
Growing Mycelium Packaging Material — Biodegradable Foam Alternative
ལམ་སྟོན
Pasteurize the Substrate
Pasteurize the Substrate
Chop the agricultural waste (hemp hurd, straw, or corn stalks) into pieces approximately 1-3cm long. Submerge in water and heat to 65-80 degrees C for 60-90 minutes. This pasteurization kills competing moulds and bacteria that would outcompete the mycelium, without sterilizing the substrate completely (some beneficial microorganisms survive and actually aid mycelium growth). Drain the substrate thoroughly — it should be damp but not dripping. Squeeze a handful: a few drops of water should emerge, but it should not stream. Excess moisture causes bacterial contamination (anaerobic conditions), while too-dry substrate will not support mycelium growth.
གོམ་པ་འདིའི་རྫས་རིགས:
Chopped Straw1-2 kg kg
All-Purpose Flour50g gལག་ཆས་དགོས་མཁོ:
Large Cooking PotInoculate and Pack the Mould
Inoculate and Pack the Mould
Break the grain spawn into individual grains and mix thoroughly with the cooled, drained substrate at a ratio of 10-15% spawn to substrate by weight. Higher spawn ratios colonize faster and resist contamination better. Pack the inoculated substrate firmly into your mould — the material must be compressed to ensure the mycelium fibers bind the particles into a solid mass. Loose packing produces crumbly, weak material. Wrap the filled mould loosely in plastic to maintain humidity (the mycelium needs high humidity but also some gas exchange). Poke a few small holes in the plastic for air.

གོམ་པ་འདིའི་རྫས་རིགས:
Mushroom Spawn200-300g gལག་ཆས་དགོས་མཁོ:
Paper Making Kit (Mould & Deckle)Incubate for Colonization
Incubate for Colonization
Place the wrapped moulds in a dark, warm location (24-28 degrees C) for 5-7 days. The mycelium grows from each grain spawn point, sending out white hyphae (threadlike filaments) that penetrate and bind the substrate particles together. By day 3-4, white mycelium should be visible on the surface. By day 5-7, the entire surface should be covered with a dense white mat, and the material should hold together as a solid block when the mould is removed. If green or black mould appears instead of white mycelium, the substrate was contaminated — discard it and start over with more thorough pasteurization or a higher spawn ratio.
ལག་ཆས་དགོས་མཁོ:
Plastic WrapUnmould and Skin
Unmould and Skin
Once fully colonized, remove the material from the mould. It should be a solid, self-supporting block that holds its shape. For a smoother, more finished surface, leave the unmoulded piece at room temperature in indirect light for 1-2 additional days. The mycelium will grow a dense outer skin over all exposed surfaces, sealing the material and giving it a smooth, white appearance similar to polystyrene foam. This skinning phase is what gives mycelium packaging its professional appearance and improved water resistance compared to unskinned material.
Dry and Heat-Kill
Dry and Heat-Kill
To halt growth and prevent the material from producing mushroom fruiting bodies (which would deform the packaging), heat-kill the mycelium by placing the formed piece in an oven at 80-100 degrees C for 2-4 hours. This dries the material and kills the fungal organism while preserving the structural integrity of the mycelium network. The finished material is lightweight (density approximately 50-100 kg per cubic metre, comparable to expanded polystyrene), insulating, shock-absorbing, fire-resistant (mycelium does not melt or produce toxic fumes like polystyrene), and fully compostable. It decomposes in a home compost or garden soil within 30-90 days, returning nutrients to the soil rather than persisting as plastic waste for centuries.
ལག་ཆས་དགོས་མཁོ:
Ovenརྫས་རིགས
3- 1-2 kg pieceས་ཆ་འཛིན
- 200-300g (10-15% of substrate weight) pieceས་ཆ་འཛིན
- 50g pieceས་ཆ་འཛིན
CC0 སྤྱི་དབང
བིལུ་པིརིན་ཊི་འདི་CC0 འོག་བཀྲམས་ཡོད། ཁྱེད་རང་གིས་ཆོག་མཆན་མ་བཞེས་པར་ཕབ་ལེན་དང་བཟོ་བཅོས། བགོ་བཤའ། དགོས་མཁོ་གང་ལའང་བཀོལ་སྤྱོད་བྱས་ཆོག
བཟོ་མཁན་ལ་རྒྱབ་སྐྱོར་བྱེད་པའི་ཆེད་ཁོང་ཚོའི་བིལུ་པིརིན་ཊི་བརྒྱུད་ཐོན་སྐྱེད་ཉོ། བཟོ་མཁན་གྱིས བཟོ་མཁན་གྱི་ཁེ་ཕོགས ཚོང་པས་གཏན་འཁེལ་བྱས་པ། ཡང་ན་བིལུ་པིརིན་ཊི་འདིའི་པར་གསར་བཟོས་ཏེ་ཁྱེད་རང་གི་བིལུ་པིརིན་ཊི་ནང་མཐུད་སྦྲེལ་བྱས་ཏེ་ཡོང་སྒོ་བགོ་བཤའ་བྱེད།