Master’s Mix Substrate Tek for Fruiting Blocks
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Master's Mix is a 50/50 blend of hardwood fuel pellets and soy hull pellets. It's one of the highest-performing substrates available for gourmet cultivation — dense, nutrition-rich, and capable of producing exceptional yields from species like Lion's Mane, oyster, chestnut, and King Oyster. The tradeoff is that its high nitrogen content requires proper sterilization, not just pasteurization. This tek covers the full process: mixing, hydrating, sterilizing, sealing, and inoculating — with exact weights and volumes so there's no guesswork.
Best Mushroom Species for Master's Mix
Master's Mix performs best with wood-loving, high-yield species that can take advantage of a rich, supplemented substrate:
| Species | Notes |
|---|---|
| Oyster mushrooms (Pleurotus spp.) | Rapid colonizers, aggressive yields — excellent for high-volume runs |
| Lion's Mane (Hericium erinaceus) | Dense, high-quality clusters — one of the best pairings with Master's Mix |
| Chestnut mushrooms (Pholiota adiposa) | Strong pinset, richer flavor — performs well on supplemented hardwood |
| King Oyster (Pleurotus eryngii) | Meaty, market-grade stems — benefits from the nitrogen load in soy hulls |
Why Sterilization Is Required
Soy hulls are rich in proteins, fats, and fermentable sugars — exactly the nutrition profile that mushroom mycelium thrives on, and exactly the profile that competing bacteria and mold spores exploit just as aggressively. Pasteurization (temperatures up to ~82°C) is not sufficient to eliminate heat-resistant endospores that live in supplemented substrates. Full pressure sterilization at 121°C / 15 PSI is required to kill these spores before they can outcompete your culture.
What You'll Need
Substrate Ingredients
- Hardwood fuel pellets (e.g., Traeger hardwood pellets)
- Soy hull pellets
Bags
- Unicorn XLS-A — 10 lb wet capacity (use for full-size blocks)
- Unicorn 3T — 5 lb wet capacity (use for smaller runs)
Tools
- Calibrated scale (grams and pounds)
- 2–5 gallon clean mixing bucket
- Measuring container for hot water
- Impulse sealer
- Flow hood or high-quality laminar flow work area
Sterilization Equipment
- Presto 23 qt pressure cooker or All American sterilizer
- Bottom rack with legs and top trivet for inside the PC (essential for safety and steam circulation)
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Exact Weights & Water Volumes
| Bag | Total Dry Weight | Hardwood Pellets | Soy Hull Pellets | Hot Water (80–90°C) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unicorn XLS-A (10 lb) | 8 lb (3,629 g) | 4 lb (1,814 g) | 4 lb (1,814 g) | ≈ 3 L |
| Unicorn 3T (5 lb) | 4 lb (1,814 g) | 2 lb (907 g) | 2 lb (907 g) | ≈ 1.5 L |
Save the water from boiling grain spawn and use it hot to hydrate your Master's Mix. It adds nutrients back into the substrate and reduces waste. Plan your workflow so the grain boil finishes just before substrate prep — the water temperature will be right in the 80–90°C window you need.
Step-by-Step Process
Weigh and Mix Dry Ingredients
Weigh hardwood pellets and soy hull pellets separately, then combine in a clean mixing bucket. Mix thoroughly so the two pellet types are evenly distributed — this ensures consistent hydration and prevents hot spots during sterilization.
Load the Bag
Pour the dry mix into your Unicorn bag and settle it flat across the bottom. You want an even, level layer — not piled in the center — so the substrate hydrates uniformly and the bag sits upright in the pressure cooker.
Add Hot Water
Pour hot water (80–90°C) directly into the bag over the dry mix. Use the exact volumes from the table above. For extra nutrition, use hot grain boil water if available. Do not stir or massage.
Hydrate — 5 to 10 Minutes
Leave the bag open and undisturbed for 5–10 minutes. The pellets will fully break down and absorb the water evenly on their own. No clipping, no massaging — pellets hydrate consistently without intervention.
Fold and Load for Sterilization
After hydration, fold the bag gussets inward so the sides sit vertical. Do not impulse seal at this stage — bags remain open during sterilization so steam can penetrate the substrate. Place a rack with legs in the bottom of the pressure cooker with 3.5 inches of water, then load bags upright with space around them for steam circulation. A 23 qt Presto fits one XLS-A or two 3T bags per run.
Sterilize at 15 PSI — 2.5 to 3 Hours
Bring the pressure cooker up to pressure. Once the safety valve closes, place the pressure regulator and bring to 15 PSI. Sterilize for a minimum of 2.5 hours — 3 hours for larger XLS-A bags or stacked loads. Start timing from when full pressure is reached, not when heat is applied.
Cool in Front of Your Flow Hood
If using a Presto pressure cooker, move it directly in front of your flow hood while it cools and depressurizes. As the PC cools, negative pressure develops inside — HEPA-filtered air from the hood prevents unfiltered ambient air from being drawn in through the open bag tops. Do not move the PC after it has cooled and depressurized — open it in place in front of the hood.
Impulse Seal Post-Sterilization
Once fully depressurized, open the PC in front of the flow hood. Remove bags one at a time and immediately impulse seal the top, keeping the filter patch unobstructed. Allow sealed bags to cool completely to room temperature before inoculation — inoculating into a warm bag raises contamination risk significantly.
Inoculate
Work in a sterile environment — flow hood preferred. Open each sealed, cooled bag, add fully colonized grain spawn, reseal, and mix by gently shaking or breaking up the substrate block. Spawn rate, spawn quality, and your sterile technique at this stage determine the outcome of the run.
Most growers begin by isolating mycelium from a liquid culture syringe to agar, then transferring the strongest growth into sterilized grain to produce grain spawn. Grain spawn is then used to inoculate bulk substrate like Master's Mix. Using agar as an intermediary lets you visually verify growth vigor and genetic consistency before committing it to a full bag run. You can also inoculate grain directly from liquid culture — both approaches work. Learn to make agar →
Colonization & Fruiting
| Stage | Parameters |
|---|---|
| Colonization | 68–75°F | 7–14 days depending on species | No light required |
| Fruiting initiation | Cut open bag or make "X" holes for side or top fruiting |
| Fruiting conditions | 85–95% relative humidity | Good fresh air exchange | Indirect light |
Production Planning
With one 40 lb bag each of hardwood and soy hull pellets (80 lb total dry mix), here's what you can produce:
| Bag | Dry Weight / Bag | Bags from 80 lb Mix | Wet Weight / Bag | Water / Bag |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unicorn XLS-A | 8 lb (3,629 g) | 10 bags | ~10 lb (4.54 kg) | ≈ 3 L |
| Unicorn 3T | 4 lb (1,814 g) | 20 bags | ~5 lb (2.27 kg) | ≈ 1.5 L |
Sterile Workflow Gear
If you do frequent mycology work, automated induction sterilizers keep your sterile sessions moving without the friction of flame. Both Rhizo Funga models are sensor-activated — place your scalpel in the unit and the 7.5-second cycle runs automatically. No button, no foot pedal, no flame near your IPA.
| FlatTop — $124.99 | LabRat — $149.99 | |
|---|---|---|
| Design | Open-top, easy wipe-down | Enclosed, ergonomic angled entry |
| Best for | Syringe needles, mixed tools, all-rounder | High-volume agar and culture work |
| Automation | Proximity sensor, no button | Proximity sensor, no button |
Prefer Ready-Made?
Skip the mixing, sterilizing, and sealing entirely. Our pre-made, lab-sterilized Master's Mix blocks are ready to inoculate straight out of the bag — same 50/50 formula, same sterilization standard, zero prep time.
Always use a bottom rack inside your pressure cooker to keep bags off direct heat. Never fill the PC beyond two-thirds capacity. Allow pressure to release fully before opening. Do not move a cooled, depressurized PC — open it in place in front of your flow hood. Follow the manufacturer safety instructions for your specific pressure cooker model at all times.




