She was the runner-up on season 15 of Top Chef, and was easily my favorite. I’m pretty sure you can watch the past seasons of the show on the bravo app if you have a cable tv subscription.
She is actually correct about the maitake (舞茸). Back in the day, they were considered to be such a rare thing to find that the person who found them would dance out of happiness. It's also said that the mushrooms look like a bunch of butterflies dancing. Either way, the character to represent "dance" in this fashion is mau (舞う). You can also find maitake tempura in Japan as well.
As a medical herbalist and someone who specializes in mushrooms, I can say that yes, some mushrooms can be eaten raw, but people are highly encouraged to cook all mushrooms, as there are constituents in raw mushrooms which are particularly difficult for the kidneys to process, and anyone with kidney problems should NEVER eat raw mushrooms. I once had a student who ate a good many raw chanterelles which they bought from a grocery store, and needed to go to the hospital due to the digestive discomfort they were experiencing... and discomfort is putting it lightly.
I second your caution to cook all mushrooms, and it is not just for digestive concerns. Some mushrooms produce compounds that can have medical consequences, most of these compounds seem to be inactivated by the heat of cooking.
This video definitely made me grateful for the untold numbers of our ancestors who, probably out of desperation, inadvertently sacrificed themselves to help humanity as a whole figure out which mushrooms didn't kill us/were edible. Such a versatile ingredient that will always taste great 😍
@@skynchickens300 they probably didn’t even have to do that. Heard somewhere that people discovered the non-toxic variant of almonds by observing animals eating the nuts. It’s prolly safe to assume people in the past saw animals eating fauna and then followed by example.
In reality, the type of beer is called "Pils", named after the city of Pilsen in the Czech Republic. I am almost 100% sure, that they just misspelled it as "Pilz" as the words sound the same, when spoken out ^^
I live in Germany and confirm what Jonas-jq9qo said. The label "Pilz" is probably intentionally misspelled for the Ameican market and should be written "Pils" and is short for "Pilsner" which, in turn, is a nod to the Czech Town of Pilsen. Germans would never confuse a Pils (pronounced "pills") with a Pilz (pronounced "pilts"). This type of marketing misspelling is to make "foreign-inspired" products seem more foreign than they are for the Anglo- or North American market. Kellogs has (or used to have?) a cereal called Müeslix, which is a non-sensical spelling for the Swiss or German cereal spelled "Müsli" or if you have no way to type an "ü", "Muesli", but never with both "ü" and "e". Similarly, Häagen-Dazs, which is marketed as a Danish brand of ice cream has a totally non-sensical spelling to Danes and is known in Denmark as "that American ice cream brand". 😆
I love this Woman! Her presentation style is so friendly and inviting with a perfect does of quirkiness while still being authoritative enough like as an expert. She is just fun.
I just love her. Her happiness and enthusiasm is just infectious and the videos are also very informative and really nicely put together. She even made me laugh a few times: “do not lick 👅 the forest floor”. She is the best host! ❤
I could remember several years ago I was diagnosed with ADHD. Also suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Not until my mom recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 8 years totally clean. Never thought I would be saying this about mushrooms
I totally agree! DMT, Psilocybin mushrooms and psychedelics in general have shown great potential in helping people with mental health issues. It's truly remarkable how effective they can be in treating depression and anxiety
Can you help me with the reliable source. I'm 64 and have suffered for years with addiction, anxiety and severe ptsd, I got my panic attacks under control myself years ago and they have come back with a vengeance, I'm constantly trying to take full breaths but can't get the full satisfying breath out, it's absolutely crippling me, i live in Greece. I don't know much about these mushrooms. Really need a reliable source!! Can't wait to get them
@@MarlinMetzler YES very sure of Dr.raymycology. I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today
YES very sure of Dr.raymycology. I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today
After undergoing psilocybin experiences, the visions and shared emotions can feel deeply relatable and genuine. Nonetheless, to someone without such experiences, these phenomena might appear unfamiliar and even incorrect.
She's very good. Explains everything thoroughly and she's having fun with it. I can keep up with her methods and actually remember some recipes. You can tell she's very passionate about her career.
Love how the can of beer had "PILZ" written on it, which means mushroom in German, as opposed to the actual name "Pils" which refers to the Czech city "Pilsen" where that type of beer originates from.
I'm glad she referred to morels as having a honeycomb pattern. I know a lot of people say they look like a brain, but that is a dangerous comparison because there are a few highly toxic wild mushrooms that look far more like a brain (one even being called the false morel).
@@allenstewart8535 naah not that poisonous. As far as i now real morels dont contain gyromitrin so you dont have to worry as much as with gyromitra esculenta for example
@@allenstewart8535 dw mate, your point that they shouldn't be eaten raw still stands. And real morels can actually cause poisonings as well, even when cooked, especially if you eat many and older morels. Though that is rather unpleasant, it's not really threatening and you fully recover after a few hours.
@ghost Wow. That's so cool. Hard to imagine. But it gives me inspiration knowing you're out there. I don't think I could make it if suddenly I couldn't see. Respect
Beautiful and very useful video! Only thing, "portobello" means "nice harbour" in Italian, but the word for door is very similar to that, so understandable
In Scandinavia where we pick and eat lots of mushrooms to dehydrate a mushroom we use medium heat, salt and put a lid over the dry pan which brings out the water, turning a few times and letting the water evaporate, After this we bring up the heat to high, put butter in the pan and brown/sear. If you sear it first you’re trapping the water inside (you referenced steak, same thing).
@@nmg6248 Oh no, this os preparing fresh meaty mushrooms for a meal. To dehydrate for storage requires complete drying or they will decompose. There ate different methods, and also dehydrators you can by with layers of sheets of netting inside with a fan for fruit, berries, herbs and mushrooms. I go picking yellow chantrelles to eat fresh end of summer, but later pick brown chantrelles to dry for winter stews, sauces etc to serve with game, and porcini and others to dry. I usually have a big stack of newspapers saved up and scatter a single layer of well cleaned and sorted mushrooms by size and type on a paper and set it close to the radiators. Put another one on top 3 times a day and flip over (some get stuck, you need to change more often the first day or two. Thin ones like the chantrelles are shrivelled up and dry quickly, porcini I dice to 1cm size pieces so they dry quicker. I keep in double paper bags in a dark dry pantry,, after some time if I have very dry ones left I transfer to big jars. If you have a good oven with fan you can use that to dry them, without heat. The whole house smells like forest and mushrooms during the process (not for everyone but I don’t mind) and two things are important: don’t pick mushrooms in damp weather after the rain, and bring a proper mushroom knife to the forest with a brush on the back end; you cut off the wet bits, anything with wormholes, and most impprtantly the gills on the types of mushrooms where they aren’t eaten (like porcini with squishy pipe gills) as you go. This all insures you don’t have wet mushrooms piling up (which decomposes fast) and that the spores and mycellum is left in the forest so more will grow. I also use a basket to carry them in, good circulation of air protects their shape. Different kinda grow in different areas, you learn to recognize these bu the trees, mosses, etc. It’s a lovely way to immerse into the forest with a friend or companion dog. And a jar of dried and gand picked porcini makes a marvelous holiday gift! I pick blueberries and lingonberries (like tiny cranberries) and freeze them too. And the first nettles of spring for nettle soup with deviled eggs.
This video is mainly focused on commercially grown mushrooms. In Russia, we mostly gather mushrooms and eat different sorts, some of them mentioned as the specialty mushrooms. We separate them into classes, class I being the tastiest. My chanterelles are golden chanterelles (Class I), and there's a lot of them growing here, other valuable mushrooms here are brown cup boletus(class III), aspen mushrooms (class II), and the most desirable mushrooms are penny buns/porcini. Porchini are rare to find, but the lats year we succeeded to find quite amount, ate them and dried them. I personally prefer chanterelles to any other mushroom i ever tasted because they have the least slimy texture and very rich taste. The problem is, slugs and worms love porcini more than people do, so it's really rare to find an intact porchino. Morels grow in Russia as well, but they are even more rare than porchini and tend to gather poisonous chemicals from the environment inside, so they are considered "mushroom fan mushroom only". They are considered class III. Other "mushroom fan only" delicacies are Lactarius Resimus (really rare and best salted, I've seen it only once a lifetime, old and rotten) and Lactarius deliciosus (doesn't grow in my region; really rare - i only heard about that). They both are Class I and are mentioned in classic literature and poetry. Fun fact: in my country crimini are sometimes marketed as "royal champinon" XD. Sometimes i buy them (any size) and fry in butter. I haven't seen portobellos before, though. Fun fact II in northern Russia in Tundra mushrooms including class I and some others mentioned above, grow unbelievably huge. Plate-size caps, knee-high stems and really tasty, locals love that. In Russia there's a lot of forests, and they are quite wet, so there's a lot of mushrooms and no restrictions on gathering and eating them at all.
Sounds amazing. I think this video is focusing on mushrooms available for home cooks in the US. I guess better to give out concise info about what they know vs giving out sloppy info on things they’ve never experienced nor would be able to show? I realized this as I was writing but they are filming at their office in the US so they would only really have access to what they can get from nearby stores to use in the video. And like she prefaced, this is only a few out of thousands.
Here in the US pacific northwest, we share a handful of those types! Golden Chantelle, porcine, king and queen boletes, and many other goodies including truffles! We have a vibrant foraging community here, I'm lucky to be in a place with one
the entire "every type of x/ how to prepare/cut/eat x" series is amazing, funny, informative, and well made. if it was all one host it would still be impressive but it's incredible how it's a different person every single time and the videos are all amazonh
When she said "porchinis are very hard to find" I was like: those literally grow 40 feet from my House in masses 😅 so appearantly Germany is a Porcini paradise
@@kanchanchaudhary1973 Yeah depends. You can't forage in a national park in Germany or Poland. But everywhere else is pretty much fine, keeping the safety of choosing the right mushroom in mind of course
I don't know if I'm such a mushrooms guy or this lady really makes me feel like I just watched my first RUclips video! Super interesting, I love her gentle sense of humor as well.
See, I didn't even know about the paper bag stuff. I usually only buy mushrooms when I need them (like specifically for a recipe). Thank you, Chef Adrienne.
Same my mom said "when you buy mushrooms make sure you use it right away or it will go bad" honestly never thought of the paper bag. So even after my family goes mushroom picking my parents would make soup with all the fresh mushroom right away lol. I love mushrooms but like you I only buy them when I want to make a dish with them
I know I’m late but I had my first morel mushrooms yesterday. They were sautéed and the topping on butter linguini. So simple and perfect. Highly recommend trying them if possible
@@Eugene_TEC Even a lot of wild-found mushrooms are cheaper than morels. The thing with them is, they're generally only in their prime edible state for about one or two weeks of the year.
We have a big variety of mushrooms growing wild here in Russia, as well as the old and rich tradition of collecting and cooking them. BTW porcini and chanterelle are quite common. Chanterelles are awesome sauteed with some onions and sourcream sauce and porcinis are reeeally great for soups.
I agree, very common in Poland as well. I noticed, that a lot of information in their videos is specified for North America. Sometimes it sounds funny :P
Wonder if there's enough mushrooms for a part 2. Cuz I wanna know what I can make with Shimeji mushrooms since grocery stores near me are selling them.
Shimeji are most often used in miso soup, but can also be cooked in a variety of stir-fries. I'm lucky enough to live in Japan, and there actually quite a few verities of shimeji. It's not typical but I love to use them when i make Oyakodon (chinken and egg over rice) as its a really nice compliment and adds a nice extra texture to the dish. Great mushroom to use in a variety of dishes because of their mild taste and nice texture.
I pickle shimeji, rice vinegar : water : sugar(1:1:0.5), salt (pinch or more depending on how much pickling liquid you're making), black pepper and I suggest some cayenne pepper if you like spiciness and star anise is good as well.
The best host you ever featured on this channel hands down, and I watch all your videos! This woman was absolutely adorable, passionate about her presentation and a delight to watch. 😊💞
Plus mushrooms have a way closer texture. Shake Shack makes a burger called "The Shroomburger" its a deep fried mushroom and cheese patty that's way better than most meat substitutes.
mushrooms are my absolute fav meat substitute but tofu can be really delicious and versatile too! i think the problem is that a lot of people try to cook a block of tofu like they would a steak instead of treating it like its own ingredient. if you wanna try some really good tofu dishes and dont mind a little spice, id recommend you try mapo tofu or soondubu-jjigae!
This is fun. I love mushrooms. Shiitake, Dried Shiitake, Enoki, Chanterelle, Morel, Swiss, Portobello, Button, Porcini, Black Fungus, Black Truffles, White Truffles, King Oyster, Oyster, Cordyceps.
Love it when the hood side comes out. ^•^ .i use to work in a golf club when i was a teen, and i became obssd with fingis, lol i was the weird kid with a basket, and yes i will find magic ones, i would eat in the middle of the woods. I just felt the conection, i love fungis!
As a chef turned exotic mushroom grower, I absolutely love this video, recommend it to soo many people and thank you so much for making it! It could've been much longer but it's the best I've ever seen. 🍄❤️
I really like how she actually dared vouce the fact portobellos are a crap mushroom and just very well marketed :D my grandma comes from a eastern european country and worked half her life as a mushroom collector for the state(s) of yugoslavia, and whenever a restaurant advertises portobellos anywhere she just leaves lol for mushroom taste, there's just much better mushrooms, and for burger-patty-similarities, there's also a ton of better options, especially by now.
@@chicuongvu1806 maybe you don't know the best way to cook them then? Sear them like a steak and season well. Put the tiniest but of butter or oil on top of mushroom once off the skillet.
We have one in Europe that grows a hat about a size of a woodchoppers whole hand 😅 it's huge and because the brown /white specks we call it in Hungary fawn legs and in Germany mostly known as Parasol because it's big size. It's best to coat them in breadcrumbs/panco and fry them 🤤
Dried dongo (冬菇 in Chinese) can also be used for making broths and they have way more flavour than regular shiitake mushrooms. Dried dongo powder can also be used to make make broths richer and my mom usually makes them with chicken feet and oyster sauce in a large pot. They taste amazing too :D
Chinese mums using them in soup, congee, and macaroni :D The best dish is 髮菜蠔豉燜冬菇 (Stewed dongo with fat choy and dried oyster) But we don't really cut them to store them though.
Last fall, I found a 10-pound head of maitake in my local park and I took that home, cleaned and shredded it, and ate stir-fried mushrooms and rice for a week. it tasted soo good! I even saved the thick stalk to use in soup stocks to add some extra omph to my bougie ramen. This experience singlehandedly kickstarted my mushroom foraging hobby, not gonna lie.
So jealous! Sycamore trees near my house sometimes have enormous beautiful maitake, but sadly they’re on a busy sidewalk-too close to dogs and car exhaust to be safe eating. 😭
I was hesitant about a 27 mins video about mushrooms, but thid was very entertaining and I learned a lot. We need to see this girl more often, she was great!
Hey all, PNW mushroom forager here. Instead of cooking your mushrooms right away with oil, cook them initially with a tiny bit of water, THEN oil.Careful so the oil doesn't splash at you, but essentially, mushrooms can absorb a LOT of oil. Cooking in water seals up the inner pathways inside the mushroom. This way, the oil you use (I use salted butter) will end up coating the mushroom, rather than getting absorbed, leading to much more tender and flavourful mushrooms! Try it out!
Someone else in the PNW who wants to cook more mushrooms, but hasn't really tried yet. I could see this being true, but doesn't that lead to more splatter in the pan?
Great tip PNW...just saw a few of years last week (early wee hrs rabbit hole mind you. But DID enjoy !! :) AND... Being a foodie... Great tip. Will be trying soon. Thx !
Adrienne Cheatham I enjoyed your clearity, warm and fun energy while giving all this fantastic information on mushrooms. I am so jazzed to eat more mushrooms and I am looking forward to making the sofe scramble eggs with shaved truffle. I look forward to more videos or maybe even a cooking show( if you don't already have one) !
Loved this episode! Would love to see Chef Cheatham again - she's got such an engaging manner and is great at communicating her knowledge and enthusiasm for what she's talking about.
she is fantastic! I love how straightforward and passionate she is. Not like a wild tv personality, which is also fine, I just enjoy that she is like, here's the deal
Here in Europe we pick mostly Porcini, because they are the best, usually in spring and autumn. In a particularly rainy period there is some chanterelles. I think the Porcini are called that because wild boars love them!
Maitake is my absolute favorite. It's great cooked with a little bit of butter and orzo too. It lets the maitake flavor the orzo with that nice, delicate, nutty taste. I never thought of frying it though! That looks so tasty!
I found this recipe online for maitake: mix soaked wakame seaweed (available dried at Asian grocery stores) with butter, then dab that all over the mushroom and roast it in the oven. Freakin' delicious. A real umami whammy!
Chantrerelles and morels can be foraged in the mountains where I live. They are a little spendy, but no more than a good cut of steak. Actually hedgehog, porcini, and truffles are available too, but I’m less familiar with them.
Darlin' - You are just about the most charming "host" I have ever experienced, especially with the slight seasoning of curse words! Adds so much umami to this overall feast of fantastic fungi! Thank you!
I love Adrienne. She was amazing on her season of TC and an absolute badass. Was pleasantly surprised to see her doing this video because I also LOVE mushrooms and this was very educational.
In Japan. Matsutake mushrooms are really rare. So when we go out into the forests, we usually hunt for them when we smell them whilst walking. Fantastic mushroom
Excellent, I would love to watch her no only expand this but help us learn about other foods too. She should be a professor. Entertaining and keeps one focused. Her presentation and demeanor is superb.
I'm fond of the white button mushrooms myself. Thing I loved the best was to saute them with some pepper, garlic and onion powder, adding a few splashes of W. sauce. I'd let them cook down until they became almost crunchy to make a nice crisp topic for an olive oil baked chicken.
After nearly 40 yrs of culinary experience off n on ... Sometimes the Main cash flow, other times 2nd or 3rd gig to fill the gaps..🙄🤭 Have had 5 legit careers (breathing down 60 now! Lol) I have taught adult ed in 3 of them. This is some of the BEST presentation I have seen !! And as a new farmer (disability career chg ! ) And a brand new myco- aficionado...this was absolutely awesome. !! And love the perspective of REAL PPL teaching. Great job Ma'am. Peace n God Bless. Mac in Maine
LMAO, I was so close to posting this exact response! It's always fun to find other people who watched that one Merriam Webster video from the long, long ago, before the days of youtube
@@SapientPearwood I don't know that I ever saw that, but I'd certainly be interested if you know where one can find it. I just looked it up at one point, when I was curious which was more etymologically accurate, octopi or octopuses, and found out what it really should have been.
I feel like I fell in love twice in 28 mins! :P She is infectiously enthusiastic, fun and knowledgeable and gave me a much stronger appreciation for mushrooms. I’ve always been kinda “blah” about them, no love or hate, but I realize now I’ve just been experiencing them wrong. Adrienne is amazing and I definitely want to see more of her and learn from her.
WE NEED MORE OF THIS GIRL and MORE OF THIS TYPE OF VIDEOS. TURN THIS INTO A SHOW.
She's fantastic. I hope she can talk about other things.
Seriously I need to see her again! She lifted my mood
ALRIGHT BRO WE CAN ALL HEAR YOU! YOU REALLY DON'T HAVE TO YELL.
Agree
She was the runner-up on season 15 of Top Chef, and was easily my favorite. I’m pretty sure you can watch the past seasons of the show on the bravo app if you have a cable tv subscription.
She is actually correct about the maitake (舞茸). Back in the day, they were considered to be such a rare thing to find that the person who found them would dance out of happiness. It's also said that the mushrooms look like a bunch of butterflies dancing. Either way, the character to represent "dance" in this fashion is mau (舞う). You can also find maitake tempura in Japan as well.
Wow
Thx for the likes
So my guess is that maitake literally means dancing mushroom?? That's really cute. Or kawai🙃
@@sebastianortega1938 its more like your hallucinating on its spores
Thx for the cute fact
As a medical herbalist and someone who specializes in mushrooms, I can say that yes, some mushrooms can be eaten raw, but people are highly encouraged to cook all mushrooms, as there are constituents in raw mushrooms which are particularly difficult for the kidneys to process, and anyone with kidney problems should NEVER eat raw mushrooms.
I once had a student who ate a good many raw chanterelles which they bought from a grocery store, and needed to go to the hospital due to the digestive discomfort they were experiencing... and discomfort is putting it lightly.
P.S... besides that, this episode was AMAZING! and I will be sharing it with my students.
Love your joy!
The fact that you are watching this video shows that you love your craft and dedicate time to it. The world needs more people like you!
As a pregnant woman…. I can’t help it. While I’m cooking them, I also snack on some of them raw 😩
I second your caution to cook all mushrooms, and it is not just for digestive concerns. Some mushrooms produce compounds that can have medical consequences, most of these compounds seem to be inactivated by the heat of cooking.
Came here to say just this...please do NOT eat your mushrooms raw.
This video definitely made me grateful for the untold numbers of our ancestors who, probably out of desperation, inadvertently sacrificed themselves to help humanity as a whole figure out which mushrooms didn't kill us/were edible.
Such a versatile ingredient that will always taste great 😍
I feel like they can eliminate a lot of the risks (granted not all of them) by feeding them to animals first and see their reaction.
@@skynchickens300 imagine having faith in people
@@skynchickens300 they probably didn’t even have to do that. Heard somewhere that people discovered the non-toxic variant of almonds by observing animals eating the nuts. It’s prolly safe to assume people in the past saw animals eating fauna and then followed by example.
@@burstnbubbles8163 for many wild foods but NOT FOR BERRIES.
Tons of berries that animals eat that are poisonous to humans....
@@ASMRGRATITUDE yep 👍
I love the editors of this channel
Lol was this sarcasm? I hope not (this wasn’t intended to be mean just if it was a misconception)
@@ezrasteiny it wasn't and there was nothing in the sentence indicating such. No overreaction needed.
Go if TFT
I agree this some quality editing.
@@ezrasteiny lol how did u even arrive at that question
I love how it says "Pilz" on the beer which is mushroom in German. Very fitting
☝️☝️wanna get any psychedelics products, shrooms, DMT, Candy bars, LSD 💊🍄💊
I'm sure that was done purposely and they wanted someone to notice. 🤓
In reality, the type of beer is called "Pils", named after the city of Pilsen in the Czech Republic. I am almost 100% sure, that they just misspelled it as "Pilz" as the words sound the same, when spoken out ^^
@@Jonas-jq9qo Well... there goes my brilliant theory. 🤓
I live in Germany and confirm what Jonas-jq9qo said. The label "Pilz" is probably intentionally misspelled for the Ameican market and should be written "Pils" and is short for "Pilsner" which, in turn, is a nod to the Czech Town of Pilsen. Germans would never confuse a Pils (pronounced "pills") with a Pilz (pronounced "pilts").
This type of marketing misspelling is to make "foreign-inspired" products seem more foreign than they are for the Anglo- or North American market. Kellogs has (or used to have?) a cereal called Müeslix, which is a non-sensical spelling for the Swiss or German cereal spelled "Müsli" or if you have no way to type an "ü", "Muesli", but never with both "ü" and "e". Similarly, Häagen-Dazs, which is marketed as a Danish brand of ice cream has a totally non-sensical spelling to Danes and is known in Denmark as "that American ice cream brand". 😆
Not seen this presenter before but I bloody love her. Great personality and such an authentic & knowledgeable delivery.
I think she also did an everything-about-potatoes video. She's great.
She was also a contestant in top Chef
She almost won top chef. She is a fabulous chef.
She’s also kinda cute…
@@mrfish.- bruh
I love this Woman! Her presentation style is so friendly and inviting with a perfect does of quirkiness while still being authoritative enough like as an expert.
She is just fun.
Kind of like the lady from the nut episode!
Simp
@@gazir4438 Get some sunlight and seek help for your hormonal imbalances.
@@gazir4438 Saying simp doesn't make you trendy I'm afraid. OP is clearly making a nice compliment.
Thanks for not using ‘girl.’ Her energy is great 🥰
I just love her. Her happiness and enthusiasm is just infectious and the videos are also very informative and really nicely put together. She even made me laugh a few times: “do not lick 👅 the forest floor”. She is the best host! ❤
Cringe
The most adorable host, for how excited she gets over fungus
I was going to say hot but adorable works too.
I'm only here for the shiitake mushroom in the thumbnail
@@btvgod8206 same
Fungus is life
amogus
As someone once said: every mushroom is edible. Some of them, once in a life time
Other ones, "You do this for fun?"
That can be said for other things too
Edited for spelling
lol
And some make you see God
@@scottvelez3154 wait what-
I could remember several years ago I was diagnosed with ADHD. Also suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Not until my mom recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 8 years totally clean. Never thought I would be saying this about mushrooms
I totally agree! DMT, Psilocybin mushrooms and psychedelics in general have shown great potential in helping people with mental health issues. It's truly remarkable how effective they can be in treating depression and anxiety
Can you help me with the reliable source. I'm 64 and have suffered for years with addiction, anxiety and severe ptsd, I got my panic attacks under control myself years ago and they have come back with a vengeance, I'm constantly trying to take full breaths but can't get the full satisfying breath out, it's absolutely crippling me, i live in Greece. I don't know much about these mushrooms. Really need a reliable source!! Can't wait to get them
@@MarlinMetzler YES very sure of Dr.raymycology. I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today
YES very sure of Dr.raymycology. I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today
After undergoing psilocybin experiences, the visions and shared emotions can feel deeply relatable and genuine. Nonetheless, to someone without such experiences, these phenomena might appear unfamiliar and even incorrect.
She's very good. Explains everything thoroughly and she's having fun with it. I can keep up with her methods and actually remember some recipes. You can tell she's very passionate about her career.
Check out @mycojims on Instagram to get some mushrooms,dmt,one up candy bar and others
Agreed absolutely. She is genuinely passionate about mushrooms and it shows and that helps delivering the great contents about mushrooms.
I Love her ... Her passion is so infectious, and her presence is so comforting and joyful at the same time.
And how cute is she? So fun.
Love how the can of beer had "PILZ" written on it, which means mushroom in German, as opposed to the actual name "Pils" which refers to the Czech city "Pilsen" where that type of beer originates from.
I'm glad she referred to morels as having a honeycomb pattern. I know a lot of people say they look like a brain, but that is a dangerous comparison because there are a few highly toxic wild mushrooms that look far more like a brain (one even being called the false morel).
Somr people in eastern and northern europe still eat those regularly dried and cooked
@@allenstewart8535 naah not that poisonous. As far as i now real morels dont contain gyromitrin so you dont have to worry as much as with gyromitra esculenta for example
@@christianwai1796 wow I must be mistaken, thx for letting me know
@@allenstewart8535 dw mate, your point that they shouldn't be eaten raw still stands. And real morels can actually cause poisonings as well, even when cooked, especially if you eat many and older morels. Though that is rather unpleasant, it's not really threatening and you fully recover after a few hours.
Which is not the case with gyromitra poisonings, those can very well be life threatening
As someone who is blind but still cooks, I love how you describing every little detail. Thank you so much!
wait how did you comment this then
@@bonelessmice6828
Screen reading software.
@@A_Wee_spook i think it’s cool how you’re blind and can cook :)
@ghost Wow. That's so cool. Hard to imagine. But it gives me inspiration knowing you're out there. I don't think I could make it if suddenly I couldn't see. Respect
@@bonelessmice6828
💜
Well I just stood still and watched this whole thing on my phone. She's so informative, skilled, and passionate.
☝️☝️☝️wanna get any psychedelics products, shrooms, DMT, Candy bars, LSD 💊
“Seasoned with love and Parmesan” is literally just a trip to my grandma’s house
LOVE AND PARMESAN could be the name of an modern romance book lol
Ok, I was today years old when I found out the 1st 3 mushrooms are all the same. Mind blown!
Ya it’s funny now that everything is so commodified criminis are more often “branded” as baby bellas with the price jacked up. Smh
Same
Beautiful and very useful video! Only thing, "portobello" means "nice harbour" in Italian, but the word for door is very similar to that, so understandable
In Scandinavia where we pick and eat lots of mushrooms to dehydrate a mushroom we use medium heat, salt and put a lid over the dry pan which brings out the water, turning a few times and letting the water evaporate, After this we bring up the heat to high, put butter in the pan and brown/sear. If you sear it first you’re trapping the water inside (you referenced steak, same thing).
In other parts of Scandinavia we've never heard of this technique and are taking notes.
Very useful! Tack!!
This is interesting… How long do they last and how do you store them?
@@nmg6248 Oh no, this os preparing fresh meaty mushrooms for a meal.
To dehydrate for storage requires complete drying or they will decompose. There ate different methods, and also dehydrators you can by with layers of sheets of netting inside with a fan for fruit, berries, herbs and mushrooms.
I go picking yellow chantrelles to eat fresh end of summer, but later pick brown chantrelles to dry for winter stews, sauces etc to serve with game, and porcini and others to dry.
I usually have a big stack of newspapers saved up and scatter a single layer of well cleaned and sorted mushrooms by size and type on a paper and set it close to the radiators. Put another one on top 3 times a day and flip over (some get stuck, you need to change more often the first day or two. Thin ones like the chantrelles are shrivelled up and dry quickly, porcini I dice to 1cm size pieces so they dry quicker. I keep in double paper bags in a dark dry pantry,, after some time if I have very dry ones left I transfer to big jars.
If you have a good oven with fan you can use that to dry them, without heat.
The whole house smells like forest and mushrooms during the process (not for everyone but I don’t mind) and two things are important: don’t pick mushrooms in damp weather after the rain, and bring a proper mushroom knife to the forest with a brush on the back end; you cut off the wet bits, anything with wormholes, and most impprtantly the gills on the types of mushrooms where they aren’t eaten (like porcini with squishy pipe gills) as you go. This all insures you don’t have wet mushrooms piling up (which decomposes fast) and that the spores and mycellum is left in the forest so more will grow. I also use a basket to carry them in, good circulation of air protects their shape.
Different kinda grow in different areas, you learn to recognize these bu the trees, mosses, etc. It’s a lovely way to immerse into the forest with a friend or companion dog. And a jar of dried and gand picked porcini makes a marvelous holiday gift! I pick blueberries and lingonberries (like tiny cranberries) and freeze them too. And the first nettles of spring for nettle soup with deviled eggs.
@@nidhoggstrike my tip was for cooking this way, not dehydration for further storage, I’m sorry of that wasn’t clear.
This woman and whoever edited this video are AMAZING. MORE PLEASE
This video is mainly focused on commercially grown mushrooms. In Russia, we mostly gather mushrooms and eat different sorts, some of them mentioned as the specialty mushrooms. We separate them into classes, class I being the tastiest. My chanterelles are golden chanterelles (Class I), and there's a lot of them growing here, other valuable mushrooms here are brown cup boletus(class III), aspen mushrooms (class II), and the most desirable mushrooms are penny buns/porcini. Porchini are rare to find, but the lats year we succeeded to find quite amount, ate them and dried them. I personally prefer chanterelles to any other mushroom i ever tasted because they have the least slimy texture and very rich taste. The problem is, slugs and worms love porcini more than people do, so it's really rare to find an intact porchino. Morels grow in Russia as well, but they are even more rare than porchini and tend to gather poisonous chemicals from the environment inside, so they are considered "mushroom fan mushroom only". They are considered class III. Other "mushroom fan only" delicacies are Lactarius Resimus (really rare and best salted, I've seen it only once a lifetime, old and rotten) and Lactarius deliciosus (doesn't grow in my region; really rare - i only heard about that). They both are Class I and are mentioned in classic literature and poetry.
Fun fact: in my country crimini are sometimes marketed as "royal champinon" XD. Sometimes i buy them (any size) and fry in butter. I haven't seen portobellos before, though.
Fun fact II in northern Russia in Tundra mushrooms including class I and some others mentioned above, grow unbelievably huge. Plate-size caps, knee-high stems and really tasty, locals love that.
In Russia there's a lot of forests, and they are quite wet, so there's a lot of mushrooms and no restrictions on gathering and eating them at all.
Ok no one cares and mushroom grow in many places not just in your dare country
Sounds amazing. I think this video is focusing on mushrooms available for home cooks in the US. I guess better to give out concise info about what they know vs giving out sloppy info on things they’ve never experienced nor would be able to show? I realized this as I was writing but they are filming at their office in the US so they would only really have access to what they can get from nearby stores to use in the video. And like she prefaced, this is only a few out of thousands.
Thank you for adding this to the video, so interesting!! I would love to eat one of those big mushrooms
@@rachel705 XL mushrooms grow in tundras in Russia, Canada and Norway.
Here in the US pacific northwest, we share a handful of those types! Golden Chantelle, porcine, king and queen boletes, and many other goodies including truffles! We have a vibrant foraging community here, I'm lucky to be in a place with one
how'd you guys find people like this, they are master on what they're doing and a great speaker
@Rose :3 you go where mushrooms grow to find mushroom experts!
the entire "every type of x/ how to prepare/cut/eat x" series is amazing, funny, informative, and well made. if it was all one host it would still be impressive but it's incredible how it's a different person every single time and the videos are all amazonh
When she said "porchinis are very hard to find" I was like: those literally grow 40 feet from my House in masses 😅 so appearantly Germany is a Porcini paradise
She talking about America
We're too lazy to venture into our forests. 😁
It's a big thing to go foraging for mushrooms, for every family. Feel like it's a bougie thing in the states
@@minisqui7103 isnt it illegal in most places?
@@kanchanchaudhary1973 Yeah depends. You can't forage in a national park in Germany or Poland. But everywhere else is pretty much fine, keeping the safety of choosing the right mushroom in mind of course
I don't know if I'm such a mushrooms guy or this lady really makes me feel like I just watched my first RUclips video! Super interesting, I love her gentle sense of humor as well.
See, I didn't even know about the paper bag stuff. I usually only buy mushrooms when I need them (like specifically for a recipe). Thank you, Chef Adrienne.
Same my mom said "when you buy mushrooms make sure you use it right away or it will go bad" honestly never thought of the paper bag. So even after my family goes mushroom picking my parents would make soup with all the fresh mushroom right away lol. I love mushrooms but like you I only buy them when I want to make a dish with them
"seasoned with love and parmesan"
love that
I know I’m late but I had my first morel mushrooms yesterday. They were sautéed and the topping on butter linguini. So simple and perfect. Highly recommend trying them if possible
LINGUINE, not LINGUINI. This is what happens when America pronounces is wrong.
Pronounce LING-GWI-NAY, not NI.
@@mjremy2605levio SAAAA 😂
@@mythydamashii9978🤣
I had no idea morels were expensive!!! I hunt for and eat them just about every spring/summer with my family-we fry em :)
For me it's the same bit with porcini and chanterelle
I'd guess the reason those 3 are so expensive is because they can't be properly cultivated like button or oyster mushrooms.
Yo Sam situation here in Tennessee with ginseng, if you can collect enough you can find someone to buy it
We also do that! They are so good there better than the mushrooms you get at the grocery store
@@Eugene_TEC Even a lot of wild-found mushrooms are cheaper than morels. The thing with them is, they're generally only in their prime edible state for about one or two weeks of the year.
We have a big variety of mushrooms growing wild here in Russia, as well as the old and rich tradition of collecting and cooking them. BTW porcini and chanterelle are quite common. Chanterelles are awesome sauteed with some onions and sourcream sauce and porcinis are reeeally great for soups.
Just like how my family cooks them! They're really common in Bulgaria too!
Yeah as your neighbor from Finland I can totally relate
I agree, very common in Poland as well. I noticed, that a lot of information in their videos is specified for North America. Sometimes it sounds funny :P
Some is delicious some are deadly some are colorful if ate
Yeah I have seen loads of chanterelles where I live in the uk.
One of the best cooking videos I’ve seen in a long time! She is so passionate about mushrooms I love it!
Wonder if there's enough mushrooms for a part 2. Cuz I wanna know what I can make with Shimeji mushrooms since grocery stores near me are selling them.
Shimeji are most often used in miso soup, but can also be cooked in a variety of stir-fries. I'm lucky enough to live in Japan, and there actually quite a few verities of shimeji. It's not typical but I love to use them when i make Oyakodon (chinken and egg over rice) as its a really nice compliment and adds a nice extra texture to the dish. Great mushroom to use in a variety of dishes because of their mild taste and nice texture.
MatthewMammothswine thnx 👌 it's been driving me crazy always seeing them at my grocery store, but never finding any recipes that uses Shimeji. 😂
I pickle shimeji, rice vinegar : water : sugar(1:1:0.5), salt (pinch or more depending on how much pickling liquid you're making), black pepper and I suggest some cayenne pepper if you like spiciness and star anise is good as well.
Try Helen Rennie's recipe for mushroom farro risotto (ruclips.net/video/pulZJOf0vUc/видео.html).
yeaa shimeji is great
The best host you ever featured on this channel hands down, and I watch all your videos! This woman was absolutely adorable, passionate about her presentation and a delight to watch. 😊💞
id still give bread guy - Jim Lahey the win on this one.. but she was definitely very cool too
Yeah, i feel like i havent really seen much of her either.
my favorite is the fish guy but this lady is cool too
That fried Maitake mushroom looked AMAZING, and sounded even better.
I never understood why the go-to meat substitute was tofu. I find mushrooms to be much more enjoyable and versatile
Plus mushrooms have a way closer texture. Shake Shack makes a burger called "The Shroomburger" its a deep fried mushroom and cheese patty that's way better than most meat substitutes.
I always thought it was cuz they’re lower in protein
Eh. I love both. Meat, tofu, mushrooms are all delicious to me.
same, i dont really like tofu that much but i love mushrooms
mushrooms are my absolute fav meat substitute but tofu can be really delicious and versatile too! i think the problem is that a lot of people try to cook a block of tofu like they would a steak instead of treating it like its own ingredient. if you wanna try some really good tofu dishes and dont mind a little spice, id recommend you try mapo tofu or soondubu-jjigae!
I love this lady! She's just so charming and witty and made my love for mushrooms even deeper 😆 Please have her on these types of videos more often!
This is fun. I love mushrooms. Shiitake, Dried Shiitake, Enoki, Chanterelle, Morel, Swiss, Portobello, Button, Porcini, Black Fungus, Black Truffles, White Truffles, King Oyster, Oyster, Cordyceps.
I was just talking to my partner about hoping someone would make a guide like this!
This is so weird but me too! Literally yesterday me and my partner were talking about this
@@listenupkids Plot twist you two are partners
@@eldendynast sus
@@eldendynast sus
I'm not even able to eat mushrooms because they make me sick but guess who's still watching this video?
I want this woman to tell me everything about things she is passionate about! She seems so lovely and full of energy! More of her
I know I love this individual!
Love it when the hood side comes out. ^•^ .i use to work in a golf club when i was a teen, and i became obssd with fingis, lol i was the weird kid with a basket, and yes i will find magic ones, i would eat in the middle of the woods. I just felt the conection, i love fungis!
I love how passionately she speaks about mushrooms! It's like a breeze of fresh air on a hot day.
as a mushroom cultivator, i got very excited when i saw this and instantly started whispering the names of the mushrooms i saw in the intro
As a chef turned exotic mushroom grower, I absolutely love this video, recommend it to soo many people and thank you so much for making it! It could've been much longer but it's the best I've ever seen.
🍄❤️
I really like how she actually dared vouce the fact portobellos are a crap mushroom and just very well marketed :D
my grandma comes from a eastern european country and worked half her life as a mushroom collector for the state(s) of yugoslavia, and whenever a restaurant advertises portobellos anywhere she just leaves lol
for mushroom taste, there's just much better mushrooms, and for burger-patty-similarities, there's also a ton of better options, especially by now.
Man those first 3 shroom tbh they are overprice and idk why they are that popular they have no flavor what so ever
Where is your grandma from?
@@nikolabajceta2508 northern macedonia
@@chicuongvu1806 maybe you don't know the best way to cook them then?
Sear them like a steak and season well.
Put the tiniest but of butter or oil on top of mushroom once off the skillet.
But she never said they were crap mushrooms???
As a mushroom enthusiast this was a very enjoyable video! Loved the host and will DEFINITELY try out all these recipes!
I wish I was as excited about something like this lady is about mushrooms
mushrooms are one of my favourite foods specially the mushroom that goes with the gravy
Im polish and is during autumn main dish always ,perfect like a souse for perfect or deer meat
@Tanner im being serious in this comment
Check out @mycojims on Instagram to get some mushrooms,dmt,one up candy bar and others
We need more of Chef Adrienne ! her vibes are amazing .
Love this woman and her mushroom enthusiasm
I really really love her energy! We need more of her!
This was great! Please bring her back again. She was very informative, funny, and lovely. The video went by so quickly.
We have one in Europe that grows a hat about a size of a woodchoppers whole hand 😅 it's huge and because the brown /white specks we call it in Hungary fawn legs and in Germany mostly known as Parasol because it's big size. It's best to coat them in breadcrumbs/panco and fry them 🤤
Dried dongo (冬菇 in Chinese) can also be used for making broths and they have way more flavour than regular shiitake mushrooms.
Dried dongo powder can also be used to make make broths richer and my mom usually makes them with chicken feet and oyster sauce in a large pot.
They taste amazing too :D
thank you for sharing 👀
Chinese mums using them in soup, congee, and macaroni :D The best dish is 髮菜蠔豉燜冬菇 (Stewed dongo with fat choy and dried oyster)
But we don't really cut them to store them though.
So when is your mom having us all over for dinner because that sounds delicious!
ooo that sounds so good, ty for sharing~
that sounds so tasty! the collagen from the chicken feet must be really good for your skin.
This should get more likes!! I love the way she explain everything. So informative, calming and entertaining
Last fall, I found a 10-pound head of maitake in my local park and I took that home, cleaned and shredded it, and ate stir-fried mushrooms and rice for a week. it tasted soo good! I even saved the thick stalk to use in soup stocks to add some extra omph to my bougie ramen. This experience singlehandedly kickstarted my mushroom foraging hobby, not gonna lie.
So jealous! Sycamore trees near my house sometimes have enormous beautiful maitake, but sadly they’re on a busy sidewalk-too close to dogs and car exhaust to be safe eating. 😭
@@lauramcmillan9592 Me too!
TEN POUNDS?!
How did someone else not get to it first???
I was hesitant about a 27 mins video about mushrooms, but thid was very entertaining and I learned a lot. We need to see this girl more often, she was great!
I love her so much - just her energy is so inviting and warm. I also love mushrooms, so this was perfect 🍄🥰
Oooohhh my god! I love this video! I’m a mushroom enthusiast, but have never found a proper recipe video. Amazing! Thanks for the effort!
Hey all, PNW mushroom forager here. Instead of cooking your mushrooms right away with oil, cook them initially with a tiny bit of water, THEN oil.Careful so the oil doesn't splash at you, but essentially, mushrooms can absorb a LOT of oil. Cooking in water seals up the inner pathways inside the mushroom. This way, the oil you use (I use salted butter) will end up coating the mushroom, rather than getting absorbed, leading to much more tender and flavourful mushrooms! Try it out!
Someone else in the PNW who wants to cook more mushrooms, but hasn't really tried yet. I could see this being true, but doesn't that lead to more splatter in the pan?
Great tip PNW...just saw a few of years last week (early wee hrs rabbit hole mind you. But DID enjoy !! :) AND... Being a foodie... Great tip. Will be trying soon. Thx !
@@isaiahdaniels5643 it leads to less, you just have to dry them off well
will use this next time, thanks!
Best video i've seen so far on youtube👍
Does anyone know who sells shrooms and delivers? I live in NY.
W I L L I A M S M Y C O 1
HE got magic mushrooms, lsd, dmt, microdose, and other psych's as well..🙂
@@jamesrogriguez1241 where to search this ?
@@richardwalker8575 lg
@@jamesrogriguez1241 Ok THANKS
Adrienne Cheatham I enjoyed your clearity, warm and fun energy while giving all this fantastic information on mushrooms. I am so jazzed to eat more mushrooms and I am looking forward to making the sofe scramble eggs with shaved truffle. I look forward to more videos or maybe even a cooking show( if you don't already have one) !
Loved this episode! Would love to see Chef Cheatham again - she's got such an engaging manner and is great at communicating her knowledge and enthusiasm for what she's talking about.
she is fantastic! I love how straightforward and passionate she is. Not like a wild tv personality, which is also fine, I just enjoy that she is like, here's the deal
Here in Europe we pick mostly Porcini, because they are the best, usually in spring and autumn. In a particularly rainy period there is some chanterelles. I think the Porcini are called that because wild boars love them!
I thought this was an old video. I am so hyped. Morels are GLORIOUS. I wish they had focused on them a little more. Truffles get so much attention.
Oh my gosh, I didn't even recognize her, she was on Top Chef and did very well! Second place. She changed her hair and looks so different!
I thought her voice sounded familiar
Maitake is my absolute favorite. It's great cooked with a little bit of butter and orzo too. It lets the maitake flavor the orzo with that nice, delicate, nutty taste. I never thought of frying it though! That looks so tasty!
I found this recipe online for maitake: mix soaked wakame seaweed (available dried at Asian grocery stores) with butter, then dab that all over the mushroom and roast it in the oven. Freakin' delicious. A real umami whammy!
This woman loves her mushrooms, this was fun to watch!
Chantrerelles and morels can be foraged in the mountains where I live. They are a little spendy, but no more than a good cut of steak. Actually hedgehog, porcini, and truffles are available too, but I’m less familiar with them.
☝️☝️wanna get any psychedelics products, shrooms, DMT, Candy bars, LSD 💊🍄💊
Egads, the 'shroom bots got you. Never seen then before. Sorry bro :/
she is so entertaining! i loved her!!
She looks so passionate about mushrooms, it makes the whole video very pleasant
I’ve BEEN WAITING for someone to show me various ways to cook mushroom!
Darlin' - You are just about the most charming "host" I have ever experienced, especially with the slight seasoning of curse words! Adds so much umami to this overall feast of fantastic fungi! Thank you!
I love Adrienne. She was amazing on her season of TC and an absolute badass. Was pleasantly surprised to see her doing this video because I also LOVE mushrooms and this was very educational.
In Japan. Matsutake mushrooms are really rare. So when we go out into the forests, we usually hunt for them when we smell them whilst walking. Fantastic mushroom
Excellent, I would love to watch her no only expand this but help us learn about other foods too. She should be a professor. Entertaining and keeps one focused. Her presentation and demeanor is superb.
Her excitement is contagious~
I hate onions but love mushrooms, so seeing a blooming maitake sounds lovely
Vegans watching this: *energetic note taking*
100% true lol
Excuse me she's been using butter and cheese and eggs lol. Not that vegan lol
I’m a veggie guy. This works for me. Lol and they make vegan versions of everything used. It’s good stuff to know.
Hey even me as a meat eater, I can make more healthy snacks between my light animal based meals.
Mushrooms are delicious
I want to see more of this lady, her presentation is amazing
I'm fond of the white button mushrooms myself. Thing I loved the best was to saute them with some pepper, garlic and onion powder, adding a few splashes of W. sauce. I'd let them cook down until they became almost crunchy to make a nice crisp topic for an olive oil baked chicken.
This lady is as cute as a button, mushroom. Great show 😀
I'm fascinated by how Epicurious manage to pick most of their host that giving of the vibe of the ingredients they are showing.
Fine example of Midwest US.
@fabRic_jAck you're pretty sad, why does it bother you.
@@spacebar9733 you can never trust a man named jack
@Mia333 with dogs the rules don’t apply. Only humans with the name jack can’t be trusted. Dogs are special
Her personality and sense of humor really works well with the editing ! Great job ☺️
I love chef Adrienne Cheatham. she's amazing
This lady is the best!! She's talented, well spoken, and silly 🥰
I just love it when people talk passionately about their favorite food, god i really want some mushrooms now
I enjoy studying Mycology as a hobby and love anything that features these delicious little guys.
More Chef Adrienne please! She is a pleasure to watch 😃
As a mushroom fan, I really appreciate this. So much insight!
After nearly 40 yrs of culinary experience off n on ... Sometimes the Main cash flow, other times 2nd or 3rd gig to fill the gaps..🙄🤭
Have had 5 legit careers (breathing down 60 now! Lol) I have taught adult ed in 3 of them. This is some of the BEST presentation I have seen !! And as a new farmer (disability career chg ! ) And a brand new myco- aficionado...this was absolutely awesome. !!
And love the perspective of REAL PPL teaching. Great job Ma'am. Peace n God Bless. Mac in Maine
The most etymologically "correct" plural for octopus would be octopodes, so you weren't that far off. Though obviously that's pretty archaic now.
LMAO, I was so close to posting this exact response! It's always fun to find other people who watched that one Merriam Webster video from the long, long ago, before the days of youtube
@@SapientPearwood I don't know that I ever saw that, but I'd certainly be interested if you know where one can find it. I just looked it up at one point, when I was curious which was more etymologically accurate, octopi or octopuses, and found out what it really should have been.
Great presenter. Knowledgeable, enthusiastic and engaging. Let's have her in more videos, please!
She is an enthusiastic and great instructor! I learned a lot and am insipired to recreate her recipes!
I feel like I fell in love twice in 28 mins! :P
She is infectiously enthusiastic, fun and knowledgeable and gave me a much stronger appreciation for mushrooms.
I’ve always been kinda “blah” about them, no love or hate, but I realize now I’ve just been experiencing them wrong.
Adrienne is amazing and I definitely want to see more of her and learn from her.
You need to get laid...
She is actually a very good presenter. Hope to see more of her
Thanks for sharing didn’t know a lot about mushroom, just beginning to try them thanks again
for so much more muschroom experience i recomerd visiting Poland in autumn, wild muschrooms had always been a big thing here