So I think quite a lot of people eat them in Europe and South America. I do not know of any severe reactions taken to the false chanterelle apart from gastric upset. There have been some claims that they are halucinagenic but I believe that has now been disproven. My good friends ate quite a lot once by mistake and did not suffer any symptoms. However there is a comment somewhere for this video in which a UA-cam user reports some strange symptoms after eating some. In many text books and so on they are just classed as inedible. Citing that they do not have a pleasant taste and nothing else. However the false chanterelle has high levels of a sugar alchohol that could cause some temporary gastric distress.
Brilliant video thank you. I've got a patch near me and I've been wondering about them for years. It's really helpful to see the false and the true chanterelle compared side by side and feature by feature. I'm subscribing
@@JamieKunka ... Does he sniff out the hard to find mushrooms for you?😉 I see people are training dogs in the UK now to sniff out truffles 😁 they smell nicer than pig... I'd love my dog to be able to smell out the Morel's and Trumpets, that are so hard to find😊
@@vadaminot429 Quite a few years back I had trained one of my old German pointers to bark when he found chantarelles, he thought it was great fun and it was really useful and a big help for me to find chantarelles. However it made him totally useless as a hunting dog for forest birds such as wood grouse/capercaillie, luckily I don't have any of those on my hunting grounds, but it was a little embarrassing to explain the reason why I had to turn down invites from my friends to bring my dog and go hunting. He was still very useful in the farmlands on the field hunting for pheasants.
Found your video today while searching for information to confirm my identification of False Chanterelles that popped up in the backyard today. I see that you setup the tripod and camera to frame a Dyer's Polypore (Phaeolus schweinitzii?) in the foreground of the shot at 3:12. Nice touch, as additional species always add interest to fungal (as contrasted to viral 😆🤭) videos.
This is amazingly helpful. Just started foraging around 10,000 feet in Colorado. This really gives us hope and excitement. Just ate some flat top coral mushrooms that we foraged today. They were so delicious.
Great explanation! Something to add - true ones have thicker stems that are a bit more strong, curved and not so straight, while false ones are thin, flimsy and more straight.
Great video, thanks. Really informative and concise. I found some earlier today, but they were very white inside so I think they must've been the true chanterelle, I'll go back tomorrow and pick some. That omelette looks delicious by the way.
That's great! I hope you've got the real thing. Be sure to check the gills are false as well! I've since found some wetter specimens to be yellowed inside from the water! Jamie
Thanks. I have some that just came up in my woods again in the same place as last year. It's a good review tho for me. If you need a new home for the dog...I have room!!!
Great video! I think I let some true chanterelles get away last year because I wasn't convinced they weren't false. Feeling much more confident in myself going into my next search!
You sir have just earned yourself a new subscriber! Very lovely, thorough, and informative video. Thank you so much for sharing. I am learning about mushrooms that grow in Texas to hopefully be confident enough to be able to consume them one day once I am able to differentiate false ones. I appreciate the effort and detail you've put into making this video. Please continue to make more because I am definitely sticking around :D
@@JamieKunka I just started getting into mushrooms a few weeks ago when I spotted a bunch walking through my local forest and to get started I Googled edible mushrooms in Texas. The first and most common ones to pop up are Chanterelles, Morels, and Oysters. That's actually how I found your video!
@@catropractor that's awesome I'm glad you found the channel 😁 Id love to find a Morel but haven't seen any yet! Watch out for the false Morel, I think it's quite poisonous!
@@JamieKunka Yes me too! I read online they go for $30 a pound at Farmer's Markets! I would absolutely love it if you made more mushroom identification videos especially ones that show side by side comparisons of false and poisonous look alikes (I also don't mind if you just utilize pictures instead of finding the real life examples). I've noticed that this is a very specific niche on UA-cam that's yet to be fulfilled and I believe you are a great candidate 👍
Great video and explaining the difference between the two mushrooms. I’m in USA, Alabama, and found a large area of chanterelles in the national forest. I’m glad you made the video so I can be sure that they are the correct kind. Again, thanks 😊
I made the mistake of eating these without cooking them long enough. These are my symptoms as they occured Day 1 - 3 hours after consuming, nausea & vomiting..went to sleep. Day 2- woke feeling nausea, anxiety, vertigo, stomach pain. Muscle cramps and spasms starting at extremities. Day 3 - muscle spasms and vertigo all day as well as waves of nausea and anxiety. Spasms moving to larger muscles while leaving previously affected muscles sore. Day 4- unsettling kidney pain, whole body sore and stiff from spasms. Day 5- felt normal relieved
Thanks. I thought I had some false Chanterelles mixed in with my other Chanterelles as they were not nearly as irregular around the outer edge. but the were paper white on the inside and they had that small ruffled center part.
Jamie Kunka they were eaten last night with garlic, pancetta, red onion, pepper, fresh tomatoes and scrambled egg. Delicious but terrifying to eat because I was so anxious I’d picked false ones haha
@@Super_tramp142 I remember that exact feeling the first time I ate them when I was younger! I still always think of the old mushroom adage... "There are old mushroom hunters and there are the bold mushroom hunters, but there are no old bold mushroom hunters"
That's a good question! The false gills are quite subtle on some of the Chanterelles and on other chanterelles they look very veiny and nothing like gills. Perhaps I'm wrong but I think the Chanterelle is the only mushroom with false gills! Next time they both pop up together ill try and do a more in depth comparison 😁
Honestly I was just curious about it since I searched up mushrooms because my friend picked up one( not this mushroom tho) very informative and useful.. will definitely tried to find some!
Nice one, man - good to know that the hundreds of fungi I found in a pine wood today were false chanterelle. I was suspicious so I left them and scoured UA-cam for a decent ID video - that's for that.
when I saw this excellent video I recalled saying to you in January that it would be hard to get a Chanterelle wrong. You were too polite to put me in my place. It seems the false ones are probably OK, so that's good. Great video on Ceps too. I presume you filmed it last year, as August would surely be very early. No sign of any here in Middle England.
I have heard recently that the false ones are thought of as edible but uninteresting or something along those lines! Filmed the ceps yesterday actually! Been finding a lot of them up hear at the moment actually. Literally tripping over them often!
@@JamieKunka Well I am surprised . When I saw your video I cycled through the local woods to look about but there is nothing happening here. You must get a very early start to the season up there. We get mainly Suillus luteus (Sticky Bun) of the cep group when they are out.
Hi Bill, that big mushroom is an Orange Birch Bolete. Quite easy to identify. Personally I think it's really tasty and adds a great texture for dishes. I have another video about it on my channel. I've heard not everyone gets in with it so if you find one make sure to cook it thoroughly.
I always check the veins. To me, they are not false gills, which run straight and deep. The chanterelle veins bulge from the surface and branch out continuously. You have to be careful. I have great trouble with the boletes because of lack of knowledge so I leave them alone. Thanks for the great video.
Good video man. Now I noticed you didn’t cut them at the base and pulled them. Which i cut all mine at the base and had none back the following year so not sure if it messes with the mycelium that much what do you think?
I have read that the exposed cut stump can lead to some kind of pathogenic infection. Also I guess you get more mudroom and it's important for positive ID to get the whole thing.
That fart, tho 😆 Edit: ok, that was probly a bee. Lol this was a great video! Awesome omlet and your cabin in the woods stole my heart! Plus ur doggy's expression mid omlet 😅 subscribed!
Loads of Chanterelles in the highlands at the mo, a fair few false ones too. Looks like there is a run of late ceps coming up at the moment which is good news. Once you learn to spot a false chanterelle you can recognise them without breaking step. It's usually the colour that gives them away but they also look 'wrong'. Try roasting your chanterelles next time, they cook wonderfully this way. Same with boletes.. Off to the woods tomorrow to see what I can find.
You should feel blessed that is a wonderful dog, I have a Australian Shepard that behaves just like him. We are in the woods everyday. It's a good thing to be owned by a great dog, it's something not everyone gets.
00:45 False Chanterelle shape
01:04 False Chanterelle gills
01:30 False Chanterelle interior
02:35 False Chanterelle smell
03:16 True Chanterelle location
03:35 True Chanterelle shape
04:00 False Vs True comparison
04:48 Colour difference
04:57 Flesh difference
05:20 Close up comparison
05:38 Smell comparison
6:37 Omelette making
00:40 Farts on live TV
whats the latin name of the false chantrelle?
@@jaggedbrain Hygrophoropsis Aurantiaca
So I think quite a lot of people eat them in Europe and South America. I do not know of any severe reactions taken to the false chanterelle apart from gastric upset. There have been some claims that they are halucinagenic but I believe that has now been disproven. My good friends ate quite a lot once by mistake and did not suffer any symptoms. However there is a comment somewhere for this video in which a UA-cam user reports some strange symptoms after eating some. In many text books and so on they are just classed as inedible. Citing that they do not have a pleasant taste and nothing else. However the false chanterelle has high levels of a sugar alchohol that could cause some temporary gastric distress.
I love how your puppy only wants to play
It’s not play. That’s a working dog.. it wants a job..
A friend of mine found these in Georgia, USA, in his yard and we used your video to identify false from true. Thanks for your help. :)
Love how it turned into a video about recognizing perfect sticks at 5:52 xD
Thank you. Very clear how to differentiate between false and true!!!🙏👍
Brilliant video thank you. I've got a patch near me and I've been wondering about them for years. It's really helpful to see the false and the true chanterelle compared side by side and feature by feature. I'm subscribing
Your very welcome. I hope you enjoy them!
Thank you!! Will be saving this and heading back to my woods. Wish me luck, lots of orange out there this morning!
Lovely boarder collie. Awesome dogs.
He loves to go foraging 😄
@@JamieKunka ... Does he sniff out the hard to find mushrooms for you?😉 I see people are training dogs in the UK now to sniff out truffles 😁 they smell nicer than pig... I'd love my dog to be able to smell out the Morel's and Trumpets, that are so hard to find😊
@@vadaminot429 Quite a few years back I had trained one of my old German pointers to bark when he found chantarelles, he thought it was great fun and it was really useful and a big help for me to find chantarelles.
However it made him totally useless as a hunting dog for forest birds such as wood grouse/capercaillie, luckily I don't have any of those on my hunting grounds, but it was a little embarrassing to explain the reason why I had to turn down invites from my friends to bring my dog and go hunting. He was still very useful in the farmlands on the field hunting for pheasants.
Great video. I'll remember what to look for now if I should happen upon them. Thanks!
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Very helpful video. Thank you. Found some false ones in the woods here in Germany. Your video clinched it. Learnt something today.
Man this is a great channel! So happy I came across it, thank you for the very clear visuals
Your very welcome!
Thsnk you. Very informative. We even have them in North Central Florida. None at my house. inedibles.
Beautiful chants. Great video
Found your video today while searching for information to confirm my identification of False Chanterelles that popped up in the backyard today. I see that you setup the tripod and camera to frame a Dyer's Polypore (Phaeolus schweinitzii?) in the foreground of the shot at 3:12. Nice touch, as additional species always add interest to fungal (as contrasted to viral 😆🤭) videos.
Excellent, thorough video, thanks
Thanks! Terrific explanation. And I love your dog!
The most helpful video I've seen, thank you!
Yesterday I collected a whole bunch of chanterelles but wasn't sure if they were real or not...
Been to Windermere, found so many today! Best time spent in the rain! Ready for lunch tomorrow :) thanks for informative video , Jamie!
Your very welcome! That's great, it's been slim pickings up here in Scotland! I think they haven't liked the weather recently 😂
This is amazingly helpful. Just started foraging around 10,000 feet in Colorado. This really gives us hope and excitement. Just ate some flat top coral mushrooms that we foraged today. They were so delicious.
I'm glad it was helpful. Those corals sounds lovely!
Thank you for the knowledge. I will remember
Thank your, really helpful!...we have some growing in our yard, in northeast Georgia, usa.
Glad it was helpful!
Great explanation! Something to add - true ones have thicker stems that are a bit more strong, curved and not so straight, while false ones are thin, flimsy and more straight.
Great observation!
wonderful comparison of the two. thank you
Great video, thanks. Really informative and concise. I found some earlier today, but they were very white inside so I think they must've been the true chanterelle, I'll go back tomorrow and pick some.
That omelette looks delicious by the way.
That's great! I hope you've got the real thing. Be sure to check the gills are false as well! I've since found some wetter specimens to be yellowed inside from the water! Jamie
Just discovered your channel. Wonderful video! thanks so much from Alabama USA.
Thanks Cindy! Glad you enjoyed it 😁
Do you post much anymore
I will soon I’ve just been a bit short of time recently! 😁
Excellent, great video 👍
While a bit blurry, this video is one of the best I've seen showing and telling the difference. It's all in the folds, baby lol
this was really helpful man, thank you. I found a huge patch today and was looking for a great quick systematic way of identifying. You're the man!
Thanks David! Enjoy your chanterelles!
Very instructive and many thanks indeed .
Glad you found it helpful!
Thanks. I have some that just came up in my woods again in the same place as last year. It's a good review tho for me. If you need a new home for the dog...I have room!!!
Great video! I think I let some true chanterelles get away last year because I wasn't convinced they weren't false. Feeling much more confident in myself going into my next search!
Oh no! Hope you bag some this year 😋
Best video identifying chanterelles.
Great informative video. Definitely deserving of more than 80 subscribers.
Thanks very much ill have to make some more foraging videos soon now its the season!
Such a good video. Thank you. The Chanterelle's are amazing in eggs!!
Your very welcome!
You sir have just earned yourself a new subscriber! Very lovely, thorough, and informative video. Thank you so much for sharing. I am learning about mushrooms that grow in Texas to hopefully be confident enough to be able to consume them one day once I am able to differentiate false ones. I appreciate the effort and detail you've put into making this video. Please continue to make more because I am definitely sticking around :D
Thanks! I'm glad your enjoying the videos. Do you know if you get Chanterelle in Texas?
@@JamieKunka I just started getting into mushrooms a few weeks ago when I spotted a bunch walking through my local forest and to get started I Googled edible mushrooms in Texas. The first and most common ones to pop up are Chanterelles, Morels, and Oysters. That's actually how I found your video!
@@catropractor that's awesome I'm glad you found the channel 😁 Id love to find a Morel but haven't seen any yet! Watch out for the false Morel, I think it's quite poisonous!
@@JamieKunka Yes me too! I read online they go for $30 a pound at Farmer's Markets! I would absolutely love it if you made more mushroom identification videos especially ones that show side by side comparisons of false and poisonous look alikes (I also don't mind if you just utilize pictures instead of finding the real life examples). I've noticed that this is a very specific niche on UA-cam that's yet to be fulfilled and I believe you are a great candidate 👍
Thank you this is very helpful. I have been finding chanterelles here in Kansas and eating them. Dont think I have.come across any false ones yet.
Great video and explaining the difference between the two mushrooms. I’m in USA, Alabama, and found a large area of chanterelles in the national forest. I’m glad you made the video so I can be sure that they are the correct kind. Again, thanks 😊
I’m glad you found it useful! It always nice having peace of mind!
You have excellent content. Truly appreciate your knowledge!
Thank you very much.This video is very usefully!!!Bt tje way...ypur dog is gorgeous!!!I.love Koly !!!
Is it a thing to thump the mushroom before you pick it? I heard to make spores airborne for next year.
Definitely! And put them in a basket with lots of holes in it!
Great video. Thanks!
I made the mistake of eating these without cooking them long enough. These are my symptoms as they occured
Day 1 - 3 hours after consuming, nausea & vomiting..went to sleep.
Day 2- woke feeling nausea, anxiety, vertigo, stomach pain. Muscle cramps and spasms starting at extremities.
Day 3 - muscle spasms and vertigo all day as well as waves of nausea and anxiety. Spasms moving to larger muscles while leaving previously affected muscles sore.
Day 4- unsettling kidney pain, whole body sore and stiff from spasms.
Day 5- felt normal relieved
You and your dog are adorable.
Thanks. I thought I had some false Chanterelles mixed in with my other Chanterelles as they were not nearly as irregular around the outer edge. but the were paper white on the inside and they had that small ruffled center part.
Thanks to this video, I now know the gold mine I foraged on a near cliff face today was not in vane!
Extreme Chanterelling!
Jamie Kunka they were eaten last night with garlic, pancetta, red onion, pepper, fresh tomatoes and scrambled egg. Delicious but terrifying to eat because I was so anxious I’d picked false ones haha
@@Super_tramp142 I remember that exact feeling the first time I ate them when I was younger! I still always think of the old mushroom adage... "There are old mushroom hunters and there are the bold mushroom hunters, but there are no old bold mushroom hunters"
Nice video... off to check my Chanterelle.
Your video was great! I’ve just started foraging so these tips are very helpful, thankyou 💖
Thanks! I think it’s always helpful to see the differences close up 😀
Great video! I found a false and didn't know the difference, now i do thanks!
Glad it was useful!
Lovely vid. Can't wait to find some down here in the south and make an omelette. Thank you for the information about the two.
Hope you find some soon for a tasty Omlette
How quickly can you reharvest after pickin?
Very helpful, thank you!!
Your welcome 😁
Great video and I love your home!
is it False chanterelle Hygrophoropsis aurantiaca ?
thanks for direct clear info, not grandstanding and jabber as with so many!
That's what I was going for!
do you have any videos on gill styles? I am new to foraying// mycology, and would love to know about the false gill vs true gill.
That's a good question! The false gills are quite subtle on some of the Chanterelles and on other chanterelles they look very veiny and nothing like gills. Perhaps I'm wrong but I think the Chanterelle is the only mushroom with false gills! Next time they both pop up together ill try and do a more in depth comparison 😁
Very informative , thank you.
That was great 👍 very informative 👏
Honestly I was just curious about it since I searched up mushrooms because my friend picked up one( not this mushroom tho) very informative and useful.. will definitely tried to find some!
Nice one, man - good to know that the hundreds of fungi I found in a pine wood today were false chanterelle.
I was suspicious so I left them and scoured UA-cam for a decent ID video - that's for that.
Well done sir. Good informative video. I'll be watching more for sure.
Thanks, I'm glad you found it useful 😁
great video, thanks for the clarity
Thank you so much 😍
This helped! Thank you very much!!
Your welcome!
when I saw this excellent video I recalled saying to you in January that it would be hard to get a Chanterelle wrong. You were too polite to put me in my place. It seems the false ones are probably OK, so that's good. Great video on Ceps too. I presume you filmed it last year, as August would surely be very early. No sign of any here in Middle England.
I have heard recently that the false ones are thought of as edible but uninteresting or something along those lines! Filmed the ceps yesterday actually! Been finding a lot of them up hear at the moment actually. Literally tripping over them often!
@@JamieKunka Well I am surprised . When I saw your video I cycled through the local woods to look about but there is nothing happening here. You must get a very early start to the season up there. We get mainly Suillus luteus (Sticky Bun) of the cep group when they are out.
@@borisacat5068 I think the unusually humid, warm and wet weather followed by a temperature drop must have done it!
@@JamieKunka ... I'm just starting to find them in North America 😃 a few different kinds and I'm excited kinda new to me this wild mushrooming.
@@vadaminot429 That's awesome, what kind of Chanterelles have you found so far? I really want to find the Trumpet Chanterelle one day.
Great video. Thanks
Very glad your enjoyed it 😁
Excellent vid - thank you (also to the editor!)
Are the false ones poisonous ?
Here in Orego n same thing dry summer and lots of rain in september and ,ore mushrooms than ever!
I really appreciate videos like these thank you
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Well explained. Thank u
What a fine well behaved dog. You did a good job training and raising him/her.
Thanks! Yes he’s a really great companion! 😊
Thanks Jamie very informative and will apply to foraging Chanterelle mushrooms in Eastern Canada where I live.
Thanks! this was of great aid 🌞
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HI Jamie enjoyed your video , can you name the big mushroom at the end you were chopping up cant quite make it out .
Hi Bill, that big mushroom is an Orange Birch Bolete. Quite easy to identify. Personally I think it's really tasty and adds a great texture for dishes. I have another video about it on my channel. I've heard not everyone gets in with it so if you find one make sure to cook it thoroughly.
@@JamieKunka Thanks Jamie
I always check the veins. To me, they are not false gills, which run straight and deep. The chanterelle veins bulge from the surface and branch out continuously. You have to be careful. I have great trouble with the boletes because of lack of knowledge so I leave them alone. Thanks for the great video.
Good video man. Now I noticed you didn’t cut them at the base and pulled them. Which i cut all mine at the base and had none back the following year so not sure if it messes with the mycelium that much what do you think?
I have read that the exposed cut stump can lead to some kind of pathogenic infection. Also I guess you get more mudroom and it's important for positive ID to get the whole thing.
I might go try to find some Chantelle’s tomorrow after work . This helps a lot
Good luck!
Unfortunately I didn’t get a chance to hunt for chanterelles two days ago . The next morning it froze !
Thanks for the tips. Love, love, love the dog! ❤
A mushroom foraging trip isn't the same without him 😁
That fart, tho 😆
Edit: ok, that was probly a bee. Lol this was a great video! Awesome omlet and your cabin in the woods stole my heart! Plus ur doggy's expression mid omlet 😅 subscribed!
It's a fly 🙉
@@JamieKunka sorry, jamie your video is awesome. I myself have never been confident enough to identify chanterelles on my own. This is very helpful.
I hope it helps and you manage to find some 😁
Nice doggie. Thanks for the vid.
Ok but false chanterelles look quite a lot like red ones 🥲 how do you differentiate those
What a great comprehensive explanation. Only downside? The Chanterelles I harvested this morning....are not Chanterelles........!
Hope you find some real ones next time!
Thanks mate, needed this info.
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Very. Useful that you 👍
i found a site saying false chanterelles are poisonous i thought they just taste bitter and are fine to eat? some reports say they can be psychedelic
Really helpful video
Funny how the chanteral has false gills
Thanks for the video bud, I thought I just hit the jack pot. You saved me a few hours on the loo!!
That happend to me also the first time I went chant hunting. I only realised when they were in the pan and didn't smell right 😂
Loads of Chanterelles in the highlands at the mo, a fair few false ones too. Looks like there is a run of late ceps coming up at the moment which is good news. Once you learn to spot a false chanterelle you can recognise them without breaking step. It's usually the colour that gives them away but they also look 'wrong'. Try roasting your chanterelles next time, they cook wonderfully this way. Same with boletes.. Off to the woods tomorrow to see what I can find.
Thanks I'll give roasting them a try next time. Just spotted some in a forest yesterday so might go on a forage excursion.
What brand is your wood stove?
It's the Aarow Fires Stratford! I love it. Super easy to light and takes any fuel well.
I have never looked into mushrooms until know but I’m fascinated. Tell me more!
hi from france!
scotland seems to be a very nice place. great video!
You should feel blessed that is a wonderful dog, I have a Australian Shepard that behaves just like him. We are in the woods everyday. It's a good thing to be owned by a great dog, it's something not everyone gets.
Great video as usual. Maybe we meet one day in the woods.
Excellent!
That omelet could feed either you, or a family of four LOL
Going hunting tomorrow, so wanted the lesson. Thanks!
Thank you!
Your welcome
Great video thanks (your dog is way cool guessing Boarder Collie) thanks!
Yes! A crazy Scottish border collie 😁
@@JamieKunka I had a border collie smarter than me by a mile...LOL
Don't recall it being mentioned--real chanterelles are stiff. False ones are floppy and bend easily.
Thank you Very useful! What is the real name of the false chanterelle?
Hygrophoropsis aurantiaca