Magic mushrooms Page Content
Magic mushrooms come in fresh, dried, or powder form. Powdered psilocybin can be inhaled (snorted) or injected (with a needle). Magic mushrooms are also taken as a tea, cooked with food, or added to fruit juice.
A person can take psilocybin legally by being in a research study or getting special permission from Health Canada with the support of their doctor. Otherwise, it is illegal to grow, sell, or carry magic mushrooms in Canada.
Morel Magic
What are morel mushrooms?
Completely distinguishable from any other type of gourmet fungus, morels are a class of their own, dark, spongy, and uniquely rotund and dimpled. “Morel mushrooms are a group of mushrooms in the Morchella family, sometimes called sponge mushrooms,” explains Ron Kerner, the mushroom expert behind the foraging site Indiana Mushrooms.
Are morel mushrooms edible?
Morel mushrooms are edible wild mushrooms, so unlike cremini mushrooms or oyster mushrooms, you’ll probably miss seeing these in your local supermarket. Instead, you may need to take a trip to a farmer’s market or two to find these rare and elusive fungi.
Are morel mushrooms the tastiest fungi?
Here are a few guidelines to find this season’s tastiest fungi Morel mushrooms are a mystery, a miracle, and a gift of the spring woods. Their arrival of mushroom hunting season often coincides with turkey season. Wild mushrooms can appear overnight and remain maddeningly elusive.
Are Morel Mushrooms poisonous?
Warm and wet conditions are best for growing morel mushrooms. Like many types of mushrooms, morels have doppelgängers — but they can be deadly. Beware of false morels, which includes a number of species that look similar but are actually poisonous.