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Examples

  • If so I'm thinking it's chicken of the woods, Laetiporus sulphureus.

    Orange and yellow fungus AYDIN 2009

  • As a consumer of wild fungi, I know that I frequently eat a few fungus gnat larvae when I'm enjoying a nice Laetiporus.

    When fruit flies go bad AYDIN 2008

  • I am pretty sure this is Laetiporus sulphureus also known as sulphur shelf, chicken of the woods, the chicken mushroom, or the chicken fungus because many think they taste like chicken.

    Recent Galleries - Worth1000 RSS Feed 2010

  • on pizza with a little goat cheese and pancetta powder: excellent sprinkled on eggs, pasta, risotto, buttered toast hen-of-the-woods in all its ruffled glory tempura honors its delicate flavor and meaty texture and it makes the ultimate mushroom soup funky chicken: Laetiporus sulphureus, often found at the base of oak trees tastes like chicken, but looks like a flamenco dancer's dress mushrooms on toast: a buttery classic

    Laura Silverman: Mycology Today Laura Silverman 2011

  • on pizza with a little goat cheese and pancetta powder: excellent sprinkled on eggs, pasta, risotto, buttered toast hen-of-the-woods in all its ruffled glory tempura honors its delicate flavor and meaty texture and it makes the ultimate mushroom soup funky chicken: Laetiporus sulphureus, often found at the base of oak trees tastes like chicken, but looks like a flamenco dancer's dress mushrooms on toast: a buttery classic

    Laura Silverman: Mycology Today Laura Silverman 2011

  • I think you meant to say that chicken of the woods (Laetiporus sp.) will be up soon; hen of the woods (Grifola frondosa, aka miatake) won't show up until September. huffponewbie 3 minutes ago (7: 40 PM) c8ciAHQ4Z9Dwx3Pskj%2B1pR3Trf3lQ5iTTq8i8QDNibUTMCFaZCdWbbwl18HhRpUaWvs9ESZddzpkINLhMoVBGg%3D%3D

    The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com 2010

  • siren call: black trumpets Craterellus cornucopioides powder: excellent sprinkled on eggs, pasta, risotto, buttered toast tempura honors its delicate flavor and meaty texture funky chicken: Laetiporus sulphureus, often found at the base of oak trees tastes like chicken, but looks like a flamenco dancer's dress mushrooms on toast: a buttery classic

    The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com Laura Silverman 2011

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