Substrate preparation guides, grow kit reviews, pressure sterilization, fruiting chamber setups, and grain spawn — everything you need for successful DIY cultivation.
⭐ Start Here
Pre-inoculated blocks reviewed for yield, price, freshness, and species variety. The best kits for first-time growers — no equipment required.
🌱 Substrate
Straw, hardwood sawdust, Master's Mix, coco coir, and manure — which substrate for which species, with preparation instructions and yield comparisons.
🌾 Spawn
Rye, wheat, corn, or popcorn — how to prepare, sterilize, and inoculate grain spawn. The most cost-effective way to scale up cultivation.
🌾 Substrate
Hot water, lime, and hydrogen peroxide pasteurization methods explained. The no-pressure-cooker route to contamination-resistant oyster mushroom substrate.
🔢 Tool
Calculate substrate quantities, field capacity water amounts, and expected yield ranges for your grow bags and containers. Interactive tool.
A 23-quart pressure cooker (Presto or All American) handles most home grows — you can sterilize 6–8 half-pint grain jars or 4–6 quart jars per run. If you're scaling up, the All American 15-quart can run multiple batches in a session. The All American is preferred for its metal-on-metal lid seal that doesn't require gasket replacement.
Not for most home growers. Still Air Boxes (SABs) — clear plastic totes with arm holes — provide adequate contamination protection for grain-to-grain transfers and inoculation work. Flow hoods become valuable when you're scaling to dozens of blocks per week or working with agar plates.
Most species fruit best at 85–95% relative humidity. Below 80%, pins abort or caps crack. Above 95% with poor airflow, bacterial blotch and green mold contamination increase. The balance is high humidity with adequate fresh air exchange (FAE) — not one without the other.
A 66-quart clear plastic tote with 2-inch holes drilled on the sides (covered with polyfill fiber) works for bulk substrate grows. Add a thin casing layer of coco coir/vermiculite, mist the lid daily, and fan briefly 2–3 times per day. A simple, effective fruiting chamber that costs under $20 to build.