Do you know when the oil is collected? When you want delicious mushrooms!

Of course, picking mushrooms in the coniferous forest is a classic mushroom craft. Why in the conifer? Because in these forests the choice of mushrooms is much wider and more diverse, and what a plentiful harvest there is - you wonder! One of the most common "inhabitants" of coniferous and pine forests is the oiler. To date, we know a little more than ten species of these wonderful mushrooms. In this article, I will tell you when the oil is collected.

when the oil is collected


The mystery of the name

Have you ever wondered why these mushrooms were called oils? It's simple - they have a brown buttery hat. The second name is butterfish, or butterdish. Interestingly, the British call them "slippery Jacks." Be that as it may, for us they remain butter.

Delicious and versatile mushroom oiler

Oil mushrooms are one of the most delicious and common mushrooms in the European part of our country. You can do anything with them:

  • they can be put out;
  • fry with potatoes;
  • pickle in a jar for the winter;
  • cook in soup;
  • dry and pickle.
    mushroom oiler

When is the oil collected?

Granular oily fruits bear the entire mushroom season. The first wave can be observed already at the beginning of summer. The last - in November, when the inveterate and seasoned mushroom pickers are collecting oil. You need to look for these mushrooms in fairly lit forest places - between young and medium-sized pine trees growing on the edges. It is especially pleasant to do this after a long rainy season when Mother Earth has not seen the warm sun for a long time! If the year turned out to be dry, then grainy oils will hide in the dense thickets of those places where coniferous and deciduous trees mix.

Experienced mushroom pickers, who know firsthand how and when they collect the butter best, are advised never to rush to look for them in different places. The fact is that these wonderful mushrooms grow in large heaps, so when you find one oiler, you should not rush to another place, because his other brothers are hiding nearby! This rule applies to all mushrooms, but especially to mushrooms.

Keep in mind that collecting butter is a pretty monotonous task, because if you find their group, you can sit in the same place for half an hour and cut them off. Here they are, buttery: when to collect - it is clear how to collect - of your choice! For example, inveterate mushroom pickers are more likely to sit on an old clearing for a long time, cutting their favorite mushrooms than to jog through the forest.

oily when to collect

Mushroom pickers, do not oversleep!

After a great warm rain, grainy oils grow literally before our eyes! However, their life span is short, as the fungus quickly becomes wormy. That is why it is so important not to miss your "finest hour", but to collect the oil right on the first day of their appearance. In this case, you have a unique opportunity to see them in all their glory: brown glossy hats, fresh milky-white juice on a tubular fringe.

Attention! Radiation!

Note that oleagins (larch, granular and late) are included in the list of dangerous products as radioactively dangerous mushrooms. The fact is that they are able to pull various radioactive elements from the soil and accumulate them in themselves. Be careful!

Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/E23506/


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