Enokitake

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Flammulina
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Cultivated Flammulina velutipes
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Wild Enokitake, Flammulina velutipes
Scientific classification
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F. velutipes
Binomial name
Flammulina velutipes
(Curtis) Singer (1951)

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Enokitake (榎茸, エノキタケ, Japanese pronunciation: [enokitake], /ˌnkiˈtɑːk/), also Enokidake (榎茸, エノキダケ, Japanese pronunciation: [enokidake], /ˌnkiˈdɑːk/) or Enoki (榎, エノキ, Japanese pronunciation: [enoki], /ˈnki/),[1] is a long, thin white mushroom used in East Asian cuisine (such as that of China, Japan, Vietnam and Korea). These mushrooms are cultivars of Flammulina velutipes, also known by the name golden needle mushroom or lily mushroom.[2] Wild forms differing in color, texture, and sliminess are called names including seafood mushrooms, winter mushrooms or winter fungus, velvet foot, velvet stem or velvet shank.[3]

This mushroom is available fresh or canned, with experts recommending fresh enoki specimens with firm, white, shiny caps, rather than those with slimy or brownish stalks that are best avoided.[citation needed] It is traditionally used for soups, but can also be used for salads and other dishes. The mushroom has a crisp texture and can be refrigerated for approximately one week.[4]

Features

The mushroom naturally grows on the stumps of the Chinese Hackberry tree ("enoki" in Japanese), but also on other trees, such as mulberry and persimmon trees. There is a significant difference in appearance between the wild and cultivated types of the mushroom. Cultivated mushrooms have not been exposed to light, resulting in a white color, whereas wild mushrooms usually display a dark brown color. Cultivated mushrooms are grown in a carbon dioxide (CO2)-rich environment to nurture the development of long thin stems, whereas wild mushrooms produce a much shorter and thicker stem.

In the UK, the wild variety of the mushroom may be found from September through to March, hence the name Winter Fungus.

Names

Flammulina velutipes
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Mycological characteristics
gills on hymenium
cap is convex
hymenium is adnexed
stipe is bare
spore print is white
ecology is saprotrophic
edibility: choice

The names enokitake (榎茸エノキタケ), enokidake (榎茸エノキダケ) and enoki (エノキ), are derived from the Japanese language. In Chinese, the mushroom is called "jīnzhēngū" or "jīngū" . In Korean, it is called "paengi beoseot" (팽이버섯), and "kim châm" or "trâm vàng" are the terms used in Vietnamese.

Health properties

Enokitake mushrooms contain antioxidants,[6][7] like ergothioneine.[7] Animal testing has indicated possible applications in the development of vaccines and cancer immunotherapy.[8]

Research at the National University of Singapore, first published in 2005, stated that the stalk of the golden needle mushroom contains a large quantity of a protein, named "Five"/"FIP-fve" by the researchers, that helps in the regulation of the immune system. The mushroom also contains flammutoxin, a cytolytic and cardiotoxic protein[9][10] that has proven to be non-toxic when absorbed orally.[11]

Gallery

See also

References

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  2. Orientalmart
  3. Shanghai Xuerong Biotechnology Co Ltd on Seafood Mushrooms
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External links

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