Yes, the stalk is edible. The entire button mushroom is commonly used in many recipes.
no.
Fungus and mushrooms can be eaten and some are edible but some are not.
None of the fungi/fungus groups are edible except edible ones of course.
yes
yes Some types like mushrooms. Not all mushrooms are edible though, some are poisonous.
Louise Freedman has written: 'Wild about mushrooms' -- subject(s): Cookery (Mushrooms), Edible Mushrooms, Cooking (Mushrooms), Edible mushrooms
no not all mushrooms are edible
J. T. Fletcher has written: 'Mushrooms' -- subject(s): Diseases and pests, Edible Mushrooms, Mushrooms, Edible
no.
Two mushrooms that have black edges on the tops are: Shaggy Mane - A large white cylinder-shaped mushroom with brown upturned shaggy scales. As it matures, the cap dissolves into a black, ink-like substance and leaves only the stalk. These mushrooms are edible, but always remember that poisonous mushrooms can often be mistaken for edible ones. Pamaepois castaneifolius - With a dark underside, this mushroom appears to have black edges. It is edible, but slightly hallucinogenic. It is bell-shaped when young and becomes hemispheric with age, ultimately becoming convex in shape.
A. B. Katende has written: 'Wild food plants and mushrooms of Uganda' -- subject(s): Edible Mushrooms, Edible Wild plants, Identification, Mushrooms, Edible, Plant names, Popular, Popular Plant names, Wild plants, Edible
11 types of mushrooms are edible.
Fungus and mushrooms can be eaten and some are edible but some are not.
Not to humans. Some other animals may eat the stalk.
R. P. Purkayastha has written: 'Indian edible mushrooms' -- subject(s): Edible Mushrooms, Identification
you could use 'fungus' which is a class of plants that include (Edible) mushrooms and toadstools (some of which may be not edible)
Many mushrooms need light to grow, and this includes nearly all edible types that are grown for sale in stores. It happens that the type that is most often sold, button mushrooms, is usually grown in the dark, and this variety includes Crimimi and Portobello mushrooms. Interestingly enough, however, mushrooms exposed to sunlight produce vitamin D, and this is especially true of button mushrooms. A person can get all the vitamin D needed each day by exposing a small button mushroom to sunlight for an hour or so and eating it.