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The Best CVG Recipe (Coco-Coir, Vermiculite, Gypsum): A Beginner-Friendly Guide

The Best CVG Recipe (Coco-Coir, Vermiculite, Gypsum): A Beginner-Friendly Guide

CVG stands for coco-coir, vermiculite, and gypsum. This bulk substrate is popular because it uses accessible materials, hydrates easily, and supports vigorous, even colonization. This guide is designed for beginners using common home gear (bucket, kettle or stove, measuring cups) and basic clean-technique.


What You’ll Need

  • Large food-grade bucket with a tight-fitting lid (or a large pot you can cover)
  • Heat source: kitchen stove or kettle for near-boiling water
  • Mixing paddle or large spoon
  • Gloves and 70% isopropyl alcohol for wiping tools and contact surfaces
  • 1 coco-coir brick (≈ 650 g)
  • Vermiculite: fine-to-medium grade
  • Gypsum: powdered or pelletized garden gypsum
  • Clean water (tap is fine if reasonably low in chlorine)

CVG Recipe (1 Coir Brick Batch)

Ingredient Amount Notes
Coco-coir (compressed brick) ≈ 650 g (1 brick) Common garden/terrarium bricks work well
Vermiculite ~ 8 cups (≈ 2 quarts / ~ 1.9–2.0 L) Add a bit more if you prefer a fluffier texture
Gypsum (CaSO4) ~ 1 cup (≈ 150–200 g) Buffers pH and adds calcium/sulfur
Hot water ~ 4–5 quarts (multiple the grams of your coco brick x 52ml + 1065ml= ml of water to use) Boiling for hydration & heat-treating

Field capacity check: Squeeze a handful—a few drops should escape, not a stream. If water streams out, it’s too wet. If nothing comes out and it feels dusty, it’s too dry.


Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Prep & Sanitize
    Wipe bucket (inside), lid, spoon, and your work surface with 70% isopropyl alcohol. Put on clean gloves. This reduces contamination risk.

  2. Dry Mix
    Place the coir brick in the bucket. Add vermiculite and gypsum. Lightly stir to distribute the dry components.

  3. Add Hot Water
    Bring water to a boil. Slowly pour ~4 quarts (reserve ~1 quart to adjust later) over the mix. As the coir expands, stir thoroughly to eliminate dry pockets.

  4. Cover & Hydrate
    Close the lid and let the mix sit for ~60 minutes to fully absorb. Wrapping the bucket in towels helps retain heat.

  5. Stir & Adjust Hydration
    Open, stir well, and check moisture. If too dry, add the remaining hot water in small increments; if too wet, let the substrate breathe uncovered and stir occasionally to release steam.

  6. Cool to Room Temperature
    Allow the substrate to cool completely (often 4–6 hours). Hot substrate can kill or weaken mycelium.

  7. Spawn (Inoculate)
    Move to a clean area. Break up colonized grain spawn and mix evenly with CVG. Typical beginner rates are 10–20% spawn by volume (e.g., 1 part spawn to 4–9 parts CVG). Thorough mixing shortens colonization time and reduces contamination risk.

  8. Incubate, Then Fruit
    Incubate at species-appropriate temperatures (commonly 65–75 °F). Once fully colonized (substrate appears evenly white), introduce fruiting conditions: light, fresh air exchange, and high humidity.

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Scaling the Recipe

Use this quick table to scale batches while keeping the same ratios. Adjust water at the end to dial in field capacity.

Batch Size Coir Vermiculite Gypsum Hot Water (start with)
Half Brick ~ 325 g ~ 4 cups ~ 1/2 cup ~ 2–2.5 quarts
One Brick (Standard) ~ 650 g ~ 8 cups ~ 1 cup ~ 4–5 quarts
Two Bricks ~ 1300 g ~ 16 cups ~ 2 cups ~ 8–10 quarts

Tip: Coir bricks vary in density and water retention. Always finish with the field-capacity squeeze test.


Spawn-to-Substrate Ratios (Quick Guide)

  • Faster colonization, lower contamination risk: ~20% spawn (1:4 spawn:CVG)
  • Balanced for most setups: ~15% spawn (1:5.5)
  • More economical, slower colonization: ~10% spawn (1:9)

Higher spawn rates shorten colonization time but use more grain. Choose based on your goals and contamination tolerance.


Troubleshooting

  • Too Wet: Substrate drips or pools water. Spread out, mix, and allow steam to escape; add a small amount of dry vermiculite if needed.
  • Too Dry: Handful crumbles, no sheen. Sprinkle in hot water in small increments and mix thoroughly.
  • Stalled Colonization: Often hydration, temperature, or low spawn rate. Verify field capacity, keep 65–75 °F, and consider raising spawn rate next time.
  • Contamination: Usually from unclean surfaces or handling. Improve sterile technique—gloves, 70% iso, wipe-downs, minimal talking/breathing over open containers.

Clean Technique Essentials

  • Gloves + 70% isopropyl alcohol for hands, tools, and contact surfaces
  • Minimize airflow over open containers (use a still air box or, ideally, a laminar flow hood)
  • Break up grain spawn thoroughly before mixing
  • Close containers promptly after mixing

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to sterilize CVG?
Most home growers use hot-water hydration and careful clean-technique (often called “bucket tek”). Full sterilization (pressure sterilization) is possible but not required for many CVG workflows. Clean handling remains critical.

Can I add coffee grounds or manure?
You can, but nutrient-rich additives can increase contamination risk for beginners. Master the basic CVG first, then experiment.

What temperature is best?
Many gourmet species colonize well between 65–75 °F. Warmer is not always better—excess heat can favor contaminants.

How will I know it’s at field capacity?
The squeeze test: a firm squeeze yields a few drops, not a stream. Adjust with small amounts of dry vermiculite (to reduce moisture) or hot water (to increase moisture).


Safety & Legal Notice

This article is for educational purposes. Follow all local laws and regulations regarding fungi cultivation and species. Work carefully with hot water and practice basic lab safety.


Printable Checklist

  • Bucket with lid
  • Coir brick (650 g)
  • Vermiculite (~8 cups)
  • Gypsum (~1 cup)
  • Hot water (~4–5 quarts to start)
  • Gloves + 70% isopropyl alcohol
  • Mixing spoon/paddle
  • Clean work surface

Summary: Hydrate coir/verm/gypsum with hot water, cover 60 minutes, stir, adjust to field capacity, cool fully, mix in clean grain spawn (10–20%), incubate, then fruit.

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