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On a plate, paint the bottom with pine nuts, and place warm chanterelles on top. Add the veal and sherry sauce to the mushrooms, and save half for the final step. Place one slice of comtè cheese ...
Clean and cut the chanterelles into small pieces, mix with chopped garlic and arrange on a baking sheet. Broil on high until golden brown. Grate almonds with microplane or food processor. Mix the veal stock and sweet sherry, and reduce on the stove by half. On a plate, paint the bottom with pine nuts, and place warm chanterelles on top.
Raw chanterelle mushrooms are 90% water, 7% carbohydrates, including 4% dietary fiber, 1.5% protein, and have negligible fat. A 100 gram reference amount of raw chanterelles supplies 38 kilo calories of food energy and the B vitamins , niacin and pantothenic acid , in rich content (20% or more of the Daily Value , DV), 27% DV of iron , with ...
Cantharellus cibarius (Latin: cantharellus, "chanterelle"; cibarius, "culinary") [2] is the golden chanterelle, the type species of the chanterelle genus Cantharellus. It is also known as girolle (or girole). [3] [4] Despite its characteristic features, C. cibarius can be confused with species such as the poisonous Omphalotus illudens.
The Cantharellaceae are a family of fungi in the order Cantharellales.The family contains the chanterelles and related species, a group of fungi that superficially resemble agarics (gilled mushrooms) but have smooth, wrinkled, or gill-like hymenophores (spore-bearing undersurfaces).
Cantharellus formosus, commonly known as the Pacific golden chanterelle, is a fungus native to the Pacific Northwest region of North America. It is a member of the genus Cantharellus along with other popular edible chanterelles. It was distinguished from C. cibarius in the 1990s. It is orange to yellow, meaty and funnel-shaped.
Turbinellus floccosus, commonly known as the scaly vase, or sometimes the shaggy, scaly, or woolly chanterelle, is a cantharelloid mushroom of the family Gomphaceae native to Asia and North America. It was known as Gomphus floccosus until 2011, [ 1 ] when it was found to be only distantly related to the genus's type species, G. clavatus .
Cantharellus roseocanus, commonly known as the rainbow chanterelle, [2] is a species of fungus in the family Cantharellaceae. Found in the Pacific Northwest region of North America, it was originally described in 1997 as a variety of Cantharellus cibarius , [ 3 ] and later promoted to distinct species status in 2012.