As most people know, mushrooms love dark places. You can find them growing in the dim recesses of forests or at the foot of old trees. But is that where we get most of the mushrooms that end up in our hearty risottos and juicy portabella sandwiches?
You would be forgiven for thinking that's the case, given the growing popularity of
mushroom hunting
Where, you might ask, is the fun in that?
While mushroom farming may not be as thrilling as fungi hunting, a 2014 video from the Web series "
How Does It Grow
The U.S. produces
900 million pounds
For that, thank the
Quakers
All in all, 98 percent of the mushrooms produced in the U.S. are your typical white and brown button mushrooms. And they grow in dark, humid and cramped "mushroom houses" — just the way the fungi like it.
Stacked inside the houses of
Phillips Mushroom Farm
What about the "exotic" mushrooms that have been making their way into fancy dishes at restaurants? You'd think they come from the wild, but those likely came from a farm, too, says Kathleen Preis, marketing manager at the
Mushroom Council
You see, species like the king trumpet, shiitake and oyster mushroom make up the other 2 percent of U.S.-produced edible fungi — about 18 million pounds' worth each year. Since the 1980s, when these mushrooms were first introduced into the American market, production has ramped up seven-fold to meet growing demand,
according
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