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The Foodie Report
Ruminations on food, cooking in and eating out in our area.


It's entirely possible to be a vegetarian in Porkopolis. Pop culture reporter Lauren Bishop blogs about products, recipes and restaurants she's tried for others who eat meat-free. E-mail her at lbishop@enquirer.com.


Nicci King is an unabashed foodie and the Lifestyle/Food editor in The Enquirer's features department. She loves to discover new food faves, and she's on a daily quest to answer one burning question: What's for dinner? E-mail her at nking@enquirer.com.


Enquirer Weekend editor Julie Gaw tends to order the same dish every time she eats at a restaurant, but periodically ventures out to discover something new and fabulous. After living in China, Hong Kong, the Philippines and Thailand for more than 8 years, she craves tasty Asian food. E-mail her at jgaw@enquirer.com.


Food/dining writer Polly Campbell loves every quirk and secret of Cincinnati's food personality, and is on a constant lookout for something good to eat. Keep an eye out for her restaurant picks, or see how she's progressing toward becoming famous for her apple pie. E-mail her at pcampbell@enquirer.com.


Communities reporter Rachel Richardson is on a mission to prove vegetarians eat more than lettuce. She shares both her graduate work on American food culture and food-related news.. E-mail her at rrichardson@enquirer.com.

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Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Grow your own morels?


A company selling "grow-your-own" morel mushroom kits e-mailed us here at The Enquirer. I remember looking at these last year, and the year before, and wondering, Do they really work? I grew up in White Oak with a yard full of huge oak trees and massive compost pile of leaves, and we always had morels growing up from underneath all the leaf litter, around May 15 every year. In case there is any doubt, let me make this clear: I LOVE MORELS. We'd soak them in water, then sprinkle the water (with the spores in it) outside, where they'd come up, to ensure more the following year. My dad would fry them up in butter in a cast-iron skillet, and I remember thinking, Mmmm, they taste like steak!


Can you replicate this with a kit? The web site doesn't really specify what climates it works in, though it does have a money-back guarantee. But from what I've heard, it's pretty hard to grow your own mushrooms - especially morels. Anyone have any experience with this?


(There are also a core group of dedicated morel hunters, but I just don't have the woodsy knowledge to know where to look. Unless, of course, you want to take me to your secret hunting spot...)


There's even a morel festival in Boyne City, Michigan. Mmm. Tasty... But if you're like me, you'll just buy yours from Madison's. Brian over there said they're coming in soon from California - maybe even this week!


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