In County Monaghan, Ireland, stands one of the world’s biggest mushroom producers. The BioRescue project partner has its own laboratories where 40 scientists not only study the compost’s composition, but also the mushroom itself in all its little details.
Peter Corcoran, chief executive of MBio, said: "We described the kingdom of fungi as a third kingdom, so it sits between plants and animals and occupies its own space.”
Jude Wilson, a biologist at MBio, outlined the health benefits: “Mushrooms are very, very good for you. They are very healthy. They are low in fat, high in fibre, they’re also high in protein. They contain a lot of very valuable nutrients, such as minerals and vitamins.”
Mr Corcoran compared the humble mushroom to a superfood: “Just like our skin, the mushroom produces vitamin D through the application of light almost identical to our own process. But importantly, because it is produced naturally by the mushroom, it is therefore a vegan form of vitamin D and there is a chronic deficiency of vitamin D globally.”
Ms Wilson outlined steps to increase the nutritional value of the fungi: “We understand the chemistry within the compost and we understand how that chemistry influences the quality of the mushrooms and the nutritional status of the mushrooms. So we can make small, very natural changes to the quality of the compost and we realise that then in nutrition-enhanced mushrooms.”