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Look what we got here. キノコ (mushroom) made of mushrooms. Just made it lefthanded.
I don't know if this is Karelian food preference to eat mushrooms, but as for me — I love mushrooms. My parents were always passionate by collecting mushrooms walking through the forest, so all my life they feed me and my brothers with mushrooms time to time.
We used to collect white mushrooms (Penny Bun) only. They are most tasty and less worm-eaten. But when a mushroom was borrowed by some kind of insect, it had to be dried to a chip. When all the insects leaved the mushroom and died, you can make a soup of those mushrooms or cook with meat and potato in oven like i did today.
In Karelian there are two different words for Bolete and Agaric mushroom classes. I just find out about that. I would have never find it out if i didn't study Karelian. Awesome! So, Bolete mushrooms are 'grivat' and Agarics are 'šienet'. Those in picture above are 'grivat'. No one dries 'šienet'.
In Japanese mushrooms have huge vocabulary so i'm a bit confused. I found that most common for mushroom is キノコ (Kinoko).
Incredible oldschool soundtrack: Infected Mushroom — Shakawkaw