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Topic: Amanita caesarea


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In the News (Sun 27 May 12)

  
 ipedia.com: Amanita muscaria Article
mella and the edible Mexican species Amanita basii (similar to A. caesarea of Europe)).
Amanita muscaria is widely thought to be the Soma talked about in the Hindu scriptures, and is less often also thought to be the amrita talked about in Buddhist scriptures.
Amanita muscaria Status Secure Amanita muscaria Scientific classification Kingdom: Fungi Division: Basidiomycota Class: Homobasidiomycetae Subclass: Hymenomycetes Order: Agaricales Family: Amanitaceae...
www.ipedia.com /amanita_muscaria.html   (912 words)

  
 Amanita muscaria - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Amanita muscaria is widely thought to be the Soma talked about in the Hindu scriptures, and is less often also thought to be the amrita talked about in Buddhist scriptures.
Psilocybe and amanita are not chemically related with regard to their psychoactive properties and therefore produce markedly different psychoactive effects.
Amanita muscaria americana has a yellow cap surface
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Amanita_muscaria   (1032 words)

  
 Amanita muscaria cooking methods
Amanita caesarea is one of Italy's most highly prized, and expensive, mushrooms.
Amanita muscaria is tainted by the cultural fear of poisonous mushrooms, especially of poisonous Amanitas, and also by the American, at least official, rejection of most intoxicants.
Amanita muscaria is a member of the Amanitaceae family, a family of mushrooms that includes some of the most wonderful edibles, and some of the most deadly.
www.williamrubel.com /Mushrooms/muscaria.html   (1343 words)

  
 Amanita rubescens
Amanita caesarea (Caesar's Mushroom) is rarely if ever found except in southern Europe; its cap is brilliant orange with a striated margin, and the stipe is yellow.
Unlike many Amanita species the Blusher, Amanita rubescens, is edible if well cooked; but, since it causes anaemia if eaten raw, most people steer clear of using it as a food source.
Amanita pantherina has a brown cap with white veil fragments; its flesh does not blush pink when damaged.
www.first-nature.com /fungi/id_guide/amanitaceae/amanita_rubescens.htm   (308 words)

  
 Amanita caesarea, Caerer's mushroom, Tom Volk's Fungus of the Month for March 2002
Amanita caesarea and its American relatives Amanita hemibapha and Amanita jacksonii are among the relatively few widely-consumed edible Amanita species.
Amanita is a well-defined genus of mycorrhizal Agaricales (gill forming mushrooms) that have a white spore print, gills (lamellae) that are free from the stipe (stalk) and a universal veil covering the young mushroom buttons.
The genus Amanita is better known for its poisonous members the death angels (Amanita virosa, A.
botit.botany.wisc.edu /toms_fungi/mar2002.html   (939 words)

  
 Amanita caesarea, Caerer's mushroom, Tom Volk's Fungus of the Month for March 2002
Amanita caesarea and its American relatives Amanita hemibapha and Amanita jacksonii are among the relatively few widely-consumed edible Amanita species.
As you might guess from the name, Amanita caesarea was a favorite of the emperors of the Roman Empire, the Caesars.
It is pretty well accepted that true Amanita caesarea does not exist in North America, having been described from the Italian region.
botit.botany.wisc.edu /toms_fungi/mar2002.html   (939 words)

  
 Amanita muscaria - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Amanita muscaria is widely thought to be the Soma talked about in the Hindu scriptures, and is less often also thought to be the amrita talked about in Buddhist scriptures.
The notion that Nordic Vikings used Amanita muscaria to produce their berserker rages was first suggested by the Swedish professor Samual Ödman in 1784.
Amanita muscaria americana has a yellow cap surface
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Amanita_muscaria   (1362 words)

  
 Amanita muscaria
Amanita caesarea (Caesar's Mushroom) is rarely if ever found in northern Europe; its cap is brilliant orange with a striated margin, and the stipe is yellow.
The Fly Agaric, Amanita muscaria, is a hallucinogen and therefore poisonous.
The caps of some samples of Amanita rubescens are deep orange, but their stems and their cap flesh always turn red when damaged.
www.first-nature.com /fungi/id_guide/amanitaceae/amanita_muscaria.htm   (241 words)

  
 Amanita fulva
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.
Although Amanita fulva, commonly referred to as the Tawny Grisette, is not poisonous it must be well cooked before it may safely be eaten.
Amanita crocea has a yellowish-orange cap with an apricot tinge at the centre.
www.first-nature.com /fungi/id_guide/amanitaceae/amanita_fulva.htm   (229 words)

  
 Amanita caesarea, Caerer's mushroom, Tom Volk's Fungus of the Month for March 2002
Amanita caesarea and its American relatives Amanita hemibapha and Amanita jacksonii are among the relatively few widely-consumed edible Amanita species.
Amanita is a well-defined genus of mycorrhizal Agaricales (gill forming mushrooms) that have a white spore print, gills (lamellae) that are free from the stipe (stalk) and a universal veil covering the young mushroom buttons.
The genus Amanita is better known for its poisonous members the death angels (Amanita virosa, A.
botit.botany.wisc.edu /toms_fungi/mar2002.html   (939 words)

  
 Amanita caesarea, Caerer's mushroom, Tom Volk's Fungus of the Month for March 2002
Amanita caesarea and its American relatives Amanita hemibapha and Amanita jacksonii are among the relatively few widely-consumed edible Amanita species.
Amanita is a well-defined genus of mycorrhizal Agaricales (gill forming mushrooms) that have a white spore print, gills (lamellae) that are free from the stipe (stalk) and a universal veil covering the young mushroom buttons.
The genus Amanita is better known for its poisonous members the death angels (Amanita virosa, A.
botit.botany.wisc.edu /toms_fungi/mar2002.html   (939 words)

  
 MykoWeb -- Miscellaneous Fungus Photos
This is the Amanita "caesarea" of the Chiricahua Mountains of Southeastern Arizona.
I was not expecting to find mushrooms while hiking through the Chiricahua National Monument on a 95 degree day, but these large, white Amanitas were hard to miss.
Here is a longitudinal section showing the hollow stipe and the thickness of the universal veil.
www.mykoweb.com /misc_photos.html   (547 words)

  
 Sam's Corner, First Quarter of 2002
Volvariella bombycina is a spectacular pink spored entity with free gills and a very large volva - like Amanita caesarea..
It is related to species of Amanita in the section vaginatae.
Turner Center was a fascinating geological place which we must visit during less xerophytic conditions.
www.mushroomthejournal.com /mma/SC200201.html   (1949 words)

  
 Amanitales Gallery
The Amanita genus is well know for such prized edibles as Caesar's mushroom (Amanita caesarea), as well as for several deadly poisonous species (Amanita phalloides and Amanita pantherina, for example).
This group also contains Amanita muscaria, commonly known as the Fly Agaric, one of the most beautiful of all the gilled fungi.
The order Amanitales contains just one family, the Amanitaceae, comprising two genera, Amanita and Limacella.
www.first-nature.com /fungi/id_guide/amanitaceae   (67 words)

  
 MSN Encarta - Mushroom
The fly amanita is classified as Amanita muscaria, the death cup as Amanita phalloides, and Caesar’s amanita as Amanita caesarea.
Truffles, especially the Périgord truffle, are subterranean European fungi and probably the most highly prized of the edible fungi.
The flesh of all truffles is nearly white when young; as the truffle matures, the flesh becomes darker with a marbling of lighter tissue.
encarta.msn.com /encyclopedia_761561803/Mushroom.html   (67 words)

  
 Amanita muscaria var. guessowii Veselý
(until recently, called "Amanita caesarea" by Mexican authors).
-- R. Tulloss (dimensions taken from Amanita of North America by D. Jenkins)
pluto.njcc.com /~ret/amanita/species/muscgues.html   (334 words)

  
 STAMPS
Description Date New Used 2340 30 q Amanita caesarea 4/28/90 NA NA 2341 90 q Lepiota procera 4/28/90 NA NA 2342 1.2 l Boletus edulis 4/28/90 NA NA 2343 1.8 l Clathrus cancellatus 4/28/90 NA NA
jozek.faithweb.com /stamps.htm   (334 words)

  
 NAMA: Art Registry-Dutch Baroque
Two Amanita caesarea, one agaric with partial veil, and a clump of coral mushrooms
Two agarics (in black and white, thus of indeterminate color)
A forest floor still life of wild roses, vines and toadstools with a red admiral, a snail, caterpillar and damselflies
www.namyco.org /art/dutch_baroque.html   (334 words)

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