Lyophyllum connatum - Hat with a diameter of 30 to 100 (150) mm, first hemispherical, later convex with the rolled up edge, finally spread with an acute, often irregularly wavy, edge; surface smooth or slightly frosted, dry, matte, shimmering, white, gray, gray-black; often the hats of neighboring several-dozen fruiting bodies are fused together.
Lamellae very thick, broad, of various lengths, cut to shortly converging, first white, with age cream to yellowish, equal blade.
Stem 40 to 120 mm high, up to 20 mm thick, cylindrical, tapered towards the base, stems of several-dozen fruit bodies joined in a bundle at the base; young full, with age empty, unchanging; surface smooth, dull, sometimes scaly and longitudinally fibrillose, sprinkled on top; hat color, with age yellowish.
Hard flesh, thin-chunky, cartilaginous, white, unchanging, with a mild taste, pleasant aroma, cucumber-flour.
Occurrence: In parks, gardens, bushes, in ditches, mostly in damp places; also in coniferous and deciduous forests; grows in bundles and tufts, rarely singly; not very frequent. From August to October.
Value: inedible fungus.