Fruit bodies of the fungus are small to medium‑sized. The cap (
pileus) measures 1.8–5.5 cm in diameter, initially convex and silky‑glossy, pale pink to rosy, later flattening and becoming matt with age and dryness, often showing paler patches and a small, darker
umbo; the margin is smooth in young specimens and becomes distinctly sulcate (grooved) at maturity. The gills (
lamellae) are straight and easily separable from the stipe, greyish white when fresh and turning yellowish white on drying; they are moderately spaced when young but become more distant in older mushrooms. The
stipe is 4–6 cm long and 0.6–1.8 cm thick, cylindrical to slightly club shaped (clavate), often widening in the middle or at the top, greyish white with variable red‑tinged hues, and tapering towards the base in older specimens. The
flesh of
R. pyriodora is thin, fragile and spongy in the stipe. Its taste is oily and sweetish with a faint sharpness at the gill edge, while the odour is pear‑like, comparable to that of
Inocybe corydalina. The
spore print is almost white. Microscopically, spores typically measure 9.0 by 7.6 μm on average, broadly
ellipsoid to obovate‑ellipsoid, ornamented with rounded warts or short crests up to 1.0 μm high; the plage is small and partly
amyloid.
Basidia (spore-bearing cells) are clavate, four‑spored, 34–36 by 10–12 μm. Cheilocystidia are abundant, fusiform with a long tapering apex (about 85 by 8.5–10 μm). The
cap cuticle bears numerous dermatocystidia (6–8 μm wide) in small clusters or scattered among narrow hyphae. ==Habitat and distribution==