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Mushrooms and UFOs in Suffolk

October 23, 2012 3 Comments Filed Under: Uncategorized

Jews Ears grow under Elder trees

It’s a little late now but hurry if you can. Go to a forest, a wood or a heath, a couple of days after it has rained. Get up early, arrive just before dawn, take a wide flat basket, a walking stick, boots, a flask of hot tea and a little guide book to mushrooms. This is the season to go on a mushroom hunt.
The first time I would recommend going with a guide, picking mushrooms isn’t something you want to get wrong. In London I recommend fungitobewith, who is a ranger at Kenwood and knows Hampstead Heath, Epping Forest and Wimbledon common well.
If you venture outside London, you will thrill to the variety and quantity of mushrooms. Last weekend I spent in Suffolk with @foodsafariUK, the brainchild of Polly Robinson. She organises regular food related forays: tours of local producers (smokehouses, breweries, bakeries), pop up dinners, cookery day courses and mushroom picking. She also works closely with the nearby Aldeburgh (pronounced Aldebrugh) food festival.

Top left: Amethyst deceivers, you can eat these but not the pink ones. Bottom right: mushrooms spread out in circles, fairy rings. The larger the ring, the older it is. Sometimes they are vast.
Polly Robinson, founder of Food Safari, bottom left, cracked red boletus. 
Rude mushrooms: Shaggy cap and Jelly ear. 
Shaggy Cap and Puffball. The Puffball was particularly delicious. If you can get a giant one, and it’s still firm, then slice it into ‘steaks’ and fry in butter. 

Purple deceivers, spiced pears with blue cheese by chef Tim Wood (delicious) and yuk, squirrel. Tim tried to say it was like rabbit, but really it’s like a rat. Gross.

As I drove to the meeting point near the wonderfully named village of Snape, a fuzzy brown shadow was moving on the left hand side, next I knew, an enormous stag dashed in front of my van and galloped to the other side of the road, disappearing into the bronze and green woodland. I gasped with shock.
Suffolk’s autumn colours vibrate with coppery intensity, it’s worth going just to see the leaves. The mushroom walk lasted a couple of hours but I could have spent all day there, after my encounter with the stag I felt there was something enchanted, reminiscent of the forest scenes in ET. I discovered later that this is near to Rendlesham Forest, where there was a curious UFO incident in 1980, where Margaret Thatcher was said to have acknowledged that it happened but said “we can’t let the people know”.

Oeufs en cocotte; fresh pasta with wild mushrooms, a simple mushroom omelette, local cider by Aspals. 

As part of the day, we had a cooking demonstration and lunch by chef Tim Wood. He gave us some tips on how to cook mushrooms:

  • Brush mushrooms, or dab lightly with a damp cloth rather than wash them. The enemy is moisture.
  • Don’t peel mushrooms.
  • Don’t over-handle. Cook lightly, it’s all about the texture.
  • To avoid maggots, cook them as soon as you get home
  • If they are leathery such as chestnut mushrooms, cook stems first then the caps. Otherwise the outside of the mushroom hardens. You can cook the stems then lift them out. Reduce the stock and then cook the caps. E
  • Each type of mushroom should be cooked differently: enoki mushrooms are better in soup. Some mushrooms such as blewets are better in stews. Chanterelles, porcini and puffballs are great fried. Others are better raw in salads.
  • Don’t overcrowd the pan.
  • Season at each stage of cooking. If the mushrooms contain a lot of moisture, salt towards the end of the cooking as salt will make them more watery.
  • Mushrooms have an affinity with butter, thyme and garlic.
  • You can also try drying them. Either with an Aga, a dehydrator or in an airing cupboard. Then to rehydrate them, soak them in hot water for 20 minutes. They have flavour but poor texture. So better to use them in casseroles or sauces.
  • Store mushrooms in a paper bag in the fridge, but better to have them at larder temperature.
  • Do not drink alcohol with common ink cap mushrooms. They naturally contain antabuse which reacts badly to alcohol. 

 I stayed as a guest of The Crown at Woodbridge, run by chef-patron Steven David, who transformed the pub into a stylish boutique hotel and restaurant four years ago. It was recently named as one of Britains best gastropubs in The Independent and the rooms are large and well designed. The food served by the restaurant regularly has local foragers bringing in produce, they only use the freshest ingredients. Woodbridge itself is an ancient village with a well-stocked cookware shop. I got there just as it was closing and spent £35 in as many seconds.

For more info: info@thecrownatwoodbridge.co.uk

Food Safari mushroom day: £160 per person
Room at The Crown at Woodbridge: £125
Food is available from stylish bar snacks to dinner with an interesting Kiwi wine list (3 course set menu plus wine approximately £70 for two)

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Comments

  1. Anonymous

    October 23, 2012 at 12:12 pm

    I think the UFO may have been something to do with a different kind of mushroom

    Reply
  2. The Curious Cat

    October 25, 2012 at 9:16 pm

    I love all mushroom things but yeah eating the wrong one does frighten me! A course would be a great gift or present one day…I'd enjoy eating them all that is for sure! xxx

    Reply
  3. Brighton Restaurant

    October 26, 2012 at 1:30 pm

    Amazing, delighted to see so much varieties of small & huge mushrooms. The first variety was just so good – the one resembling ears & also named so. & the purple deciphers look absolutely gorgeous ! lovely post !

    Reply

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MsMarmiteLover aka Kerstin Rodgers.

Chef, photographer, author, journalist, blogger. Pioneer of the supperclub movement.

This is my food and travel blog, with recipes, reviews and travel stories. I also stray into politics, feminism, gardening.

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msmarmitelover

Kerstin Rodgers/MsMarmiteLover
Apple rose blossom tarts with rose jam. Rose Appl Apple rose blossom tarts with rose jam.  Rose Apple Blossom Tarts

Serves 8

Equipment: 
Microwave
Cupcake or muffin tin

I use a red-skinned apple to make these, to get a hint of blush at the edges of the ‘petals’.

Ingredients:
4 Pink Lady or Royal Gala apples, cored, cut into quarters, sliced thinly into half moons
1 lemon, squeezed
1 pack all butter readymade puff pastry 320g, on a roll, cut into 8 strips about 6 cms long
100g of melted butter
1/2 jar of rose jam
1 or 2 tbsp cinnamon or cardamom, ground 
Pinch maldon salt
2 or 3 tbsp icing sugar

Instructions

Prepare a bowl of acidulated water (cold water with lemon juice) to prevent browning.
Core the apples, and cut them in quarters. Slice thinly into half-moons (a mandolin is useful for this). 
Put them into a large bowl of cold water with the lemon.
Microwave the bowl of sliced apples for 5 minutes until soft enough to bend slightly but not cook them.
Preheat the oven to 180ºC.
Roll out the puff pastry. Divide into 8 sections by cutting the roll into quarters then halving each quarter. You will end up with 8 approximately 6cm strips.
Brush the strip with melted butter then paint with a layer of rose jam. You can then dust with either ground cinnamon or cardamom.
Lay the apple slices along the top of the pastry strip, overlapping them. Fold up the bottom half of the pastry strip to make an pleat with the skin side of the apple half moon poking over the top.
Roll up the folded pastry strips until they look like a rose made of apple at the top
Place ‘rose’ side up, in a buttered cupcake tin
Repeat until all are done and bake for 20 -30 minutes.
Using a tea strainer or small sieve, sprinkle with icing sugar.
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