bigger and better sports. On the other hand, mushroom hunting,
when it is regarded at all by outsiders—which is not often, because it is
difficult to make a buck out of a mushroom hunter, since all he needs by way of
equipment is a paper bag or tin can—strikes them as some sort of a creepy cross
between black magic and truck farming. What follows is a minority vote in favor
of the proposition that it is sportier and requires more energy, woodcraft and
nerve to pick and eat a mess of wild mushrooms than it does to pull a little
fish out of a stream or blow a hole in a deer at a hundred yards.
Take this matter
of derring-do. Nobody can deny that it is a gutsy thing to walk through the
woods in the fall when every crunched leaf stirs violent hallucinations in the
buck-fevered imaginations of Nimrods, or to wade a stream in April when the
hooks are flying like hornets. However, these dangers are not technically part
of the sport of hunting or fishing, any more than being struck down by
lightning is a planned hazard on a golf course. Being felled by a 30-30 or
garroted with a length of monofilament are better examples of the fickleness of
fate than they are of sportsmen knowingly challenging it.
Not so with
mushroom hunting, where the risks are, so to speak, structured and openly
courted. There are at least 5,000 species of fungus growing in this country,
and their properties, vis-�-vis the human digestive system, vary wildly and
mysteriously. Many of them are good to eat. Good, in fact, is a pale word.
Delicious, delectable, divine is the way people have been describing the
savoriness of these vegetables since the beginning of history. In imperial
Rome, by way of example, what we know as the Amanita caesarea, or Caesar's
mushroom, was called cibus deorum—the food of the gods. So valued was it that
neither plebeians nor slaves were allowed to do the cooking. Special amber
knives were used to slice them, and the preparation was reserved for noble
hands. This custom was probably regarded as something of a blessing by the
regular kitchen help, since the Amanita caesarea is a close relative of Amanita
phalloides, whose common name, destroying angel, gives a rather broad hint as
to its character.
Despite the fact
that a good mushroom is very, very good indeed, a bad one can be worse than
horrid. Among our native fungi there are species that cause nausea, cramps,
spasms, horrendous hangovers or hallucinations, and others that can kill you
dead. Even so, it might seem to the uninitiated that there is no particular
problem. After all, we regularly sprinkle sodium chloride on our steak and
avoid cyanide crystals without making a moment of truth out of the decision. It
would seem that, depending upon whether he was seeking a good meal, a vision or
suicide, a reasonable man could select the proper mushroom and let the rest
alone. However, the choice is not that simple, for mushrooms are like women—one
man's passion is another's poison. There seems to be great variance in what
might be daintily called "individual tolerance" to some of the fungi.
Species generally regarded as edible can cause strong and bizarre allergic
reactions in an unhappy minority. The early morel, a widely sought and admired
table delicacy, is in this category, causing a few of its fans to suffer an
abrupt and noticeable impairment of muscular control.
Not only are some
mushrooms tricky, but many of them are unknown quantities as far as toxicity
goes. All over the country it is possible to find fungi upon which there is
wildly conflicting testimony from experts (living) as to edibility, or no
testimony at all. Faced with this confusion, the real mushroom buff does not,
as common sense might indicate, turn to potato chips or spiced shrimp for his
gastronomical kicks. Upon encountering a fungus of doubtful character, the
dyed-in-the-woods mushroomer eats a bit of it and then watches for and records
any resulting infirmities for future—he hopes—reference. This guinea-pig
syndrome is at the heart of the mushroom mystique. It makes mushroom hunting a
thrill sport that separates the gourmets from the grunts, and occasionally the
quick from the dead. Alexander H. Smith, in his authoritative and vastly
entertaining The Mushroom Hunter's Field Guide, underscores the adventuresome
side of the game. A University of Michigan professor, he writes of Helvella
esculenta, one of the so-called false morels:
"Dangerous,
but edible and choice if you do not have a sensitivity to it.... Each person
must try it for himself or herself, and it follows that this species should
never be sold as an edible fungus on markets or at mushroom festivals."
Louis C.C. Krieger, in his Popular Guide to the Higher Fungi (Mushrooms) of New
York State, says that 160 people are known to have died from eating the
Gyromitra esculenta, another false morel. I am not prepared to accept these
figures, but the fact remains that those who use fungi for food are taking
their chances. In the central part of Michigan the Helvella esculenta ranks
with the morels in the number of pounds collected for human consumption.
It is this kind of
spirit, I contend, that entitles a really gung-ho mushroomer to look down upon
not only deerstalkers and fly-fishermen, but also mountain climbers, karate
experts, drag racers and bullfighters as timid, cautious fellows.
My own
mushroom-hunting problem is that I suffer from two conflicting character flaws:
cowardice and gluttony. I have attempted to resolve this dilemma by restricting
my mushrooming to several relatively "safe" species, notably the true
morels. These morels have certain things going for them which make them a
favorite of us hungry nervous Nellies. To begin with, no fungus is quite so
toothsome, an assessment that even the hairy-chested savorers of muscarine and
phallin (the principal toxic agents in sporty mushrooms) will agree with. There
are several kinds of true morels and, barring the spastic condition produced in
some by the early morels, all appear to be safe eating. Also—and here you see
the crux of my thinking—morels are difficult to confuse with any other kind of
mushroom. Growing up through the leaves on pale, buffy hollow stalks, the caps
of the morels are strongly pitted and ridged, looking much like small brown
sponges. Morels are commonly called corncobs, and in the Appalachian region
there is another nickname which, unfortunately, is indelicate.
Even though morels
are about as safe to identify and eat as mushrooms can be, I am the type who,
if I could, would be willing to buy them in large supermarkets where they
presumably would be identified by experts whom my heirs could sue if they
mistakenly stuffed a destroying angel into the Septiseal plastic bag. However,
except occasionally in country markets and certain gourmet groceries that
prosper by bringing the country to the rich, morels cannot be bought. Like most
other wild mushrooms, they do not lend themselves to agricultural production.
The Agaricus bisporus that can be grown, sold and canned commercially is good
enough, but it compares to the morel and the other feral species as does a
frozen piece of haddock to a fresh-caught trout. There is nothing to do, once
one has become addicted to morels, but to go out into the bosky glades and hunt
for them. This is not as easy as it sounds. Not only are morels hard to come
by, but one must compete with other hunters who will go to considerable lengths
to confuse and mislead their fellows. For the sake of both health and success,
a tenderfoot on his first hunts is advised to follow at the heels of a
veteran.