This blue-staining mushroom is fairly easy to identify: look for the dark red cap with the red, deeply reticulated (net-like) stem. This one, however, is generally considered edible (some individuals may experience gastrointestinal distress). …

Are blue-staining bolete edible?

Like several other red-pored boletes, it stains blue when bruised or cut. Edible and good when cooked. It can cause gastric upset when eaten raw and can be confused with the poisonous Boletus satanas; as a result, some guidebooks recommend avoiding consumption altogether.

Are boletes hallucinogenic?

Boletus speciosus is a rare wild hallucinogenic mushroom and can cause “lilliputian hallucination” when cooked in a wrong way or eaten too much. The stipe of the mushroom is yellow and becomes blue quickly after bruise. The toxin was defined as hallucinogens but not isolated up to now [10].

Are there any poisonous boletes?

Boletus rubroflammeus mushrooms are poisonous, and can cause gastrointestinal distress if consumed.

Are all blue staining boletes poisonous?

Because so many blue bruising boletes are poisonous, it’s best to avoid them altogether. Some people think that all blue bruising mushrooms are safe to eat or are hallucinogenic.

What is Butyriboletus frostii?

Butyriboletus frostii (“Candy Apple Bolete”) Candy-apple red (sometimes duller) cap, pores, and stem.

What is Bulbophyllum frostii?

Bulbophyllum frostii also called as Frost’s Bulbophyllum, Bulbophyllum bootanoides, Cirrhopetalum bootanoides, Cirrhopetalum frostii, is a species of the genus Bulbophyllum. This species was described by Victor Samuel Summerhayes in 1928. Bulbophyllum frostii comes from Vietnam, more rarely it is also found in Thailand.

What is exexsudoporus frostii?

Exsudoporus frostii (formerly Boletus frostii), commonly known as Frost’s bolete or the apple bolete, is a bolete fungus first described scientifically in 1874. A member of the family Boletaceae, the mushrooms produced by the fungus have tubes and pores instead of gills on the underside of their caps.

Where does boboletus frostii grow?

Boletus frostii and Exsudoporus frostii are former names. Ecology: Mycorrhizal with oaks and other hardwoods; growing alone, scattered, or gregariously; summer and fall; widely distributed in eastern North America, Texas, pockets of the Southwest, Mexico, and Central America. The illustrated and described collections are from Kentucky.