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  2. Here's Why You Should Never Use Canned Chicken in a Baked ...

    www.aol.com/news/heres-why-never-canned-chicken...

    The canning process tends to take away a lot of the original flavor and some of the firmness of the chicken. Including canned chicken in a pasta recipe would imbue the entire dish with the ...

  3. Cream of mushroom soup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cream_of_mushroom_soup

    Cream of mushroom soup is a simple type of soup where a basic roux is thinned with cream or milk and then mushrooms or mushroom broth are added. In North America, it is a common canned condensed soup. Cream of mushroom soup is often used as a base ingredient in casseroles and comfort foods. This use is similar to that of a mushroom-flavored gravy.

  4. Laetiporus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laetiporus

    Laetiporus is a genus of edible mushrooms found throughout much of the world. Some species, especially Laetiporus sulphureus, are commonly known as sulphur shelf, chicken of the woods, the chicken mushroom, or the chicken fungus because it is often described as tasting like and having a texture similar to that of chicken meat.

  5. Master mix (PCR) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master_mix_(PCR)

    A master mix is a mixture containing precursors and enzymes used as an ingredient in polymerase chain reaction techniques in molecular biology. Such mixtures contain a mixture dNTPs (required as a substrate for the building of new DNA strands), MgCl 2, Taq polymerase (an enzyme required to building new DNA strands), a pH buffer and come mixed in nuclease-free water.

  6. Mushroom spawn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mushroom_spawn

    Definition of Spawn: Spawn is a type of medium present in mushroom tissue that propagates the fungus such as Trichoderma which is the root system of mushrooms. [5] Mycelium, or actively growing mushroom culture, is placed on a substrate—usually sterilized grains such as rye or millet—and induced to grow into those grains.

  7. Termitomyces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Termitomyces

    Termitomyces, the termite mushrooms, is a genus of basidiomycete fungi belonging to the family Lyophyllaceae. [3] All species in the genus are completely dependent on fungus-growing termites, the Macrotermitinae, to survive, and vice versa. [4]

  8. Suillus americanus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suillus_americanus

    Commonly known as the chicken fat mushroom, American suillus, it grows in a mycorrhizal association with eastern white pine and is found where this tree occurs in eastern North America and China. The mushroom can be recognized by the bright yellow cap with red to reddish-brown scales embedded in slime, the large yellow angular pores on the ...

  9. Grifola frondosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grifola_frondosa

    This is a very distinct mushroom except for its cousin, the black staining mushroom, which is similar in taste but rubbery. Edible species which look similar to G. frondosa include Meripilus sumstinei (which stains black), Sparassis spathulata [4] and Laetiporus sulphureus, another edible bracket fungus that is commonly called chicken of the woods or "sulphur shelf".