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dodoskido says...
I've never had truffles, but I sure do want to try since I see them on Iron Chef all of the time. Here's a neat story unearthed (pardon the pun) by bookofjoe about hunting these $4,000/pound morsels (yes, that's $250/oz...nearing the price of gold, mind you).
Originally from bookofjoe...
In this past Sunday's New York Times Travel section Denny Lee wrote that "truffles (above) can fetch upward of $4,000 a pound ($1,818 per kg) in the global gourmet market.
With my handyâ??dandy calculator here I see that's over $250 an ounce ($1.82 per gram).
So perhaps you can understand why I'm more than delighted with my truffle salt (below),
purchased recently here for $22 for a 3.5 oz bottle.
A little goes a very long way, so much so that the morning after I've made popcorn and then sprinkled truffle salt on it, the bowl and kitchen are still redolent of truffles.
Nice.
Anyway, Sunday's article related the tale of Lee's exhausting 2â??hour hike through the woods with an experienced truffle hunter and his dog near San Giovanni d'Asso, a sleepy village in Tuscany about 25 miles southeast of Siena.
Last November the town opened Italy's first museum of the truffle, called the Museo del Tartufo di San Giovanni d'Asso.
Being Italian, it keeps Italian hours: it's open on weekends from 10 to 1 and 2 to 6.
The museum is housed in a 13thâ??century castle overlooking a rustic valley.
Lee ended his story with a comment from Fosco Lorenzotti, 62, a truffle hunter for 30 years: "I get tired of looking for truffles sometimes, but I never tire of eating them."
Here's the Times story.
Sniffing through the dank woods of Tuscany, Ugo, a truffle-hunting dog, paused before a pine tree, dug his paws into the crunchy soil and darted off.
"Vieni! Vieni!" Luciano Tognazzi shouted.
But it was too late.
The truffle had become the world's most expensive doggy treat.
Not to worry, said Mr. Tognazzi, 45, a stocky truffle hunter with dark curly hair and a broad nose.
He pointed to a dark forest in the distance.
"There are plenty of truffles there."
They are plentiful, yes, but hard to find.
Truffles, which resemble knobby potatoes and taste like fermented mushrooms, are often buried under a foot of dirt, masking their pungent, knock-your-socks-off aroma.
Some have likened the smell to primal musk, with hints of garlic, overripe cheese and ozone.
To others, they smell like gold: truffles can fetch upward of $4,000 a pound in the global gourmet market.
That heady scent, however, proved elusive on this hot afternoon in late March.
There were no truffles in the oak forest, none by the sheep farm and the broom shrubs were picked clean.
Unearthing a truffle, it turns out, takes plenty of patience, not to mention luck and comfortable hiking shoes.
It wasn't the hoped-for gastronomic bonanza, but at least it wasn't a touristy affair.
In Alba, Italy's truffle capital, in the northwestern province of Piedmont, demand for the fungi has spawned a cottage industry of package tours, food festivals and a strip mall of truffle-themed shops. (Truffle ice cream, anyone?)
Meanwhile, the cognoscenti are converging on the less-trampled truffle paths around the sleepy village of San Giovanni d'Asso, about 25 miles southeast of Siena in the cypress-studded hills of Tuscany.
While Tuscan truffles lack the brand-name recognition of those from Alba, San Giovanni d'Asso also lacks the circus atmosphere that can result in overpricing and overhunting.
And the quality, some say, is just as odoriferous.
"The truffles here are very, very, very good," said Leonardo Terzigli, a truffle trader from Florence, who goes door to door buying truffles in San Giovanni d'Asso for several high-end restaurants in London, including Locanda Locatelli.
"Truffles don't like pollution and, as you can see, there's nothing here."
Nothing, that is, except for luscious wheat fields, crumpled clay hills and the ribboned vineyards of the Sangiovese grape, which is used to make two of Italy's finest wines: Brunello di Montalcino and Vino Nobile di Montepulciano.
Perched on a craggy hilltop, San Giovanni d'Asso is also nothing like Cortona, the Tuscan village lovingly chronicled - some say ruined - by the writer Frances Mayes.
There are no postcard or craft stores, just a butcher shop that keeps irregular hours, a tobacco store and a hole-in-the-wall cafe that offers half-day truffle excursions.
The trifolau (truffle hunter) will sometimes plant a tuber to ensure an entertaining hunt.
Last November, in a bid to elevate its truffle stature, the village of 940 opened the country's first museum dedicated to the food.
"Nobody heard of us before," said Michele Boscaglia, the town's 35-year-old mayor.
"Now we have more beds for tourists than for residents."
Mr. Boscaglia gave a tour of the trattoria-sized museum, housed in a 13th-century castle overlooking the rustic valley.
He had a firm grasp of the contents, which included three fist-sized replicas of truffles cast from resin and a device that emits a synthetic truffle perfume.
Like most able-bodied men in the village, he goes hunting in his spare time, just as his father did, and his grandfather before that.
But fungi foraging can easily graduate into a full-time pursuit.
The season lasts 11 months, from June to April.
The summer black truffle appears on menus in early June.
The prized white truffle, sometimes called the white diamond of Italy, grows from September to December.
And the late spring saw the waning days of the bianchetti truffle, a milder cousin of the white truffle that is found widely in Tuscany.
Regardless of the season, skillful hunters keep their mental treasure maps up to date.
They also learn to worship the waxing moon, which supposedly draws out the truffle's scent, and ignore the lightning storms, which, according to myth, trigger the growth of the spores.
And they become intimate with their hounds.
"The most important thing is the relationship with the dog," said Mr. Tognazzi, the truffle hunter, who has four Lagotto Romagnolos, the preferred breed in the area. (Below, the truffleâ??hunting Lagotto dog Susi with his owner, Simone Francini).

Rivalry for top dog is fierce: every few years, several Lagottos are poisoned by strychnine-laced sausages, presumably left by unsportsmanlike hunters.
"For the truffle dogs to be exceptional," Mr. Tognazzi continued, "you have to hunt everyday."
Ugo, a shaggy white five-year-old, clearly needed a refresher on another Saturday.
After scouring a hillside, Ugo led three visitors down a muddy path, before running away at the sight of a wild boar track.
It had been a disappointing season, Mr. Tognazzi said.
Then again, truffle hunters are the alter egos of fishermen: instead of telling fanciful tales about the big one that got away, they always report returning empty-handed, the better to avoid taxes and the envy of neighbors.
Mr. Tognazzi, however, was determined not to let his customers down.
After an exhausting two-hour hike, he finally drove to one of his secret spots, a sun-dappled pine forest at the edge of a farm.
Then he let Ugo off his leash.
Mr. Tognazzi cajoled, commanded, praised and reprimanded him in a rapid staccato: "Dove?" (Where?), "Cos'è?" (What is it?), "Bravo ragazzo" (Good boy), "Fai la finita" (Stop that).
Ugo snapped to attention like a lion on the prowl and started digging furiously under a towering pine.
"Piano, piano," (Slowly, slowly), Mr. Tognazzi cried, pushing Ugo away with a gentle shove.
With a stout gardening hoe known as a vanghetta, he scooped out a clod of brown soil, revealing an orange-beige truffle the size of a walnut.
He reached into his vest pocket and gave Ugo a kibble.
"Bravo," he said.
Ugo was on a roll.
He sniffed out three more truffles over the next hour, ranging in size from chickpea to garlic clove.
On the short drive back to town in his Fiat, Mr. Tognazzi insisted on giving away the day's paltry catch.
With the prize in hand, a victory lap was made to the local supermarket to pick out ingredients for a truffle-centered meal.
In keeping with Tuscan tradition, the courses would be simple: baked eggs with shaved truffles; buttered tagliatellini tossed with truffles; and a grilled T-bone steak served over arugula and drizzled with truffles.
There wasn't enough to experiment with truffle ice cream.
As night fell, the kitchen at a nearby bed-and-breakfast began filling with the tantalizing and precious aroma: slightly earthy, a touch nutty and, as the Romans once described it, vaguely sexual.
It brought to mind something that another trifolau had said.
"I get tired of looking for truffles sometimes," said Fosco Lorenzetti, 62, a hunter for 30 years.
"But I never tire of eating them."
********************
Visitor Information
Getting There
San Giovanni d'Asso is about 150 miles north of Rome and 75 miles south of Florence. In late June, flights in mid-July to Rome from New York started at about $1,200.
Where to Stay
La Locanda del Castello, Piazza Vittorio Emanuele II, 4, (39-0577) 802 939, on the Web at www.lalocandadelcastello.com, has seven rooms and three suites ranging from $135 to $185, including breakfast.
Ankhura, (39-0577) 802 943, www.ankhura.com, in the adjacent hamlet of Monterongriffoli, has four rustic-style rooms for $123 including breakfast. It also offers Tuscan cooking classes.
Tours
Half-day truffle excursions for $49, at $1.23 to the euro, are offered by Assotartufi, (39-0577) 803 076, www.assotartufi.com, at Via XX Settembre, 22. Nearby bed-and-breakfasts also can arrange for hunts.
Museum
The Museo del Tartufo di San Giovanni d'Asso, Piazza Gramsci, 1, is open on weekends from 10 to 1 and 2 to 6. Admission is $3.70. For more information: (39-0577) 803 101; www.museodeltartufo.it.