Tag Archive for 'food'

Mushroom Logs

Ben’s permaculture professor at NC State, Will Hooker, has been kind enough to allow me to tag along on some of their field trips and workshops. Yesterday the class was invited to his home in Raleigh (just down the bike path from where we live) to learn about mushroom logs and how to make one.

We started with 3′ wide, 4-6″ diameter hardwood logs and 1″ long dowel plugs that are pre-colonized by shiitake mycelium. The logs we used were sweetgum and oak, but you can use any hardwood for shiitake as long as the bark is thick and tough. It is important to use logs that are only 4-6 weeks old (from the time the tree was cut down). If you use logs right away, the natural defenses in the wood will kill the shiitake mycelium. If you wait too long (past 6 weeks), other undesirable fungi can colonize the log first.

To begin, take each log and drill 1.5″ holes with a 5/16″ drill bit about 6″ apart in a row along the length of the log. Continue drilling the rows of holes in a “diamond” pattern, covering the entire log. Then, take the dowel plugs and hammer them into the holes, making sure they’re flush with the bark.

Ben Hammers a Log

After all the dowel plugs are hammered in, paint over the plugs, each end of the log, and any blemishes in the bark with melted beeswax to create a protective seal. Stack the logs in a shady area and keep them moist by watering them once per week.

Plugging the logs with the dowels and keeping them moist encourages the mycelium to colonize the entire log. Once the colonization is complete (about one year), mushrooms can be “forced” to produce by soaking the logs in water for 24-48 hours. After the soak, stand the logs up against some kind of support so the mushrooms have room to grow. Will mentioned an alternate method which is to beat the crap out of them with a mallet (but don’t break the wood); this simulates the effect of the tree falling in the forest.

The best time of year to make the logs is a few weeks before consistent overnight frosts, so the mycelium have enough time to start growing before the winter months. You can yield a few harvests (called “flushes”) of mushrooms off each log during the spring and summer.

A mushroom is ready to be harvested when the outside of the cap is still slightly pulled in, like an umbrella. (Ones with the edges starting to fan out are still edible, however.) It is recommended that you cut them off instead of pulling them out so that the plug stays in place.

In a little nook in his back yard, Will had several logs with shiitakes that were ready to harvest. He cut them off and cooked them for us to taste and they were just about the best mushrooms Ben and I have ever eaten. :)

Making Mushroom Logs

These sites have more detailed information about making mushroom logs:

Natural Log Shiitake Mushroom Production and Processing

How to Care for and Fruit Your Shiitake Mushroom Log

Order Mushroom Plugs at Fungi Perfecti

Local Living Economies

Last night Ben and I heard a talk by Judy Wicks, owner/founder of The White Dog Cafe in Philadelphia. She spoke last night in Raleigh about what she calls “local living economies” which encompasses local food and farming, community energy and organizing, finding more sustainable ways to enhance commerce among people and businesses within a specified region, and integrate these alternative methods into global trade.

It was moving, to say the least.

None of the issues she spoke about were new to me: our overpopulation situation, effects of long distance food distribution, trade issues, loss of local farms and the connections between, etc. But the ways in which this woman has created change in her community (and by starting small) was *very* new to me. I tend to have a pessimistic view of our nation and mostly generalize people into one large group of “idiots” who succumb to the way things seem and don’t strive to make change. This, I realize, is wrong, but it’s difficult for me to snap out of it until I see someone who *has* made change come forward and talk about their experiences. Judy noted that a lot of her success comes simply from talking to people. For the past 25 years she has formed honest relationships through communication of mutual beneficial alternatives to unsustainable living, and fueled her community with information on how changes can be made, starting with the individual. It’s grassroots all around and gave me a lot of ideas.

Hearing Judy speak and feeling her energy last evening left me excited about creating a life in Toccoa. Living and playing mostly in cities my whole life I struggle with the vision of living in a small town on a farm. And I probably have no idea how much actual *work* it’s going to be, at least to get us started, but now, more than I ever imagined, I am looking forward to it. And I say that because I am hoping that Ben and I can make a difference in Toccoa and sort of grab the town by the balls, if you will. There is certainly a huge opportunity there for us to impact locals by setting an example of a more sustainable way of life and I can’t wait to get started!