Researchers develop a method to 3D print with coffee grounds and mycelium, resulting in resilient, compostable materials for ...
Only 30% of a coffee bean is soluble in water, and many brewing methods aim to extract significantly less than that. So of ...
Various workers 1 have shown that fungi and bacteria and their associated metabolic products are capable of affecting the structure of soils. Fungi act largely by the entangling effect of their ...
Researchers developed a new system for turning used coffee grounds into a paste, which they use to 3D print objects, such as packing materials and a vase. They inoculate the paste with Reishi mushroom ...
A team has developed a biodegradable material by combining used coffee grounds and mushroom mycelium. This innovative ...
A variety of organisms, such as bacteria, fungi, and plants, produce secondary metabolites, also known as natural products. Natural products have been a prolific source and an inspiration for numerous ...
Department of Chemical, Biochemical, and Environmental Engineering, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, 1000 Hilltop Circle, Baltimore, Maryland 21250, United States ...
They inoculate the paste with Reishi mushroom spores, which grow on the objects to form that mycelial skin ... businesses owners producing small-batch products — for example, small, delicate ...
Curated by multidisciplinary artist James Charles Morris and Galerie Camille director Marta Carvajal, Living Frequency follows the mycelial threads of Detroit’s Black art scene from the past ...