Isaacs Archives

Calvatia booniana

    The giant puffball of the interior western United States has become a favorite of mushroom collectors in recent years. The large size and excellent culinary qualities of this puffball make it a much sought after item. In our area this big puffball is most frequent in the foothills or lower mountains, often in pastures or grassy areas, sometimes with Aspen or even in aspen-spruce forests. In prairie areas to the north and east of us it occurs in fairy rings—sometimes of great diameter. Large specimens up to 30cm diameter can be found, although specimens near basketball size are much more common. Since they often repeat year after year in the same location, collectors can have a heavy impact on these giants of the fungal world. It is always good practice to leave a fruiting body to insure future reproduction. We know too little about long term reproduction of such fungi to over-collect them.
    Although some people apparently find these fungi of limited culinary interest, I have always liked them. Cooked after the fashion of eggplant, they have a hearty, satisfying quality, perhaps more due to texture and bulk than to flavor. Since there is nothing else that looks remotely like a giant puffball, its a safe choice for beginners if one remembers that the flesh mush be pure white with no traces of yellow or olive. The latter colors mark the beginning of enzyme activity that ultimately results in the puffball "digesting" itself, a sort of process of self absorption.
    It has been shown that the spore case of a giant puffball produces billions of spores, and if the spores were all to germinate and grow, the world shortly would be overwhelmed with giant puffballs, a fate perhaps preferable to that of being overwhelmed by yuppies.

Bill Isaacs
1996-12-30

Notes:
• Bill Isaacs' original manuscript had the genus spelled "Clavatia" rather than Calvatia: perhaps just a typing error.
• Learn more about Calvatia booniana at MushroomExpert.Com

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