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Mushrooms and Our Culture of Fear: Caputo

Mushrooms and Our Culture of Fear: Caputo
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  • Mushrooms and Our Culture of Fear: Caputo

    Post #1 - May 25th, 2004, 8:30 pm
    Post #1 - May 25th, 2004, 8:30 pm Post #1 - May 25th, 2004, 8:30 pm
    Mushrooms and Our Culture of Fear: Caputo's, Elmwood Park

    In my home office, on one of my file cabinets, next to bottles of Ultimo-procured DaVinci olive oil and old Gorilla Gourmet DVDs that I've yet to inflict on friends and family, I have a plastic bag of dried morel mushrooms I bought in Seattle. I could eat them any time, but I kind of like the way they look.

    Tonight, one of my daughter's friends was up in my office, and he saw the mushrooms and said, "Ooh, do you eat those?" I affirmed that I intended to, someday, and he said, looking at me as though I were slightly daft, "How do you know they won't kill you." I did not answer. How the hell do you respond to a question like that?

    I like mushrooms a lot. I like the way they look, and I like how they taste, and I like the fact that something so damned delicious grows on death and decay. There's a lesson there, I'm sure, but that's not my point, which is that mushrooms are frequently scorned based on irrational fears. No doubt, the wrong mushrooms can make you very sick, and no sane person would ever randomly munch unrecognized fungi found on the forest floor, but this abiding aversion to mushrooms seems just another symptom of our culture of fear, a dumbass cowering mindset fueled by, for instance, tonight's headline on CNN.com: "Major Terror Attack Planned this Summer." How the hell do you respond to a threat like that. How in the name of Yahweh, Allah, etc., are we supposed to act on that information?! There's nothing you, I, or anyone can do differently, but it is certainly in the best interests of some to keep us fearful, unfocused and too fretful to think clearly. Warmongers are fearmongers.

    So anyway, after my daughter and her friends left, I went downstairs: the television was still on, and they had been watching "24" on Fox (America's Pravda); the subject was, of course, a deadly virus (a favorite fear). I sautéed some straw mushrooms I bought from Caputo's (79 cents a can, right next to register #3). The flavor was okay, but the mushrooms themselves were just so gorgeous, reddish brown caps glistening. Is it possible a dreaded toadstool might have slipped in, perhaps accidentally picked by an Asian farm worker, or even placed there by a revenge-seeking former Viet Cong? Sure, but I'm not going to worry about it, and I'm not certainly not going to let fear ruin my dinner. I turned off the television to enjoy my feast of fungus in peace.

    Caputo's Food Market
    2558 N Harlem Ave
    Elmwood Park
    (708) 453-0155,
  • Post #2 - May 25th, 2004, 8:50 pm
    Post #2 - May 25th, 2004, 8:50 pm Post #2 - May 25th, 2004, 8:50 pm
    David,

    Do yourself a favor and buy a delicious Oregon Pinot Noir to pair with a side dish of sauteed mushrooms. And maybe some Copper River salmon, as well. That's what Nancy and I did Saturday night.

    Life is good.

    Best,
    Al
  • Post #3 - May 27th, 2004, 6:52 pm
    Post #3 - May 27th, 2004, 6:52 pm Post #3 - May 27th, 2004, 6:52 pm
    David thanks for that mushroom story. I tend to think many human's have a general suspicion to mushrooms throughout most cultures. For instance, I've known plenty of Mexicans that think huitlacoche is disgusting. This suspicion can be overcome with education and experience, however it seems the current culture of fear and aversion to death here in the US adds to and feeds this (perhaps) natural inclination. Maybe this suspicion arises as a byproduct of collective humanity's past experiences with them, particularly with the psychedelic and toxic varieties of mushrooms. In Northern European cultures, shamanic use of the fly agaric mushroom was quite common and has influenced our modern myth of Santa Claus. There is a mystery surrounding the mushroom, that of death and of other worlds that one can either ignore or appreciate. As folks that enjoy mushrooms, we should do our best to expose others to the varieties and beauty of these great organisms.
  • Post #4 - May 27th, 2004, 7:52 pm
    Post #4 - May 27th, 2004, 7:52 pm Post #4 - May 27th, 2004, 7:52 pm
    donknotts wrote:In Northern European cultures, shamanic use of the fly agaric mushroom was quite common and has influenced our modern myth of Santa Claus


    Hey Don, I went to a lecture a few years ago given by Tom Volk, noted mycologist, and hosted by the Illinois Mycological Society (of which our beloved Cathy2 is the former President). Volk spoke about the connection, in coloration at the very least, between Santa Claus and the red/white and presumably psychedelic amarita muscaria. Here's an link to his site that features some amusing ornaments and other artifacts that join the mushroom and the famous Xmas shaman.

    http://botit.botany.wisc.edu/toms_fungi/dec99.html

    David

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