Even for people who donāt enjoy eating mushrooms, there is still intrigue in learning how they grow. Thereās something mystical and magicalāI mean I do get a lot of people asking about āmagicā mushrooms but I always comment that I think all mushrooms are magical.
I really like being able to watch a culture start from a little piece of tissue. From one tiny piece youāre able to grow thousands and thousands of pounds of food. We start our cultures in petri dishes. To create that culture you can take a piece of a mushroomāyou can take any mushroom out of a grocery store and put that into a petri dishāand it will grow an exact replica of the original mushroom.
Once I establish the culture on the petri dish, I put it into a test tube. The test tube is my master culture that I put into a refrigerator, and I can keep that for five to ten years. You want to keep track of each of your generations and how far youāve separated it from the initial spawn; mushrooms, unlike plants, break down and cause genetic mutations really quickly if you donāt keep track. All of our bags are labeled.
We grow our mushrooms first in grain. I use barley or millet. We soak the grain in water then sterilize it in a pressure cooker for about four hours. After that it we cool it down and put it in front of hyperfilters that blow sterile air out at us so we can open up all the bags of grain without fear of things (i.e. competing fungi or bugs) flying into them. Then we take the myceliumāthe fungal network of the mushroom from the petri dishāand add them to the sterile grain. That goes out on the shelves to grow. How long depends on the species; oysters usually take about two weeks on grain. Then from there, we break the mycelium back up into grain and put it into our next substrate, which is a sawdust mixture. Thatās what will eventually produce mushrooms.
We set up fifty-pound barrels with stacks of forty sawdust bags each, and then steam-pasteurize them. Weāre lucky to live in an area where thereās lots of wood substrate, so itās easy to get cheap sawdust. We take the sawdust and mix it together with barley and oat flour, and that gives it the carbohydrates and sugars to make the mycelium happy. If we just put it in sawdust, it wouldnāt workāmaybe it would produce one or two mushrooms. We go through three or four yards of sawdust every other week, and to see that sawdust turned into food for people, thatās really rewarding for us.
We have a regular greenhouse that weāve tarped so we can control the sunlight and the heat. A lot of people think mushrooms need to grow in complete darkness, but that really isnāt true: they like a little bit of light. We just open up the bags in here and give them high humidity. They like 80 to 90 percent humidity. As long as they donāt get too hot, usually we can grow year-round. When the mushrooms are grown, weāll do one long slice down the middle of the bagāthen after a while, when the bag ages to about a month or so, weāll do a second slice, just to try to get as much out of it as we can.
Every mushroom is different. Oysters usually take about four weeks from start to finish; shiitakes are about forty-five to sixty days. This is why the prices are different with mushrooms, generally; some take longer than others to grow. Maitake takes up to seventy days to get mushrooms, so thatās why theyāre $18 a pound in the grocery store.
Ria Kaelin, Christianās wife and partner in the business offers a concluding thought.
We so traditionally think of growing food as you put a seed in the dirt and nurture it and it will give you something. Whereas with this, you go, How does that even work? Almost like weāre not connected to that microbiological world. We are! But we donāt sometimes stop to see it.