Carolina Mountain Life Magazine, Autumn 2021

Page 108

Colonizing the millet

Cordyceps militaris

Edible mushrooms

Get to Know High Country Fungi I

f in recent months you’ve visited one of our area’s popular farm-to-table dining establishments, you have likely come across High Country Fungi’s product offerings on the menu. Or, if you’ve picked up some fresh or dehydrated mushrooms, or lesser known medicinal extracts, at the Watauga County Farmers’ Market, you may have even rubbed elbows with High Country Fungi’s founder himself, Avery Hughes. A relatively new addition to the gourmet and medicinal mushrooms trade, High Country Fungi is best described by its slogan: “from spore to shroom, we do it all.” We couldn’t help but want to learn more about how someone can take something as microscopic as mushroom spores and transform them into prized culinary delicacies and highly effective remedies. CML was thrilled to accept an invitation to meet with Avery Hughes for a behind-the-scenes tour of his impressive High Country Fungi operation in Plumtree, NC. While with Hughes, we asked him to share more with us about his introduction to fungi, how his emerging business has “mushroomed,” and what the future holds. CML: When did you first become interested in mycology (the study of fungi)? Hughes: Fungi entered my awareness in my early twenties when I attended a shiitake log growing workshop hosted by the Avery County Ag Extension Office

108 — Autumn 2021 CAROLINA MOUNTAIN LIFE

in Newland. My father had signed us up while I was in town visiting from Atlanta, where I was working in the hospitality industry. The workshop touched on growing [shiitake mushrooms] as a business and then we proceeded to inoculate our own oak logs. We were given a bag of spawn and told that within this bag of sawdust was shiitake mycelium. I had no mental framework for understanding what mycelium actually was. I was fascinated. We inoculated the logs with spawn that fall and had mushrooms by the following spring. CML: What brought you here to the High Country, and how did your interest grow into a business? Hughes: About three years after that workshop, I moved up to Boone and had taken an interest in farming. I began interning on a farm where they grew shiitakes and found myself consuming more and more of them. At that time I was also seeing an herbalist, who recommended Reishi mushroom tea to improve my health. I was incorporating mushrooms into my diet and supplement routine and my overall wellbeing went through the roof! Soon I was studying other medicinal mushrooms, and met some guys out west who introduced me to an indoor mushroom cultivation course in Oregon. So I flew to Oregon where I learned the ins and outs of the industry. I came back home, found space to start the operation, and the rest is history.

By CML Staff

CML: How did you go about launching your business in this market, and what challenges did you encounter? Hughes: Shortly after getting the operation up and running at a small scale, we applied for a grant through the WNC Ag Options Grant program and were awarded a $3,000 grant, which we used to purchase shelving materials and bulk growing supplies to set us up for our first year. That year happened to be 2020; we had everything in place right as restaurants shut down for COVID. So we spent the better part of last year learning how to grow a few different medicinals, perfecting our extraction techniques, and finalizing other products. As things opened back up and sales resumed, my partner Miika decided to join me fulltime in growing the business. From designing our logo to managing the grow room, she does it all and I sure couldn’t do it without her. CML: Give our readers a basic understanding of your process, “from spore to shroom.” Hughes: The whole process begins in a sterile laboratory that we constructed in an old pottery studio. The central component to this lab is a hospital grade HEPA filtration unit which blows sterile air over the work surface, ensuring no other microscopic organisms, such as bacteria and mold, contaminate the clean culture of mycelium we are seeking to propagate.


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Articles inside

In the CML Kitchen with Meagan Goheen

7min
pages 128-132

Waterfront Group Offers New Wine Options |By Karen Rieley

5min
pages 121-127

Roll’d Sweets | By Pan McCaslin

4min
pages 111-115

Ounce of Prevention with Mike Teague

4min
page 107

High Country Fungi | By CML Staff

8min
pages 108-110

Be Well with Samantha Steele

5min
pages 104-106

ARHS Expands to Meet Health Needs | By Kim S. Davis

5min
pages 100-103

Community and Local Business News

11min
pages 95-99

Local Tidbits

8min
pages 86-90

Local Realtors on Affordable Communities | By Jason Reagan

8min
pages 91-94

Givers of Hope for Hospitality House | By Anna Lisa Stump

4min
page 85

Ray Christian – A Resilient Storyteller | By Karen Rieley

6min
pages 80-81

Shulls Mill Revisited | By Julie Farthing

7min
pages 78-79

Lieutenant Colonel John Collier – A Vet’s Story | By Steve York

6min
pages 82-84

Watauga County Sheriffs’ Wall of Fame | By Julie Farthing

3min
page 77

Historic Cemeteries | By Elizabeth Baird Hardy

6min
pages 74-76

History on a Stick with Michael C. Hardy

2min
page 73

Wisdom and Ways with Jim Casada

8min
pages 71-72

Trail Reports

3min
page 61

Fishing with Andrew Corpening

8min
pages 67-70

Blue Ridge Explorers with Tamara S. Randolph

4min
pages 59-60

Notes from Grandfather Mountain

6min
pages 56-58

Crazy for Grazin’ – Eating on Board | By Gail Greco

4min
page 51

Mayland’s Earth to Sky Park | By Elizabeth Baird Hardy

5min
pages 62-64

Book Nook

3min
page 50

Behind the Lens – Capturing Fall Colors | By Local Photographers

3min
pages 48-49

NC’s Treasure – Rosemary Harris | By Keith Martin

9min
pages 40-41

App Theatre is Live | By Keith Martin

5min
pages 45-47

Cultural Calendar with Keith Martin

9min
pages 26-31

Where Are They Now? | By Trimella Chaney

4min
pages 37-39

Where the Music is | By CML Staff

6min
pages 42-44

Valle Country Fair & Woolly Worm | By Steve York

8min
pages 24-25

Regional Happenings | By CML Staff

18min
pages 20-23
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