Chanterelles with Spaetzle Recipe - Chanterelles Recipe (2024)

Home | Foraging | Mushrooms | Lies, Lust and a Golden Treasure

5 from 1 vote

By Hank Shaw

February 01, 2012 | Updated December 29, 2020

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Chanterelles with Spaetzle Recipe - Chanterelles Recipe (2)

Last week I went to one of my favorite spots in the East Bay to find blewits, a lovely purple mushroom that smells like lilacs and tastes a lot like regular button mushrooms. I’d found them at this spot last year, and since we finally got some rain the week before, I thought I’d have plenty to show the foraging class I was to teach that night at the Vacaville Public Library.

But as I walked around the area, I noticed something: No mushrooms. None. Not even LBMs, the Little Brown Mushrooms few of us can identify. Weird. I went right for the area I knew I should find blewits, but they were not there. The only thing I found was a shabby littlesuillus;edible, but certainly nothing to write home about. I picked it and put it in my pack. At least I’d have something to show the class.

I wandered over to a grove of old oaks. I’d seen agaricus mushrooms there in the past, and maybe they’d be around this time. But again, nothing. Damn. I was standing there, looking around, when I caught a flash of orangey-gold at my feet. No way. Couldn’t be… I bent down and brushed away the duff.

Chanterelles with Spaetzle Recipe - Chanterelles Recipe (3)

What the hell? Chanterelles? Huge ones, too! I could not believe my eyes. I cut one to make sure. Looked like a chantie. I smelled it, and inhaled that citrusy apricot aroma all chanterelle lovers adore. Definitely a chantie.

I furtively stuffed the mushrooms into wax bags in my pack, then looked for more. All around me I saw mushrumps, lumps in the duff where the chanterelles were pushing up. A secret bonanza! I was bending down to cut another when a biker rode by. “Looking for mushrooms?” he asked. Yep. “Find any?” I told him it was pretty grim, that I’d found one or two but that was it.

So there you have it: I lied to feed my lust. It gets worse. I had half my pack filled when an elderly couple walked up the trail toward me. I’d spotted them a fair distance away, so I stopped what I was doing, pulled out my cellphone and pretended to send text messages. I kept a close eye on them as they ambled past. Only when they were long gone did I continue picking.

I am not alone in my deceit. The person who first told me about this site, which is fairly large, said in no uncertain terms that there were no chanterelles here. I kept running his words through my head as I picked. Lying bastard. Surely he was keeping the secret to himself. Too bad for him I just whacked his spot.If I sound harsh, or a little like Gollum from Lord of the Rings, you’re not too far off. Those mushrooms were precious to me. Precious, I tell you…

Try not to think ill of me. Even though the pursuit of food from the wild is an inherently uplifting and hopeful endeavor, it can also evoke the darker side of our nature. There is not an angler, hunter or forager among us who has not lied — or at the very least obfuscated — when asked about our favorite spots. If I had to put money on it, I reckon that the first lie ever told, eons ago, was about where the good hunting grounds were.

Why lie? Because way back when, our band/tribe/clan’s survival might have depended on it. Our success in the field depends on having spots that are either so rich that they cannot easily be depleted, or are kept secret enough so that only a few know their whereabouts. If I told you where my chanterelle spot was, you could go there and pillage it the way I very well might have to the dude who told me about the spot in the first place.

Did I betray him by picking those chanties? Not the way I see it. If he’d told me that it was his secret spot for chanterelles, and to respect that, I would have. But if he knew that chanterelles grew there, they were so precious to him that he lied about it, too. A vicious circle.

Lies or no lies, it was an awesome haul, at least for me. In less than an hour, I’d picked 6.5 pounds of very large, very firm chanterelles. Absolutely beautiful mushrooms.

Chanterelles with Spaetzle Recipe - Chanterelles Recipe (4)

The first thing I did when I got back was make a big batch of pickled chanterelles. Chanterelles do not dry very well, so you need to either pickle them or cook-and-freeze them if you want to preserve your haul. I gave some to my friend Elise, and am planning to use a bunch of them for a wild duck jaeger schnitzel this weekend.

But I had to cook some right away. I’ve been toying with a particular chanterelle recipe for months now that stems from a dish of chanterelles, pasta and pine nuts I ate at Incanto in San Francisco. I tried to replicate it first with orecchiette pasta. It was good, but not great. I then ditched the pasta and made a version with white polenta I’d gotten from my friend Scott at the Sausage Debauchery. That dish was great.

Chanterelles with Spaetzle Recipe - Chanterelles Recipe (5)

So I’d planned on posting that version here at some point, but when I saw how deeply golden-orange this batch of chanterelles was, I thought I’d play with the color and serve it not with white polenta, but with pumpkin spaetzle. To that I added homemade guanciale, pine nuts from Nevada, butter, onions, garlic and parsley.

A wonderful plate of food. Lots of different textures and colors, highlighted by the bright orange of the chanterelles and the muted yellow-orange of the spaetzle. A tiny splash of sherry vinegar at the end brightened everything up. I suppose I could have plated it super fancy-like, but Holly and I just wanted big bowls of the stuff. We ate more than a pound of chanterelles at one sitting — and that ain’t no lie.

5 from 1 vote

Chanterelles with Spaetzle

This is a recipe to celebrate the chanterelle, but if you use other mushrooms the world will not end. I like the play of orange-and-orange from the chanterelles and the pumpkin spaetzle, but you could use store-bought or another spaetzle recipe if you don't have pumpkin or squash puree handy. And in the absence of guanciale, get thick-cut pancetta or bacon. The essence of this dish is the play of flavors and textures. Chewy, meaty cured pork, savory and aromatic chanterelles, soft, rich spaetzle, the dense chew of the pine nuts, plus a touch of bitter from the parsley and sour from the sherry vinegar. Have all your ingredients ready because the dish comes together fast.

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Course: Pasta

Cuisine: German

Servings: 4 people

Author: Hank Shaw

Prep Time: 20 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 20 minutes minutes

Total Time: 40 minutes minutes

Ingredients

  • 3 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 1/4 pound guanciale or thick-cut pancetta or bacon, cut into batons
  • 1 medium onion, sliced thin
  • 4 garlic cloves, slivered
  • 1 pound chanterelle mushrooms, cleaned and cut into large pieces
  • 1/4 cup pine nuts, toasted
  • 1/2 recipe pumpkin spaetzle, 8-12 ounces
  • 1/2 cup chopped parsley
  • Salt and black pepper to taste
  • A splash of sherry, white wine or cider vinegar

Instructions

  • Melt the butter in a large saute pan over medium heat. Add the guanciale batons and fry slowly until crispy. Remove and set aside in a bowl. Add the onion slices, turn the heat to high and saute until the edges begin to brown. Add the garlic and cook another 30 seconds to a minute; don't let the garlic burn. Remove the onions, garlic and excess butter into the bowl with the guanciale.

  • Put the mushrooms into the pan and cook them over medium-high heat until they give up their water. This may take a few minutes. My chanterelles were pretty wet inside, so I got a lot of water. When it is mostly boiled away, add back the guanciale, onions and garlic (with the fat in the bowl), plus the pine nuts and spaetzle. Toss to combine and cook for 1 minute. Mix in the parsley and cook another minute.

  • Serve hot in bowls with some black pepper and a splash of vinegar.

Nutrition

Calories: 312kcal | Carbohydrates: 13g | Protein: 7g | Fat: 26g | Saturated Fat: 10g | Cholesterol: 41mg | Sodium: 205mg | Potassium: 774mg | Fiber: 5g | Sugar: 3g | Vitamin A: 894IU | Vitamin C: 13mg | Calcium: 42mg | Iron: 5mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Tried this recipe? Tag me today!Mention @huntgathercook or tag #hankshaw!

Categorized as:
Essays and Stories, Foraging, Mushrooms, Recipe

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About Hank Shaw

Hey there. Welcome to Hunter Angler Gardener Cook, the internet’s largest source of recipes and know-how for wild foods. I am a chef, author, and yes, hunter, angler, gardener, forager and cook. Follow me on Instagram and on Facebook.

Read More About Me

Chanterelles with Spaetzle Recipe - Chanterelles Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What spices go well with chanterelles? ›

GENERAL COOKING SUGGESTIONS

Their firm texture and strong earthiness go well with herbs like sage, rosemary, tarragon, and thyme. They are good in stews with rich stocks and go very well with roasted corn and with mild, creamy goat cheese.

What are the best conditions for chanterelles? ›

Like most mushrooms, chanterelles tend to avoid areas that are either too dry or too bright, opting instead for moister, canopied forests that provide nice, filtered light and shade for fungus to thrive. Chanterelles thrive in older forests or areas heavily populated with coniferous trees after a rainfall.

What is the best way to preserve chanterelles? ›

If you want to store mushrooms, keep them in the refrigerator in a paper—not plastic—bag. Chanterelles store longer than most mushrooms—up to ten days. Or, you can give them a quick saute in butter until they release their moisture and freeze them for up to a year.

Do you wash chanterelles before cooking? ›

Clean chanterelles require just a little brushing, but from some habitats they're dirty and must be washed. Forget all that nonsense about never washing mushrooms because the flavor will wash away. The chanterelle in your hand probably took 1 to 3 weeks to grow and has already gone through plenty of rain baths.

What flavor goes with chanterelle? ›

Pairing: Chanterelles pair well with various ingredients, such as garlic, onions, fresh herbs like thyme and parsley, cream, white wine, and mild cheeses. They can be used in dishes like pasta, risottos, omelets, and even as toppings for pizzas.

Do you use the stems of chanterelles? ›

They're prized for their delicate flavor. Both the stems and caps are edible. Nutritionally, chanterelle mushrooms are high in fiber, and contain vitamin B and D–and some trace minerals, as well.

What month is best for chanterelles? ›

The best time to forage for chanterelles is during late summer and early fall, typically from July to October.

Why are chanterelles so expensive? ›

The main reason for chanterelles' $224-per-pound price is that they're infamously difficult to cultivate. They mostly grow in the wild, meaning they must be foraged, and they require a period of heavy rainfall in a coniferous forest, followed by several days of continuous heat and high humidity.

Can I freeze raw chanterelles? ›

Put the bag of mushrooms in the freezer. Alternatively, you can also freeze the mushrooms inside a freezer-safe storage container. Divide the mushrooms into smaller batches and put into separate freezer bags if you prefer. Your chanterelle mushrooms will last up to 6 months in the freezer.

Should fresh chanterelles be refrigerated? ›

Chanterelles keep best in the refrigerator in a sealed plastic container. Use paper towels to prevent the mushrooms from touching plastic. Change the paper towels when they become wet from condensation. The total time you can store chanterelles varies, depending on the condition of the mushrooms when they were picked.

Can you mistake chanterelles? ›

Unlike some edible mushrooms, the chanterelle can be a bit tricky to identify. Unfortunately, they are a few non-edible mushrooms that are commonly mistaken for chanterelles. These include the jack o'lanterns and the false chanterelle. Although neither of these mushrooms are fatal, neither are good for eating.

What is the best way to eat chanterelles? ›

You pan-fry them in a dry skillet for a bit before introducing butter, along with garlic if you wish, to finish the mushrooms and provide a soft, velvety mouthfeel with just a bit of crunch around the edges. Eat the chanterelles by themselves, in an omelet, or just spooned over a good steak.

How do you know when chanterelles are cooked? ›

Heat oil in a large skillet over high heat. Add chanterelles and cook for around 3 minutes or so, stirring occasionally, until they start to brown. If they release water - that's okay, just allow it to evaporate on its own. Reduce heat to medium-high.

Is it OK to eat chanterelles raw? ›

You can enjoy them raw or cooked, though most people prefer the flavor and texture of cooked chanterelle mushrooms. Dried chanterelle mushrooms can also be rehydrated by steeping them in hot water until they are soft. Chanterelle mushrooms make a great addition to your pasta sauces, pizzas, stuffings, or risottos.

What is the flavor profile of chanterelle? ›

A golden buttery yellow, chanterelle mushrooms are the most common edible wild mushroom around the globe. They have a very unique flavour compared to other mushrooms. Chanterelles are slightly fruity and can even have a hint of apricot or peach flavour, without the sweetness, of course.

What are three spices that pair with oregano? ›

Oregano. Herbs and Spices: Pairs really well with rosemary, thyme, basil, sage, nutmeg, cilantro, lemon zest, cumin, anise, coriander, cardamom, mint, and lemongrass.

What can chanterelles be confused with? ›

Unlike some edible mushrooms, the chanterelle can be a bit tricky to identify. Unfortunately, they are a few non-edible mushrooms that are commonly mistaken for chanterelles. These include the jack o'lanterns and the false chanterelle. Although neither of these mushrooms are fatal, neither are good for eating.

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