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Boletus edulis

Boletus edulis
In the northern Apennine Mountains, Abetina Reale forest, Italy
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Boletales
Family: Boletaceae
Genus: Boletus
Species:
B. edulis
Binomial name
Boletus edulis
Bull. (1782)
Synonyms[2]
  • Ceriomyces crassus Battarra (1775)
  • Boletus solidus Sowerby (1809)
  • Leccinum edule (Bull.) Gray (1821)
  • Dictyopus edulis (Bull.) Forq. (1890)
Boletus edulis
Pores on hymenium
Cap is convex
Hymenium is adnate
Stipe is bare
Spore print is brown
Ecology is mycorrhizal
Edibility is choice

Boletus edulis (English: cep, penny bun, porcino or porcini) is a basidiomycete fungus, and the type species of the genus Boletus. Widely distributed in the Northern Hemisphere across Europe, Asia, and North America, it does not occur naturally in the Southern Hemisphere, although it has been introduced to southern Africa, Australia, New Zealand, and Brazil. Several closely related European mushrooms formerly thought to be varieties or forms of B. edulis have been shown using molecular phylogenetic analysis to be distinct species, and others previously classed as separate species are conspecific with this species. The western North American species commonly known as the California king bolete (Boletus edulis var. grandedulis) is a large, darker-coloured variant first formally identified in 2007.

The fungus grows in deciduous and coniferous forests and tree plantations, forming symbiotic ectomycorrhizal associations with living trees by enveloping the tree's underground roots with sheaths of fungal tissue. The fungus produces spore-bearing fruit bodies above ground in summer and autumn. The fruit body has a large brown cap which on occasion can reach 30 cm (12 in), rarely 40 cm (16 in) in diameter and 3 kg (6 lb 10 oz) in weight. Like other boletes, it has tubes extending downward from the underside of the cap, rather than gills; spores escape at maturity through the tube openings, or pores. The pore surface of the B. edulis fruit body is whitish when young, but ages to a greenish-yellow. The stout stipe, or stem, is white or yellowish in colour, up to 20 cm (8 in), rarely 30 cm (12 in) tall and 10 cm (4 in) thick, and partially covered with a raised network pattern, or reticulations.

Prized as an ingredient in various culinary dishes, B. edulis is an edible mushroom held in high regard in many cuisines, and is commonly prepared and eaten in soups, pasta, or risotto. The mushroom is low in fat and digestible carbohydrates, and high in protein, vitamins, minerals and dietary fibre. Although it is sold commercially, it is very difficult to cultivate. Available fresh in autumn throughout Europe and Russia, it is most often dried, packaged, and distributed worldwide. It keeps its flavour after drying, and it is then reconstituted and used in cooking. B. edulis is one of the few fungi sold pickled.

Taxonomy edit

 
Pierre Bulliard first described B. edulis in 1782.

Boletus edulis was first described in 1782 by the French botanist Pierre Bulliard and still bears its original name.[3] The starting date of fungal taxonomy had been set as January 1, 1821, to coincide with the date of the works of the 'father of mycology', Swedish naturalist Elias Magnus Fries, which meant the name required sanction by Fries (indicated in the name by a colon) to be considered valid, as Bulliard's work preceded this date. It was thus written Boletus edulis Bull.:Fr. A 1987 revision of the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature set the starting date at May 1, 1753, the date of publication of Linnaeus' work, the Species Plantarum.[4] Hence, the name no longer requires the ratification of Fries' authority. Early alternate names include Boletus solidus by English naturalist James Sowerby in 1809,[5] and Gray's Leccinum edule.[6] Gray's transfer of the species to Leccinum was later determined to be inconsistent with the rules of botanical nomenclature, and he apparently was unfamiliar with the earlier works of Fries when he published his arrangement of bolete species.[7]

Boletus edulis is the type species of the genus Boletus. In Rolf Singer's classification of the Agaricales mushrooms, it is also the type species of section Boletus, a grouping of about 30 related boletes united by several characteristics: a mild-tasting, white flesh that does not change colour when exposed to air; a smooth to distinctly raised, netted pattern over at least the uppermost portion of the stem; a yellow-brown or olive-brown spore print; white tubes that later become yellowish then greenish, which initially appear to be stuffed with cotton; and cystidia that are not strongly coloured.[8][9] Molecular analysis published in 1997 established that the bolete mushrooms are all derived from a common ancestor, and established the Boletales as an order separate from the Agaricales.[10]

The generic name is derived from the Latin term bōlētus "mushroom", which was borrowed in turn from the Ancient Greek βωλίτης, "terrestrial fungus".[11] Ultimately, this last word derives from bōlos/βῶλος "lump", "clod", and, metaphorically, "mushroom".[12] The βωλίτης of Galen, like the boletus of Latin writers like Martial, Seneca and Petronius,[13] is often identified as the much prized Amanita caesarea.[14] The specific epithet edulis in Latin means "eatable" or "edible".[15]

Common names edit

Common names for B. edulis vary by region. The standard Italian name, porcino (pl. porcini), means porcine;[16] fungo porcino, in Italian, echoes the term suilli, literally "hog mushrooms", a term used by the Ancient Romans[17] and still in use in southern Italian terms for this species.[18] The derivation has been ascribed to the resemblance of young fruit bodies to piglets, or to the fondness pigs have for eating them.[19] It is also known as "king bolete".[20] The English penny bun refers to its rounded brownish shape. The German name Steinpilz (stone mushroom) refers to the species' firm flesh.[21] In Austria, it is called Herrenpilz, the "noble mushroom",[19] while in Mexico, the Spanish name is panza, meaning "belly".[22] Another Spanish name, rodellon, means "small round boulder", while the Dutch name eekhoorntjesbrood means "squirrel's bread".[23] Russian names are belyy grib (ru:белый гриб; "white mushroom" as opposed to less valuable "black mushrooms") and borovik (ru:боровик; from bor—"pine forest"). The vernacular name cep is derived from the Catalan cep or its French name cèpe, although the latter is a generic term applying to several related species. In France, it is more fully cèpe de Bordeaux, derived from the Gascon cep "trunk" for its fat stalk,[24] ultimately from the Latin cippus "stake".[25] Ceppatello, ceppatello buono, ceppatello bianco, giallo leonato, ghezzo, and moreccio are names from Italian dialects,[26][27] and ciurenys or surenys is another term in Catalan.[28] The French-born King Charles XIV John popularised B. edulis in Sweden after 1818,[29] and is honoured in the local vernacular name Karljohanssvamp, as well as the Danish name Karl Johan svamp. The monarch cultivated the fungus about his residence, Rosersberg Palace.[30] The Finnish name is herkkutatti, from herkku 'delicacy', and tatti, 'bolete'.

Description edit

 
Cross-section showing white flesh, broad stem, and spore tubes on the underside of the cap

The cap of this mushroom is 7–30 cm (3–12 in) broad at maturity. Slightly sticky to touch, it is convex in shape when young and flattens with age. The colour is generally reddish-brown fading to white in areas near the margin, and continues to darken as it matures. The stipe, or stem, is 8–25 cm (3–10 in) in height, and up to 7 cm (3 in) thick—rather large in comparison to the cap;[31] it is club-shaped, or bulges out in the middle. It is finely reticulate on the upper portion, but smooth or irregularly ridged on the lower part. The under surface of the cap is made of thin tubes, the site of spore production; they are 1 to 2 cm (12 to 34 in) deep, and whitish in colour when young, but mature to a greenish-yellow.[32] The angular pores, which do not stain when bruised, are small—roughly 2 to 3 pores per millimetre.[33] In youth, the pores are white and appear as if stuffed with cotton (which are actually mycelia); as they age, they change colour to yellow and later to brown. The spore print is olive brown. The flesh of the fruit body is white, thick and firm when young, but becomes somewhat spongy with age. When bruised or cut, it either does not change colour, or turns a very light brown or light red.[34] Fully mature specimens can weigh about 1 kg (2 lb 3 oz); a huge specimen collected on the Isle of Skye, Scotland, in 1995 bore a cap of 42 cm (16+12 in), with a stipe 18 cm (7 in) in height and 14 cm (5+12 in) wide, and weighed 3.2 kg (7 lb 1 oz).[31] A similarly sized specimen found in Poland in 2013 made international news.[35]

 
 
Stem shape can range from club-shaped to centrally bulbous

Boletus edulis is considered one of the safest wild mushrooms to pick for the table, as few poisonous species closely resemble it, and those that do may be easily distinguished by careful examination.[19] The most similar poisonous mushroom may be the devil's bolete (Rubroboletus satanas), which has a similar shape, but has a red stem and stains blue on bruising.[19] It is often confused with the very bitter and unpalatable Tylopilus felleus, but can be distinguished by the reticulation on the stalk; in porcini, it is a whitish, net-like pattern on a brownish stalk, whereas it is a dark pattern on white in the latter. Porcini have whitish pores while the other has pink. If in doubt, tasting a tiny bit of flesh will yield a bitter taste.[19] It can also resemble the "bolete-like" Gyroporus castaneus, which is generally smaller, and has a browner stem. Boletus huronensis, an uncommon mushroom of northeastern North America, is another recognized look-alike known to cause severe gastrointestinal disorders.[36]

The spores are elliptical to spindle-shaped, with dimensions of 12–17 by 5–7 µm. The basidia, the spore-bearing cells, are produced in a layer lining the tubes, and arrange themselves so their ends are facing the center of the tube; this layer of cells is known technically as a hymenium. The basidia are thin-walled, mostly attached to four spores, and measure 25–30 by 8–10 µm. Another cell type present in the hymenium is the cystidia, larger sterile cells that protrude beyond the basidia into the lumen of the hymenium, and act as air traps, regulating humidity.[37] B. edulis has pleurocystidia (cystidia located on the face of a pore) that are thin-walled, roughly spindle-shaped to ventricose, and measure 30–45 by 7–10 µm; the "stuffed" feature of the hymenium is caused by cheilocystidia—cells found on the edges of the pores.[32] The hyphae of B. edulis do not have clamp connections.[33]

Related species edit

 
B. edulis var. grandedulis
 
B. regineus

Several similar brownish-coloured species are sometimes considered subspecies or forms of this mushroom. In Europe, in addition to B. edulis (or cèpe de Bordeaux), the most popular are:

  • Cèpe bronzé ("dark cep"; Boletus aereus), much rarer than B. edulis, is more highly regarded by gourmets, and consequently more expensive. Usually smaller than B. edulis, it is also distinctively darker in colour.[19] It is especially suited to drying.[20]
  • Cèpe des pins ("pine tree cep"; Boletus pinophilus or Boletus pinicola) grows among pine trees. Rarer than B. edulis, it is less appreciated by gourmets than the two other kinds of porcini, but remains a mushroom rated above most others.[20]
  • Cèpe d'été ("summer cep"; Boletus reticulatus), also less common and found earlier.[19]

Molecular phylogenetic analyses have proven these three are all distinctive and separate species;[38] other taxa formerly believed to be unique species or subspecies, such as B. betulicola, B. chippewaensis, B. persoonii, B. quercicola and B. venturii, are now known to be part of a B. edulis species complex with a wide morphological, ecological and geographic range,[39][40] and that the genetic variability in this complex is low.[41] Similar molecular technology has been developed to rapidly and accurately identify B. edulis and other commercially important fungi.[42][43]

Three divergent lineages found in Yunnan province in China that are commonly marketed and sold as B. edulis (and are actually more closely related to B. aereus) were described in 2013 as B. bainiugan, B. meiweiniuganjun and B. shiyong.[44][45] The classification has since been updated and expanded. All lineages are still members of Boletus sect. Boletus, the sensu sticto "porcini clade" of the genus.[46]

 
B. rex-veris

Western North America has several species closely related to B. edulis. The white king bolete (Boletus barrowsii), found in parts of Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and California (and possibly elsewhere), is named after its discoverer Chuck Barrows.[47] It is lighter in colour than B. edulis, having a cream-coloured cap with pink tones;[48] often mycorrhizal with Ponderosa pine, it tends to grow in areas where there is less rainfall. Some find its flavour as good as if not better than B. edulis.[49] The California king bolete (Boletus edulis var. grandedulis) can reach massive proportions, and is distinguished from B. edulis by a mature pore surface that is brown to slightly reddish. The cap colour appears to be affected by the amount of light received during its development, and may range from white in young specimens grown under thick canopy, to dark-brown, red-brown or yellow brown in those specimens receiving more light.[50] The queen bolete (Boletus regineus), formerly considered a variety of B. aereus, is also a choice edible. It is generally smaller than B. edulis, and unlike that species, is typically found in mixed forests.[51] The spring king bolete (Boletus rex-veris), formerly considered a variety of B. edulis or B. pinophilus, is found throughout western North America. In contrast to B. edulis, B. rex-veris tends to fruit in clusters, and, as its common name suggests, appears in the spring.[52] B. fibrillosus is edible but considered inferior in taste.[53]

Habitat and distribution edit

 
In Lithuania

The fruit bodies of Boletus edulis can grow singly or in small clusters of two or three specimens. The mushroom's habitat consists of areas dominated by pine (Pinus spp.), spruce (Picea spp.), hemlock (Tsuga spp.) and fir (Abies spp.) trees, although other hosts include chestnut, chinquapin, beech, Keteleeria spp., Lithocarpus spp., and oak. In California, porcini have been collected in a variety of forests, such as coastal forests, dry interior oak forests and savannas and interior high-elevation montane mixed forests,[54] to an altitude of 3,500 m (11,500 ft).[55] In northwestern Spain, they are common in scrublands dominated by the rock rose species Cistus ladanifer and Halimium lasianthum.[56] In the Midi region of south-west France, they are especially favoured and locally called cèpe de Bordeaux after the town from which they are traded to the north and abroad.[57]

Boletus edulis has a cosmopolitan distribution, concentrated in cool-temperate to subtropical regions.[54] It is common in Europe—from northern Scandinavia, south to the extremities of Greece and Italy—and North America, where its southern range extends as far south as Mexico.[34] It is well known from the Borgotaro area of Parma, Italy, and has PGI status there. The European distribution extends north to Scandinavia and south to southern Italy and Morocco.[54] In China, the mushroom can be found from the northeastern Heilongjiang to the Yunnan–Guizhou Plateau and Tibet.[34] It has been recorded growing under Pinus and Tsuga in Sagarmatha National Park in Nepal,[58] as well as in the Indian forests of Arunachal Pradesh.[59] In West Asia, the species has been reported from the northwest forests of Iran.[60]

Cultivation edit

Some steps have been made towards cultivating Boletus edulis,[61] including mycorrhization of rockrose shrubs enhanced by helper bacteria.[62]

Non-native introductions edit

Boletus edulis grows in some areas where it is not believed to be indigenous. It is often found underneath oak and silver birch in Hagley Park in central Christchurch, New Zealand, where it is likely to have been introduced,[63] probably on the roots of container-grown beech, birch, and oak in the mid-19th century—around the time exotic trees began to be planted in the Christchurch area.[34] Similarly, it has been collected in Adelaide Hills region of Australia in association with three species of introduced trees.[64] It has been growing plentifully in association with pine forests in the southern KwaZulu-Natal Midlands in South Africa for more than 50 years and is believed to have been introduced with the import of pine trees.[65][66] It also grows in pine plantations in neighboring Zimbabwe.[67]

Ecology edit

 
B. edulis is ectomycorrhizal and may co-occur with Pinus radiata

Fruit body production edit

Italian folklore holds that porcini sprout up at the time of the new moon;[19] research studies have tried to investigate more scientifically the factors that influence the production of fruit bodies. Although fruit bodies may appear any time from summer to autumn (June to November in the UK), their growth is known to be triggered by rainfall during warm periods of weather followed by frequent autumn rain with a drop in soil temperature.[54] Above average rainfall may result in the rapid appearance of large numbers of boletes, in what is known in some circles as a "bolete year".[68] A 2004 field study indicated that fruit body production is enhanced by an open and sunny wood habitat,[69] corroborating an earlier observation made in a Zimbabwean study;[67] removal of the litter layer on the forest floor appeared to have a negative effect on fruit body production, but previous studies reported contradictory results.[70][71] A Lithuanian study conducted in 2001 concluded that the maximal daily growth rate of the cap (about 21 mm or 0.8 in) occurred when the relative air humidity was the greatest, and the fruit bodies ceased growing when the air humidity dropped below 40%. Factors most likely to inhibit the appearance of fruit bodies included prolonged drought, inadequate air and soil humidity, sudden decreases of night air temperatures, and the appearance of the first frost.[72] Plots facing north tend to produce more mushrooms compared to equivalent plots facing south.[73]

Mycorrhizal associations edit

Boletus edulis is mycorrhizal—it is in a mutualistic relationship with the roots of plants (hosts), in which the fungus exchanges nitrogen and other nutrients extracted from the environment for fixed carbon from the host. Other benefits for the plant are evident: in the case of the Chinese chestnut, the formation of mycorrhizae with B. edulis increases the ability of plant seedlings to resist water stress, and increases leaf succulence, leaf area, and water-holding ability.[74] The fungus forms a sheath of tissue around terminal, nutrient-absorbing root tips, often inducing a high degree of branching in the tips of the host, and penetrating into the root tissue, forming, to some mycologists, the defining feature of ectomycorrhizal relationships, a hartig net.[75] The ectomycorrhizal fungi are then able to exchange nutrients with the plant, effectively expanding the root system of the host plant to the furthest reaches of the symbiont fungi.[75] Compatible hosts may belong to multiple families of vascular plants that are widely distributed throughout the Northern Hemisphere; according to one 1995 estimate, there are at least 30 host plant species distributed over more than 15 genera.[34] Examples of mycorrhizal associates include Chinese red pine,[76] Mexican weeping pine,[77] Scots pine, Norway spruce,[78] Coast Douglas-fir,[79] mountain pine,[80] and Virginia pine.[81] The fungus has also been shown to associate with gum rockrose, a pioneer early stage shrub that is adapted for growth in degraded areas, such as burned forests.[82] These and other rockrose species are ecologically important as fungal reservoirs, maintaining an inoculum of mycorrhizal fungi for trees that appear later in the forest regrowth cycle.[83]

The mushroom has been noted to often co-occur with Amanita muscaria or A. rubescens, although it is unclear whether this is due to a biological association between the species, or because of similarities in growing season, habitat, and ecological requirements.[54] An association has also been reported between B. edulis and Amanita excelsa on Pinus radiata ectomycorrhizae in New Zealand, suggesting that other fungi may influence the life cycle of porcini.[84] A 2007 field study revealed little correlation between the abundance of fruit bodies and presence of its mycelia below ground, even when soil samples were taken from directly beneath the mushroom; the study concluded that the triggers leading to formation of mycorrhizae and production of the fruit bodies were more complex.[85]

Heavy-metal contamination edit

Boletus edulis is known to be able to tolerate and even thrive on soil that is contaminated with toxic heavy metals, such as soil that might be found near metal smelters. The mushroom's resistance to heavy-metal toxicity is conferred by a biochemical called a phytochelatin—an oligopeptide whose production is induced after exposure to metal.[86] Phytochelatins are chelating agents, capable of forming multiple bonds with the metal; in this state, the metal cannot normally react with other elements or ions and is stored in a detoxified form in the mushroom tissue.

Pests and predators edit

The fruit bodies of B. edulis can be infected by the parasitic mould-like fungus Hypomyces chrysospermus, known as the bolete eater, which manifests itself as a white, yellow, or reddish-brown cottony layer over the surface of the mushroom.[87] Some reported cases of stomach ache following consumption of dried porcini have been attributed to the presence of this mould on the fruit bodies.[88] The mushroom is also used as a food source by several species of mushroom flies,[54] as well as other insects and their larvae.[89] An unidentified species of virus was reported to have infected specimens found in the Netherlands and in Italy; fruit bodies affected by the virus had relatively thick stems and small or no caps, leading to the name "little-cap disease".[90][91]

Boletus edulis is a food source for animals such as the banana slug (Ariolimax columbianus),[92] the long-haired grass mouse,[93] the red squirrel,[94] and, as noted in one isolated report, the fox sparrow.[95]

Culinary uses edit

 
A porcini mushroom and noodle soup served in a bread bowl at a Polish restaurant
 
A porcini mushroom sandwich in Stockholm, Sweden

Boletus edulis, as the species epithet edulis (Latin: "edible") directly implies, is an edible mushroom. Italian chef and restaurateur Antonio Carluccio has described it as representing "the wild mushroom par excellence", and hails it as the most rewarding of all fungi in the kitchen for its taste and versatility.[19] Considered a choice edible, particularly in France, Germany, Poland and Italy,[20] it was widely written about by the Roman writers Pliny the Elder and Martial, although ranked below the esteemed Amanita caesarea. When served suilli[a] instead of boleti,[97] the disgruntled Martial wrote:

sunt tibi boleti; fungos ego sumo suillos (Ep. iii. 60)
("You eat the choice boletus, I have mushrooms that swine grub up.")[98]

The flavour has been described as nutty and slightly meaty, with a smooth, creamy texture, and a distinctive aroma reminiscent of sourdough. Young, small porcini are most appreciated by gourmets, as the large ones often harbour maggots (insect larvae), and become slimy, soft and less tasty with age. Fruit bodies are collected by holding the stipe near the base and twisting gently. Cutting the stipe with a knife may risk the part left behind rotting and the mycelium being destroyed. Peeling and washing are not recommended.[19] The fruit bodies are highly perishable, due largely to the high water content (around 90%), the high level of enzyme activity, and the presence of a flora of microorganisms.[99] Caution should be exercised when collecting specimens from potentially polluted or contaminated sites, as several studies have shown that the fruit bodies can bioaccumulate toxic heavy metals like mercury,[100] cadmium,[101] caesium and polonium.[102][103] Bioaccumulated metals or radioactive fission decay products are like chemical signatures: chemical and radiochemical analysis can be used to identify the origin of imported specimens,[104] and for long-term radioecological monitoring of polluted areas.[105]

Porcini are sold fresh in markets in summer and autumn in Europe and Russia, and dried or canned at other times of the year, and distributed worldwide to countries where they are not otherwise found.[106] They are eaten and enjoyed raw, sautéed with butter, ground into pasta, in soups, and in many other dishes. In France, they are used in recipes such as cèpes à la Bordelaise, cèpe frits and cèpe aux tomates.[107] Porcini risotto is a traditional Italian autumn dish.[108] Porcini are a feature of many cuisines, including Provençal,[109] and Viennese.[110] They are used in soups and consumed blanched in salads in Thailand.[111] Porcini can also be frozen—either raw or first cooked in butter. The colour, aroma, and taste of frozen porcini deteriorate noticeably if frozen longer than four months. Blanching or soaking and blanching as a processing step before freezing can extend the freezer life up to 12 months.[99] They are also one of the few mushroom species pickled and sold commercially.[112]

Dried edit

 
A pile of dried porcini at the Borgotaro festival of the porcino, Italy

Boletus edulis is well suited to drying—its flavour intensifies, it is easily reconstituted, and its resulting texture is pleasant.[113] Reconstitution is done by soaking in hot, but not boiling, water for about twenty minutes; the water used is infused with the mushroom aroma and it too can be used in subsequent cooking. Dried porcini have more protein than most other commonly consumed vegetables apart from soybeans. Some of this content is indigestible, though digestibility is improved with cooking.[114]

Like other boletes, porcini can be dried by being strung separately on twine and hung close to the ceiling of a kitchen. Alternatively, the mushrooms can be dried by cleaning with a brush (washing is not recommended), and then placing them in a wicker basket or bamboo steamer on top of a boiler or hot water tank.[115] Another method is drying in an oven at 25 to 30 °C (77 to 86 °F) for two to three hours, then increasing the temperature to 50 °C (122 °F) until crisp or brittle.[116] Once dry, they are kept in an airtight jar.[115] Importantly for commercial production, porcini retain their flavour after industrial preparation in a pressure cooker or after canning or bottling, and are thus useful for manufacturers of soups or stews. The addition of a few pieces of dried porcino can significantly add to flavour, and they are a major ingredient of the pasta sauce known as carrettiera (carter's sauce).[117] The drying process is known to induce the formation of various volatile substances that contribute to the mushroom's aroma. Chemical analysis has shown that the odour of the dried mushroom is a complex mixture of 53 volatile compounds.[118]

Commercial harvest edit

 
Porcini can vary considerably in size.

A 1998 estimate suggests the total annual worldwide consumption of Boletus edulis and closely related species (B. aereus, B. pinophilus, and B. reticulatus) to be between 20,000 and 100,000 tons.[54] Approximately 2,700 tonnes (3,000 tons) were sold in France, Italy and Germany in 1988, according to official figures. The true amount consumed far exceeds this, as it does not account for informal sales or consumption by collectors.[55] They are widely exported and sold in dried form, reaching countries where they do not occur naturally, such as Australia and New Zealand. The autonomous community of Castile and León in Spain produces 7,700 tonnes (8,500 tons) annually.[82] In autumn, the price of porcini in the Northern Hemisphere typically ranges between $20 and $80 per kilogram, although in New York in 1997 the scarcity of fruit bodies elevated the wholesale price to more than $200 per kilogram.[55]

In the vicinity of Borgotaro in the Province of Parma of northern Italy, the four species Boletus edulis, B. aereus, B. aestivalis and B. pinophilus have been recognised for their superior taste and officially termed Fungo di Borgotaro. Here these mushrooms have been collected for centuries and exported commercially. Owing to the globalization of the mushroom trade most of the porcini commercially available in Italy or exported by Italy no longer originate there. Porcini and other mushrooms are imported into Italy from various locations, especially China and eastern European countries; these are then often re-exported under the "Italian porcini" label.[119][120]

In Italy the disconnect with local production has had an adverse effect on quality; for example in the 1990s some of the dried porcino mushrooms exported to Italy from China contained species of genus Tylopilus, which are rather similar in appearance and when dried are difficult for both mushroom labourers and mycologists alike to distinguish from Boletus. Tylopilus species typically have a very bitter taste, which is imparted to the flavour of the porcini with which they are mixed.[121]

After the fall of the Iron Curtain and the economic and political barriers that followed, central and eastern European countries with local mushroom harvesting traditions, such as Albania, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Romania, Serbia and Slovenia, developed into exporters of porcini, concentrating primarily on the Italian market.[120] Exported porcini and other wild fungi are also destined for France, Germany and other western European markets, where demand for them exists, but collection on a commercial scale does not.[120] Picking B. edulis has become an annual seasonal income earner and pastime in countries like Bulgaria, especially for many Roma communities and the unemployed.[122] A lack of control has led to heavy exploitation of the mushroom resource.[123]

Like many other strictly mycorrhizal fungi, B. edulis has eluded cultivation attempts for years.[114][124][61] The results of some studies suggest that unknown components of the soil microflora might be required for B. edulis to establish a mycorrhizal relationship with the host plant.[125][126][127] Successful attempts at cultivating B. edulis have been made by Spanish scientists by mycorrhization of Cistus species,[61] with Pseudomonas fluorescens bacteria helping the mycorrhiza.[62]

Boletus edulis, fresh[128]
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy342.4 kJ (81.8 kcal)
1.70 g
7.39 g
VitaminsQuantity
%DV
Thiamine (B1)
9%
0.105 mg
Riboflavin (B2)
8%
0.092 mg
Niacin (B3)
40%
6.07 mg
Pantothenic acid (B5)
53%
2.64 mg
Vitamin B6
4%
0.051 mg
Folate (B9)
73%
290 μg
Vitamin C
5%
4.21 mg
MineralsQuantity
%DV
Calcium
0%
1.195 mg
Copper
39%
0.786 mg
Iron
6%
0.739 mg
Phosphorus
3%
22.26 mg
Potassium
7%
203.3 mg
Zinc
44%
4.172 mg
Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.
Source: USDA FoodData Central

Nutrition edit

Boletus edulis mushrooms are 9% carbohydrates, 3% fat, and 7% protein (table). Fresh mushrooms consist of over 80% moisture,[129] although reported values tend to differ somewhat as moisture content can be affected by environmental temperature and relative humidity during growth and storage.[130] The carbohydrate component contains the monosaccharides glucose, mannitol and α,α-trehalose, the polysaccharide glycogen, and the water-insoluble structural polysaccharide chitin, which accounts for up to 80–90% of dry matter in mushroom cell walls. Chitin, hemicellulose, and pectin-like carbohydrates—all indigestible by humans—contribute to high proportion of insoluble fibre in B. edulis.[131]

The total lipid, or crude fat, content makes up 3% of the dry matter of the mushroom. The proportion of fatty acids (expressed as a % of total fatty acids) are: palmitic acid, 10%; stearic acid, 3%; oleic acid, 36%; and linoleic acid, 42%.[132]

A comparative study of the amino acid composition of eleven Portuguese wild edible mushroom species showed Boletus edulis to have the highest total amino acid content.[133][134]

B. edulis mushrooms are rich in the dietary minerals, sodium, iron, calcium, and magnesium, with amounts varying according to the mushroom component and to soil composition in the geographic region of China where they were sampled.[131][135] They also have high content of B vitamins and tocopherols.[136] B. edulis contains appreciable amounts of selenium, a trace mineral,[137] although the bioavailability of mushroom-derived selenium is low.[138]

Phytochemicals and research edit

 
Phytochelatins give B. edulis resistance to toxic heavy metals like cadmium.

Boletus edulis fruit bodies contain diverse phytochemicals, including 500 mg of ergosterol per 100 g of dried mushroom,[139] and ergothioneine.[140] The fruit bodies contain numerous polyphenols, especially a high content of rosmarinic acid,[141] and organic acids (such as oxalic, citric, malic, succinic and fumaric acids),[142] and alkaloids.[143]

Aroma edit

Aroma compounds giving B. edulis mushrooms their characteristic fragrance include some 100 components, such as esters and fatty acids.[144] In a study of aroma compounds, 1-octen-3-one was the most prevalent chemical detected in raw mushrooms, with pyrazines having increased aroma effect and elevated content after drying.[145]

See also edit

References edit

Footnotes

  1. ^ The term suilli was also thought to encompass the related Leccinum scabrum.[96]

Citations

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Cited texts edit

  • Carluccio, A. (2003). The Complete Mushroom Book. London: Quadrille. ISBN 978-1-84400-040-1.
  •   Media related to Boletus edulis at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Boletus edulis at Wikispecies

boletus, edulis, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, northern, apennine, mountains, abetina, reale, forest, italyconservation, statusleast, concern, iucn, scientific, classificationdomain, eukaryotakingdom, fungidivision, basidiomycotaclass, agaricom. Cep redirects here For other uses see Cep disambiguation Boletus edulisIn the northern Apennine Mountains Abetina Reale forest ItalyConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom FungiDivision BasidiomycotaClass AgaricomycetesOrder BoletalesFamily BoletaceaeGenus BoletusSpecies B edulisBinomial nameBoletus edulisBull 1782 Synonyms 2 Ceriomyces crassus Battarra 1775 Boletus solidus Sowerby 1809 Leccinum edule Bull Gray 1821 Dictyopus edulis Bull Forq 1890 Boletus edulisMycological characteristicsPores on hymeniumCap is convexHymenium is adnateStipe is bareSpore print is brownEcology is mycorrhizalEdibility is choice Boletus edulis English cep penny bun porcino or porcini is a basidiomycete fungus and the type species of the genus Boletus Widely distributed in the Northern Hemisphere across Europe Asia and North America it does not occur naturally in the Southern Hemisphere although it has been introduced to southern Africa Australia New Zealand and Brazil Several closely related European mushrooms formerly thought to be varieties or forms of B edulis have been shown using molecular phylogenetic analysis to be distinct species and others previously classed as separate species are conspecific with this species The western North American species commonly known as the California king bolete Boletus edulis var grandedulis is a large darker coloured variant first formally identified in 2007 The fungus grows in deciduous and coniferous forests and tree plantations forming symbiotic ectomycorrhizal associations with living trees by enveloping the tree s underground roots with sheaths of fungal tissue The fungus produces spore bearing fruit bodies above ground in summer and autumn The fruit body has a large brown cap which on occasion can reach 30 cm 12 in rarely 40 cm 16 in in diameter and 3 kg 6 lb 10 oz in weight Like other boletes it has tubes extending downward from the underside of the cap rather than gills spores escape at maturity through the tube openings or pores The pore surface of the B edulis fruit body is whitish when young but ages to a greenish yellow The stout stipe or stem is white or yellowish in colour up to 20 cm 8 in rarely 30 cm 12 in tall and 10 cm 4 in thick and partially covered with a raised network pattern or reticulations Prized as an ingredient in various culinary dishes B edulis is an edible mushroom held in high regard in many cuisines and is commonly prepared and eaten in soups pasta or risotto The mushroom is low in fat and digestible carbohydrates and high in protein vitamins minerals and dietary fibre Although it is sold commercially it is very difficult to cultivate Available fresh in autumn throughout Europe and Russia it is most often dried packaged and distributed worldwide It keeps its flavour after drying and it is then reconstituted and used in cooking B edulis is one of the few fungi sold pickled Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Common names 2 Description 2 1 Related species 3 Habitat and distribution 3 1 Cultivation 3 2 Non native introductions 4 Ecology 4 1 Fruit body production 4 2 Mycorrhizal associations 4 3 Heavy metal contamination 4 4 Pests and predators 5 Culinary uses 5 1 Dried 5 2 Commercial harvest 6 Nutrition 7 Phytochemicals and research 7 1 Aroma 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Cited textsTaxonomy edit nbsp Pierre Bulliard first described B edulis in 1782 Boletus edulis was first described in 1782 by the French botanist Pierre Bulliard and still bears its original name 3 The starting date of fungal taxonomy had been set as January 1 1821 to coincide with the date of the works of the father of mycology Swedish naturalist Elias Magnus Fries which meant the name required sanction by Fries indicated in the name by a colon to be considered valid as Bulliard s work preceded this date It was thus written Boletus edulis Bull Fr A 1987 revision of the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature set the starting date at May 1 1753 the date of publication of Linnaeus work the Species Plantarum 4 Hence the name no longer requires the ratification of Fries authority Early alternate names include Boletus solidus by English naturalist James Sowerby in 1809 5 and Gray s Leccinum edule 6 Gray s transfer of the species to Leccinum was later determined to be inconsistent with the rules of botanical nomenclature and he apparently was unfamiliar with the earlier works of Fries when he published his arrangement of bolete species 7 Boletus edulis is the type species of the genus Boletus In Rolf Singer s classification of the Agaricales mushrooms it is also the type species of section Boletus a grouping of about 30 related boletes united by several characteristics a mild tasting white flesh that does not change colour when exposed to air a smooth to distinctly raised netted pattern over at least the uppermost portion of the stem a yellow brown or olive brown spore print white tubes that later become yellowish then greenish which initially appear to be stuffed with cotton and cystidia that are not strongly coloured 8 9 Molecular analysis published in 1997 established that the bolete mushrooms are all derived from a common ancestor and established the Boletales as an order separate from the Agaricales 10 The generic name is derived from the Latin term bōletus mushroom which was borrowed in turn from the Ancient Greek bwliths terrestrial fungus 11 Ultimately this last word derives from bōlos bῶlos lump clod and metaphorically mushroom 12 The bwliths of Galen like the boletus of Latin writers like Martial Seneca and Petronius 13 is often identified as the much prized Amanita caesarea 14 The specific epithet edulis in Latin means eatable or edible 15 Common names edit Common names for B edulis vary by region The standard Italian name porcino pl porcini means porcine 16 fungo porcino in Italian echoes the term suilli literally hog mushrooms a term used by the Ancient Romans 17 and still in use in southern Italian terms for this species 18 The derivation has been ascribed to the resemblance of young fruit bodies to piglets or to the fondness pigs have for eating them 19 It is also known as king bolete 20 The English penny bun refers to its rounded brownish shape The German name Steinpilz stone mushroom refers to the species firm flesh 21 In Austria it is called Herrenpilz the noble mushroom 19 while in Mexico the Spanish name is panza meaning belly 22 Another Spanish name rodellon means small round boulder while the Dutch name eekhoorntjesbrood means squirrel s bread 23 Russian names are belyy grib ru belyj grib white mushroom as opposed to less valuable black mushrooms and borovik ru borovik from bor pine forest The vernacular name cep is derived from the Catalan cep or its French name cepe although the latter is a generic term applying to several related species In France it is more fully cepe de Bordeaux derived from the Gascon cep trunk for its fat stalk 24 ultimately from the Latin cippus stake 25 Ceppatello ceppatello buono ceppatello bianco giallo leonato ghezzo and moreccio are names from Italian dialects 26 27 and ciurenys or surenys is another term in Catalan 28 The French born King Charles XIV John popularised B edulis in Sweden after 1818 29 and is honoured in the local vernacular name Karljohanssvamp as well as the Danish name Karl Johan svamp The monarch cultivated the fungus about his residence Rosersberg Palace 30 The Finnish name is herkkutatti from herkku delicacy and tatti bolete Description edit nbsp Cross section showing white flesh broad stem and spore tubes on the underside of the capThe cap of this mushroom is 7 30 cm 3 12 in broad at maturity Slightly sticky to touch it is convex in shape when young and flattens with age The colour is generally reddish brown fading to white in areas near the margin and continues to darken as it matures The stipe or stem is 8 25 cm 3 10 in in height and up to 7 cm 3 in thick rather large in comparison to the cap 31 it is club shaped or bulges out in the middle It is finely reticulate on the upper portion but smooth or irregularly ridged on the lower part The under surface of the cap is made of thin tubes the site of spore production they are 1 to 2 cm 1 2 to 3 4 in deep and whitish in colour when young but mature to a greenish yellow 32 The angular pores which do not stain when bruised are small roughly 2 to 3 pores per millimetre 33 In youth the pores are white and appear as if stuffed with cotton which are actually mycelia as they age they change colour to yellow and later to brown The spore print is olive brown The flesh of the fruit body is white thick and firm when young but becomes somewhat spongy with age When bruised or cut it either does not change colour or turns a very light brown or light red 34 Fully mature specimens can weigh about 1 kg 2 lb 3 oz a huge specimen collected on the Isle of Skye Scotland in 1995 bore a cap of 42 cm 16 1 2 in with a stipe 18 cm 7 in in height and 14 cm 5 1 2 in wide and weighed 3 2 kg 7 lb 1 oz 31 A similarly sized specimen found in Poland in 2013 made international news 35 nbsp nbsp Stem shape can range from club shaped to centrally bulbous Boletus edulis is considered one of the safest wild mushrooms to pick for the table as few poisonous species closely resemble it and those that do may be easily distinguished by careful examination 19 The most similar poisonous mushroom may be the devil s bolete Rubroboletus satanas which has a similar shape but has a red stem and stains blue on bruising 19 It is often confused with the very bitter and unpalatable Tylopilus felleus but can be distinguished by the reticulation on the stalk in porcini it is a whitish net like pattern on a brownish stalk whereas it is a dark pattern on white in the latter Porcini have whitish pores while the other has pink If in doubt tasting a tiny bit of flesh will yield a bitter taste 19 It can also resemble the bolete like Gyroporus castaneus which is generally smaller and has a browner stem Boletus huronensis an uncommon mushroom of northeastern North America is another recognized look alike known to cause severe gastrointestinal disorders 36 The spores are elliptical to spindle shaped with dimensions of 12 17 by 5 7 µm The basidia the spore bearing cells are produced in a layer lining the tubes and arrange themselves so their ends are facing the center of the tube this layer of cells is known technically as a hymenium The basidia are thin walled mostly attached to four spores and measure 25 30 by 8 10 µm Another cell type present in the hymenium is the cystidia larger sterile cells that protrude beyond the basidia into the lumen of the hymenium and act as air traps regulating humidity 37 B edulis has pleurocystidia cystidia located on the face of a pore that are thin walled roughly spindle shaped to ventricose and measure 30 45 by 7 10 µm the stuffed feature of the hymenium is caused by cheilocystidia cells found on the edges of the pores 32 The hyphae of B edulis do not have clamp connections 33 Related species edit nbsp B edulis var grandedulis nbsp B regineus Several similar brownish coloured species are sometimes considered subspecies or forms of this mushroom In Europe in addition to B edulis or cepe de Bordeaux the most popular are Cepe bronze dark cep Boletus aereus much rarer than B edulis is more highly regarded by gourmets and consequently more expensive Usually smaller than B edulis it is also distinctively darker in colour 19 It is especially suited to drying 20 Cepe des pins pine tree cep Boletus pinophilus or Boletus pinicola grows among pine trees Rarer than B edulis it is less appreciated by gourmets than the two other kinds of porcini but remains a mushroom rated above most others 20 Cepe d ete summer cep Boletus reticulatus also less common and found earlier 19 Molecular phylogenetic analyses have proven these three are all distinctive and separate species 38 other taxa formerly believed to be unique species or subspecies such as B betulicola B chippewaensis B persoonii B quercicola and B venturii are now known to be part of a B edulis species complex with a wide morphological ecological and geographic range 39 40 and that the genetic variability in this complex is low 41 Similar molecular technology has been developed to rapidly and accurately identify B edulis and other commercially important fungi 42 43 Three divergent lineages found in Yunnan province in China that are commonly marketed and sold as B edulis and are actually more closely related to B aereus were described in 2013 as B bainiugan B meiweiniuganjun and B shiyong 44 45 The classification has since been updated and expanded All lineages are still members of Boletus sect Boletus the sensu sticto porcini clade of the genus 46 nbsp B rex verisWestern North America has several species closely related to B edulis The white king bolete Boletus barrowsii found in parts of Colorado New Mexico Arizona and California and possibly elsewhere is named after its discoverer Chuck Barrows 47 It is lighter in colour than B edulis having a cream coloured cap with pink tones 48 often mycorrhizal with Ponderosa pine it tends to grow in areas where there is less rainfall Some find its flavour as good as if not better than B edulis 49 The California king bolete Boletus edulis var grandedulis can reach massive proportions and is distinguished from B edulis by a mature pore surface that is brown to slightly reddish The cap colour appears to be affected by the amount of light received during its development and may range from white in young specimens grown under thick canopy to dark brown red brown or yellow brown in those specimens receiving more light 50 The queen bolete Boletus regineus formerly considered a variety of B aereus is also a choice edible It is generally smaller than B edulis and unlike that species is typically found in mixed forests 51 The spring king bolete Boletus rex veris formerly considered a variety of B edulis or B pinophilus is found throughout western North America In contrast to B edulis B rex veris tends to fruit in clusters and as its common name suggests appears in the spring 52 B fibrillosus is edible but considered inferior in taste 53 Habitat and distribution edit nbsp In LithuaniaThe fruit bodies of Boletus edulis can grow singly or in small clusters of two or three specimens The mushroom s habitat consists of areas dominated by pine Pinus spp spruce Picea spp hemlock Tsuga spp and fir Abies spp trees although other hosts include chestnut chinquapin beech Keteleeria spp Lithocarpus spp and oak In California porcini have been collected in a variety of forests such as coastal forests dry interior oak forests and savannas and interior high elevation montane mixed forests 54 to an altitude of 3 500 m 11 500 ft 55 In northwestern Spain they are common in scrublands dominated by the rock rose species Cistus ladanifer and Halimium lasianthum 56 In the Midi region of south west France they are especially favoured and locally called cepe de Bordeaux after the town from which they are traded to the north and abroad 57 Boletus edulis has a cosmopolitan distribution concentrated in cool temperate to subtropical regions 54 It is common in Europe from northern Scandinavia south to the extremities of Greece and Italy and North America where its southern range extends as far south as Mexico 34 It is well known from the Borgotaro area of Parma Italy and has PGI status there The European distribution extends north to Scandinavia and south to southern Italy and Morocco 54 In China the mushroom can be found from the northeastern Heilongjiang to the Yunnan Guizhou Plateau and Tibet 34 It has been recorded growing under Pinus and Tsuga in Sagarmatha National Park in Nepal 58 as well as in the Indian forests of Arunachal Pradesh 59 In West Asia the species has been reported from the northwest forests of Iran 60 Cultivation edit Some steps have been made towards cultivating Boletus edulis 61 including mycorrhization of rockrose shrubs enhanced by helper bacteria 62 Non native introductions edit Boletus edulis grows in some areas where it is not believed to be indigenous It is often found underneath oak and silver birch in Hagley Park in central Christchurch New Zealand where it is likely to have been introduced 63 probably on the roots of container grown beech birch and oak in the mid 19th century around the time exotic trees began to be planted in the Christchurch area 34 Similarly it has been collected in Adelaide Hills region of Australia in association with three species of introduced trees 64 It has been growing plentifully in association with pine forests in the southern KwaZulu Natal Midlands in South Africa for more than 50 years and is believed to have been introduced with the import of pine trees 65 66 It also grows in pine plantations in neighboring Zimbabwe 67 Ecology edit nbsp B edulis is ectomycorrhizal and may co occur with Pinus radiata nbsp and Amanita muscaria Fruit body production edit Italian folklore holds that porcini sprout up at the time of the new moon 19 research studies have tried to investigate more scientifically the factors that influence the production of fruit bodies Although fruit bodies may appear any time from summer to autumn June to November in the UK their growth is known to be triggered by rainfall during warm periods of weather followed by frequent autumn rain with a drop in soil temperature 54 Above average rainfall may result in the rapid appearance of large numbers of boletes in what is known in some circles as a bolete year 68 A 2004 field study indicated that fruit body production is enhanced by an open and sunny wood habitat 69 corroborating an earlier observation made in a Zimbabwean study 67 removal of the litter layer on the forest floor appeared to have a negative effect on fruit body production but previous studies reported contradictory results 70 71 A Lithuanian study conducted in 2001 concluded that the maximal daily growth rate of the cap about 21 mm or 0 8 in occurred when the relative air humidity was the greatest and the fruit bodies ceased growing when the air humidity dropped below 40 Factors most likely to inhibit the appearance of fruit bodies included prolonged drought inadequate air and soil humidity sudden decreases of night air temperatures and the appearance of the first frost 72 Plots facing north tend to produce more mushrooms compared to equivalent plots facing south 73 Mycorrhizal associations edit Boletus edulis is mycorrhizal it is in a mutualistic relationship with the roots of plants hosts in which the fungus exchanges nitrogen and other nutrients extracted from the environment for fixed carbon from the host Other benefits for the plant are evident in the case of the Chinese chestnut the formation of mycorrhizae with B edulis increases the ability of plant seedlings to resist water stress and increases leaf succulence leaf area and water holding ability 74 The fungus forms a sheath of tissue around terminal nutrient absorbing root tips often inducing a high degree of branching in the tips of the host and penetrating into the root tissue forming to some mycologists the defining feature of ectomycorrhizal relationships a hartig net 75 The ectomycorrhizal fungi are then able to exchange nutrients with the plant effectively expanding the root system of the host plant to the furthest reaches of the symbiont fungi 75 Compatible hosts may belong to multiple families of vascular plants that are widely distributed throughout the Northern Hemisphere according to one 1995 estimate there are at least 30 host plant species distributed over more than 15 genera 34 Examples of mycorrhizal associates include Chinese red pine 76 Mexican weeping pine 77 Scots pine Norway spruce 78 Coast Douglas fir 79 mountain pine 80 and Virginia pine 81 The fungus has also been shown to associate with gum rockrose a pioneer early stage shrub that is adapted for growth in degraded areas such as burned forests 82 These and other rockrose species are ecologically important as fungal reservoirs maintaining an inoculum of mycorrhizal fungi for trees that appear later in the forest regrowth cycle 83 The mushroom has been noted to often co occur with Amanita muscaria or A rubescens although it is unclear whether this is due to a biological association between the species or because of similarities in growing season habitat and ecological requirements 54 An association has also been reported between B edulis and Amanita excelsa on Pinus radiata ectomycorrhizae in New Zealand suggesting that other fungi may influence the life cycle of porcini 84 A 2007 field study revealed little correlation between the abundance of fruit bodies and presence of its mycelia below ground even when soil samples were taken from directly beneath the mushroom the study concluded that the triggers leading to formation of mycorrhizae and production of the fruit bodies were more complex 85 Heavy metal contamination edit Boletus edulis is known to be able to tolerate and even thrive on soil that is contaminated with toxic heavy metals such as soil that might be found near metal smelters The mushroom s resistance to heavy metal toxicity is conferred by a biochemical called a phytochelatin an oligopeptide whose production is induced after exposure to metal 86 Phytochelatins are chelating agents capable of forming multiple bonds with the metal in this state the metal cannot normally react with other elements or ions and is stored in a detoxified form in the mushroom tissue Pests and predators edit The fruit bodies of B edulis can be infected by the parasitic mould like fungus Hypomyces chrysospermus known as the bolete eater which manifests itself as a white yellow or reddish brown cottony layer over the surface of the mushroom 87 Some reported cases of stomach ache following consumption of dried porcini have been attributed to the presence of this mould on the fruit bodies 88 The mushroom is also used as a food source by several species of mushroom flies 54 as well as other insects and their larvae 89 An unidentified species of virus was reported to have infected specimens found in the Netherlands and in Italy fruit bodies affected by the virus had relatively thick stems and small or no caps leading to the name little cap disease 90 91 Boletus edulis is a food source for animals such as the banana slug Ariolimax columbianus 92 the long haired grass mouse 93 the red squirrel 94 and as noted in one isolated report the fox sparrow 95 Culinary uses edit nbsp A porcini mushroom and noodle soup served in a bread bowl at a Polish restaurant nbsp A porcini mushroom sandwich in Stockholm SwedenBoletus edulis as the species epithet edulis Latin edible directly implies is an edible mushroom Italian chef and restaurateur Antonio Carluccio has described it as representing the wild mushroom par excellence and hails it as the most rewarding of all fungi in the kitchen for its taste and versatility 19 Considered a choice edible particularly in France Germany Poland and Italy 20 it was widely written about by the Roman writers Pliny the Elder and Martial although ranked below the esteemed Amanita caesarea When served suilli a instead of boleti 97 the disgruntled Martial wrote sunt tibi boleti fungos ego sumo suillos Ep iii 60 You eat the choice boletus I have mushrooms that swine grub up 98 The flavour has been described as nutty and slightly meaty with a smooth creamy texture and a distinctive aroma reminiscent of sourdough Young small porcini are most appreciated by gourmets as the large ones often harbour maggots insect larvae and become slimy soft and less tasty with age Fruit bodies are collected by holding the stipe near the base and twisting gently Cutting the stipe with a knife may risk the part left behind rotting and the mycelium being destroyed Peeling and washing are not recommended 19 The fruit bodies are highly perishable due largely to the high water content around 90 the high level of enzyme activity and the presence of a flora of microorganisms 99 Caution should be exercised when collecting specimens from potentially polluted or contaminated sites as several studies have shown that the fruit bodies can bioaccumulate toxic heavy metals like mercury 100 cadmium 101 caesium and polonium 102 103 Bioaccumulated metals or radioactive fission decay products are like chemical signatures chemical and radiochemical analysis can be used to identify the origin of imported specimens 104 and for long term radioecological monitoring of polluted areas 105 Porcini are sold fresh in markets in summer and autumn in Europe and Russia and dried or canned at other times of the year and distributed worldwide to countries where they are not otherwise found 106 They are eaten and enjoyed raw sauteed with butter ground into pasta in soups and in many other dishes In France they are used in recipes such as cepes a la Bordelaise cepe frits and cepe aux tomates 107 Porcini risotto is a traditional Italian autumn dish 108 Porcini are a feature of many cuisines including Provencal 109 and Viennese 110 They are used in soups and consumed blanched in salads in Thailand 111 Porcini can also be frozen either raw or first cooked in butter The colour aroma and taste of frozen porcini deteriorate noticeably if frozen longer than four months Blanching or soaking and blanching as a processing step before freezing can extend the freezer life up to 12 months 99 They are also one of the few mushroom species pickled and sold commercially 112 Dried edit nbsp A pile of dried porcini at the Borgotaro festival of the porcino ItalyBoletus edulis is well suited to drying its flavour intensifies it is easily reconstituted and its resulting texture is pleasant 113 Reconstitution is done by soaking in hot but not boiling water for about twenty minutes the water used is infused with the mushroom aroma and it too can be used in subsequent cooking Dried porcini have more protein than most other commonly consumed vegetables apart from soybeans Some of this content is indigestible though digestibility is improved with cooking 114 Like other boletes porcini can be dried by being strung separately on twine and hung close to the ceiling of a kitchen Alternatively the mushrooms can be dried by cleaning with a brush washing is not recommended and then placing them in a wicker basket or bamboo steamer on top of a boiler or hot water tank 115 Another method is drying in an oven at 25 to 30 C 77 to 86 F for two to three hours then increasing the temperature to 50 C 122 F until crisp or brittle 116 Once dry they are kept in an airtight jar 115 Importantly for commercial production porcini retain their flavour after industrial preparation in a pressure cooker or after canning or bottling and are thus useful for manufacturers of soups or stews The addition of a few pieces of dried porcino can significantly add to flavour and they are a major ingredient of the pasta sauce known as carrettiera carter s sauce 117 The drying process is known to induce the formation of various volatile substances that contribute to the mushroom s aroma Chemical analysis has shown that the odour of the dried mushroom is a complex mixture of 53 volatile compounds 118 Commercial harvest edit nbsp Porcini can vary considerably in size A 1998 estimate suggests the total annual worldwide consumption of Boletus edulis and closely related species B aereus B pinophilus and B reticulatus to be between 20 000 and 100 000 tons 54 Approximately 2 700 tonnes 3 000 tons were sold in France Italy and Germany in 1988 according to official figures The true amount consumed far exceeds this as it does not account for informal sales or consumption by collectors 55 They are widely exported and sold in dried form reaching countries where they do not occur naturally such as Australia and New Zealand The autonomous community of Castile and Leon in Spain produces 7 700 tonnes 8 500 tons annually 82 In autumn the price of porcini in the Northern Hemisphere typically ranges between 20 and 80 per kilogram although in New York in 1997 the scarcity of fruit bodies elevated the wholesale price to more than 200 per kilogram 55 In the vicinity of Borgotaro in the Province of Parma of northern Italy the four species Boletus edulis B aereus B aestivalis and B pinophilus have been recognised for their superior taste and officially termed Fungo di Borgotaro Here these mushrooms have been collected for centuries and exported commercially Owing to the globalization of the mushroom trade most of the porcini commercially available in Italy or exported by Italy no longer originate there Porcini and other mushrooms are imported into Italy from various locations especially China and eastern European countries these are then often re exported under the Italian porcini label 119 120 In Italy the disconnect with local production has had an adverse effect on quality for example in the 1990s some of the dried porcino mushrooms exported to Italy from China contained species of genus Tylopilus which are rather similar in appearance and when dried are difficult for both mushroom labourers and mycologists alike to distinguish from Boletus Tylopilus species typically have a very bitter taste which is imparted to the flavour of the porcini with which they are mixed 121 After the fall of the Iron Curtain and the economic and political barriers that followed central and eastern European countries with local mushroom harvesting traditions such as Albania Bulgaria Macedonia Romania Serbia and Slovenia developed into exporters of porcini concentrating primarily on the Italian market 120 Exported porcini and other wild fungi are also destined for France Germany and other western European markets where demand for them exists but collection on a commercial scale does not 120 Picking B edulis has become an annual seasonal income earner and pastime in countries like Bulgaria especially for many Roma communities and the unemployed 122 A lack of control has led to heavy exploitation of the mushroom resource 123 Like many other strictly mycorrhizal fungi B edulis has eluded cultivation attempts for years 114 124 61 The results of some studies suggest that unknown components of the soil microflora might be required for B edulis to establish a mycorrhizal relationship with the host plant 125 126 127 Successful attempts at cultivating B edulis have been made by Spanish scientists by mycorrhization of Cistus species 61 with Pseudomonas fluorescens bacteria helping the mycorrhiza 62 Boletus edulis fresh 128 Nutritional value per 100 g 3 5 oz Energy342 4 kJ 81 8 kcal Fat1 70 gProtein7 39 gVitaminsQuantity DV Thiamine B1 9 0 105 mgRiboflavin B2 8 0 092 mgNiacin B3 40 6 07 mgPantothenic acid B5 53 2 64 mgVitamin B64 0 051 mgFolate B9 73 290 mgVitamin C5 4 21 mgMineralsQuantity DV Calcium0 1 195 mgCopper39 0 786 mgIron6 0 739 mgPhosphorus3 22 26 mgPotassium7 203 3 mgZinc44 4 172 mgUnits mg micrograms mg milligrams IU International units Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults Source USDA FoodData CentralNutrition editBoletus edulis mushrooms are 9 carbohydrates 3 fat and 7 protein table Fresh mushrooms consist of over 80 moisture 129 although reported values tend to differ somewhat as moisture content can be affected by environmental temperature and relative humidity during growth and storage 130 The carbohydrate component contains the monosaccharides glucose mannitol and a a trehalose the polysaccharide glycogen and the water insoluble structural polysaccharide chitin which accounts for up to 80 90 of dry matter in mushroom cell walls Chitin hemicellulose and pectin like carbohydrates all indigestible by humans contribute to high proportion of insoluble fibre in B edulis 131 The total lipid or crude fat content makes up 3 of the dry matter of the mushroom The proportion of fatty acids expressed as a of total fatty acids are palmitic acid 10 stearic acid 3 oleic acid 36 and linoleic acid 42 132 A comparative study of the amino acid composition of eleven Portuguese wild edible mushroom species showed Boletus edulis to have the highest total amino acid content 133 134 B edulis mushrooms are rich in the dietary minerals sodium iron calcium and magnesium with amounts varying according to the mushroom component and to soil composition in the geographic region of China where they were sampled 131 135 They also have high content of B vitamins and tocopherols 136 B edulis contains appreciable amounts of selenium a trace mineral 137 although the bioavailability of mushroom derived selenium is low 138 Phytochemicals and research edit nbsp Phytochelatins give B edulis resistance to toxic heavy metals like cadmium Boletus edulis fruit bodies contain diverse phytochemicals including 500 mg of ergosterol per 100 g of dried mushroom 139 and ergothioneine 140 The fruit bodies contain numerous polyphenols especially a high content of rosmarinic acid 141 and organic acids such as oxalic citric malic succinic and fumaric acids 142 and alkaloids 143 Aroma edit Aroma compounds giving B edulis mushrooms their characteristic fragrance include some 100 components such as esters and fatty acids 144 In a study of aroma compounds 1 octen 3 one was the most prevalent chemical detected in raw mushrooms with pyrazines having increased aroma effect and elevated content after drying 145 See also editList of Boletus species List of North American boletesReferences editFootnotes The term suilli was also thought to encompass the related Leccinum scabrum 96 Citations Dahlberg A 2019 Boletus edulis errata version published in 2022 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T122090234A222968388 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 3 RLTS T122090234A222968388 en Retrieved 22 January 2024 title has extraneous text Boletus edulis Bull 1782 MycoBank International Mycological Association Retrieved 2010 10 21 Bulliard JBF 1782 Herbier de la France Vol 2 in French Paris France P F Didot pp 49 96 plate 60 Retrieved 2009 11 24 Esser K Lemke PA 1994 The Mycota A Comprehensive Treatise on Fungi as Experimental Systems for Basic and Applied Research Heidelberg Germany Springer p 81 ISBN 3 540 66493 9 Sowerby J 1809 Coloured Figures of English Fungi Vol 4 London J Davis p 199 This entire work is available in Commons here but the reference is to plate 419 with textual description on page 697 Sowerby described the same modern species as B edulis on plate 111 description on page 57 Gray SF 1821 A Natural Arrangement of British Plants London Baldwin Cradock and Joy Paternoster Row p 647 Retrieved 2009 11 24 Sutara J 1985 Leccinum and the question of superfluous names Fungi Boletaceae Taxon 34 4 678 86 doi 10 2307 1222214 JSTOR 1222214 Singer R 1986 The Agaricales in Modern Taxonomy 4th rev ed Koenigstein Germany Koeltz Scientific Books p 779 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Dandan Sun Baoguo Ren Fazheng Zhang Yuyu Chen Haitao 2018 Characterization and comparison of key aroma compounds in raw and dry porcini mushroom Boletus edulis by aroma extract dilution analysis quantitation and aroma recombination experiments Food Chemistry 258 260 268 doi 10 1016 j foodchem 2018 03 056 ISSN 0308 8146 PMID 29655732 S2CID 4890378 Cited texts edit Carluccio A 2003 The Complete Mushroom Book London Quadrille ISBN 978 1 84400 040 1 nbsp Media related to Boletus edulis at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Boletus edulis at Wikispecies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Boletus edulis amp oldid 1197812991, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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