Mushrooms·Niche·Year-round

Maitake mushroom

Grifola frondosa (Fungi)

Rich, woodsy, slightly nutty; deep umami; the most complex flavor profile among common mushrooms.

Category
Mushrooms
Peak form
Roasted whole-cluster at high heat; tempura battered; sliced
Common uses
5
Cross-refs
7

About Maitake

The maitake mushroom (also called hen-of-the-woods) is the dramatically frilly, clustered mushroom that grows at the base of oak trees (and is now cultivated). The Japanese name means 'dancing mushroom' — apparently because foragers danced upon finding the prized fungus in the wild. Japanese cuisine elevated maitake to fine-dining status (tempura, hibachi grilled); modern American restaurants have followed suit. The texture is uniquely complex — feathery edges that crisp, dense central trunk that maintains chew, individual frill flavor that intensifies in the deepest interior portions. Premium specialty pricing reflects relatively limited cultivation; wild maitake in Eastern US oak forests is treasured by foragers.

Variety profile

Botanical
Grifola frondosa (Fungi)
Flavor
Rich, woodsy, slightly nutty; deep umami; the most complex flavor profile among common mushrooms.
Texture
Frilly edges crisp beautifully; dense interior holds chew; cooks unevenly which is feature, not bug.
Peak form
Roasted whole-cluster at high heat; tempura battered; sliced and pan-seared.
Season window
Year-round cultivated supply; wild season fall (September-October).

Common uses

Editorial notes

Worth knowing

Roast maitake at very high heat (450°F+) for maximum textural complexity — frilly edges crisp while interior maintains substance. Pair with fall flavors (sage, brown butter, parmesan).

Cross-references

Related categories

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