The white mushroom (Agaricus bisporus), also called the common mushroom, cultivated mushroom, and called champignon de Paris in France, is the most widely cultivatedmushroom in the world. Virtually every grocery store in the western world carries this mushroom (in canned and fresh preparations). An agaric, its gills are often left on in preparations. It can be found cooked on pizzas and casseroles, raw on salads, and in various forms in a variety of dishes.
Portobello mushroom is a marketing name for a large brown strain of the same fungus. Portobellos are left to mature and take on a toadstool-shaped appearance before picking. During maturation, their color darkens and their flavor changes.
A familiar wild mushroom, the meadow mushroom, can be found throughout much of the United States. However, care must be taken, as it resembles the immature stage of a number of deadly poisonous Amanita species.
Growers of white mushrooms often must watch out for the red-capped weed Panaeolus (Panaeolus subbalteatus), a hallucinogenic mushroom that grows in the same environment. Panaeolus subbalteatus is found on manure and rotting hay in the wild, and is frequently found in the compost used by white mushroom cultivators. With its differently shaped reddish-brown cap, it does not look similar to the white mushroom, which greatly eases finding and removing it from the crop.
La température à l'intérieur des tas atteint de 70 à 75 °C sous l'effet des bactéries et des champignons qui décomposent la matière animale et végétale et transforment des composés azotés inorganiques en composés organiques, composés qui fournissent les nutriments nécessaires aux champignons.
La température du compost descend ensuite à environ 25 °C. Du blanc de champignon est introduit dans le compost et étalé sur la surface.
De nouveaux champignons (« pousses » ou « percées ») apparaissent à un intervalle de 7 à 11 jours.