How to Spot and Identify Morel Mushrooms

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Intro: How to Spot and Identify Morel Mushrooms

Morels are one of the most sought after mushrooms in the woods. Found all over most of the United States, as well as other parts of the world, they are a delicacy as well as a source of income for those who sell them. They are expensive and a few pounds can bring a decent bit of money. But most morel hunters will throw them in the skillet or fryer as soon as they get home.

Here's a guide to show you:

-how to identify them, be sure it's the real thing
-how to spot them better, since they are camouflaged.

STEP 1: How to Positively Identify

First, this is a guide and not a scientific definition guaranteed to find you the correct mushrooms. Be cautious about what you eat and remember the phrase "when in doubt, throw it out".

Now don't get too scared, because the morel is one of the most early identifiable wild mushrooms.

Characteristics of the morel are:

-Pitted, "sponge" type appearance
-Hollow interior and stem (the stem will go up through the cap as well)

The hollow stem is the main way to be sure it's a morel. There exists a "false morel" that has been reported to be poisonous to some people, but it's fairly easy to distinguish from the morel.

False morel characteristics:
-more of a brain-like cap rather than sponge
-stem is not hollow, usually somewhat "cottony" in appearance

Once you have found a morel with a hollow stem, you can be sure it's the real thing (again, this is a guide, and don't eat anything you aren't completely sure of).

There are several species of morels, but the main groups are:

-Yellows (the largest, often light brown or yellow-brown)
-Grays (usually immature yellows, have dark gray pits and light ridges)
-Whites
-Blacks (all brown when young, brown with black ridges when mature, these are known for more flavor and the earliest ones to pop up
-Half-free (lower half of cap is detached from stem, often the stem is much larger, these are known as "dog pecker" or "pecker heads" due to appearance)

STEP 2: How to Spot

Morels are incredibly camouflaged. Some of the bigger yellows will stand out more, as will tall specimens among matted down leaves. However, most morels are almost the same colors as the leaves they are growing among, and some might not even penetrate above the leaf litter.

How to spot...

Remember this: your eyes focus on a small area in the center of your vision, about 5 degrees. The rest of your visual field around this is peripheral. While you can still see colors and movement just fine, you won't be able to see the detail to distinguish a mushroom from the surrounding leaves.

Only the very center of where your eyes focus will be in clear detail. This means that scanning the forest floor won't yield many mushrooms. You have to look directly at the mushroom to see it. Sometimes, a particular mushroom will catch the corner of your eye, but you can't go into the woods expecting to find them like this. You must scan as thoroughly as you can, hoping your vision will cross a mushroom.

When searching new territory, you will want to find a balance between lazily scanning the woods and thoroughly scrutinizing the ground. You don't want to miss a patch, but you also don't want to spend too much time in one area when trying to find a new patch.

When you find one mushroom, keep looking in the immediate area in all directions. Often, morels will grow in patches. Sometimes you may only find one or two, but you may also find three or four, or 20, or 250. You never know until you look.

STEP 3: Where and When to Look

First I will tell you some good areas to look. In much of the Midwest, morel hunters like to find dead or dying elms. Several trees can be linked to morel patches, but nothing is absolute.

Here in the southeast, I like to search wooded hillsides and ridges that have plenty of tulip poplar, white ash, maple and sometimes hickory trees. I have found some of my best morel patches in large groves of tulip tree. White ash is also a common morel tree but I have found mushrooms in a wide variety of woods.

Hillsides are a great place to look regardless of tree species. Morels will also grow in bottoms, ridges, valleys and sometimes meadows and orchards, but a hillside is a good place to start.

There is no telling where the mushrooms may grow, but the above mentioned trees are a good indicator of woods that may be ideal for morels.


When to look:

Morels only grow for a few weeks in the spring. Some years are better than others. Ideally, the soil temps should be in the 50s.

A general rule is that when day temps are starting to hit 70 regularly and not going much below 40 at night, it's a good time to look. Also, you can add the daytime high and nighttime low together, and if it is at least 100 for a few days in a row, you should be in the woods.

Another good indicator is may apples - if you know what these look like (google them, they grow in patches) you should start looking for morels when the may apples have come up and their leaves are opening up like umbrellas.

Once the day temps are consistently in the 80s, it's usually getting too hot for morels and remaining mushrooms will dry up.

Be sure to visit patches repeatedly until they stop producing. A good patch will keep sprouting mushrooms for at least a week or two.

DONT FORGET: when picking morels, it helps them reproduce if you carry mushrooms in a mesh bag. This allows millions of spores to release back to the woods while you are walking around.

STEP 4: How to Cook Morels

Morels are arguably some of the best mushrooms to eat. They can be used in almost any dish that calls for mushrooms, or you can eat them by themselves.

Common methods of eating morels are:

-breading and deep frying
-roll in flour and sautée
-sautée in butter with salt and pepper

The latter is probably my favorite way to eat them plain, but they are also very good fried in flour, cornmeal or batter. Season to taste with whatever seasoning you like.

Cut larger mushrooms in half lengthwise so they cook better.

Some people soak morels in saltwater to draw out bugs. I don't usually do this, any any really dirty mushrooms can be discarded.

STEP 5: Preserving Morels

PRESERVING:

Probably the best way to preserve is to string them up on a thread and let them hang out to air dry for several days. Make sure the mushrooms are completely stiff and dry before storing in an airtight container. Boil dried mushrooms for a minute or two to reconstitute.

I hope this instructable has helped you and good luck in the woods next spring!

43 Comments

after a wet winter from that huge atmospheric river that hit us in cali one of our old eucs came down on the road so public utilities came out and ground that guy into a Huge pile of gold i ended up spreading that around much of my property as compost and mulch, well come spring i have never seen so many mushrooms growing through the matter they looked very similar to these maybe they will come back next year so i can be sure they arent the false kind
Where to find them
Is it too late or too early in Ohio
Where are they found at in the woods east or west

It might be too late for me this year. It is May & I live in Long Beach, MS. I go to college in Mobile, AL. Warm practically all year.

We haven't found any yet, but every Spring we bring this up as our guide. Love foraging!

Also known as "Hickory Chicks" for us Kentuckians.

Anyone know the best date to start hunting in the mid-south? Tennessee...

Dear tv, Late March here in south-central Indiana. I feel as though they "bloom" as a wave moving north. Your local hunters will know best.

Thanks Dorybob! We come from Illinois and surprisingly most of the people we have talked too here hardly know anything about shroom hunting!

Same thing here in Alabama, tvance929. The only shrooms around here that anyone knows about are the "magic" kind. LOL

Were at in alabama i just moved here and would love find some im in Anniston

I wouldn't rely too much on a fixed date

tvance929. The best guide on when to start hunting that I know is to start when the leaf buds on the oak trees are about the size of a squirrel's ear.

Thank you for this great Instructable!

Great tips. I love looking for them.

Very well explained, and while Morel's are reasonably safe, most of the time mistaking a false morel for a real one only brings on "the gummy bear from hell" syndrome, As I was told by my mentor in mushrooms over 40 years ago, "Never eat a mushroom that someone who knows hasn't told you is safe, don't rely on books" We then spent a year, off and on, wandering around the various micro-climates of the Mendocino coast till I could tell them all: Poisonous, Magic, Tasty, not so tasty, and ones that taste down right foul but won't do you serious harm. To this day, I can still identify them for that area but, you know what, don't really like to eat them much. Also the information is regional. While many are similar in other areas, it's the not so good ones that become problematic.

Very well explained.

I found a very large one growing on our garage wall (!) and alerted the family to it. Imogene Cunningham was visiting (my father was an accomplished photographer and scientist) and photographed it. My son has the only print that I know about, for it was not in the Cunningham catalog of prints, but she signed it. There is some slight water damage as a result of the print being stored improperly by my parents.

I'm definitely gonna go hunting this upcoming season!

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