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Edibility
Choice
Lookalike Danger
2 / 5
Habitat
🌳 Oak duff
Season
Aug – Oct
"Lumpy white distorted puffs alongside honey mushrooms. Parasitic failure. Actually tastes like shrimp."
This species is found with or partners with the following hosts. Ectomycorrhizal hosts (green border) form a root-level partnership; ericoid / arbutoid shrubs (purple border) share the same mycorrhizal networks.

Truffle / bolete / chanterelle host. Acorns edible after leaching.

Decomposing leaf and needle litter on the forest floor — substrate for blewit, aniseed funnel, earthstar, and many coral mushrooms.
Strange aborted fruitings where Entoloma attacks Armillaria (honey mushroom), creating lumpy gray-white nodules. Mild shrimp-like flavor when cooked. Normal Entoloma caps are also edible but expert-only due to toxic lookalikes.
Wherever honey mushrooms grow — the aborted forms appear alongside. Eastern North America. Fall.
Min Soil Temp
55°F
Moisture Need
rain 0.5in 7d
Drought Tolerance
moderate
Elevation Range
0–6,684 ft
TOXIC. A normal-capped Entoloma that can be confused if you pick the caps instead of just the aborted lumps. Stick to the aborted ones.
Oak duff
Photograph it and log your observation on iNaturalist. The community can help confirm your ID — always get confirmation before eating.