Indoor neon-lit mushroom farms are New York's hottest new food trend

Nov 02, 2018

Pink oyster mushrooms grown in a ‘mini farm’ unit. Photograph: Hannah Shufro

As well as looking pretty, inventor Smallhold claims its far more sustainable than traditional farming

Diners at the Bunker, a Vietnamese restaurant in Brooklyn, may not realise that the mushrooms in their bánh mì were grown in a blue-tinted, spaceship-looking “mini farm” underneath their seats. But it’s just one of a growing number of plug-in fungi farms mushrooming in New York City.

Smallhold, the company that created the idea, grows around 100 pounds of various mushroom types a week, then distributes them three-quarters grown to climate-controlled, do-it-yourself mini “farms” around the city. The mushrooms finish growing within the automated units, while a remote technician adjusts humidity, airflow and temperature, offering chefs on-the-spot, fresh and self-replenishing batches of a food item that has a short shelf-life.

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Source: The Guardian - Laura Pitcher

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