I just looked back on the testimony of Dr Truong because that is the first that I have heard that.
On August 2, 2023, she took the food to her work laboratory and “conducted exactly the same investigation” at her office as she had at home. Dr Truong said there were “no signs” of death cap mushrooms in the food sample.
On both inspections, however she found field mushrooms.
“The name is agaricus bisporus. This is the typical mushrooms that you find in a supermarket,” she said. “That is the only mushroom that I found in this food item.”
Dr Truong’s colleague, mycologist Tom May, on Wednesday told the court death cap mushrooms can look like non-toxic mushrooms such as “young puffballs”.
“In general, young puffballs are regarded as edible,” he said.
‘NO SIGN’ OF DEATH CAPS IN LUNCH LEFTOVERS
todayspaper.theaustralian.com.au