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Mondo Liquid Culture Vial
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Mondo Liquid Culture Vial

Spore Syringes

by Mondo

€ 11,95
Temporarily out of stock
Cut your colonisation time in half by growing live mycelium from spores before inoculating substrate. The Mondo Liquid Culture Vial is a pre-sterilised nutrient solution — inject 1 ml from any spore syringe, shake once daily, and within 2 to 14 days you have a ready-to-use liquid culture. No flow hood required. Stores over 12 months in the fridge.
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Mondo Liquid Culture Vial — Double Your Colonisation Speed

A liquid culture vial is a pre-sterilised nutrient solution that lets you expand a single millilitre of spores into a thriving mycelium culture — cutting colonisation time roughly in half compared to inoculating substrate directly from a spore syringe. The Mondo Liquid Culture Vial requires no laminar flow hood, no glove box, and no sterile environment. Inject, shake, wait, and within 2–14 days you'll see white strands of mycelium threading through the liquid.

2x faster colonisation No sterile setup needed Store 12+ months at 4–6°C Available in 5 ml, 10 ml and 25 ml Inject just 1 ml of spores

Which Size Do You Need?

The right liquid culture vial size depends on how many jars or bags you plan to inoculate from a single culture. The Mondo Liquid Culture Vial comes in three volumes — here's how they break down.

Variant Volume SKU Best for
Small 5 ml SH0027 Single grow kit or 1–2 grain jars. Good for testing a new strain before committing.
Medium 10 ml SH0028 3–5 grain jars or a couple of monotubs. The sweet spot for most home growers.
Large 25 ml SH0029 Bulk runs, multiple substrates, or building a strain library. Use 2–5 cc per inoculation point and you've got enough for a serious batch.

If you're just dipping a toe into liquid culture for the first time, buy the 10 ml vial — it's the one we'd point you towards. It gives you enough liquid to inoculate several jars while leaving room for error — and there will be error, that's how you learn. The 5 ml is fine for a single experiment, but it doesn't leave much margin. The 25 ml is genuinely useful if you're preserving cultures long-term or trading strains with other growers.

Why Liquid Culture Beats Direct Spore Inoculation

Liquid culture colonises substrate roughly twice as fast as direct spore inoculation because you're delivering live, actively growing mycelium instead of dormant spores. That speed difference is the single most important reason experienced growers make the switch.

When you inject spores directly into grain or substrate, each spore has to germinate individually, find a compatible mating partner, and then start forming mycelium. That germination step can take days on its own, and it's inconsistent. Some spores land in good spots, some don't. The result: patchy colonisation, slower timelines, and more opportunity for contaminants to move in before the mycelium can defend its territory.

With liquid culture, you've already done the germination step in a controlled nutrient solution. By the time you inject into your substrate, you're delivering live mycelium — not dormant spores hoping for the best. The mycelium hits the grain running. That speed matters because every extra day your substrate sits partially colonised is another day moulds and bacteria can get a foothold.

The honest limitation: liquid culture does add an extra step to your workflow. You'll need to wait 2–14 days for visible mycelium growth in the vial before you can use it. If you're after the absolute simplest path from box to flush, a ready-to-grow kit with pre-colonised substrate is less fuss. But if you're working from spore syringes and want better results, liquid culture is the single biggest upgrade you can make.

Specifications

Below are the full technical details for the Mondo Liquid Culture Vial across all three available sizes.

Specification Detail
Brand Mondo
Product type Pre-sterilised liquid culture vial
Available volumes 5 ml, 10 ml, 25 ml
Spore input required 1 ml from a spore syringe
Inoculation rate 2–5 cc of liquid culture per substrate unit
Colonisation visible 2–14 days after spore injection
Sterile environment needed No
Storage temperature 4–6°C (standard fridge)
Shelf life (stored correctly) Over 12 months
Use case Mass production, culture preservation, strain trading

Complete your setup: pair the Mondo Liquid Culture Vial with a Mondo spore syringe to get started — Golden Teacher and Cambodian are both fast colonisers that work brilliantly with liquid culture. If you're inoculating grain jars or grow bags, order a Mondo XL Grow Kit to get the substrate side of the equation sorted. And if you want to keep things properly clean during transfers, grab an alcohol burner or a pack of sterile gloves from the Azarius cultivation supplies category.

Why You Need Liquid Culture in Your Grow Setup

Inconsistent colonisation is the most common frustration among growers working with spore syringes — and liquid culture is the most effective solution. We've been selling mushroom cultivation supplies since 1999, and this is the upgrade we recommend more than any other.

One jar colonises in 10 days, the one next to it takes 3 weeks, and a third one goes green with mould before the mycelium even gets going. That's not bad technique — it's the nature of spore germination. Spores are genetically variable, germination rates differ, and you're essentially rolling the dice with each inoculation point.

Liquid culture changes that equation. Once you've got a healthy culture growing in the vial — visible as wispy white clouds or clumps of mycelium suspended in the solution — every drop you draw out contains live, vigorous mycelium ready to colonise on contact. The consistency goes up dramatically. Jars colonise at roughly the same rate, and that uniformity means you can time your flushes and plan your grows instead of just hoping.

The other big advantage is multiplication. One millilitre of spores can produce an entire vial of liquid culture. From that vial, depending on the size you choose, you can inoculate anywhere from 2 to 12 substrate units at 2–5 cc each. That's a massive stretch on your spore investment. And because you can store the vial in the fridge at 4–6°C for over a year, you're not racing against a clock to use it all up.

One thing to watch out for: contamination in liquid culture is harder to spot than on agar or grain. Bacterial contamination can make the liquid cloudy or give it an off smell, but early-stage contamination sometimes looks similar to thin mycelium growth. If the liquid smells sour or looks murky yellow rather than slightly hazy white, bin it and start fresh. Better to lose one vial than an entire batch of substrate.

How to Use the Mondo Liquid Culture Vial

Using the Mondo Liquid Culture Vial takes nine steps from spore injection to substrate inoculation, with a 2–14 day waiting period in between for mycelium to develop.

  1. Sterilise the rubber port on the vial with an alcohol wipe. The vial itself is pre-sterilised, but the injection point picks up whatever's floating in your air.
  2. Draw 1 ml of spore solution from your spore syringe. Use a fresh, sterile needle — don't reuse one that's touched anything else.
  3. Inject the 1 ml of spores through the rubber port into the liquid culture vial. Push slowly to avoid creating excess pressure inside the vial.
  4. Place the vial at room temperature (20–25°C). Avoid direct sunlight — a cupboard or shelf works fine.
  5. Shake the vial gently once a day. This breaks up mycelium clumps and distributes nutrients evenly, encouraging faster growth throughout the solution.
  6. Check for visible mycelium growth between day 2 and day 14. You're looking for white, wispy strands or small cotton-like clumps floating in the liquid. Some strains show growth in 2–3 days; others take the full 2 weeks.
  7. Once the culture is visibly active, draw 2–5 cc per substrate unit using a sterile syringe and needle. Shake the vial well before drawing to distribute the mycelium evenly.
  8. Inject the liquid culture into your grain jars, grow bags, or substrate of choice. Colonisation should be noticeably faster than direct spore inoculation — roughly half the time in most cases.
  9. Store any unused liquid culture in the fridge at 4–6°C. It'll keep for over 12 months, ready whenever you need it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a laminar flow hood or glove box to use the Mondo Liquid Culture Vial?

No. The vial is pre-sterilised and sealed with a self-healing rubber port, so you can inject spores without a sterile workspace. Wipe the port with alcohol before injecting and use a fresh needle — that's enough. It's one of the main selling points over making your own liquid culture from scratch, which does require sterile technique.

How do I know if my liquid culture is contaminated?

Healthy mycelium in liquid culture looks white — wispy strands, cotton-ball clumps, or a general cloudy haze. Contamination typically shows as a sour or yeasty smell, murky yellow or green discolouration, or a slimy film on the surface. If anything looks or smells off, don't use it. Toss the vial and start with a fresh one rather than risking your entire substrate batch.

Can I use any spore syringe with the Mondo Liquid Culture Vial?

Yes. The vial contains a nutrient solution designed for growing mycelium from any Psilocybe cubensis spore syringe — Golden Teacher, Cambodian, B+, McKennaii, or any other cubensis strain. Inject 1 ml regardless of the strain. Colonisation speed varies by genetics, but the liquid culture process is the same.

How long can I store the liquid culture in the fridge?

Over 12 months at 4–6°C. That's a standard home fridge, not a freezer. Freezing will kill the mycelium. Before using stored culture, let the vial come to room temperature and give it a good shake to redistribute the mycelium. Long-term storage is one of the best reasons to buy liquid culture — you can preserve a strain you like and come back to it months later.

What's the difference between liquid culture and a spore syringe?

A spore syringe contains dormant spores suspended in sterile water. They still need to germinate and find compatible mating partners before mycelium forms. Liquid culture contains live, actively growing mycelium in a nutrient solution — the germination step is already done. That's why liquid culture colonises substrate roughly twice as fast. Think of it as the difference between planting seeds versus transplanting seedlings.

How much liquid culture do I inject per grain jar or grow bag?

Use 2–5 cc per inoculation point. For a standard grain jar, 2–3 cc is usually enough. For larger grow bags or bulk substrate, go closer to 5 cc. The 10 ml vial gives you roughly 3–5 inoculations; the 25 ml vial stretches to 5–12 depending on how generous you are with each injection.

Why is my liquid culture not showing growth after 14 days?

If you see nothing after a full 14 days at room temperature, the spores may not have been viable, or the injection didn't deliver enough material. Check that your spore syringe was properly shaken before use — spores settle at the bottom. Try again with a fresh 1 ml injection. If a second attempt also fails, the issue is likely with the spore syringe rather than the culture vial.

Where can I buy the Mondo Liquid Culture Vial?

You can order the Mondo Liquid Culture Vial directly from Azarius in all three sizes — 5 ml, 10 ml, and 25 ml. Browse the mushroom cultivation supplies category for spore syringes, grow kits, and other accessories to complete your setup.

Last updated: April 2026

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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.

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