
20 Plastic Petri Dish Sterile
Grow supplies
by Unbranded
Sterile Plastic Petri Dishes for Mushroom Spore Germination
Sterile Petri dishes are shallow, lidded containers used to germinate spores, isolate cultures, and propagate mycelium in a contamination-free environment. This pack of 20 pre-sterilised dishes gives you enough workspace for multiple agar transfers, spore prints, or seed germination runs without reusing a single dish — because in mycology, single-use sterile gear is not a luxury, it is the baseline. Order a pack and you have 20 guaranteed-clean surfaces ready to go, no autoclaving required.
| Specification | Detail |
|---|---|
| Pack quantity | 20 dishes |
| Material | Clear plastic (polystyrene) |
| Sterilisation | Factory pre-sterilised, individually sealed |
| Lid | Included (slip-fit cover) |
| Use type | Single-use / disposable |
| SKU | SH0122 |
| Primary application | Mushroom spore germination, agar work, seed starting |
| Compatible with | Standard nutrient agar, malt extract agar (MEA), potato dextrose agar (PDA) |
| Dish type | Material | Reusable | Autoclavable | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single-use plastic (this product) | Polystyrene | No | No — warps at 121°C | Home cultivators, beginners, high-volume agar pours |
| Borosilicate glass | Glass | Yes | Yes | University labs, long-term reuse, repeated sterilisation cycles |
| Polypropylene plastic | PP plastic | Limited | Some grades | Mid-range option, check manufacturer specs |
Complete your agar workstation: pair these Petri dishes with a still air box or laminar flow hood for clean transfers. Spore syringes, sterile scalpels, and pre-mixed agar powder are all available separately in our mushroom grow supplies section. If you are starting from scratch, a mushroom grow kit takes the guesswork out of the first harvest while you practise your sterile technique on the side. Browse our full mycology category for grain spawn bags, substrate, and parafilm.
Why You Need Sterile Petri Dishes for Mushroom Growing
Contamination is the single biggest cause of failed home mushroom projects, according to community surveys and data tracked by cultivation forums over the past decade. We have seen it hundreds of times over the past 25-plus years at our Amsterdam counter: someone cracks open a spore syringe, drops it onto a surface that looked clean, and three days later the dish is green with Trichoderma instead of white with mycelium. The difference between a successful culture and a mouldy mess almost always comes down to one thing — sterile equipment at the moment of inoculation.
A factory-sealed, single-use Petri dish removes one entire variable from that equation. You crack the seal, pour your agar (roughly 1.2 grams of nutrient agar powder per 60 ml of hot water, according to standard preparation guides), drop your spore sample, close the lid, and wrap with parafilm. No scrubbing, no autoclaving, no wondering if the glass dish you boiled for 20 minutes is actually sterile or just hot. For the price of a pack of 20, you get 20 guaranteed-clean surfaces. That is 20 chances to isolate a healthy culture or test a new spore print.
The honest limitation: these are lightweight, disposable plastic. They are not the thick borosilicate glass dishes you would find in a university lab, and they are not designed for repeated autoclaving or long-term storage. If you need dishes you can sterilise and reuse dozens of times, glass is the way to go. But for most home cultivators running agar transfers in a still air box, single-use plastic dishes are the practical choice — cheaper per dish, lighter to ship, and zero prep time. We would pick these over glass for anyone doing their first 10-20 agar plates.
How to Use Sterile Petri Dishes for Agar Work
Agar work with sterile Petri dishes follows seven steps, from workspace prep through final transfer to grain spawn or substrate. The entire process takes about two hours of active work plus 3-7 days of incubation.
- Prepare your workspace. Set up a still air box or work near a laminar flow hood. Wipe all surfaces with 70% isopropyl alcohol. Put on nitrile gloves — one ungloved hand can introduce enough contaminants to ruin an entire batch.
- Mix your agar medium. Stir approximately 1.2 grams of nutrient agar powder into 60 ml of hot water per dish. For 20 dishes, that is roughly 24 grams of agar powder in 1,200 ml of water. Sterilise the liquid in a pressure cooker at 15 PSI for 15-20 minutes, then let it cool to around 50-55°C — warm enough to pour, cool enough not to kill your spores.
- Pour the agar. Crack the seal on one Petri dish at a time. Pour roughly 15-20 ml of liquid agar into the bottom half, then immediately replace the lid. Work quickly to minimise airborne exposure. Tilt the dish gently to spread the agar evenly across the base.
- Let the agar solidify. Leave the dishes lid-side-up on a flat surface for 30-60 minutes until the agar sets into a firm, clear gel. You can stack them, but do not move them until they are fully set.
- Inoculate. Using a sterilised scalpel or inoculation loop, transfer a small sample from your spore syringe, spore print, or existing culture onto the centre of the agar surface. Replace the lid immediately and seal the edges with a strip of parafilm or micropore tape.
- Incubate. Store the sealed dishes upside down (agar on top, lid on the bottom) at 24-27°C. This prevents condensation from dripping onto the culture surface. Check daily for growth — healthy mycelium should appear as white, rhizomorphic strands within 3-7 days.
- Transfer or use. Once you have a clean, isolated culture, transfer a small wedge of colonised agar to grain spawn, a new Petri dish, or directly into a grow kit substrate.
Not Just for Mushrooms — Seed Germination in Petri Dishes
Sterile Petri dishes provide a sealed, humid microenvironment that is ideal for germinating seeds of all kinds, including cannabis seeds and pepper varieties. The controlled, sealed environment keeps moisture levels consistent and lets you monitor germination progress without disturbing the seed. Place a damp piece of filter paper or cotton wool in the base of the dish, set your seeds on top with 1-2 cm spacing, close the lid, and store in a warm spot (20-25°C). Most viable seeds crack open within 24-72 hours. Once the taproot reaches 1-2 cm, transfer to soil or a growing medium.
The clear plastic makes it dead easy to check on progress without opening the lid — which matters, because every time you open a germination chamber you lose humidity and risk introducing mould spores. With 20 dishes in a pack, you can run multiple strains or varieties simultaneously, each in its own labelled dish, without any cross-contamination risk. If you want to get organised, buy a few extra packs so you always have sterile dishes on hand when a new seed batch arrives.
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Medical disclaimer. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before use of any substance.










