How to Dehydrate Mushrooms in Canada (Wild and Cultivated)
To dehydrate mushrooms, brush clean (don't wash) 1 kilogram of fresh mushrooms — button, cremini, portobello, oyster, shiitake, or foraged species. Slice 5 to 8 millimetres thick (larger mushrooms; whole if button-sized). Arrange in a single layer on dehydrator trays. Dehydrate at 50 to 55 degrees Celsius for 6 to 10 hours until completely brittle when bent. Store in airtight glass jars at room temperature for 1 year, vacuum-sealed for 2 years. Rehydrate in hot water for 20 to 30 minutes — the soaking liquid is also flavourful and used as mushroom stock. Dried mushrooms have 5 to 10 times the flavour concentration of fresh.
Dehydrated mushrooms are the most flavour-dense way to preserve fungi. The water cooks out; the umami compounds concentrate. A handful of dried porcini in a winter soup tastes like an entire fresh mushroom dish.
This guide covers cultivated and wild mushrooms. The safety detail to watch is identification — only dehydrate mushrooms you can identify with absolute certainty.
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Pick your mushrooms
Cultivated (always-safe options)
- Button (white button) — supermarket standard; dehydrates fine; modest flavour gain
- Cremini (baby bella) — slightly deeper flavour than button
- Portobello — large cremini; slice thick; great for “mushroom jerky” snacking
- Shiitake — classic dried mushroom of Asian cooking; flavour intensifies dramatically
- Oyster (Pleurotus ostreatus) — delicate; dehydrates well; great for soup
- King oyster (King trumpet) — meaty; holds shape
- Maitake (hen of the woods) — sometimes cultivated; complex flavour
- Lion’s mane — better frozen than dried (texture changes); but works
Foraged Canadian wild (only if you’re 100% certain on ID)
- Chanterelle (Cantharellus cibarius) — golden, fluted; common in BC and Atlantic Canada forests
- Morel (Morchella spp.) — spring; honeycomb cap; possibly the most-prized
- Porcini / King bolete (Boletus edulis) — autumn; widely foraged
- Lobster mushroom (Hypomyces lactifluorum) — orange-red parasitic fungus
- Chicken of the woods (Laetiporus sulphureus) — bright orange shelf fungus
- Black trumpet (Craterellus fallax) — autumn; East Coast Canada
- Hen of the woods / maitake (Grifola frondosa) — fall; eastern Canada
Don’t dehydrate
- Mushrooms you can’t 100% identify — toxic species remain toxic when dried
- Wet/slimy mushrooms — past prime; discard
- Enoki — too wet; freeze instead
- Mushrooms with worm holes — trim heavily or skip
- Old supermarket mushrooms — quality matters; fresh dries to better-quality product
You need about 1 kg of fresh mushrooms for a typical dehydrator load (about 100-150 g dried).
What you need
- 1 kg fresh mushrooms (cultivated or properly-identified wild)
- Soft brush, paper towel, or vegetable brush for cleaning
- Sharp knife for slicing
- Dehydrator with trays at 50-55°C — see best dehydrator in Canada
- OR: oven at lowest setting (typically 65-90°C) — workable but less ideal because most ovens don’t get below 65°C
- Baking sheets with parchment (if using oven)
- Glass jars for storage — Bernardin 250 mL or 500 mL
- Optional: silica gel packets for humid climates
- Optional: vacuum-seal bags for longer storage
35-75°C range — the 50-55°C mushroom range is the lower-temperature setting many cheaper dehydrators can't hit precisely. ~$200 CAD.
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Method
Step 1: Clean and prep
- Brush mushrooms clean. Don’t wash unless absolutely necessary.
- For foraged mushrooms with hidden dirt:
- Tap or shake to dislodge debris
- Very brief rinse if needed (under 5 seconds)
- Pat dry immediately
- Trim tough stems — shiitake stems are too woody to eat (save for stock), button stems are fine.
- Slice mushrooms:
- Button / cremini / small: halve or quarter
- Portobello: 5-8 mm thick slices
- Shiitake: 5 mm slices through the cap; discard or stock-save stems
- Oyster: tear or slice into chunks
- Morel: halve lengthwise (also exposes any hidden insects)
- Chanterelle: tear or slice thick (5-8 mm)
- Porcini: 5-8 mm slices
- Uniform thickness matters — different thicknesses dry at different rates.
Step 2: Arrange on trays
- Spread in a single layer on dehydrator trays. No overlapping.
- Don’t crowd — air must circulate around each piece.
Step 3: Dehydrate
- Set dehydrator to 50-55°C (125-130°F). Lower than fruit; mushrooms have less sugar.
- Dry for time depending on type and thickness:
- Thinly-sliced cultivated: 6-8 hours
- Wild thick-sliced: 8-12 hours
- Whole small button: 10-14 hours
- Check at the 5-hour mark, then every 2 hours.
Step 4: Test for doneness
Mushrooms are properly dried when:
- Completely brittle — snaps cleanly when bent
- No moisture when squeezed
- Lightweight feel — most mushrooms are ~90% water; dried they feel like styrofoam
- No tackiness, no springiness
Under-dried mushrooms mould in storage. Over-dried mushrooms are dust-fragile — handle carefully.
Step 5: Cool, condition, store
- Let mushrooms cool 30 minutes at room temperature.
- “Condition” in a sealed jar for 1 week: pack into glass jar, seal, shake daily. Watch for condensation. If any moisture appears, return to dehydrator for another 1-2 hours.
- Once stable, store airtight in glass jars in a cool dark dry place.
Storage
- Glass jar, tight lid, cool dark place: 1 year at peak quality
- Vacuum-sealed bags: 2-3 years
- Frozen, airtight: 3-5 years
- With silica gel packets: extend storage by 50% in humid climates
Using dried mushrooms
Rehydration
- Place dried mushrooms in a heat-safe bowl.
- Cover with hot water (just-off-boiling is fine).
- Soak 20-30 minutes until completely soft.
- Drain in a sieve — save the soaking liquid as mushroom stock (use within 3 days refrigerated or freeze).
- Squeeze out excess water gently.
- Use rehydrated mushrooms as you would fresh — sauté, add to pasta, soup, risotto.
The soaking liquid is itself a precious ingredient — use as a substitute for chicken or vegetable stock in:
- Risotto
- Beef stew
- Mushroom soup
- Pan sauce
- Gravy
Powder
Pulse fully-dried mushrooms in a spice grinder or high-speed blender to make mushroom powder. Use as:
- Flavour booster in soup/stew (1 tsp per pot)
- Umami salt for finishing (mix with salt)
- Coating for steak (mushroom-crusted ribeye)
- Stir-in for ground meat (burgers, meatballs)
Direct use (no rehydration)
- Crumbled into soup — they rehydrate in the broth
- Crushed into pasta sauce — same; rehydrate in sauce
- In a pot of long-cooking beans — flavour transfers
- In rice or quinoa cooking water — adds umami
Recipes and uses
- Mushroom risotto — dried porcini soaked, chopped, plus the soaking liquid as part of the stock
- Wild mushroom soup — rehydrate mixed dried mushrooms; cream-based or broth-based
- Pasta with mushrooms — quick winter dinner; tagliatelle + rehydrated mushrooms + cream + parmesan
- Beef stroganoff — sauté rehydrated mushrooms with beef and sour cream
- Mushroom gravy — pan sauce with rehydrated mushrooms
- Vegetarian “meat” base — finely chopped rehydrated mushrooms substitute for meat in chili, lasagna, bolognese
- Asian noodle dishes — rehydrated shiitake in ramen, pho, stir-fries
- Stuffing — wild mushroom stuffing for holiday turkey
- Mushroom risotto — the canonical use of dried porcini
Variations
Mushroom “jerky” snacks
Marinate sliced portobello or king oyster mushrooms in soy sauce + garlic + ginger + sesame oil for 1 hour before dehydrating. Dry to leathery (not brittle). Snack like jerky.
Mixed mushroom blend
Combine different dried mushroom types in one jar — porcini + shiitake + cremini + chanterelle. Use as a “wild mushroom mix.”
Mushroom salt
Combine ½ cup dried mushroom powder + 1 cup pickling salt + 1 tbsp dried thyme. Pulse in a spice grinder. Umami-rich finishing salt for steaks, eggs, popcorn.
Mushroom soup base
Dry mushroom powder + dried onion + dried garlic + dried celery + salt + thyme. Pack into a jar. Add to hot water for instant savoury broth.
Smoky mushrooms
Cold-smoke mushrooms for 1-2 hours before dehydrating. Smoky-umami; excellent in vegetarian dishes.
Common problems
- Mushrooms shrank to nothing. Normal — fresh mushrooms are 80-90% water. 1 kg fresh dehydrates to 100-150 g.
- Mould in jar. Wasn’t dried thoroughly. Condition for a week before sealing; discard mouldy.
- Mushrooms turned dark / black. Some darkening is normal; many wild mushrooms darken during drying. If they smell off, discard.
- Mushrooms still slightly soft after long drying. Variety has high water content. Continue drying.
- Mushrooms taste bitter when rehydrated. Foraged species with unexpected bitterness — possibly misidentified. When in doubt, don’t eat. Get identification verified.
- Mushrooms absorbed freezer / kitchen odours. Store in tight-sealing glass; not near onions, garlic, or strong-smelling foods.
- Rehydrated mushrooms gritty. Trapped dirt that didn’t come out during initial brush-clean. Soak longer; agitate; or rinse rehydrated mushrooms before use.
Yield expectations
- 1 kg fresh mushrooms → 100-150 g dried (about 85-90% water loss)
- A full Cosori 6-tray dehydrator → ~500 g dried mushrooms per session
- A typical Canadian household uses 50-200 g of dried mushrooms per year (a 250 mL jar lasts most households a long time)
Why home-dried mushrooms are worth making
- Dramatically cheaper than commercial dried wild mushrooms — Italian dried porcini is $30-60 per 100 g; foraged BC chanterelle dehydrated at home is essentially free
- Better flavour — fresh-foraged or fresh-market mushrooms dried immediately are better than commercial
- Storage-efficient — 1 kg of fresh becomes ~125 g dried
- Year-round access — winter mushroom dishes from fall foraging
- Quality control — your own selection, no preservatives, no surprises
- Hunter/forager essential — wild mushrooms must be preserved within hours; dehydrating is the most-shelf-stable option
Safety: identification
Foraged wild mushrooms must be identified by an expert. Many Canadian wild mushrooms have deadly look-alikes:
- Death cap (Amanita phalloides) looks like several edible species; widespread in BC and increasing in eastern Canada
- Destroying angel (Amanita virosa, A. bisporigera) similar issue
- False morels (Gyromitra) can look like true morels but contain toxic monomethylhydrazine
Resources for safe identification:
- Mycological Society of Toronto, Vancouver, Edmonton, Montreal — local clubs with experienced foragers
- Federated Mushroom Clubs of Canada — national umbrella
- Books: “Mushrooms of British Columbia” (Royal BC Museum), “Mushrooms of the Boreal Forest” (University of Regina)
- Apps: not sufficient alone; use as a starting point, verify with experts
Never eat any mushroom you can’t 100% identify. Dehydrating doesn’t make toxic mushrooms safer.
Next steps
- How to make mushroom powder in Canada — the downstream product from dried mushrooms
- Best dehydrator in Canada — equipment guide
- How to dry herbs in Canada — gateway dehydrator project
- How to dry apples in Canada — fruit dehydrator project
- How to make fruit leather in Canada — sweet dehydrator project
- How to pressure can bone broth in Canada — pair mushroom stock with bone broth
- Dehydrating pillar — broader method context
Sources
- Bernardin Complete Book of Home Preserving (latest edition)
- Health Canada — Food safety for home preservation
- University of Guelph — Department of Food Science