Lion’s Mane Extract
Lion’s Mane
Welsh grown, organic, dual extracted lion’s mane. Properly dosed extract powder with nothing hidden behind a commodity label. Welsh grown. Properly dosed.
What it is
Lion’s mane (Hericium erinaceus) is an edible mushroom that looks like nothing else on the forest floor. Instead of a cap and stem it grows as a single white pom-pom, a dense cascade of soft spines that hang down like a frozen waterfall or a shaggy mane. In the wild it fruits on hardwood, usually beech and oak, often high up on standing or fallen trunks. The flesh is white throughout and the texture, when cooked, is famously close to seafood.
It has a long culinary history alongside its traditional use, which is unusual for a functional mushroom. Our lion’s mane extract UK supply is grown here in Britain rather than imported as anonymous bulk material, so we know exactly what went into it.
Traditional use
Lion’s mane has been used for centuries in traditional Chinese and Japanese practice, where it is known as hou tou gu and yamabushitake. It was traditionally taken both as a food and as a tonic, and was historically associated with the digestive system and with general vitality. In some accounts it was reserved for monks and nobility because wild specimens were scarce.
Traditional use is exactly that: a record of how people have used the mushroom over a long period. It is not evidence of a medical effect, and we do not present it as one.
What the research explores
Lion’s mane is one of the more actively studied functional mushrooms. Most of the interest centres on the brain and nervous system. Laboratory and animal research has explored compounds in the mushroom called hericenones and erinacines, and their relationship to nerve growth factor, a protein involved in the growth and maintenance of nerve cells. This is the source of the popular framing around cognition, focus and memory.
It is important to be honest about where this stands. Much of the work to date has been carried out in cell cultures and in animals. Human trials exist but are generally small and short, and the wider scientific picture is still developing. Researchers have also explored lion’s mane in the context of gut health, again largely at an early stage. None of this amounts to proof of benefit in people, and we make no health claims on the back of it. We simply think the research area is interesting and worth following honestly.
If you want to understand why the way an extract is made matters as much as the mushroom itself, read the science behind dual extraction, beta-glucans and triterpenes.
How Ffyngau sources it
Our lion’s mane is UK grown and organic, cultivated in Wales rather than shipped in as commodity powder of unknown origin. We dual extract it, using both a water extraction to pull out the water-soluble beta-glucans and an alcohol extraction to capture the alcohol-soluble triterpenes. A single extraction method would leave one of those groups behind. Doing both is more work, and it is the only way to deliver the full spectrum of what the mushroom holds.
The result is sold as an extract powder, properly dosed at a meaningful daily amount rather than a token sprinkle, and fully traceable from the growing room to the pouch. No anonymous commodity ingredients, no mystery blends. The same lion’s mane extract is the mushroom we use in Grym Coffee and Grym Cacao, so you can take it however suits your day.
- Latin name: Hericium erinaceus
- Form: extract powder
- Extraction: dual (water + alcohol)
- Sourcing: UK grown, organic
Ffyngau products are food supplements. They are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. If you are pregnant, breastfeeding or taking medication, consult a healthcare professional before use.