Top 13 Mushroom Growing Substrates Recipes | How To Make & Use (2024)

Mushroom growing substrates provide specific nutrients for different types of mushrooms to grow. It is essentially the food for your mushroom to grow.

That being said, let’s look at what mushrooms eat…

  1. Lignin
  2. Cellulose
  3. Hemicellulose

These are the 3 main components found in the cell walls of plants and trees and this is what mushrooms feed on to grow. Additionally, they like to have the following:

  1. Small amounts of nitrogen (0.2% – 0.4%)
  2. Small amounts of minerals (K, P, Mg, Ca)
  3. pH levels in the range of 4 – 7 depending on the mushroom (almost neutral on the PH scale of 0 – 14)(you may find a PH tester useful)
  4. 50% – 70% water content in substrate

The reason I tell you this is because people come up with new mushroom growing substrate ideas all the time. For example, TR Davis came up with the idea of using a 50/50 mix of 1 lbs hardwood sawdust and 1 lbs soy bean hulls with 1.4 liters water (AKA Master Mix). This formula produces HUGE first flushes… better than almost any mix before it.

Certain mushroom will grow better on different types of mushroom growing substrates. I have other articles linked further down in this article that will tell you the best substrate to use for that specific mushroom based on what other people have tried.

Now that you understand what your mushroom growing substrates should contain let’s look at the most common mushroom substrate recipes:

Table of Contents

1) Supplemented Hardwood Sawdust

Top 13 Mushroom Growing Substrates Recipes | How To Make & Use (1)

5 pound block = 5 cups hardwood pellets, 1.4 liters water, 1 1/4 cups bran (wheat or oat). This would need to be sterilized in a pressure cooker.

If you don’t use the bran to supplement the sawdust you wouldn’t need to sterilize it because the wood pellets are already sterilized in the process of turning them into pellets.

Can be used to grow almost any type of mushroom, but best for mushrooms that specifically grow on dead trees in nature or for inoculating logs.

2) Psilocybe Fanaticus Technique (PF-Tek)

In 250 ml (half pint) mason jar put = 1/6 cup brown rice flour (BRF), 1/2 cup vermiculite & 60 ml water. Then put the jars into a pressure cooker at 15 PSI for 45 minutes.

The PF-Tek method is good for making small amounts of mushrooms but isn’t designed to make big mushrooms and they will tend to be much smaller. The majority of mushrooms can grow on the PF-Tek substrate.

This one is a favorite among psilocybe cubensis growers (growing cubensis in the United States is a federal crime).

3) Straw

Straw chopped into 3 to 4 inch lengths (use a weed wacker in a 55 gallon barrel). Can be pasteurized using a hydrated lime or hot water.

  1. Hydrated Lime: 175 grams of hydrated lime per 100 litres of water and soak for 12 to 18 hours. Use mesh bag to soak straw and then drain out for an hour.
  2. Hot Water: Raise water temperature to 149 – 175 degrees Fahrenheit and soak the straw in the hot water for 1 to 2 hours. Use mesh bag to soak straw and drain for 15 to 20 minutes.

Another option that could work would be to put straw in a bowl with water into the microwave. Then turn the microwave on until then water boils out of it..

You could soak the straw in 55 gallon barrel or you could use a bucket. I heating it you could:

  1. Prop the barrel up on some cinder blocks and put a fire underneath it.
  2. Use an electric drum heating belt around the barrel.

You could also use a bucket to soak the straw if you are using the hydrated lime method.

Almost any type of mushroom will grow on straw but some may require different supplements to be added to make them grow better. This is favorite among oyster musrhoom growers.

4) Coffee Grounds

Top 13 Mushroom Growing Substrates Recipes | How To Make & Use (3)

Use spent coffee grounds after making coffee (if not used within 24 hours they will need to be sterilized). If you don’t have any you can go to the nearest coffee shop (Starbucks) near you, give them a bucket and ask them to throw their spent coffee grounds in there and you pick up the bucket at the end of the day.

Almost any type of mushroom will grow on coffee grounds but may require different supplements to be added to make them grow better. Normally it is better to add coffee grounds as a supplement to other substrates then to use by itself.

Shiitake and Oyster mushroom grow well on coffee grounds.

5) Rye Grain

Rye grains soaked in water (option to add a cup of coffee (better yields) and a tbsp of Gypsum (prevent grain from sticking together)) for 12 – 24 hours then bring water to a boil and let simmer for 10 – 15 minutes. Let dry and put in bags or jars. Sterilize in pressure cooker for 90 minutes at 15 PSI.

You can also buy the rye grain substrate bags already done for you.

Rye grain is typically used to create mushroom spawn that will later be used to inoculate a bulk substrate. Just about any mushroom spawn can be grown on rye grain.

6) Manure Based Mushroom Substrate Recipe

You can be creative with mixing stuff with manure but a good mix would be 2 parts sun dried horse poop with 1 part coco coir (comes from coconuts). Need to add water to get it to field capacity. Field capacity basically means it is holding as much water as possible without pooling any at the bottom (when you squeeze lightly no water drips out but if you squeeze it hard a couple drops drip out).

Use a pressure cooker to sterilize it at 15 PSI for 2.5 hours.

You can also get bags that have manure already ready for inoculation.

Here is a 10 pound manure bag that is mixed with coco coir.

Manure is good for your manure loving mushrooms like the button mushroom or psilocybe cubensis (growing cubensis in the United States is a federal crime).

7) Masters Mix

50/50 mix of 1 lbs hardwood sawdust and 1 lbs soy bean hulls with 1.4 liters water. Sterilize in a pressure cooker for 2.5 hours at 15 PSI.

Let soy bean hulls soak overnight with boiled water so it will be easier to break apart. 700 ml water for every 2.5 cups of pelletized soy hulls. Sawdust will break apart much easier.

Master mix will create amazing first flushes for most mushrooms and is a good option if you want to grow a larger than normal mushroom. It works well with most mushrooms but not well with Shiitake.

8) Logs

Depending on the mushroom, you will use a hardwood log that is 3 to 4 feet long by 4 to 6 inches in diameter (the wider the log with bigger the mushroom typically). Drill inch deep holes 4 to 6 inches apart in a row. Each row is 2 to 3 inches away in a staggered (diamond like) formation.

You can use a drill with a 5/16th drill bit or an angle grinder with a 12 mm bit to drill you holes.

Examples of hardwood logs are:

  • Alder, birch, oak, maple, beech, polar, balsam, aspen, elm, and willow.

You can get the mushroom log drill bits, inoculation tools and angle grinder adapters shown in the video here:

  • North Spore Log Inoculation Tools – Use promo code ‘ CURATIVEMUSH ‘ for a 20% discount at checkout.

You can also get the sawdust spawn for the type of mushroom that you want to grow here:

The best time to cut your trees is from mid summer into late fall but don’t cut trees that are budding out in late spring. Also, you might want to wait a month before inculcating to give the tree’s natural fungi prevention ability a chance to die off.

For this you will grow mushrooms that are typically found growing on dead or dying hardwood trees to mimic their environment perfectly.

9) Straw with Coffee Grounds

  • 60% hydrated & pasteurized wheat straw
  • 30% fresh (within 24 hours) coffee grounds
  • 10% mushroom grain spawn

Depending on your mushroom, you could mix all the ingredients together (can use a compost tumbler if you want or do by hand) and the layer the mushroom spawn in (every inch of substrate sprinkle some spawn).

You can make your own grain spawn or get it pre-made here:

The majority of mushrooms will grow on coffee grounds with straw but may require different supplements to be added to make them grow better. Works well with Oyster mushrooms.

10) Straw with Coffee Grounds & Sawdust

  • 40% hydrated & pasteurized wheat straw
  • 30% fresh (within 24 hours) spent coffee grounds
  • 20% hydrated sawdust pellets
  • 10% mushroom grain spawn

Depending on your mushroom, you could mix all the ingredients together (can use a compost tumbler if you want or do by hand) and the layer the mushroom spawn in (every inch of substrate sprinkle some spawn). Or you could mix the substrate with the spawn together.

You can make your own grain spawn or get it pre-made here:

Almost any type of mushroom will grow on coffee grounds with straw and sawdust but may require different supplements to be added to make them grow better. This is a great recipe for Shiitake.

11) Coco Coir Mushroom Substrate Recipe with Vermiculite

1 part coco coir with to 1 part vermiculite and then pasteurized. Mix it together and then add your spawn.

Or:

  1. 1 brick of coco coir (1.4 lbs)
  2. 8 cups of dry vermiculite
  3. 16 cups of boiling water
  4. Soak in a bucket for 40 minutes with lid on.
  5. Mix and then put lid back on and cool for 4 hours.

The majority of mushroom will grow on coco coir mixed with vermiculite but may require different supplements to be added to make them grow better. Normally used as a substitute for manure.

12) Cardboard

Cardboard can be used by soaking it in boiling water. Bring the pot with the cardboard to a boil then let cool down.

This is a cheap option to use with extra stuff laying around the house. You can also mix it with coffee grounds. It is best to do the lazanya layering method by putting cardboard, then grain spawn, then cardboard, then grain spawn…etc.

Works well with oyster mushrooms.

You can make your own grain spawn or get it pre-made here:

13) Popcorn Grain

This method can be used to create your grain spawn instead of use rye grain. Rye grain is definitely the most popular but maybe you want to be creative and use popcorn.

Steps:

1) For this you rinse you popcorn and put it into a pressure cooker (fill pressure cooker with enough water for the popcorn to absorb. Better to put more than not enough) and turn your stove on high.

2) Let the pressure cooker steam for 10 minutes to remove air.

3) Place weight on pressure cooker and let pressure build to 15 PSI.

4) Then let it cook the corn at 15 PSI for 30 minutes.

5) Let drain for 10 minutes in a strainer.

6) Lay out the popcorn on a paper towel to pat dry and then put into the mason jars.

7) The put the jars into the pressure cooker again at 15 PSI for 90 minutes.

Be sure to drill a hole in the top of the mason jar lid, fill it with poly stuffing and then cover with foil before putting the jars into the pressure cooker.

This method can be used the same types of mushroom spawn that you would with rye grain.

Now that you understand the different types of mushroom growing substrates and how to use them, let’s talk about what to do next…

Choosing a Substrate Micro Environment

Now that we understand the type of substrate we need for the type of mushroom we want to grow the next step is to decide on the type of environment we want to put our substrate into to encourage mushroom colonization…

I have written a separate article on this topic that will explain the following options for your micro environment:

  1. Different types of sealed plastic bags (pre-made and how to make your own with filters)
  2. Improvising with layflat tubing instead of bags (much cheaper then buying mushrooms bags)
  3. Creating a monotub for your substrate and ‘pimping it out‘ to encourage maximum mushroom growth.
  4. Creating a ‘humidity dome’
  5. Using bottles correctly

Additionally, we will go into the next stages of the growing process:

  • Stage 4 – Inoculate the Mushroom Substrate
  • Stage 5 – Incubation
  • Stage 6 – Mushroom Fruiting

Check it out the article now:

Now lets wrap things up…

Conclusion

Pick the right substrate for the mushroom you want to grow really just involves looking at the natural environment that mushrooms like to grow in and what they like to eat. They like to eat the 3 main components found in the cell was of plants and trees (and they like it moist):

  1. Lignin
  2. Cellulose
  3. Hemicellulose

Really, you can be creative as you want making a substrate or simply pick one of the ones above that have already been proven to work through other people’s experience (or combine different ones together).

The best option is to probably pick one that uses the most readily available resources for you to come across based on where you live. If you live out in the middle of the country it might not make sense to try and use fresh coffee grounds in your substrate but straw may be in abundance.

Or maybe you just want to get right down to it and order a ‘ready to go’ substrate already in the bag so you don’t have to do anything. That might not be the most cost effective idea if you are trying to grow mushrooms for profit however if you are just doing it for fun then it would be fine (should be okay to order pre-made spawn even if you are growing for profit).

Be sure to check out my other article (referenced above) that explains everything that you need to do in the next step of the growing process in picking your substrate growing environment and then inoculating it.

I hope you found this article useful. If you did please share it. Thanks!

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Top 13 Mushroom Growing Substrates Recipes | How To Make & Use (2024)

FAQs

What is the best substrate recipe for a Monotub? ›

If you decide to make your own manure substrate blend, the easiest formulation is 50% coco coir and 50% horse manure. Coco coir can be purchased by the bag from most grow shops specializing in hydroponic or urban gardening.

Which is the most commonly used substrate for mushroom production? ›

Agricultural wastes are the good source for the cultivation of mushrooms. Some of them are most commonly used such as wheat straw, paddy straw, rice straw, rice bran, molasses, coffee straw, banana leaves, tea leaves, cotton straw, saw dust etc.

What is the bulk substrate for cubensis? ›

Manure/Compost

Manure is the aged, dried excrement of horses, cows, elephants, etc. It is one of the most effective bulk substrates for dung loving species like psilocybe cubensis, panaeolus cyanescens and agaricus bisporus (Portobello). It is usually cheap or free if it can be located.

What is the best size Monotub cubensis? ›

Too small of a tub and your harvest won't be as successful as it could be—your fungi will be essentially competiting with itself for resources, and you'll ultimately get less pinning and fruiting. A monotub should be 54 quarts, more or less.

What is the most nutritious mushroom substrate? ›

Selecting and Mixing the Sawdust: Begin with fine hardwood sawdust, which is the best for wood-loving mushrooms. To this, add a nutritional supplement, commonly wheat bran or rice bran, at a ratio of 20% to the sawdust volume. This creates a nutrient-rich substrate that supports the extensive growth of mycelium.

What is the easiest mushroom substrate? ›

Pretty much every mushroom growing resource I could find says that oyster mushrooms are the easiest variety for first time-growers, as they grow fast and can easily thrive in substrates made of things like coffee grounds and straw, making them relatively low maintenance.

Why add gypsum to mushroom substrate? ›

Gypsum has been found to shorten the time it takes for the mycelium to grow throughout the substrate, according to researchers at the University of Putra Malaysia. That means it's quicker for the spores to grow throughout the growing block and start to grow mushrooms.

Are coffee grounds a good mushroom substrate? ›

Your morning cup of filtered coffee only uses 1% of the grounds nutrients. It seems insane to throw something away that has 99% of its power left! Mushrooms are nutrient hungry and thrive in coffee grounds. So you can grow food using food waste to reduce food and packaging waste, how cool is that!?!

How much coffee grounds to add to mushroom substrate? ›

Coffee grounds should comprise 77% of your substrate's total weight. Pasteurized straw or sawdust equal to 15% of the total substrate weight or 20% of the weight of the coffee grounds. Oyster or sh*take mushroom spawn equal to 8% of the total substrate weight or 10% of the weight of coffee grounds.

What can I use as a substitute for mushroom substrate? ›

... Alternatives for mushroom cultivation has been reported with varying success including wheat straw, cottonseed straw, cereal straw, corncob, sugar cane straw and sawdust.

How do you make a homemade substrate? ›

Recipes usually call for two parts manure with one part coco coir. Water then needs to be added to reach field capacity. That is basically the amount of water the substrate can hold without extra water pooling at the bottom.

Can Cubensis grow on straw? ›

Straw mushrooms, as the name suggests, thrive on straw substrate. They are relatively easy to grow and yield a substantial harvest. On the other hand, growing psilocybe cubensis on straw can also yield good results, although it may require a bit more attention to detail regarding environmental conditions.

What is the grain to substrate ratio for a monotub? ›

We frequently get asked the question, “how much grains and substrate should I purchase to spawn a gourmet monotub?” The answer is a proper ratio in your vessel of choosing. We feel the best ratio is 1:2 spawn to sub.

What is the best ratio for mushroom substrate? ›

The ideal ratio for a bulk mushroom substrate using coco coir is 1 part coco coir with 1 part vermiculite. Start by pasteurizing the mixture, combining equal parts of coco coir and vermiculite.

What is the best substrate for a fruiting chamber? ›

Perhaps the most important of which is that vermiculite is capable of improving moisture retention in the substrate and, as you likely already know, fungi love high levels of moisture. Vermiculite can also help to aerate soil, which as you'll see with gypsum below, is extremely important for mushrooms to thrive.

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