Woolly Milkcap (Lactarius torminosus) Identification

Woolly Milkcap / Summer / Autumn / Poisonous

Through this guide we’re going to look at the key feautures to help identify the woolly milkcap mushroom.


Scientific Name

Lactarius torminosus


Family

Russulaceae


Habitat

Woods and heaths, usually with Birch


General Description

It has a cap 4-12cm across which is convex becoming funnel-shaped, margin inrolled and hairy.  The cap is pale salmon-buff to pale pink with deeper-coloured, indistinct, concentric bands.  The stem or stipe (30-80 x 10-20mm) is pale flesh-coloured to salmon; soon hollow, finely downy.  The gills are slightly decurrent, narrow; pale flesh-coloured to pale salmon.  The latex produced from cut or torn gills is white; taste hot and acrid.


Identifying Features for the Woolly Milkcap:

Cap:

Initially convex, then flat with a depressed centre, eventually funnel-shaped, concentrically zoned with oranges and pinks, sticky when wet, covered in woolly fibres which hang over the edge.  The edge of the cap is rolled inwards.

Luridiformis-CC-BY-3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Stem:

Cylindrical or tapering downward, paler than the cap, smooth, becoming hollow.

Jose-Angel-Urquia-Goitia-CC-BY-SA-4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Gills:

Pale pink, crowded, slightly decurrent, sometimes forked near the stem.  The milk is white.

Debivort-CC-BY-SA-3.0
Br00k963-CC-BY-SA-4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
dschigel-CC-BY-4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Smell:

Faint mushroomy smell


Spores:

White or slightly pink


Edibility of The Woolly Milkcap

The taste is hot and acrid and it is significantly poisonous raw when it is capable of causing oral blistering.  It can be eaten after boiling twice (throwing the water away after each boil), then salting down and is a popular edible species in Slavic countries, especially Russia.


Harvesting

Late summer and autumn.


Known hazards

Poisonous when raw and may cause oral blistering.


Potential lookalikes

Lactarius torminosus is one of the more easily identified milkcaps due to its colour scheme and woolliness, but there are still plenty of slightly hairy milkcaps you might mistake for it. For example, the Bearded Milkcap, Lactarius pubescens, is similar though paler and less woolly than the Woolly Milkcap.  Bearded Milkcap is also poisonous.

Jerzy-Opiola-CC-BY-SA-4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

References

here’s what first nature says about it

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