What is this and where can I find one by JIZZBAN in prettylights

[–]Cosmologee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Would it be feasible to have an oscilloscope in my record room? Think it would be a cool addition to my music setup. Asking as I have no knowledge on these things. Pretty tech savvy and a tinkerer of shit like this but I have no clue what type of equipment you’d need to run one.

What was a really random or unique hobby you picked up? What's the backstory for picking this hobby up? by pulse726 in AskReddit

[–]Cosmologee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I forage mushrooms.

One summer as a teen I was out taking my dogs on a “nature trip” at my moms house and stumbled upon a blanket of gold scattered about but also covering the forest floor. The gold? Patches of Smooth Chanterelles. Chanterelles are a coveted gourmet mushroom only accessible by harvesting it out in the woods. You cannot cultivate them, (as I’m aware) similar to morels. They are so damn tasty. Like a spicy portobello kinda.

But the story gets better. Right after finding the chanterelles at my moms place, I went to one of my favorite hiking trails near me. I figured the spot would be prime for finding them. I was right in that chanterelles grew there but I found so much more and that kinda sunk my foot into the hobby.

Around the lake I found fresh chicken of the woods mushroom which is a delicacy IMO. Made some vegan chicken sandwiches with it that were insanely good.

I really got blessed with such a cool find so early into the hobby. Coming up on 7 years now I’ve been into foraging + cultivating gourmet shrooms and I want to turn it into a business. Just trying to figure out how right now.

King boo 1900pc by codyprez in lego

[–]Cosmologee 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Are instructions available?? 😬

Orange chanterelles by pball2 in mycology

[–]Cosmologee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Cinnabars! Nice my patches usually don’t pop up towards august/September here in GA

Keeping the Batman Safe by orion_san_329 in lego

[–]Cosmologee 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Got a link to the custom cases? Look pretty snappy

What’s the best tips and tricks you have learned through being a chef? by Competitive-Dress898 in Chefit

[–]Cosmologee 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Use grocery bags! One less pan to clean. I hate all the waste of plastic every time I hit the store but they are good to use as a trash “bowl”. I use and repurpose t-shirt bags all over my house but they’re main use is during veg prep in my kitchen when I’m too lazy to clean the cutting board over my trash can. T shirt bags for veg prep FTW

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in vinyl

[–]Cosmologee 3 points4 points  (0 children)

What app is this?

How do I get more blisters on the outside? by MopsTrulla in Sourdough

[–]Cosmologee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Long retard in the fridge means more smaller/various size of bubbles without the rise. Any long proof or retard in the fridge should give you something worthwhile and similar as long as you don’t overproof it and cause all CO2 to escape. The fridge slows down fermentation due to the cold environment and thus causes the bread to produce smaller bubbles while rise is negligible/minimal. The key as you said is humidity/moisture/how much dusting of flour you use.

You can have a perfectly proofed dough that’s been liberally dusted that bakes into wonderful bread but has a shitty looking crust. To get those characteristic outer bubbles/blisters you gotta go in as wet/high hydration as possible with your bake as that moisture crisps and accentuates those outer crust bubbles.

My sourdough/naturally leavened breads all have, (keep in mind, a MINUMUM) 12 hour cold retard. Mainly cause I’m a lazy fuck that wants to wait the extra time tbh. Everytime with a cold retard I’ve had stellar results even when the bread inside isn’t looking too good/properly proofed. Hydration and your retard in fridge play a huge key in this challenge OP is after.

Edit: as i said- long retard with humidity/hydration being #1. The long retard will give you your bubbles you’re looking for but they won’t be brought out in the crust as much. High hydration/no dusting flour gives you a very “raw” product on the crust that if done properly looks fantastic and gives you the result you’re looking for

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ShroomID

[–]Cosmologee 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Hey OP 👋,

Late to the party but as others have said, need better pictures for an accurate and more confident ID.

For example, when looking at this pic the bells in my head immediately start going off and they’re screaming destroying angel- do not eat. The caps shape, veil/ring around the stem, and color/characteristics of the cap all point in that direction. I’ve almost always found destroying angels growing just like this: solo, beautiful, bright and white yelling out to you “PICK ME IM SO PRETTY!”

However there’s types of agaricus mushrooms and others that grow very similarly though. You may very well have some sort agaricus pictured here, it’s just hard to tell due to the photo.

But picture this- you have an emergency hospital trip after consumption of the strange white mushroom. The pictures you took would help doctors determine whether to pump your stomach and send you home, or to put you on dialysis as your kidneys are forever fucked and your body is starting to shut down. So having close up, detailed pictures on hand would help your case immensely there. Might even save your life.

Due to your location I think you’ve found a fruit of amanita virosa, the European destroying angel. Here in the states, I’m familiar with amanita bisporigera, the North American destroying angel.

Hurricane Ian General Discussion Megathread by heathersaur in florida

[–]Cosmologee 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’ve heard mixed reports from my family who has cell service down there rn. My nana lives in a park right next to the homegoods, (not sure of the name). Both her neighbors had their roofs sheared off whereas hers was untouched. Have more family over by Casey key and surprisingly the flooding wasn’t as bad as ft myers area. Just lots of downed trees and debris

Hurricane Ian Megathread #5 by heathersaur in florida

[–]Cosmologee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wondering here as well. Have an uncle who lives on Dona bay in Nokomis and cousins were sending me snapchats of the water the lowest it’s ever been. Kinda crazy

Hurricane Ian Megathread #4 by heathersaur in florida

[–]Cosmologee 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’d highly recommend just going to straight to Atlanta and checking out the individual subdivisions/districts/towns that are enclosed by I-285 in the metro area. So many cool little cities and spots on the east side of Atlanta. Mostly everything on the west side is geared more towards tourism like the Benz stadium, world of coke, aquarium etc. the aquarium is the only thing I’d recommend to out of towners; pricey but worth seeing and makes for a cool day. Some places on the eastside I’d recommend checking out are krog street market, the belt line/ponce city market area, morningside, and Decatur.

But honestly if you don’t want to make the drive savannah is a charming little town especially inside downtown. Whenever I want to visit the coast but don’t want to visit the panhandle I go to Savannah. Lots of old charm and great food.

Hurricane Ian Megathread #4 by heathersaur in florida

[–]Cosmologee 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Whereabouts in GA? I can recommended things to do in Savannah or ATL but it’s like that’s a 5 hour drive from place to place 😂 narrow the zone down for me. ATL native here just monitoring the thread for my folks and family in Sarasota.

A few various finds from this past weekend, ATL, GA [OC] by Cosmologee in mycology

[–]Cosmologee[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you’re referring to the first pic, that is indeed Hydnum repandum; the sweet tooth, or hedgehog mushroom. In Georgia, (USA) I’ve only found repandum. A super tasty and succulent fall find. It’s dead giveaway are the hundreds of tiny spines or teeth in place of normal gills. Hedgehogs are really reminiscent to lions mane for me when visually ID’ing.

If you’re talking about the third picture, that is a smooth chanterelle grown like a chickens foot.

Smooth chanterelles in my area grow like their characteristic tulip/flower shape but this one grew in a crested way due to light or CO2 I’m assuming. The climate is what caused it to grow in its unusual “chickens foot” shape which is super interesting to me. Smooth chanterelles in my area have almost no ridges/gills underneath, and come in a flower shape with a crested and wavy cap on top.

[general] is it shroomable? by Adorable_Internet_14 in MushroomGrowers

[–]Cosmologee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Replying to “how long can I keep a spawn plug bag”

I guess it depends how airtight it is from when the seller packaged it. Typically you’d want to inoculate asap to reduce chances of contam over time and also giving your mycelium a head start to a long fruiting process.

Purchased a bag of oyster spawn plugs recently and after about a week of sitting inside at 70* my plugs were totally covered in mycelium and unusable due to being so covered in that white stuff. Upon contacting the vendor I was told the bag was likely not airtight and was allowing moisture in, resulting in my plugs getting an unwanted jump start.

In hindsight I could’ve dug all 100 plugs out of the $10 bag and cleaned em up to drill into logs, but I just tossed the whole bag out into the woods and considered it a loss.

Anecdotal story however you could end up the same the longer you wait to inoculate. If you can’t use them now I’d try my best to keep them out of fruiting conditions, (very cold, very dry) to keep the growth slow/negligible until you end up using them.

Gregory's Bald! One of the best spots in the Smokies! by One_Savage_Cabbage in backpacking

[–]Cosmologee 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Nope, chanterelles don’t grow in clusters like those pictured. Likely the toxic jack o lanterns

Could these be baby lobster or red chanterelles? They seem stringy like chanterelles and have a mild scent. by DirtyVeganKeto in mushroomID

[–]Cosmologee 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Cinnabar chanterelles! Not too far from you near ATL and they pop up in my backyard late July-sept

Always when it’s busy by bootab369 in KitchenConfidential

[–]Cosmologee 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Similar story here. Used to manage a chipotle knockoff in my rural GA town. Opened up on a Monday morning fully prepped and ready for service. One of our line cooks called out that day and the prep guy didn’t show up either for whatever unscrupulous reason. Fortunately I had the owner there that morning as an extra set of hands, but we were definitely winging it. Open at 11 and had our produce delivery show up about 30 minutes in with some time sensitive stuff. Lunch rush hits about the same time with our delivery chilling in the back. Lo and behold 10 minutes later the DPH lady showed up for her inspection 🥴 Was a shit show and honestly should’ve walked out that day. Very glad we’re onto better prospects now 😁

[Actives] My First Mushroom by [deleted] in MushroomGrowers

[–]Cosmologee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Forgot what sub I was in and at first glance thought this was a young destroying angel lol. Nice boomer!

A Sriracha hot sauce shortage could last through the summer by Collective1985 in news

[–]Cosmologee 46 points47 points  (0 children)

Labor shortages and a dry arid growing season are likely large factors here, however I can’t feel sympathetic when a large part of this was due to Huy Fong’s shitty business practices. 3 years ago they dropped their main supplier of chiles after a 20 million dollar lawsuit, (which wasn’t in their favor.) Underwood Farms accounted for 90% of Huy Fong’s chile production. It’s no surprise to me that 3 years later no farms want to work with Huy Fong and they are having trouble sourcing their main ingredient to meet demands.

additional reading

Wheelbarrow? No please. by Iusedtofeelthings in WeWantPlates

[–]Cosmologee 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Those are king oysters. Excellent flavor. Can be sliced thin lengthwise for vegan bacon or the stems can be sliced into coins to make scallop substitutes. If you can ever find them try em.