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7 mushroom varieties to try this winter

etimes.in | Last updated on - Nov 9, 2025, 15:07 IST
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1/8

7 mushroom varieties to try this winter

Mushrooms are winter’s quiet luxury, earthy, versatile, and rich with natural umami. They add depth without heaviness, turning everyday meals into something more layered and satisfying. Beyond taste, they’re packed with nutrients that support immunity, energy, and gut health, all things your body quietly craves when the temperature drops. From crisp and delicate to meaty and bold, each variety brings its own texture, aroma, and nutrition profile. Scroll down for seven worth adding to your plate this season.

2/8

Button mushrooms - The dependable all-rounder

They’re the most familiar faces in the kitchen, yet often the most overlooked. The key is simple: never let them steam, let them brown. A hot pan, a drizzle of oil, and a bit of breathing space is all it takes for that deep, nutty aroma to surface. Fold sautéed buttons into masala omelettes, stir them through a pulao, or roast them till crisp for a tart topping. Their flavour is subtle but giving - they quietly absorb spices, add weight, and make everything around them taste more complete.

3/8

Oyster mushrooms - Soft, silky, and obliging

Oyster mushrooms are naturally elegant, tender, quick to cook, and effortlessly versatile. Tear them into wide strips and toss them in a hot pan with garlic and crushed pepper for something light yet fragrant. Or let them simmer slowly in a coconut or tomato gravy, where they soak up spice without losing their silky texture. Their faint, almost buttery sweetness smooths out the richness of winter cooking - the cream, the nuts, the slow-cooked gravies, bringing balance without ever overpowering.

4/8

Shiitake - Smoke, bite, and broth depth

Shiitakes are the flavor builders. Fresh, they have a rich chew and smoky undertone; dried, they create a dark, umami-dense broth that can transform a simple soup into something layered and comforting. They’re loaded with lentinan - a compound linked to immune health and they taste like they’ve been simmering for hours, even when you haven’t.

5/8

Portobello - Meat without pretense

When you want heft, reach for portobellos. Their wide caps take a marinade, hold char well and give a satisfyingly substantial mouthfeel. Grill with a swipe of mustard and balsamic, stuff with spiced paneer or lentils, or slice and sear for a sandwich that feels like a main course. They’re direct, clean, and stop you from missing meat.

6/8

Enoki - Texture that brightens bowls

They look like noodles made by nature - long, thin, snow-white strands with a gentle crunch. Enoki mushrooms are loved for their texture more than taste, adding lightness to hearty winter bowls. Toss them into ramen, hotpots, or even cold salads for contrast. They’re low in calories, high in potassium, and bring a clean, crisp note to heavier meals.

7/8

Milky mushroom - India’s sturdy answer

Milky mushrooms (khandwa/milky) are India’s own homegrown variety, thick-stemmed, firm, and ideal for masala gravies. They hold their shape in heat, absorb spice beautifully, and bring a satisfying bite to pulao or korma. Nutritionally, they’re a powerhouse: protein-rich, full of antioxidants, and one of the few vegetarian sources of vitamin D. Rural cooks have been using them for years - the rest of us are just catching up.

8/8

Morels (gucchi) - The concentrated indulgence

Morels are rare and precise: sponge-like caps that trap butter, cream, or clarified ghee and their honeycomb caps hide a smoky, nutty aroma that deepens with heat. Use them sparingly - a handful with cream on hot rice or folded into a simple pulao is enough because their flavour is concentrated and singular. Treat them like a seasoning, not a bulk ingredient.

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Copyright © Jun 2, 2026, 08.14PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service