For importers buying dried shiitake in container quantities, the difference between a premium batch and a filler-grade batch is real money — and most of it can be checked at the sample stage. Here are six measurable indicators we recommend to every new buyer.
1. Moisture Content (≤13%)
Moisture is the single most important parameter. Above 13%, mushrooms become prone to mold during sea freight, lose weight after delivery, and have shorter shelf life. Ask for a moisture test report with every shipment.
2. Broken Rate (≤5% for Grade A)
Whole mushrooms command 20-40% higher prices than broken pieces. Inspect samples by spreading 1 kg on a flat surface and counting whole vs broken caps. Anything above 10% broken indicates poor handling or grade substitution.
3. Cap Thickness
Thick caps (3-5 mm at center) indicate full maturity before harvest. Thin caps mean early harvest, less flavor, less weight per piece.
4. Aroma
Premium dried shiitake has a deep, earthy, slightly smoky aroma. Faint or musty smell can indicate poor drying or sulfite treatment. Sulfite-treated mushrooms are restricted in EU, UK and Japan — always ask for no-sulfite certification.
5. Color Uniformity
Within a single grade, color should be uniform. Flower shiitake should show clear white star-shaped cracks on a deep brown cap — these cracks form naturally from temperature swings and cannot be faked.
6. Origin Documentation
Ask for: SC food production license, phytosanitary certificate, and a third-party laboratory test result (pesticide residues, heavy metals, microbiological count). A legitimate exporter provides these without hesitation.
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