I have not as yet satisfied myself as to the best methods of cooking this polyporus. Fried in butter it has a tendency to become slightly tough in consistency, in its white stringy fibre as well as in taste closely suggesting the "white meat" of chicken. It lends itself well to a stew or ragoût, and might, perhaps, to a curry, the substance being cut or broken in small pieces and treated after the manner of meat under similar recipes. Following the hints contained in our last chapter, many methods of its culinary treatment will suggest themselves.
PLATE XXVI
THE SULPHUROUS POLYPORUS
Polyporus sulphureus
In the mature specimen the growth is horizontal, spreading fan-like from stem, undulating with radiating flutings. Upper surface salmon orange or orange red, the edge being smooth and unevenly thickened with nodule-like prominences. In young specimen ascending, under yellow surface outwardly exposed.
Pore Surface: Bright sulphur yellow; pores very minute.
Spores: Dingy white.
Stem: Very short; a mere close attachment for the spreading growth.
Taste: Slightly acid and mucilaginous when raw; after cooking somewhat suggesting white meat of chicken.