Hobby Farms

Cutting-Edge Crops

Truffles

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If you haven’t eaten truffles, you might be wondering what all the fuss is about. After eating my first plate of pasta covered with thin truffle slices I understood what the fuss was about but couldn’t explain it. I just knew that if my sense of smell were strong enough, I, too, would be down on all fours like a pig, snarfing up truffles, dirt and all.

So on a trip to Tuscany, Italy, my wife and I hired someone to find and feed us some truffles. Massimo, our truffle forager, introduced himself as a “littermate” to his dogs. He had grown up with them; his father and grandfathe­r were also long-time truffle hunters in San Miniato, a short drive west of Florence. His sister, Letitzia, would serve us lunch made with the truffles we found.

Massimo loaded Stella, a knee-high black and white truffle dog, into her crate in the back of his car and we were off. Ten minutes later, we pulled into a patch of woods. Now loose, little Stella was so happy that she pogo-jumped several times. Her head bobbed up nearly as high as mine.

In a few more minutes, Stella sat down to mark a spot where she smelled a truffle just below the surface of the soil. Immature truffles are also close to the surface, but they don’t give off an aroma until they are ripe.

The truffle is an undergroun­d mushroom. Regular mushrooms can release their spores to the wind. Undergroun­d truffles have to give off a strong aroma to attract certain species of mammals to dig them up, eat them and then poop out their spores across the countrysid­e.

Dogs don’t think of truffles as food. Pigs, however, do eat truffles. In the old days, truffle hunters used pigs to sniff them out. Which leads to an equally old joke: How do you tell a truffle hunter who uses pigs from one who uses dogs? The one that uses pigs is missing a few fingers.

column & photos by Frank Hyman

Where & When?

The U.S. has delicious, native truffles: The pecan truffle in the southeast and the Oregon white in the Pacific Northwest are a couple examples. Growing these in their native range would probably be the least expensive option for a hobby farmer. Foragers can also seek them out with a trained dog and a landowner’s permission. (Hint: Know any pecan orchards?)

The most sought after truffle is the Italian Alba White, but no one has been able to cultivate it. You’ll need a Tuscan truffle hunter like Massimo to help you find it in winter when it’s ripe.

A few Mediterran­ean truffles are being grown here with uneven results. The French Black Perigord has been grown on oak tree roots in California and the southeast. Burwell Farms and Mycorrhiza Biotech have had success growing springtime white Bianchetto truffles on loblolly pines in North Carolina.

Inoculatio­n

If you want to create a new plantation of either native or Mediterran­ean truffles you’ll have to buy

young trees that have had their roots inoculated with your preferred truffle. (See the “Truffle Resources” sidebar below for sources.)

Getting specific truffles to attach themselves to your host trees takes a bit more science than most DIYers can manage. Growers should not expect their first harvest for 3 to 5 years and may wait up to 10 years for a profitable harvest — if they’ve maintained their planting well.

Bottom Line

At 500 trees per acre you could spend $10,000 just to buy the trees. Depending on variety and the market, you could sell your truffles for $300 to $1,000 per pound. After 10 years, mature production could be 100 pounds per acre or more. A well-maintained, mature plantation could gross $25,000/acre per year.

Lime It Up

If you want to grow Mediterran­ean truffles in the eastern U.S., you’ll need to invest in lime-spreading equipment and lime — lots of it. Mediterran­ean truffles expect a pH of about 8. That doesn’t sound very far away from the 5 commonly found in the eastern U.S. But the scale isn’t linear; it’s exponentia­l. That means that if you want to raise a plot of land from 5 to 6, the soil test might recommend applying one ton. If you want to raise that plot from 6 to 7, you’ll have to apply another 10 tons. And to get from 7 to 8, you’ll have to apply another 100 tons — perhaps every year.

Granted lime is less expensive than most fertilizer­s, but it will be a substantia­l annual expense for materials and labor. Traditiona­l farmers have used dolomitic lime because it has magnesium. Farm truffle master Richard Franks at Burwell Farms is experiment­ing with less expensive calcitic lime. No one is sure if the truffles really need the magnesium, so he’s decided to find out.

Go Dogs Go!

Dogs have to be trained to sniff out special things such as bombs, narcotics, fugitives and, of course, truffles. You can buy a dog already trained for that if you have about $5,000 lying around. But any lively, trainable dog with a decent nose can be trained at home if you have the time and the discipline.

With some of your target truffle in hand you’ll need to get your dog to associate that with something that matters to them: a treat, a ball to chase, a toy to chew on. There are resources online for dog training such as www.truffledog­company.com.

Some Truffles are Weeds

So is it as simple as putting the trees out, keeping the pH up and then spending a lovely day with your dog gathering thousands of dollars worth of truffles? Hey, you’re a farmer. You know better. There are such things as weed truffles.

 ??  ?? The outside of a truffle is deceptivel­y unappetizi­ng (pictured below: various Italian white and black truffles), but the marbling of the interior (below right) — and the aroma — will draw you in.
The outside of a truffle is deceptivel­y unappetizi­ng (pictured below: various Italian white and black truffles), but the marbling of the interior (below right) — and the aroma — will draw you in.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? These loblolly trees are inoculated with truffles at Burwell Farm in North Carolina.
These loblolly trees are inoculated with truffles at Burwell Farm in North Carolina.
 ??  ?? Laddie the truffle dog, a retriever, was trained by
W. C. Paynter, who works at Burwell Farms in
North Carolina.
Laddie the truffle dog, a retriever, was trained by W. C. Paynter, who works at Burwell Farms in North Carolina.

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