Growing Morel Mushrooms at Home

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Every weekend at the farmers market, I have a few people approach me with a hungry twinkle in their eye (It’s a very thinking-about-morels-specific twinkle) and ask wistfully if it’s possible to grow morel mushrooms at home. It is entirely possible, although many will tell you that growing morel mushrooms is a fool’s errand — the thing is that it usually takes between 3 to 5 years for any morel mushrooms to grow, and you won’t know until they pop up whether or not it worked. Morel mushrooms are quite interesting in that they have several very particular needs in order to grow, one of the most critical being that they have to experience a cold snap in order to trigger growing.

We’re fortunate to be in Michigan, where we’re guaranteed a good cold snap, at least for a while in the winter, and the spring morel season is big here. They say a winter with big snowstorms will yield the best morel seasons. If you live in a warmer climate that doesn’t get cold winters, growing morel mushrooms isn’t likely to work, but if you’re in a place where snow and frost aren’t strangers, you’ll likely have some luck if you’re patient enough to wait a few years for your mushrooms to grow.

People frequently ask how to grow morel mushrooms indoors — there have been a few recent successes in commercial indoor morel cultivation. Still, it’s a fidgety process that requires a great deal of control over temperature through different phases of the growth process and can be costly to maintain with no guarantee of success. Many morel lovers claim that morel mushrooms grown indoors lack some of the beloved flavor that morels are so treasured for, although I do think that some of that flavor comes from the timeless delight of gathering them in the wild. Whatever the case may be, here’s the classic outdoor approach to growing morel mushrooms at home.

And don’t miss the recipe for Morel Chili below!

Where to begin growing morel mushrooms?

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