Garlic and Butter Roasted Mushrooms - Delicious Mushroom Recipe (2024)

This recipe is so filled with garlic it will make a grown man wince. Just the way we like it.
Text And Photo By Brittany Thomas

In my twenty five years on this planet, I have eaten a lot of mushrooms. I’ve eaten countless slices of pizza with paper thin wafers of mushroom dotted across the bubbly cheese; I’ve swapped out a hamburger for a Frisbee-sized portabella cap; they’ve been my staple side dish at nearly every steakhouse meal, swimming in butter yet lacking in real flavor; and I’ve cursed under my breath as the raw mushrooms split and cracked during my best attempt at skewering them for a kabob barbecue. Mushrooms and I? We go back a long way.

Garlic and Butter Roasted Mushrooms - Delicious Mushroom Recipe (1)

When I was in high school, we took a class cruise to the Bahamas. Now, for anyone who has ever been aboard a cruise ship, you are already aware of the sinful gluttony that takes place every time a meal is served. It’s course after course, plate after plate, each one with a heavy cream sauce pooled underneath some expensive cut of meat we’d otherwise never buy at home. And that’s the sort of indulgence you expect, I suppose. After all, my last cruise experience was for my parent’s wedding anniversary and thanks to the late night room service option, my father walked off a seven day cruise twelve pounds heavier than when he first boarded. That’s a true story.

Garlic and Butter Roasted Mushrooms - Delicious Mushroom Recipe (2)

It was on that high school cruise that I first had escargot. No one at the table wanted to order it, yet we all dared each other to, and nobody wanted to look like a pansy. So my roommate and I ordered it and waited anxiously for it to arrive. When the server set the dinged up silver tray with its tiny potholes filled with strange caramel-colored knobs of meat in front of me, I didn’t see what all the fuss was about. It looks sort of boring, actually. Now, my mother explained to me once how to enjoy escargot: you don’t chew; you just sort of suck all the garlic and butter off of each one and swallow it right down. Easy. So I scooped up one of the little creepy-crawlies and down the hatch it went. It was hot, swimming in melted butter, with the scent of garlic so strong it made your eyes water just a bit. It was fantastic. As lovely of an experience as it was, I didn’t make it through the entire plate. Somewhere along the line, I spotted two of the tiny antennae poking up through the butter like a sad little flag of surrender and I couldn’t carry on.

Garlic and Butter Roasted Mushrooms - Delicious Mushroom Recipe (3)

When I came across this recipe for garlic and butter roasted mushrooms in Gourmet, it was delightfully disguised as a substitute for the escargot experience. I don’t like to think of it that way – this dish is a surrogate for nothing. You roast a few handfuls of meaty mushrooms with sweet butter, tangy capers, and enough fresh garlic to make a grown man wince. After they’ve submitted to the heat of the oven, you squeeze over a bit of tart lemon juice to liven things up a bit and a bit of minced parsley, lemony and green and wonderful. With a few wedges of crusty bread to sop up the juices in all their glory, you’ll never miss the escargot.

Garlic and Butter Roasted Mushrooms - Delicious Mushroom Recipe (4)

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Garlic & Butter Roasted Mushrooms

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5 from 3 reviews

  • Author: Recipe From Gourmet
  • Total Time: 30 minutes
  • Yield: 2 1x
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Description

Baby Bella mushrooms roasted in butter with garlic, capers, lemon juice, and parsley.

Ingredients

Scale

  • 1 lb (16 oz.) mushrooms, button or Baby Bella
  • 2 tablespoons capers, rinsed and chopped
  • 3 large garlic cloves, minced
  • 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
  • 3 tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into pieces
  • 2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice
  • 2 oz.) cup chopped flat-leaf parsley
  • 2 oz.) teaspoon each Salt & Pepper

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 450 degrees F. Clean the mushroom with a wet paper towel and put them into a baking dish, halving them if they are a bit large. Sprinkle over the capers, garlic cloves, salt & pepper, & vegetable oil and toss it all together. Dot the butter over the top.
  2. Roast for 15-20 minutes, stirring occasionally.
  3. Immediately after removing from the oven, squeeze over the lemon juice and parsley. Serve hot.
  • Prep Time: 10 mins
  • Cook Time: 20 mins

Garlic and Butter Roasted Mushrooms - Delicious Mushroom Recipe (5)

Brittany Thomas

Brittany Thomas is a freelance food writer and the author, photographer, & publisher of the award-winning blog "If You Give A Girl A Cookie." Her writing has been featured in The Urbanite, Hagerstown Magazine, The Baltimore Sun, & The Frederick News Post. She likes chocolate cake, asparagus, blood oranges, and lemon desserts. She lives in small-town Pennsylvania with her new husband and mischievous puppy, Kona.

Garlic and Butter Roasted Mushrooms - Delicious Mushroom Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Should I cook mushrooms or garlic first? ›

Instructions
  1. Melt the butter in a large pan over medium high heat.
  2. Add the mushrooms. ...
  3. Cook, stirring occasionally, for 7 minutes or until most of the liquid has evaporated and mushrooms are caramelized.
  4. Add the garlic and cook for 1 more minute, stirring constantly.
  5. Sprinkle with parsley, then serve.
Mar 21, 2019

What is the secret to crispy mushrooms? ›

First, make sure the mushrooms are completely dry, then cook them in a hot skillet with some oil or butter as you normally would. Wait until you take them off the heat to shower them with a sprinkle of salt. This seems like a really small thing, but it actually makes a big difference.

Is it better to cook mushrooms in butter or oil? ›

Butter is great because it adds lots of flavor and produces a nice golden brown exterior, while adding oil allows the mushrooms to cook a little more quickly at slightly higher heat.

How do you get the best Flavour out of mushrooms? ›

Instead of tossing the mushrooms straight in the pot, cook them in a little skillet alongside before you add them. This will help release their moisture, concentrate their natural sugars right in the pot, and lend big flavor to the whole dish.

What should we not do before cooking mushrooms? ›

Do I need to wash the mushrooms before I cook them? Never wash mushrooms. Instead, Wipe off any dirt with a damp paper towel. You can wash them but they won't be as good in texture/color.

Do I wash mushrooms before roasting? ›

Regardless of the different schools of thought on how to get that pesky dirt off mushrooms, there is no doubt that it is important to clean mushrooms before cooking, one way or another. Vegetables (and fruits) can sometimes carry germs that can lead to foodborne illness, so it is important to be mindful.

How to cook mushrooms like a pro? ›

How to Sauté Mushrooms Like a Pro
  1. Heat enough oil to coat the bottom of your Smart Cooker. ...
  2. Add the mushrooms, sliced, quartered, or whole, in a single layer. ...
  3. Do not stir the mushrooms. ...
  4. Cook off any excess liquid. ...
  5. Season your sautéed mushrooms with a pinch of salt, as it brings out the meaty, umami flavor.

Why are my sauteed mushrooms rubbery? ›

Constantly sautéeing and stirring the mushrooms means that they won't have the opportunity to become golden-brown. Without proper caramelization, mushrooms are nothing but rubbery gray nubbins.

Should you cook mushrooms fast or slow? ›

Sautéing on High or Low Heat

Don't go too low or high on heat, which can make mushrooms over or under-cooked. Think right in the middle. "Medium-high heat is the way to go with mushrooms. You want their liquids to slowly evaporate while they caramelize," says Norton.

When to season mushrooms? ›

Salt your mushrooms at the end: I know this seems odd, but mushrooms are one of the only things I salt towards the end of cooking. Salt brings out moisture, which, in the case of mushrooms, prevents them from browning in the pan.

Why should mushrooms be cooked in water before oil? ›

Sautéing them in oil first is a crucial mistake when cooking with mushrooms, as the oil will disappear, so you'll add more but then be left with soggy, oil-logged mushrooms. Cooking the mushrooms in water -- although counterintuitive and unconventional -- solves the problem of soggy mushrooms.

What is the most flavourful mushroom? ›

Maitake. Also called Hen-of-the-wood, this is pound-for-pound the most flavorful mushroom around. You could definitely say we're maitake fans. It's extremely versatile, just as good sautéed with butter as it is on pizza.

What are the tastiest gourmet mushrooms? ›

Top 10 Tastiest Edible Mushrooms
  • Portobello Mushrooms. Portobello mushrooms are one of the most popular edible mushroom varieties and are often used as a meat substitute in vegetarian dishes. ...
  • Shiitake Mushrooms. ...
  • Morel Mushrooms. ...
  • Chanterelle Mushrooms. ...
  • Enoki Mushrooms. ...
  • Maitake Mushrooms. ...
  • Oyster Mushrooms. ...
  • Cremini Mushrooms.
Feb 23, 2023

What makes mushrooms taste so good? ›

Edible mushrooms have an earthy, slightly woodsy, meaty flavor and are one of the foods that contain umami, the fifth primary taste. Chefs describe umami as a savory, brothy taste that spreads across the tongue and lingers in your mouth.

Do you cook mushrooms first or last? ›

For the Best Mushrooms, Give Them a Good Sear

Cooking mushrooms concentrates their flavor and brings out notes of sweet earthiness from the Maillard reaction taking place. The best way to do this is to sear the mushrooms first in a dry pan. The high heat browns the mushrooms while instantly driving off excess moisture.

Should mushrooms be cooked before onions? ›

Do You Sauté the Onions First? To keep the onions from cooking in the mushroom juices, wait to add the onions until the mushrooms have released their excess liquid and almost all of that liquid has evaporated. Once you get there, add the onions and let them sauté and brown in the fat alongside the mushrooms.

Which cooks faster, mushrooms or onions? ›

Add sliced onions and worcestershire sauce and cook, stirring occasionally for 3-4 minutes or until edges start to get a little brown. Add mushrooms and cook additional 5-8 minutes depending on the size of the mushrooms and your preference for doneness. Whole mushrooms will take the longest.

Do you saute garlic before or after meat? ›

As a general rule, wait to add the garlic until immediately before you add other ingredients like stock or meat, allowing it to mingle with the cooked onion to create the onion and garlic foundation of the flavor profile you're building.

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