—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, Jan. 1, 1977 42 ' She's glad when 'breaks' " are ever Mrs; George Blevins, a helper. She is wearing gear for picking in the weighs a 10 pound basket of. dark mushroom house, mushrooms which were fust picked; Spawn shown at the side of a bed section. *vfc—- n - ■ Mushrooms during a "break.” ? U * By SUSAN KAUFFMAN Feature Writer After spending three or four hours in the bameach morning, Jettie Mills heads to the house because there is a break, and the beds need attention. She is not going to the farmhouse for a leisurely,cup of.coffee and a chance to. prop her feet up'to watch TV or read a book. She is goiiig to the mushroom house where a “break” refers to the crop in its peak of production when a solid white blanket of mushrooms pop up all over the 24, five-and-one-half-foot wide by 60-foot-long “beds”. “This mushroom business is just a side line for ns,” Mrs. Mills explains. With over 100 dairy animals and 173 acres to tend to, Frank and Jettie Mills, Nottingham, Rl, grow the mushrooms for th? cannery-rather than for the more involved catting and packing. operations. “There is too much labor involved in that kind of operation,” Mrs. Mills adds. “We keep picking ours a lot longer than those who cut and pack for market.?!’;/ The Mills start picking early in December and have big breaks usually until the end of January with four people picking every day for eight hours. Then, throujgh’ April and May, two people pick steadily four or five hours each day. " Actually, the Work on the mushroom crop, as with other fanning ventures, begins long before harvest. Mushrooms don’t appear on the beds until 60 days after the house is filled. The block house contains 24 beds each five-and-one-half feet wide and 60 feet long. Four rows, six beds high, constitute what is called a double house. The beds are built of wood and filled with 140 to 160 yards of mushroom compost specially prepared with a mixture of one-half manure and one-half synthetic materials. The synthetic materials are generally alfalfa or grass hay which has been rained on before being baled. A conveyer system and a work crew bring the compost into the house and the beds. The day after the house is filled with the compost, it is steamed for six to eight hours by an oil-fired steamer brought on truck to the farm. The steam is pumped under pressure into the house through pipes so that a temperature of 140 to 145 degrees results. The temperature is held at that point for four hours then eased down to 120 to 135 degrees for a week to 10 days and finally allowed to drop to 80 degrees at the end of 14 days after steaming is done. When the bed or soil temperature is 70 to 79 degrees, the spawn can be seeded. Mushroom spawn is broadcast by hand onto the beds by using millet or some other sterilized seed which has the mushroom spores or seeds coated on it In a few days the spores grow into a fine cobweb appearance all over the dirt in the beds. Clear plastic is laid over the beds to hold the moisture, and the spawn is allowed to “run” or spread for two weeks. After growing for these two weeks, the spawn is covered with a three quarters of an inch deep layer of good top soil with a pH of 7.5 or 7.6. The top soil is taken from the farm itself and sterilized before putting it into the mushroom house. The process of covering the spawn with soil is called casing. PYank Mills estimated that the amount of soil used is approximately 48 quarts to a section. Each section is four feet by five and'one-half feet sections to a bed. When the'spawn Starts comii through the dirt, watering begins, uses a hose with a rose-hea tachment which provides * fines He waters every day, skipping) now and then. He can'water the 21 in an hour or an hour and a half. “A light spray is better than too: atone time,” he explains. “These to be pretty wet for the mushroot grow well.” The mushrooms are grown u dark at a temperature of 58 dp with daily Watering to provide needed moisture to develop the: delicacies. At harvest time the mushroom pulled out of the dark by hand the roots are cut off into a container an mushrooms placed Into plastic bi which hgld lO pounds each: l?ie bi are weighed on scalesjchecked byi inspectors so that accurate weight: recorded. The tain truck daily to local canneries. This year, according to Mill], price has been high with 72 ca pound paid for mushrooms on De The price has dropped 7 cents a p r to G 5 cents this >week; Last yea price averaged S 2 cents with 49 < being~.pald in February apd 64 1 paid in May. After the New Year, p drop with a drop in demand and Homestead Notes abundance on the market. & mushrooms grow best at aboil degrees, air-conditioning is neces for warm weather resulting in hi pnees. For the shopper to get the most r out of the money she spends mushrooms, Mrs. Mills suggests choose those with the caps still against the stem. “They are never very pretty o store when you are used to seeing I - fresh and white on the beds like tl she laments as she shows them grc on the section beside her. “They displayed in the stores in the light light turns them brown. Really, should be stored in a brown paper in the refrigerator and kept dry l used. Sunlight and water on them ruin them,” she emphasized. To make creamed mushrooms, a 1 as distinctive to Chester County chow-chow is to the PennsyW Dutch - wash mushrooms and df Place them in a pan with a tight-fi lid and cook in their own liquid for 1 minutes. Add condensed milk, salt and pepper to taste. Thicken flour and milk, Mrs. Mills ad v “Never add water to mushrooms " provide their own liquid.” “We really like breaded mushr® 1 even though they are tedious to & Wash and drain them; dip into egg milk mixture, roll in cracker cm* and deep fry.” When a break means eight hotf day pulling mushrooms, besides tW or seven hours spent in the bam.J Mills is more than glad when her W is over!