Upscale your coffee grounds into a mini mushroom garden (2024)

Tasty, delicious, and garden unfriendly, oyster mushrooms thrive in a cozy bed of coffee grounds. In addition to making a tasty gift, mushrooms are also a great source of selenium, a powerful antioxidant that helps support the immune system and prevent cell and tissue damage. Mushrooms grow best in porous, sterile, slightly moist soil known as substrate. The optimal substrate is very easy to achieve with a combination of used coffee grounds and straw or sawdust. Harvestable mushrooms should start to appear within two weeks of creating your mushroom bed.

What you will need

Clean, sealable, breathable plastic bags, such as food storage bags or filter spawn bags.

A clean pale or pot for mixing.

2-3 cups of just-brewed, moist coffee grounds. For a successful garden, you will need coffee grounds that have been brewed within the past 24 hours. Grounds older than 24 hours are likely to be dry and may have started to mold. Coffee grounds should comprise 77% of your substrate’s total weight.

Pasteurized straw or sawdust equal to 15% of the total substrate weight or 20% of the weight of the coffee grounds.

Oyster or sh*take mushroom spawn equal to 8% of the total substrate weight or 10% of the weight of coffee grounds.

One medium-sized or several small crates, boxes, or baskets with an open top.

Making a mushroom bed

Step 1: Mix your coffee grounds and straw or sawdust until well integrated.

Step 2: Add your oyster mushroom spawn to your substrate and mix until very thoroughly combined.

Step 3: Transfer your mixture into the breathable plastic bags and seal.

Step 4: Turn your mini mushroom gardens upside down so that the bag’s seal is on the bottom and shake your bag to ensure the top (the side without the seal) is level. Place your mini mushroom gardens into your crate(s) or container(s).

Step 5: Poke 2 to 4 holes in the tops of the breathable plastic bags.

Step 6: Store your mushroom garden at room temperature, out of sunlight until the coffee grounds are covered with a white covering, known as mycelium. This first process generally takes between 7 and 14 days. When most of your coffee grounds have mycelium on them, your spawns have colonized the substrate.

Step 7: Once colonized, move your garden to a spot with good airflow, indirect sunlight (mushrooms need some sunlight to grow), and away from direct heat. Mushrooms will grow best in a spot that fits these criteria and cools down a bit in the evening, such as a windowsill.

Step 8: Using scissors or a small knife, cut a cross on the top of your bags, being sure not to damage the mycelium while cutting.

Step 9: Gently mist your garden a few times per day to keep the mycelium moist.

Step 10: Harvest your mushrooms and enjoy!

Grown and giving tips

Below are our basic tips for growing your mushrooms. If you would like more detailed information, please visit the blog entries, noted below, that were provided by Danielle of North Spore, an innovative company with a team of experts in all things mushroom.

  • Be sure to keep your garden moist at all times. Mushrooms cannot grow without moisture.
  • Avoid placing your garden in an area that gets too warm (above 70°F) or too cold (below 62°F).
  • If you are giving an oyster mushroom garden as a gift, include a little spray bottom for misting and a card with care instructions included.
North Spore resource references:

Mushroom Garden

Outdoor Mushroom Beds

Sources

The health benefits of mushrooms

Using Coffee Grounds in the Garden

Gourmet Woodland Mushrooms

Growing Mushrooms In Coffee Grounds

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Upscale your coffee grounds into a mini mushroom garden (2024)

FAQs

How to make mushroom substrate with coffee grounds? ›

Making a mushroom bed
  1. Step 1: Mix your coffee grounds and straw or sawdust until well integrated.
  2. Step 2: Add your oyster mushroom spawn to your substrate and mix until very thoroughly combined.
  3. Step 3: Transfer your mixture into the breathable plastic bags and seal.
Nov 26, 2019

How to make cheap mushroom substrate? ›

Mixing these two materials together can create an ideal substrate for growing some types of mushrooms. Most recipes call for one part coco coir and one part vermiculite. For a standard brick of dried coco coir (about 1.5 lbs) add eight cups of dry vermiculite, along with 16 cups of boiling water.

Can you make mushroom coffee in a regular coffee maker? ›

Can I put mushroom coffee in my coffee machine? Yes. You can brew mushroom coffee the way you brew your morning coffee.

What is the use of hydrogen peroxide in mushroom cultivation? ›

Just a few of Hydrogen Peroxide's uses in mushroom cultivation: Safely destroys mold infections from any fruiting jar or bulk casing grow. When using perlite during the growing (fruiting) stage, add weekly to your moist Perlite to keep it clean and free from any bacteria or mold growth.

Do used coffee grounds grow bacteria? ›

Researchers suggest that the bacterial and fungal species normally found on decomposing coffee grounds, such as non-pathogenic Pseudomonas, Fusarium, and Trichoderma spp.

Can you soak coffee grounds in water for plants? ›

We recommend using about a teaspoon of coffee grounds per gallon of water. Let the coffee grounds and water mixture steep for a few nights, stirring occasionally, then strain the liquid through a cheesecloth. The remaining liquid can be used to water, and gently fertilize, your houseplants.

Can you mix mushroom coffee with regular coffee? ›

Mushroom coffee blends are typically half mushroom powder and half ground coffee. If you make your own, you can brew it with your favorite kind of coffee. If using whole bean coffee, store your beans and your mushroom powder separately and mix when you grind your coffee for brewing.

How do you make a mushroom substrate mixture? ›

Table of Contents - Preparing Bulk Mushroom Substrate
  1. Step 1 : Boil Water. Mix Coir, Vermiculite, Gypsum (CVG) in 5 Gallon Bucket.
  2. Step 2 : Pour Boiling Water into Bucket and Cover (Bucket TeK)
May 23, 2021

Can you make coffee ground bedding? ›

Our Coffee Bedding Today

For brooding, we use coffee bedding with no pine shavings. We not only use the coffee bedding for brooding our chicken chicks, we have also used the coffee bedding with ducks, turkeys, Coturnix quail, and even Button quail.

How do you use coffee grounds in potting mix? ›

Sprinkle a very small amount of grounds directly in the pot or mix well into potting soil before planting. You can also use a liquid fertilizer made from water and coffee grounds to water your plants.

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