I remember lots of people posting homemade, fresh, yummy bread. Now everyone on chapo dot chat is discussing breadtubes?? Sounds nasty tbh

  • Darthsenio_Mall [he/him]
    ·
    4 years ago

    I'm in dire and urgent love with the pun but also i must inform you that you need only enough space for a bag of uncle ben's precooked rice to grow mushrooms.

    • GrouchoMarxist [comrade/them,use name]
      hexagon
      ·
      edit-2
      4 years ago

      Hmm I might actually look into that then. I've been cooking a lot of stuff with button mushrooms lately and already have a space where I have a small herb garden going and I think I could squeeze something alongside it

      • happybadger [he/him]
        ·
        edit-2
        4 years ago

        https://www.shroomery.org/forums/showflat.php/Number/22337800

        This technique uses a regular plastic storage tote to grow either three large sawdust colonies (king oyster mushrooms, lion's mane), a bunch of small mason jar colonies (enoki, oysters and king oysters), or a layer of substrate (magic mushrooms). What I do is use a tiered storage shelf with 1-2 on each shelf and a small fan blowing fresh air in their direction. Whenever there isn't water condensation on the walls of the containers I spray them with tap water. Each produces maybe 1-2lbs of mushrooms per week. Outdoors I stack logs inoculated with various species on the dead space where I can't grow plants. Each will produce 1-3lbs of mushrooms per year for up to five years.

        /r/unclebentek is the technique to create the grain colonies for the ones you'll fruit. For that you only need a lighter, micropore tape, and a shelf. /r/mycobazaar has cultures of pretty much every culinary and medicinal mushroom while /r/mushroomgrowers is a great resource for fungiculture. It's great for gardening over the winter.

        • GrouchoMarxist [comrade/them,use name]
          hexagon
          ·
          4 years ago

          Oh thanks! This looks pretty cool once it's all set up, I'll look into this a bit more and see if I can figure out where I'd do it. But thanks again for the resources!