Doctor Pot
Well-Known Member
I wanted to try growing mushrooms, but all the sites I went to said you needed to buy all this crap, like a pressure cooker, vermiculite, etc. So I decided to see if I could grow them using a spore print, without buying anything at all. Well, except brown rice, which is like 50 cents a pound at the Asian market. And a cubensis B+ spore print, which I got for $30 on the Internet from a site I knew was reputable.
I eat a lot of salsa, and had a couple jars laying around. I washed those, then dug through the refrigerator and found a few more that were almost empty, or were spoiled. I washed out the jars and rinsed them with bleach and tap water. Then I poured a quarter cup of brown rice in each one, along with about 1.5 times that much water. They fit well in a pot I had, so I put some silverware in the pot (to make sure there was space between the jars and the bottom of the pot) and put the jars in. Then I filled it up with water to about halfway up the jars. I put the lids on fairly loose, and boiled the water with the lid on for about 45 minutes.
Once the jars cooled off, I took them to the least-used, least-dusty, least-likely-to-have-mold-in-it room where I live. This turned out to be the guest bedroom. Then I wrapped tape around one end of a piece of copper wire (to keep my hand from burning if it got hot). I took a shower, then washed my hands really well, making sure NOT to dry them with a towel. Those things are loaded with germs. Then I got my butane mini-torch and heated up the one end of the copper wire to the point where it discolored. I held the spore print over each jar, uncapped it, scratched at the spore print so I saw them fall in the jar, then capped them again.
After three days, I saw some fuzz, so I loosened the jars to let in oxygen. Over the next few days, there was more white fuzz. One day, I saw a spot of mold in one of them, so I got a little spoon and heated it up with my torch, then scooped it out. That happened again with one of the other jars, and I scooped that mold out the same way. Eventually, the mycella took over all five jars, and after 17 days, I saw tiny mushrooms. I couldn't get the cakes out because the neck of the jar was too narrow, so I cut each cake in half and pulled out the two halves. Then I put them in a clear plastic box, and put some water in the bottom, then covered the box with saran wrap.
The tiny mushrooms grew into big mushrooms, and I had enough to trip on after about a week. So a bit more than three weeks from the spore print. We have a dehumidifier running in the basement, so I pointed the blower from that on my mushrooms to dry them. Now it's a bit more than a month and I have about an ounce of dried mushrooms, with a bunch more still in the box. Considering all the precautions I didn't take, I think I did pretty good! I didn't have to throw away a single jar, and got plenty of shrooms.
Now I'm trying to see if I can get the mycella to take over an entire casserole dish of brown rice that I baked in the oven. If that works, I'll have a steady supply of shrooms for like a year!
I eat a lot of salsa, and had a couple jars laying around. I washed those, then dug through the refrigerator and found a few more that were almost empty, or were spoiled. I washed out the jars and rinsed them with bleach and tap water. Then I poured a quarter cup of brown rice in each one, along with about 1.5 times that much water. They fit well in a pot I had, so I put some silverware in the pot (to make sure there was space between the jars and the bottom of the pot) and put the jars in. Then I filled it up with water to about halfway up the jars. I put the lids on fairly loose, and boiled the water with the lid on for about 45 minutes.
Once the jars cooled off, I took them to the least-used, least-dusty, least-likely-to-have-mold-in-it room where I live. This turned out to be the guest bedroom. Then I wrapped tape around one end of a piece of copper wire (to keep my hand from burning if it got hot). I took a shower, then washed my hands really well, making sure NOT to dry them with a towel. Those things are loaded with germs. Then I got my butane mini-torch and heated up the one end of the copper wire to the point where it discolored. I held the spore print over each jar, uncapped it, scratched at the spore print so I saw them fall in the jar, then capped them again.
After three days, I saw some fuzz, so I loosened the jars to let in oxygen. Over the next few days, there was more white fuzz. One day, I saw a spot of mold in one of them, so I got a little spoon and heated it up with my torch, then scooped it out. That happened again with one of the other jars, and I scooped that mold out the same way. Eventually, the mycella took over all five jars, and after 17 days, I saw tiny mushrooms. I couldn't get the cakes out because the neck of the jar was too narrow, so I cut each cake in half and pulled out the two halves. Then I put them in a clear plastic box, and put some water in the bottom, then covered the box with saran wrap.
The tiny mushrooms grew into big mushrooms, and I had enough to trip on after about a week. So a bit more than three weeks from the spore print. We have a dehumidifier running in the basement, so I pointed the blower from that on my mushrooms to dry them. Now it's a bit more than a month and I have about an ounce of dried mushrooms, with a bunch more still in the box. Considering all the precautions I didn't take, I think I did pretty good! I didn't have to throw away a single jar, and got plenty of shrooms.
Now I'm trying to see if I can get the mycella to take over an entire casserole dish of brown rice that I baked in the oven. If that works, I'll have a steady supply of shrooms for like a year!