(Jan. 3, 2008) Winters are horrible back East and I used to dread them. Here in Humboldt, though, the first rains of fall bring out the mushrooms, and the rest of the season is an Easter egg hunt. I love to disappear into the damp green woods while the rest of the nation freezes. It’s a thrill to go into a familiar forest where I know individual logs, stream courses, hillsides, trees and snags as well as you might know your own pantry or workshop. The woods are my sanctuary. Perhaps this is why I am so attracted to the commercial mushroom business.
Larry Alameda grew up on the Yurok Reservation by the Klamath River and first found and tasted mushrooms as a boy. He was poor, and the family often fell back on foods from the woods. His first edibles were the field mushrooms, members of the Agaricus order (the commercial button or table mushroom is Agaricus bisporus) that he picked in cow pastures and yards. Larry still loves to sauté them in butter and onions with deer meat.
I went picking with Larry by the Trinities a few springs ago and it was glorious. He is amazing. Lanky and fast in the woods, he picks mushrooms that I cannot even see. We were in a dry upland fir forest and the woods were covered with cones. Morels are remarkably similar to fir cones, and it is headache-inducing trying to distinguish them. Larry would pick a half dozen while I just stared at the patterns on the dappled forest floor, trying to make sense of it all.
Larry sold his first mushroom more than 20 years ago in Hoopa when the Japanese matsutake market was just opening up. The Japanese were paying up to $100 per pound for the perfect specimens in those days. Larry remembers selling matsutakes between $10 and $20 per pound for two months in 1997 and taking home $400-$500 a day. Now that market has all but collapsed.
When I talked to him in early December, he was getting only $1.50 per pound for the most valuable buttons, “the number ones, the unbroken veils.” Larry says his return on this year’s bumper harvest was “incredibly low, the worst ever.” That’s because matsutakes (and various closely related subspecies) have become available all over the world at the same latitude and climate region. So the mushroom we call “tan oak” (here in the coastal mountains where they grow under the deciduous hardwood of the same name) or the “pine mushroom” (in the Cascades inland) is now harvested in ex-Communist countries (Tibet, China and Russia) as well as Korea, Sweden, Japan and the United States. Worse for the market, the flushes seem to coincide all over the Northern Hemisphere, and so North America only gets a good price when other regions fail. Only 20 percent of Larry’s business is now in matsutakes.
So now Larry picks a whole range of mushrooms and has a variety of markets that change with the seasons. It begins under the fog drip in coastal forests where the first chanterelles pop in late summer. This small harvest might end up at the Co-op or one of our local restaurants. I love these chanterelles. They are small and perfectly fluted like orange morning glories, and are the best to cook, being firm, dense, dry and sweet. The “Prince,” the stately Agaricus augustus, also comes up in mid-summer, but this elusive giant (I’ve collected perfect one-pound buttons), a relative of the supermarket button, is too rare to make it a market. It’s a shame, as it is one of the most distinctive edibles with a powerful and pungent aroma of almond marzipan.
Once the rains begin in earnest, usually in late September and early October, Larry’s season goes into high gear. Boletes on the coast and the mountains (the King in the spruces and the Queen in the firs), the delicious Amanita coccora (a very close relative of the killer shrooms Death Cap and Destroying Angel, and beloved of the Italian community), followed by the matsutake, hedgehog, candy cap and finally, in late winter, yellowfoot chanterelles and black trumpets.
Larry sells most of his winter mushrooms to Trent Valvo, the founder and owner of Sierra Madre Mushroom Company in Bayside. Trent recently drove three tons of chanterelles to the San Francisco airport in a refrigerator truck. They are destined for France.
Plunging into the bay and beyond
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Why the local beach fishing industry has shrunk to smelt-sized proportions
STAFF PICK / outdoors / 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Meet at Pacific Union School. Help remove non-native invasives at the Lanphere Dunes Unit of the Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge. Tools and gloves provided, wear work clothes and bring water. Carpool to the protected site. 444-1397.
STAFF PICK / events, art, outdoors, sports, for kids, free / 9 a.m.-6 p.m. A 3-day, 42-mile kinetic sculpture race over land, sand, mud and water! LeMans start at the Noon Whistle on the Arcata Plaza. Follow the race through Manila, Eureka and into Ferndale on Memorial Day for the Glorious Finish. kineticgrandchampionship.com. 889-3024.
outdoors / 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Humboldt Botanical Gardens, College of the Redwoods, Eureka. Roam the 44-acre fully fenced property. $5. www.hbgf.org. 442-5139.
garden / 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Shafer's Ace Hardware and Garden Center, 2760 E St., Eureka. Free lecture by Duncan McNeill on how to create a healthy environment and healthy soils for your plant’s roots. E-mail shafers@sbcglobal.net. 442-5734.
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