Posted 18 January 2007 - 11:56 AM
I recently heard Martha Stewart mention that she was planning to visit a commercial truffle oranization in North Carolina so I guess it is "thing" in the area. I'd never heard of truffles growing down there before.
edited to add: Here is an article titled "Black Gold" about the commercial Perigord truffle venture in North Carolina:
link(The article is from March 2004).
It mentions that the Garland family, located just north of Raleigh, were the first in the US to produce Perigod truffles in the US. It's hard to understand what attracted Garland to truffles in the first place. He says in the late 1970s he read an article on the front page of the Wall Street Journal about a new method of inoculating trees in order to grow truffles (in the past, truffle cultivation was achieved by planting trees in places where the soil was known to have the fungus, making it impossible to grow truffles outside natural truffle regions). Garland, the former head of the digital electronics program at Alamance Community College, whose previous agriculture experience consisted of growing hothouse tomatoes, says that one article inspired enough interest in him to search out the man who was mentioned and buy a few hundred hazelnut trees from him. He says he didn't really even know what a truffle was. It was more than 10 years after planting the trees that Garland actually found a truffle. It had taken him some time to find out that North Carolina soil is too acidic and needs to be treated with lime in order to have the right pH. During those years, he learned more and more about the truffle, and his desire to produce them grew. In the meantime, he also developed a thriving business growing shiitake mushrooms.
Looking at that article and this link, it looks like there have been some subsidies to help promote this as an alternative crop for some farmer's like former tobacco farmers:
clickedited to add: There is a previous egullet topic that links to article I posted above
here The question posed in that thread was "how does the taste of the 'Tarheel truffle' compare with European truffles?" It seemed the jury was not completely in at that time.
Did the Tennesse truffles you tasted come from a commercial operation? From the NC article it sounds like there is quite a bit of work requiered to plant proper trees and to inoculate the surrounding soil correctly.
Edited by ludja, 18 January 2007 - 12:12 PM.
"Under the dusty almond trees, ... stalls were set up which sold banana liquor, rolls, blood puddings, chopped fried meat, meat pies, sausage, yucca breads, crullers, buns, corn breads, puff pastes, longanizas, tripes, coconut nougats, rum toddies, along with all sorts of trifles, gewgaws, trinkets, and knickknacks, and cockfights and lottery tickets."
-- Gabriel Garcia Marquez, 1962 "Big Mama's Funeral"