These sauteed mushrooms are SO good and honestly I think it’s the glaze that does it – soy, Worcestershire, honey, garlic, fresh thyme, all going in at the end so the mushrooms are already perfectly browned before any liquid touches the pan. No grey watery mush here!! If you love knowing how to cook mushrooms properly, this is the method that will actually change how you do it. My Mushroom Stroganoff Pasta has that same depth of flavour if you want something similar.

For a proper dinner at home, these go really well alongside Garlic Butter Chicken, Oven Baked Salmon Steaks, or Steak Pasta.
Table of Contents

Key ingredients that make these sauteed mushrooms worth making over and over:
See the recipe card for full information on all ingredients and quantities.
A few ways to take this sauteed mushroom recipe in a different direction:

Step 1: Slice the mushrooms and preheat a large cast iron or stainless steel pan over high heat.

Step 2: Once the pan is hot, add a drizzle of olive oil along with the first half of your sliced mushrooms.

Step 3: Leave them to brown undisturbed for 5 minutes, then stir with a spatula and fry for a further 2 minutes before removing them from the pan.

Step 4: Repeat the browning process for the second batch of mushrooms, then add the first batch back into the pan and reduce the heat to medium-low.

Step 5: Add the minced garlic, fresh thyme, soy sauce, Worcestershire sauce, and honey directly to the mushrooms.

Step 6: Season generously with salt and pepper, sauté everything for a final 3 minutes until glazed, then serve up and enjoy!
If you love quick vegetable sides, Skillet Roasted Corn, Air Fryer Green Beans, and Mediterranean Pasta Salad are all worth a look.

The biggest problem people run into with white mushroom recipes is tipping the whole batch into the pan at once. When you overcrowd a skillet the temperature drops immediately, the mushrooms start releasing their liquid, and instead of frying they just sit and steam in their own water. Cooking them in two batches over high heat solves this – you get enough surface area for a proper sear and that caramelised crust that makes all the difference to the final texture of the sauteed mushrooms.
Moisture control matters just as much. Because mushrooms are so porous, any water they pick up during washing pools straight into the hot pan and undoes all your work. Wiping them with a damp paper towel is all they need.
And then there’s the timing of the seasoning. Waiting until the very end to add the salt, soy, and honey means the mushrooms stay firm and meaty all the way through rather than going soft before the glaze even gets a chance to form. It’s the best way to saute mushrooms and once you do it like this you’ll neverrr go back to chucking everything in at once.
These sauteed mushrooms go with pretty much everything! Pile them on Creamy Mushroom Toast, toss them through Easy Red Pesto Pasta, load them onto toasted sourdough, or serve them as a mushroom side dish alongside whatever you’ve got going, like Chicken Bolognese, Tonkatsu Pork & Cabbage Salad or even Pork Loin Crock Pot.
Sauteed mushrooms keep really well and are one of the most useful things to have ready in the fridge for the week.
Refrigerator: Leave them to cool completely before transferring to an airtight container. They’ll keep in the fridge for up to 4 days and the flavour deepens as they sit.
Freezer: Freezing isn’t great for mushrooms unfortunately as the texture goes a bit soft and watery on defrosting and you lose that seared texture you worked to get.
Reheat: Warm them in a skillet over medium-low heat for a few minutes. If the glaze has thickened up in the fridge, just add a small splash of water to loosen it back up.

It almost always comes down to an overcrowded pan, heat that’s too low, or salt added too early. Cooking in two batches over high heat and seasoning right at the end lets all that moisture evaporate instantly and gives you a proper golden sear instead, which is what makes this the best sautéed mushrooms recipe.
Rinsing mushrooms under the tap is a bad idea because they soak up the water and it all ends up in your pan. A quick wipe with a damp paper towel is all you need to get the dirt off without affecting how they cook. This is one of those things that makes a real difference when you’re figuring out how do I saute mushrooms for the first time.
A large cast iron or heavy stainless steel skillet is what you want because they hold high heat really well. Non-stick pans tend to lose temperature too quickly & you don’t get that deep caramelisation you want in your Italian mushroom recipes.
Chestnut mushrooms are brilliant because they hold their shape so well under heat, but cremini, portobello, and shiitake all work great in this sauteed mushrooms recipe. Mixing a few different varieties together is a really good shout if you want something a bit more interesting.
Try some sweet desserts after dinner, like my Banana Bread Cookies, Rice Pudding, or Lemon Muffins.
If you tried this Sauteed Mushrooms Recipe, it would mean so much to me if you could leave a review & a star rating to let me know how you found it! I love hearing about your experiences – it motivates me to keep creating more and more recipes for you guys 💛 Let’s get cooking! – Mimi x

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