EDIT: :icon_offtopic:
Well you are partially in luck, except for black truffles and I got out before studying white, you are talking to an old hat in mushroom growing, and not just the ones teenagers are interested, proper gormet and medicinal ones.
Agaricus bisporus (Portobello) - surprise its just white mushroom thats aged and browned (Swiss brown, Portobello) feeling ripped off by the Supermarkets yet
Lentinula edodes (Shiitake) - easy to grow on sawdust substrate blocks.
Its easy to even clone mushrooms by extracting mycelium from the core and transferring to a petri dish. You get a perfect clone but you are further down the generation of cells so closer to mutation but its an easy way to use fresh markets as your culture library.
These I can teach you to grow but you will have a bit of study ahead of you and some gear buildup. Mostly petri plates, jars, pressure canner, and either old-school (glove box) or new-school Hepa-filter laminar flow hood or flow wall, scapels, innoculation loops. I have all my old agar recipes one even crossover from brewing using dry malt extract
If I was in QLD I'd probably give the old Volvariella volvacea (Paddy Straw Mushroom) a go as I'd love to find it fresh in its egg-form so I could inject tamari sauce (natural fermented soy sauce) in it and roast em then in the mouth for a flavour explosion :icon_drool2:
Even though its a bit of a study and even more so clean-sterile environment at a few critical steps only in the process it will be a hell of a lot easier than trying to work with creating yeast strains.
Cheers,
Brewer Pete