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Lepista nuda

 

Lepista nuda, the Wood Blewit, grows in leaf litter in woodland and hedgerows during autumn and winter. Blewits are edible if well cooked, but it is wise to try a very small portion at first because they have been known to disagree with some people.

 

Care is needed to ensure that these edible mushrooms are not confused with some of the larger purple species of Cortinarius fungi. Cortinarius fungi all have rusty brown spores, so it is fairly easy to distinguish them from Lepista nuda.

Cap

The violet-tinged cap and gills of the young wood blewit, together with its stocky build, distinguish it from other purple or lilac coloured fungi.

Often growing in fairy rings in mixed woodland, the caps mature at 6 to 15 cm in diameter and retain a slightly inrolled margin until the violet tinge fades and the surface turn buff with mid brown centres.

Old specimens sometimes develop wavy margins.

Gills

Sinuate and crowded, the gills have a beautiful lilac flush when young, turning buff and then brown as the fruiting body matures.

Stipe

15 to 25 mm in diameter and 5 to 10 cm tall, the non-tapering stipe is solid and 

Spore print

Pale pinkish-buff.

Odour/taste

Faint aniseed odour and a pleasant taste.

Habitat

Mixed woodland.

Season

Most plentiful from August to December, but occasional fruiting bodies can emerge at any time of the year..

Occurrence

Common.

Similar species

Lepista saeva, the Field Blewit, is a less common species; it is very similar but lacks the violet tinge to the cap.

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