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Amanita fulva

 
Although Amanita fulva, commonly referred to as the Tawny Grisette, is not poisonous it must be well cooked before it may safely be eaten. It is easily confused with a Death Cap.

Identification guide

Cap

5 - 8 cm diameter; tawny orange with a paler area around the edge of the cap. Initially egg-shaped, the cap expands to become flat but with a  small raised central area (an umbo). The edge of the cap is striated (with comb-like radial ridges).

Gills

White, free and crowded.

Stipe

10 - 15 cm long and 1 - 1.5 cm in diameter, tapering (narrower at the top); white with zig-zag patterning in a paler shade of the cap colour. There is no ring, but at the base of the stipe there is a large white sack-like volva.

Spore print

White.

Odour/taste

Not distinctive.

Habitat

Mycorhizal with hardwood and softwood trees; commonly found beside woodland paths.

Season

July to October.

Occurrence

Frequent.

Similar species

  1. Amanita caesarea (Caesar's Mushroom) is rarely if ever found in southern Europe; its cap is brilliant orange with a striated margin, and the stipe is yellow.
  2. Amanita crocea has a yellowish-orange cap with an apricot tinge at the centre. It has cream rather than white gills and a more brittle stipe that is often hollow in mature fruit bodies. It has a sweet smell and a nutty taste.
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