Black Trumpet Mushroom — Cups to Grams
1 cup fresh black trumpet = 50g — dried = 22g, rehydrated = 165g
1 cup Black Trumpet Mushroom = 50 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Black Trumpet Mushroom
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 12.5 g | 4.03 tbsp | 12.5 tsp |
| ⅓ | 16.7 g | 5.39 tbsp | 16.7 tsp |
| ½ | 25 g | 8.06 tbsp | 25 tsp |
| ⅔ | 33.3 g | 10.7 tbsp | 33.3 tsp |
| ¾ | 37.5 g | 12.1 tbsp | 37.5 tsp |
| 1 | 50 g | 16.1 tbsp | 50 tsp |
| 1½ | 75 g | 24.2 tbsp | 75 tsp |
| 2 | 100 g | 32.3 tbsp | 100 tsp |
| 3 | 150 g | 48.4 tbsp | 150 tsp |
| 4 | 200 g | 64.5 tbsp | 200 tsp |
Measuring Black Trumpets: Fresh, Dried, and Rehydrated
Black trumpet mushrooms present a unique measurement challenge because they are almost exclusively purchased and used in dried form in markets outside their foraged range. Understanding the dramatic weight differences between forms is essential for recipe scaling.
Fresh whole (50g/cup): Fresh black trumpets are very lightweight for their volume — the hollow trumpet shape fills the measuring cup with mostly air. Fresh availability is limited to fall months in temperate regions and specialty markets near foraged areas. If you find fresh black trumpets, use them immediately — they keep only 2–3 days refrigerated.
Dried (22g/cup): The commercial form. Dried black trumpets are papery, light, and almost weightless. Because they are so concentrated in flavor, small quantities go a long way — 28g (1 oz) of dried mushrooms provides the flavor equivalent of approximately 168g (6 oz) fresh. Dried black trumpets keep 12–18 months in an airtight container away from light and moisture.
Rehydrated (165g/cup): After reconstitution in warm water, the mushrooms absorb 5–6 times their dry weight. The rehydrated texture is soft and silky — quite different from fresh, which has more firmness. Always rehydrate in exactly as much water as the mushrooms will absorb — excess soaking water is fine, but the strained liquid should be saved and used.
| Measure | Fresh (g) | Dried (g) | Rehydrated (g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tablespoon | 3.1g | 1.4g | 10.3g |
| ¼ cup | 12.5g | 5.5g | 41g |
| ½ cup | 25g | 11g | 82.5g |
| 1 cup | 50g | 22g | 165g |
| 28g dried (1 oz) | ~168g fresh equiv. | 1 cup + 3 tbsp | ~165-180g rehydrated |
The Truffle-Like Flavor: Why Black Trumpets Are Prized
Black trumpets occupy a unique flavor position in the wild mushroom world — they are the most truffle-adjacent of the commonly foraged edible species, without the prohibitive cost of true black truffle (Tuber melanosporum). The overlap in aroma is not coincidental: both species produce similar volatile aromatic compounds including sulfur-containing molecules and long-chain aldehydes that register as earthy, smoky, and deeply savory.
The drying process concentrates these aromatics dramatically. Fresh black trumpets have a mild earthiness; the same mushrooms dried and then added to cream acquire an aroma that many professional chefs describe as unmistakably truffle-reminiscent. This makes dried black trumpets extremely useful as a flavor-boosting addition in small quantities — even 5–10g (approximately 3–7 tablespoons dried) can transform a sauce or risotto.
The visual impact of black trumpets is equally important in high-end cooking. Their deep matte black color creates stunning contrast in cream sauces, pale soufflés, and white tagliatelle. French nouvelle cuisine chefs in the 1970s–80s celebrated this visual-flavor combination; the mushroom remains a signature of classical French fine dining.
Key Recipes and Quantities
Black trumpet cream sauce (4 servings): Rehydrate 30g (1 cup + 3 tablespoons) dried black trumpets in 200ml warm water for 25 minutes. Lift out mushrooms. Strain soaking liquid. Saute 2 shallots (60g) in 20g butter. Add mushrooms, cook 3 minutes. Add strained soaking liquid + 200ml heavy cream. Reduce by half (approximately 10 minutes). Season with salt and white pepper. Serve over fresh pasta (250g dry / 400g fresh). The dramatic black sauce coating white pasta is the defining visual statement.
Black trumpet omelette (1 serving): Rehydrate 8g dried black trumpets in 50ml warm water 20 minutes. Squeeze gently. Cook rehydrated mushrooms in 1 teaspoon (5g) butter 2 minutes. Set aside. Make a 3-egg French omelette in butter, fold in mushrooms + fresh chervil just before the last fold. The contrast of pale yellow egg and black mushrooms visible through the translucent fold is the classic presentation.
Black trumpet risotto (4 servings): Rehydrate 25g dried mushrooms in 500ml warm mushroom stock 25 minutes. Make risotto using the strained mushroom-infused stock. Add rehydrated mushrooms in the last 5 minutes. Finish with 60g butter + 40g grated Kefalotyri or Parmigiano.
Storage and Shelf Life
Fresh black trumpets keep only 2–3 days refrigerated — store them in a paper bag in the vegetable drawer, never in sealed plastic. If you have more fresh mushrooms than you can use immediately, dry them: spread in a single layer on baking sheets and dehydrate at 60°C (140°F) for 4–6 hours until completely crisp, or air-dry at room temperature for 24 hours in a well-ventilated area. Properly dried, they keep 12–18 months in airtight jars away from light.
Commercially dried black trumpets should be purchased in sealed packaging with minimal moisture. Inspect for signs of humidity damage: clumping, softness, or off-smell. Store opened packages in a sealed glass jar with a small silica gel desiccant packet. Do not refrigerate opened dried mushrooms — temperature fluctuations cause condensation and accelerate deterioration. Rehydrated mushrooms should be used the same day; do not refrigerate reconstituted mushrooms as the texture degrades overnight.
- USDA FoodData Central — Mushrooms, chanterelle (Craterellus cornucopioides USDA data integrated under Cantharellus family)
- NOAA / US Forest Service — Edible Wild Mushrooms of the Pacific Northwest
- Slow Food Foundation — Ark of Taste: Wild Mushrooms of European Forests
- Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry — Volatile compounds in Craterellus cornucopioides (Bellesia et al.)
- North American Mycological Association (NAMA) — Field identification guides and safety protocols