Powdery Brittlegill (Russula Parazurea) – Identification

Powdery Brittlegill / Summer / Autumn / Edible

The powdery brittlegill is a medium-sized mushroom with a grey to blue cap covered in a powdery coating. white to cream Brittle gills and a white stipe that snaps easily.


Scientific Name

Russula Parazurea


Family

Russulaceae


Habitat

Mixed Woodland but mainly broad leaved, especially oak or beech but occasionally with pine.


Description

A medium-sized mushroom with a grey to blue cap covered in a powdery coating. white to cream Brittle gills and a white stipe that snaps easily.


Identifying Features:


Cap:

Matte grey, blue sometimes with a hint of green around the edge of the cap. Can feel a bit greasy when wet. The powdery bloom can wash off of the cap in heavy rain

Lukas from London, England, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Stem:

White and snaps like chalk


Gills:

Adnexed, crowded white/cream gills attached to the stem. Brittle when touched.

Elsa, CC BY 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Adnexed gills


Smell:

Mushroomy smell. This mushroom can give a peppery taste but shouldn’t be hot like chilli.


Spores:

White to cream


Known hazards

Other Russulas. see the four step test to check for safe Russulas.


Potential lookalikes

Other blue/grey Russulas like the Charcoal Burner, but these are edible if tested with the four step test.

-Snap – Does the stem snap like a piece of chalk?
-Flick – Do the gills break when you flick them gently?
-Peel – Does the skin on the cap peel away?
-Taste–  this should only be done when you have gone through the other steps and are confident that you have a Russula. If a tiny amount placed on the tongue a chilli like burn or tingle means the mushroom is poisonous but a pleasant mushroomy taste means it is edible.

Find our Russula Guide here


Uses

As a delicious additive to food check out some of our mushroom recipes to see what you could use this for!


In food

Good and fleshy could be used as a feature in a big meal or too add flavour to a soup or stew.


 

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