Cooking & Baking
Related: About this forumMushrooms. Is everyone else having difficulty finding basic canned mushrooms at the grocery?
We certainly are here. When I do find them, they are at least twice as expensive.
Ocelot II
(120,833 posts)So I haven't priced the canned ones. Everything is more expensive, I guess.
Warpy
(113,130 posts)but chopped fine, they can work in homemade cream of mushroom soup, on pizza, in tomato sauces. As a flavoring when you're out of fresh ones and don't want to make a special trip to the store, they're fine.
I can tolerate the canned ones. Freezing is what turns them into old tires.
yellowdogintexas
(22,714 posts)I add them to spaghetti sauce, make soup with theme
For some reason, I have never liked fresh mushrooms on pizza. They just sort of sit there and feel dry.
I like fresh ones sliced in salads, sauteed in butter/wine sauce and so forth. I just don't like them on pizza, and they are handy for other things
Warpy
(113,130 posts)I'm not nuts about raw ones, period. Saute them in butter with a few swipes of nutmeg across a grater, pure heaven.
yellowdogintexas
(22,714 posts)as a general rule. At least not here.
However, canned mushrooms are still difficult to fine and pricey when you do find them
yellowdogintexas
(22,714 posts)NoRethugFriends
(2,993 posts)yellowdogintexas
(22,714 posts)RainCaster
(11,543 posts)No problem
yellowdogintexas
(22,714 posts)I can rarely find them on the shelf at supermarkets and they are about double in price from when I bought them regularly. Which was of course when I could find them almost anywhere.
RockRaven
(16,270 posts)Neither a mushroom fan nor a hater, rather indifferent outside of maybe some specific cases.
Usually the recipes I'm using call for fresh whatever mushrooms, and if I cannot get them (or don't want to make the effort, or they're overpriced) then I either skip them or make something else...
Though I do also use dried mushrooms in some recipes, and have substituted reconstituted-dried for fresh.
Are there specific/unique uses for canned mushrooms or is it just a swap-out for fresh for convenience/preservation purposes?
2naSalit
(92,683 posts)Otherwise I wouldn't have noticed them because I never use them. I either buy them fresh or dip into my dried stash of Morels.
MontanaMama
(24,021 posts)Heaven in the pantry
2naSalit
(92,683 posts)Always have a few stashed away, you just ain't Montanan if ya don't.
MontanaMama
(24,021 posts)I have a could canning jars full of tried morels. I think long and hard before using them.
2naSalit
(92,683 posts)Special dishes only after I get down to a certain amount in the stash.
Golden Raisin
(4,674 posts)Or reconstituted dried so havent noticed anything about canned as I have never used them.
MontanaMama
(24,021 posts)But I did see them in jars not long ago. I dont remember why I noticed them. Ive got to hit 3 grocery stores today, if I see them, Ill let you know. If you want me to ship you some, Id be happy to do that, just DM me. Im the shipping manager for our family small business. One more FedEx box out the door is no big deal.
🍄
Retrograde
(10,646 posts)And twice as expensive as what? I cook with fresh or dried mushrooms - fresh are common in the SF Bay area, and dried last a long time in the pantry. Dried mushrooms seem a lot on a per pound basis, but a little go a long way
yellowdogintexas
(22,714 posts)Twice as expensive as they were when I could find them easily anywhere I shopped.
I use fresh for certain things but prefer canned ones for pizza, pasta sauce and convenience I don't like fresh mushrooms on pizza.
Price increases are no fun, but we just can't find them !!! It's not like we live in the boonies, either.
Retrograde
(10,646 posts)Mr. Retrograde doesn't like fresh mushrooms on pizzas either, but we've found that if we sautee them first they don't get as crunchy as the fresh ones do when baked.
spinbaby
(15,198 posts)I use canned mushrooms when I make pizza. Used to get them at Aldi for 49 cents; a year later theyre $1.39.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,727 posts)and in recent years I can only buy fresh already packaged, far, far more than I would use. There was a time when they'd have loose mushrooms and I could purchase as few as I needed.
The_REAL_Ecumenist
(874 posts)MUCH better.
yellowdogintexas
(22,714 posts)I like tossing them on a pizza or into a pot of pasta sauce. Easy, I like them and if I can find them they are convenient and I don't have to remember to get mushrooms from the produce dept at the store.
I love fresh mushrooms sauteed in wine sauce over chicken, in a hearty Boeuf Bourguigon or Coq Au Van. I just don't like them on Pizza!
Voltaire2
(14,703 posts)and not for too long - in the same oven I'm using for the pizza. So like 5 minutes at as hot as your oven gets. Then put them on the pizza and they continue to cook there, plus they integrate with the other toppings and sauce.
ificandream
(10,516 posts)Fresh don't have the sodium of canned. They're much better for you.
Voltaire2
(14,703 posts)However my favorite- fresh shiitake- doubled in price this year and are now unaffordable. The other fresh mushrooms also increased but not by 2x. A lot of my favorite recipes include mushrooms, so the mushroom situation is not good.
intrepidity
(7,891 posts)Growing up, this was the only way I ever knew mushrooms, and liked them on homemade pizzas and in spaghetti sauce and certain Thai soups.
Canned has a unique flavor and texture that, if you are accustomed to, is not easily replaced. It took me years to adapt to fresh and dried varieties.
Having said that, a few weeks ago while walking my dog, I stumbled upon a recently-fallen oak tree trunk with a massive bounty of beautiful, stunning white oyster mushrooms! Which I promptly picked and shared with my neighbor. I've been watching for mushrooms for three seasons here now and this was the first time seeing oysters (or really, any edibles that are worthwhile). And I wasn't even looking at the time, because we hadn't gotten much rain yet. Which reminds me: I need to go looking today.....