The Best Mushroom Based Meat Substitutes We Found in a Taste Test

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I’m a real maniac for mushrooms. A freak for fungi. My husband? He simply can’t stomach the things, so my fridge and freezer tend to be mushroom-free zones (although I do keep some canned mushrooms in the pantry for frozen pizza purposes). When we set out to find the best mushroom meat—I’m talking mushroom based meat substitutes—I was like a sugar-deprived child taste-testing Fruity Pebbles. 

What we included in our mushroom meat taste test

Vegan-friendly brands like Meati specialize in meat substitutes made with mycelium (the root structure of mushrooms), while others, like Omni, make meat out of straight-up mushrooms. Lion’s mane mushrooms in particular are super meaty and rich tasting—soaked in a little beet juice, they even look like meat. We didn’t differentiate between mushroom and myceclium—if it’s a fungus and we could find it at a local grocery store, we included it in this taste test.

What we were looking for in the best mushroom based meat substitutes

  • Pleasant texture: We love that mycelium meat products are better for the planet, but, woof, some of them really eat like wet cardboard. The texture didn’t have to remind us of meat, necessarily, but it shouldn’t make mushroom meat a slog to eat. 
  • Savory flavor: No matter how much mushroom based meat looks like the real stuff (Omni really does a great job), it’s not going to taste like filet mignon. That’s fine. But it should be seasoned so that it scratches a certain itch for the meat it’s mimicking. 
  • Accessibility: Listen. We live in L.A. We probably could have had a more robust taste test if we would have hit up our local Erewhon for niche mushroom meats, but we instead focused on brands that are pretty widely available. 

Here are four mushroom-based meat alternatives we recommend—as long as you’re a fungus freak, too.

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meati mycelium breakfast patties

Best for Breakfast

Meati Mycelium Breakfast Patties

When you hear “breakfast patty” you probably think you’re getting vegetarian sausage, right? Well, these are not sausage-like. Nope, not at all. They’re more like little vegetarian ham steaks. Same dense texture, but the flavor is nice and mild. I’ll be totally honest: I wouldn’t rush out for these, but they’re a fun enough way to mix things up for your a.m. meatless meat feast if you’ve tired of faux sausage.

Rating:

6.5/10

Sporks

meati mushroomroot cutlets

Best Chicken Substitute

Meati Cutlets

We tried a few products from Meati. Their steaks were a hard no for us—they’re tough and the texture is reminiscent of water-saturated cardboard. Meati Cutlets have that same texture, but get a pass because the breading tastes great and distracts from the strange consistency and slightly funky flavor of the mycelium meat. It tastes like the breading on Chicken McNuggets (positive). This mushroom meat would be PERFECT slathered in white gravy for a vegetarian country fried steak situation. The moisture of the gravy will help with the dense texture of the meat.

Rating:

7/10

Sporks

best mushroom bacon review

Best Mushroom Bacon

MyBacon Original Recipe

We tried MyBacon the last time we updated our ranking of the best veggie bacon, and I’m happy to report it’s as good, if not better, than we remembered. This stuff is not for the mushroom averse. The texture is straight-up thinly-sliced mushroom (and in my experience, getting past the slick, soft texture is, like, 99 percent of the battle for people who hate mushrooms). But the flavor is unreal. It’s really just reformed oyster mushrooms coated in coconut oil, but the flavor is outrageous. The strips crisp up around the edges, and the overall texture is like bacon for people who like it with a little bit of chew. It’s smoky. It’s umami. It’s the best mushroom meat for BLTs and breakfast sammies, that’s for sure.

Rating:

9/10

Sporks

best mushroom steak

Best Mushroom Steak

Omni Lion’s Mane Mushroom Steak

This is another mushroom based meat substitute for people who really like mushrooms, but…you’re reading a ranking of mushroom meats, so I’ll assume you’re good with that. Omni marinates its presliced lion’s mane steaks in beet juice and, no lie, the slices look like rare steak. It’s wild. The flavor is fantastic and the “meat” is so, so juicy. It’s the best mushroom meat…so far!

Rating:

9/10

Sporks

Other mushroom meat we tried

Meati Classic Steaks, Meati Carne Asada Steaks

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About the Author

Gwynedd Stuart

Howdy! I’m Gwynedd, Sporked’s managing editor. I live in Los Angeles and have access to the best tacos the U.S. has to offer—but I’m a sucker for a crunchy Old El Paso taco night every now and then. I’ve been at Sporked since 2022 and I’m still searching frozen mozzarella sticks that can hold a candle to restaurant sticks. Why you should trust me: I’ve been a journalist for 20 years (yikes), a consumer of food for 40-plus years, and I’m truly hard pressed to think of foods I don’t like (or that I can’t tolerate at the very least). Oh and one time I cooked my way through Guy Fieri’s cookbook and wrote about the journey through Flavortown. What I buy every week: Trader Joe’s Original Savory Thins. Fat free plain yogurt (usually Fage or Nancy’s). Honeycrisp apples. Sweet cream coffee creamer for my at-home Americanos. A frozen cauliflower crust pizza and some jarred mushrooms to top it with. Old El Paso Stand ‘N Stuff taco shells and Gardein Ground Be’f, even though I think “be’f” is a nightmarish contraction. Favorite ranking: Stouffer’s frozen dinners. I don’t own a microwave (I get my cancers the old fashioned way!), so I love taste testing things that I don’t really buy to eat at home. Least favorite ranking: Soy sauce. Don’t get me wrong, I love soy sauce—but consuming that much sodium in one sitting is probably illegal in some countries. Our frozen enchilada taste test was a close second; the smell of microwaved corn tortillas still haunts me.

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  • I love veggie meat substitutes and ones made with real mushrooms, but I want to warn people to be careful with mycelium-based ones. For some reason, the mycelium ones make me REALLY sick. (And I tried Meati more than once– I know it wasn’t just a coincidence that I got sick after I ate it that one time.) I’ve read online that some other people have similar problems with Quorn (which is made with mycoprotein), but that doesn’t bother me. It just seems like fungus-based meat subs that aren’t made with actual mushrooms can be an issue for some people.

    Reply
    • This is sometimes what happens when people consume foods that are trying to mimic other foods. They combine ingredients in strange ways trying to accomplish something. You CAN, but SHOULD you?

      Reply