Boletus variipes

Buff/yellow-brown/brown cap often cracks & fissures with age & hot weather. White pores turn dingy yellow with age. Often bulbous stem is usually netted either white or brown.

SKU: Boletus variipes Categories: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Description

Genus: Boletus

Species: variipes

Tells: Buff/yellow/brown cap often cracks & fissures with age & hot weather. White pores age dingy yellow. Often bulbous stem usually netted but w/ white or brown.

Other Information: Often mistaken for B. edulis, variipes prefers leafy trees including oak, beech & aspen. NOTE: Variipes var. fagicola has a darker cap and stem.

Edibility: Choice.

Science Notes: Whole genome testing of the porcini clade has created questions about whether the name should be changed to the long forgotten name “B. leptocephalus.” The confusion apparently comes from mixed up labels at (or on their way to) the herbarium level.

CHEMICAL TESTS:

  • NH4OH (Ammonia): Cap skin turns dark amber with a purplish black zone. Cap flesh turns gray or has no reaction.
  • KOH: Cap skin turns dark amber with a purplish black zone. Cap flesh turns pinkish orange and then grayish.
  • FeSO4 (Iron Salts): Cap skin may turn a little olive, but not reliably. Cap flesh slowly turns pale gray or yellowish.

Links:

National Audubon Society Field guide to Mushrooms, Gary Lincoff 568 Mushrooms of West Virginia and the Central Appalachians 307 North American Boletes 168 167

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