Tuesday 15 July 2008

Mushrooms part deux

King oyster mushrooms

Oh you rascal, Michele Curtis! I open today's Epicure only to find your gushing endorsement of Damian Pike's king oyster mushrooms on page 2, published mere days after I too had waxed lyrical about them here!

At the risk of blogging/media saturation coverage of Damian Pike's king oyster mushrooms, here's what I did with them tonight. :)

Best-friend-K came over for dinner, wine and season 3 West Wing. I had some cream in the fridge I wanted to use up, so we ended up making a simple creamy sauce with chicken, spring onions, garlic, white wine, baby spinach and cracked black pepper to have with farfalle pasta. While b-f-K watched the sauce, I lightly pan-fried the thinly sliced king oyster mushrooms separately in a bit of butter. We draped the slices of mushroom over the pasta to serve.

King oyster mushrooms have a gorgeous firm texture, and the hint of garlic and parmigiano we later grated over the top really helped to bring out their umami flavour. Sensational mushrooms!

King oyster mushrooms

12 comments:

Simon said...

West Wing!! woot. Did you watch it to the final season? How freaky are some of the coincidences? Did you notice Rev Jackson recently did what politicians should never be caught doing? - telling the truth and having an honest opinion that hasn't been tested and written into a soundbite. Very much like Bartlet's ".33 magnum in a .45 calibre world".

Ahem ... maybe I should say something food related now. Mushrooms ... yum! The Arts Centre is running a competition where you can win a $880 dinner for 4 at Jacques Reymond if you book tickets to Lands End using the password "CUISINE" before July 31.

claire said...

Do you work for a promotions promoter or something, Simon?? That's your second comment in a row where you're spruiking some kind of special offer...

I've seen every WW episode and am a complete addict. And yes, the coincidences between the democratic nomination in WW and in real life are indeed spooky!

thanh7580 said...

You're always on the forefront of what's hot with food Claire. I read your first post too and then also saw the Epicure article.

Thermomixer said...

Nice choice - mushies with cream, garlic, spring onions & parma - did that last night with a pearl barley risotto & had spinach & chick peas on the side ! Freaky.

Only the ordinary old swiss browns

cp said...

oh, I am salivating. I have just been in the NT for 2 weeks where, let me put it this way, there is no Lygon St.
There is some nice food but I am so pasta deprived, and always deprived of mushrooms. that sounds like so much fun, my mouth is still watering. nice pics too!

Simon said...

Haha I wish I were a promoter ... they just seem to email me about the same time you post :P I'm on a lot of event mailing lists. Nothing new today ... sorry .... wait hold the presses :P

The Melbourne International Arts Festival just launched their 2008 program last night www.melbournefestival.com.au

Sometimes you have to feed the soul too.

Btw, did you notice they did a little review of the Auction House cafe in Nth Melbourne? I swear they're just reading food blogs to get the scoop.

Anonymous said...

You can also get these mushrooms readily at Box Hill market and some of the small grocery stores in Centro Whitehorse. Didn't know what to do with them before I read this though- although I admired them for their sculptural mario-bros-esque forms ;)

George Biron said...

Does anybody know where these mushrooms are grown?
I suspect they come from Korea? and repackaged in Australia.
From memory I also remember something about them being a parasite that are dangerous to certain trees.
I hope I am wrong?
Please clarify.
gbiron@bigpond.net.au
www.georgebiron.com

Thermomixer said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Thermomixer said...

Hi George

Pretty sure they will be aussie mushies - thet are also called King Browns and believe Justin North had them from a grower he wrote about in one of his books.
Check out the links:

http://www.lemdell.com.au/productrange

http://www.cookingwithmushrooms.com/

http://li-sunexoticmushrooms.com.au/

Hope the links work this time - if not copy and paste into browser

George Biron said...

thanks thermo
Yes I was thankfully wrong I have seen them at Footscray from Korea
and thought they were another oyster mushroom Pluetorus [bai ling] some times sold as abalone mushroom in Chinese restaurants.
Those ones can only be imported in cans as they pose a danger to our native trees.
Thanks again.

claire said...

Hey Thanh, thanks - I do try to keep my finger on the pulse, but it gets tricky when you don't actually have any connection to "the industry" whatsoever and you work full time!! :)

Hi Thermomixer - re those recipes, great minds obviously think alike. And thanks for posting those links for George and the rest of us: you're quite the mushroom guru!

Heya Cathy, at least you got some good barra up in the NT! I dunno about your Lygon St reference though... I reckon decent Italian food on Lygon is pretty hard to find... ;)

Hi Simon, yes I saw Matt Preston's review of Auction Rooms in the Epicure (there was also a quick review in today's Sunday Age). I went there for brunch today and it was PACKED - word is clearly catching on with the masses!

Hey Jessie - yes, their "sculptural mario-bros-esque forms" (nicely put, by the way!) is one of the things that first attracted me to them...

Hi George - I could be wrong but from memory the king oyster mushrooms I bought at Damian Pike may have come from Asia. I will check next time.