Truffles and the doggies who find them for us

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  • Опубликовано: 14 ноя 2021
  • Thanks to Audible for sponsoring this video! Start listening with a 30-day Audible trial. Choose one audiobook and two Audible Originals absolutely
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    The Alternative Crops and Organics Program at North Carolina State University, which runs the experimental black périgord truffle orchard at NCState's Mountain Research Station: www.NCHerb.org
    Lois Martin (and Monza) at the Truffle Dog Company: truffledogcompany.com/lois-ma...
    Katie Learn at NC State: www.ces.ncsu.edu/profile/kati...
    Ella Reeves at NC State: cals.ncsu.edu/entomology-and-...
    "Truffle Hound" by Rowan Jacobsen: www.rowanjacobsen.com/books/tr...
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @samuelkatz1124
    @samuelkatz1124 2 года назад +5035

    When I was younger I was told chocolate truffles actually had truffles in them, and they were too expensive for me to eat. Looking back, that was definitely just grandpa not wanting to share chocolate...

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 2 года назад +272

      Ah, grandpas. Always trying to pull something. Gotta love 'em.

    • @Runehorn
      @Runehorn 2 года назад +73

      Grandpa's are usually clever like that!

    • @mrow7598
      @mrow7598 2 года назад +60

      I'll have to remember that with my niece.

    • @Reichstaubenminister
      @Reichstaubenminister 2 года назад +55

      I don't like lying to kids, never helps them in life. And nice last name.

    • @busyrand
      @busyrand 2 года назад +22

      I too shall now pass forth the wisdom your grandpa shared with you. Chocolate truffles are amazing and kids should have to get a job and drivers license before they're allowed to buy them... Just like Birthday Cake!...

  • @MrPaladapus
    @MrPaladapus 2 года назад +2672

    Something about the phrase "This lab full of truffle nerds is pretty jazzed to smell a native truffle" really tickled me lol. Always fun to see experts get excited about whatever it is they're an expert on!

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 2 года назад +41

      Everyone in that room felt so awed. It's lovely.

    • @onepiece190993
      @onepiece190993 2 года назад +36

      Yeah and that "Wow!" was my favorite part

    • @pepegya5168
      @pepegya5168 2 года назад +45

      Professional nerds doing nerd things are always delightful

    • @omarpacheco2756
      @omarpacheco2756 2 года назад +6

      Yeah it’s really wholesome

    • @SongsOfDragons
      @SongsOfDragons 2 года назад +24

      I work in arboriculture and my first day on the job a colleague brought in a branch of some tree - everyone else dropped what they were doing and ran to examine it, out came the books and all. They spent an hour talking about this specimen from a tree and what it was doing there and the arb work done on it. (it was Quercus lusitanica - not common in the UK.)

  • @nanzymyap
    @nanzymyap 2 года назад +2295

    The happiness in Adams face when he realised that the dogs go word was “shmuzzles”! 👌

    • @krankarvolund7771
      @krankarvolund7771 2 года назад +7

      What does shmuzzle means? XD

    • @okami_6
      @okami_6 2 года назад +56

      @@krankarvolund7771 just something with the connotation that it’s cute

    • @deanbrafman
      @deanbrafman 2 года назад +9

      6:44

    • @spookith
      @spookith 2 года назад +42

      @@cinderela1882 i hope every soda you drink is flat and all the chips/cracker/cereal you eat is stale

    • @ippotsk
      @ippotsk 2 года назад +4

      Here I thought it was the dog's name lmao

  • @speedsnake785
    @speedsnake785 2 года назад +1725

    Hey you talked about how they made marshmallows from marshmallow root, I think that would be interesting learning how marshmallows were first made, and how to make them, if you can even find that info in the first place

    • @NathanTAK
      @NathanTAK 2 года назад +13

      Recipe from Adam ruclips.net/video/EcBK27chvR4/видео.html

    • @crimsonvale7337
      @crimsonvale7337 2 года назад +71

      Ann Reardon has made an interesting video about some of the original marshmallow recipes, just look up "Ann Reardon 200 year old marshmallow"

    • @speedsnake785
      @speedsnake785 2 года назад +28

      @@NathanTAK this is how we make marshmallows now, i’m more curious about how they used to make it with the herb marshmallow root, I do appreciate you sending me that video though so thank you

    • @speedsnake785
      @speedsnake785 2 года назад +14

      @@crimsonvale7337 thanks I think this is basically exactly what I was looking for, about to give it a watch👍

    • @micaiahleigh2449
      @micaiahleigh2449 2 года назад +12

      @@speedsnake785 I was about to suggest the same as them; if you’re looking for genuine recipes from around that time, Ann is the absolute first stop 😁

  • @Icehowl
    @Icehowl 2 года назад +514

    This is why i like adam. He calls out white truffles for being "elitist" and that you could replace it with less of other truffles. He is fancy as long as its practical and reasonable. Will some people be able to defend and vouche for white truffles? Yeah probably but your average cook probably wouldn't.
    "The truffle oil is not made with actual truffe ... but I think its real good"

    • @mattkuhn6634
      @mattkuhn6634 2 года назад +68

      The biggest thing with Truffle oil is to go in knowing it's probably synthetic and then not letting yourself be taken for a ride because you think it's supposed to be expensive. It's less of a problem if you buy the truffle oil yourself, but some restaurants will include truffle oil in dishes and then jack up the price because of it, despite not using any actual truffles. I generally avoid ordering anything that is advertised as having truffle oil in it for that reason.

    • @nate_storm
      @nate_storm 2 года назад +21

      i’m glad adam isn’t a white truffle supremacist

    • @stpedro-ht9ng
      @stpedro-ht9ng 2 года назад +26

      @@nate_storm black or white, truffle supremacism will not be tolerated here. truffle diversity is our strength.

    • @idontwantahandlethough
      @idontwantahandlethough Год назад +1

      @@stpedro-ht9ng Except purple truffle supremacists. Screw purple people!
      (and I say that as a proud Minnesotan, so you know it's true)

  • @hughmainland7492
    @hughmainland7492 2 года назад +840

    FYI Adam, I'm a farmer. Have variously farmed beef, lamb, salmon, and now starting my own rainbow trout farm. RE: the commentary about white truffles and the stupidity of their value. It's pretty spot-on. In my experience with producing food, all of the haughty ideas and preconceptions that general consumers and foodie enthusiasts have about food stuffs are so deeply misplaced that it's been the bane of my life since I first started learning about how to farm. Of all the chefs/cooks I follow your opinions are the ones I would say are closest to reality and it's such a breath of fresh air to hear someone with a platform make an effort to dispell so many of the absurd, unscientific, and just straight snobby bullsh*t that people circulate ad nauseam.

    • @binkietheclown
      @binkietheclown 2 года назад +19

      As a fellow Gearhead, I'm interested in where I can buy your products. I have kilo loads of plastic to trade for pumpkin seed.

    • @ashurean
      @ashurean 2 года назад +21

      unfortunately those snobby opinion has wiped the markets, finding out about alternatives that are just as good is a rare experience as a result. I really appreciate people like Adam taking the time to identify these options and set the record straight.

    • @ThrawnFett123
      @ThrawnFett123 2 года назад +43

      I've had similar arguments with "great cooks" at simple local functions, parties, potlucks what have you. I'll bring soups and other dishes made out of mostly canned ingredients other than the proteins. They bring a bland "top quality fresh ingredients only" dish that they didn't realize loses all of its "specialness" the second it's reheated or kept warm to long. Flash frozen fish or veggies are gonna be fresher than anything that's not off the dock or farmstand, but they bragg about how the salmon and peas was "never frozen". This is coming from someone that grew up in a massive fishing port, if you're not buying it right off the boat, you're not getting it fresher than the processing factory can flash freeze it

    • @idontwantahandlethough
      @idontwantahandlethough Год назад +13

      There's just SO much nonsense in the food industry. I'm at the point where I basically assume any new term I'm not already privy to is _probably_ at least 50% B.S.

    • @demoniack81
      @demoniack81 Год назад +22

      @@ThrawnFett123 Yeah I'll never understand the snobbery for canned and frozen vegetables.
      For me the revelation was frozen broccoli. They look AND taste better than the ""fresh"" broccoli from the vegetables section, as long as you keep them frozen they will never go bad (within reason), and they are usually cheaper too (I guess precisely because they don't have to keep throwing them out uneaten).
      My supermarket stocks 450g bags of a brussels sprouts/broccoli/cabbage/carrot mix, and they're perfect for when you want some vegetables as a side dish for something you're already making. Just toss the whole bag in the microwave, wait 7-8 minutes and you get perfect, fresh, steamed vegetables every time.
      Same for spinach, "fresh" spinach are usually on the way to half wilted already by the time you buy them and they're three times as expensive. I'll never understand why people buy them. If you're buying them literally off a field from a farmer who JUST harvested then ok fine they're probably better than frozen, but otherwise you're spending more money to buy an objectively inferior product for literally no reason.
      "Minestrone" (bags of mixed vegetables such as carrots, potatoes, beans, zucchini, eggplant, pumpkin etc, for making soup) is also super cheap, 2.5-3€/kg, and I find it on sale for 1.8-2 fairly often. The only way to get a lower price than this on vegetables is by going to open markets and only buying what's in season, and by the time you've processed everything (peeled, cut off stems etc) I'm not even sure it _actually_ comes out cheaper. It's also an absolutely giant waste of time to specifically go to a market just to buy some vegetables and then spending half an hour peeling shit when you could just cut open a bag, toss the contents into the pot, and get basically the same result. Also at the market you have to buy at least 0.5-1kg of each item, so unless you intend to make an insane amount of soup you're either not going to get anywhere close to the same variety, have to make it every day for 2 weeks with increasingly stale ingredients each time, or... you're going to have to freeze the damn vegetables anyway, and stuff you freeze at home is never going to be as good as something that was flash frozen with industrial equipment that costs more than everything you'll ever own combined.
      Also don't get me started on things like canned beans or chickpeas. Canned chickpeas taste great, are a perfect addition to bulk up soups and such, and are _ridiculously_ cheap.

  • @etherdog
    @etherdog 2 года назад +540

    "If you want to make a dog happy, give it a job to do." So true, Adam!

    • @barbarab9375
      @barbarab9375 2 года назад +32

      Some dogs will *find* a job if you don't give them one. Hence all those poor, bored Border Collies sitting in pounds, hoping for someone who will love them and give them a job.

    • @DysprosiumMr
      @DysprosiumMr 2 года назад +2

      Same for humans...

    • @Matty002
      @Matty002 2 года назад +4

      @@DysprosiumMr what no. some dog breeds were bred and so genetically have that 'instinct' to 'work'
      humans were not bred for 'work'. we operate on natural evolution, which means doing the least amount of work to successfully reproduce. 'humans need to work to be happy' is capitalist propoganda

    • @DysprosiumMr
      @DysprosiumMr 2 года назад +5

      @@Matty002 you are operating purely on intuition, and have nothing to back that up.
      We all operate on dopamine, there's no single source of it, even for dogs.

    • @SimuLord
      @SimuLord Год назад +7

      @@DysprosiumMr This is part of why anti-poverty programs are so self-perpetuating. Far too few of them involve the one thing that will get and _keep_ people out of poverty, namely the feeling that they've truly become the productive members of society they were always told they should be.
      I ended up homeless during the Great Recession, and the biggest reason I'm not now is that I never let the social workers get their hooks into me. I went to the library every day and used their job-search resource room until I landed the job that got me off the street.
      The moral of the story is that productivity and belonging are the real answer in this world.

  • @FutureCommentary1
    @FutureCommentary1 2 года назад +461

    I thought about those PhD students/research assistants. By the time they graduate the truffles they worked so hard on will still not be mature. That's some serious dedication and faith.

    • @MondeSerenaWilliams
      @MondeSerenaWilliams 2 года назад +43

      They're the giants whose shoulders future researchers stand on.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 2 года назад +57

      "I guide others to a treasure I cannot possess."

    • @jamescollier3
      @jamescollier3 2 года назад +4

      NASA JWST engineers have left the chat

    • @TheRibbonRed
      @TheRibbonRed 2 года назад +4

      A truffle a student grows will become a truffle that future students harvest. And the truffles they grow will become the truffles that even further future students harvest.
      Such is the process of anything long-term...if everything went right.

  • @starfthegreat
    @starfthegreat 2 года назад +660

    In the Palestinian, Jordanian, Iraqi and Syrian desert there grows a type of "desert truffles" called qemah or fegah in Arabic, they're much less fragrant and much cheaper. We often eat them in stews or grilled with meat

    • @saratakkoush6109
      @saratakkoush6109 2 года назад +33

      And they're super yummy

    • @rasmusn.e.m1064
      @rasmusn.e.m1064 2 года назад +12

      Cool! I never knew that.

    • @Gaby-wi4bx
      @Gaby-wi4bx 2 года назад +38

      Yes, my dad told me about how my great grandma and her sister would collect truffles from the trees nearby their home in Hama. It one of those stories I heard all the time as a child but not really think about much until your comment reminded me lol

    • @als0689
      @als0689 2 года назад +16

      Yeah in Kuwait too over here we go out in the desert and find some when they’re in season. We call them fuge3 فقع

    • @Ome99
      @Ome99 2 года назад +20

      Yes, here in Iraq, we call this cheap local delicacy Chima/Kima.
      They are sold by the truck load when in season.

  • @JoeZUGOOLA
    @JoeZUGOOLA 2 года назад +229

    "I would describe it as an early summer evening breeze"
    🤯 *WOOOOOOOOOOw* 🤯

    • @kenmore01
      @kenmore01 2 года назад +13

      Well, that's better than "crap in a rainstorm." LOL

    • @aname8018
      @aname8018 2 года назад +4

      @@kenmore01 lmao

  • @CHoustonify
    @CHoustonify 2 года назад +469

    Good lord that "these look like" joke was good. I had to re-watch it three times before I got it, I thought it was an editing error at first.

    • @gnatdagnat
      @gnatdagnat 2 года назад +2

      timestamp sir?

    • @richardubege996
      @richardubege996 2 года назад +19

      @@gnatdagnat 8:36 maybe?

    • @ShadowBeetle
      @ShadowBeetle 2 года назад +22

      @@richardubege996 damn, took me long enough to get it. Im ashamed

    • @babayaga9102
      @babayaga9102 2 года назад +5

      I didn't get it.

    • @MightyMase04
      @MightyMase04 2 года назад +42

      @@babayaga9102 "these do kinda look like [shit]"

  • @morningstar8187
    @morningstar8187 2 года назад +262

    I could never make it as a truffle collector. I’d just end up playing with the dog.

  • @NealieInWonderTube
    @NealieInWonderTube 2 года назад +86

    My family dog was a lagotto romagnolo just like in the video. He had an AMAZING nose and was always fixated with smelling something none of us could see. He used to dig these huge trenches and bury his toys only to dig them up 3 years later. Thanks for the video!

  • @mandrew31
    @mandrew31 2 года назад +134

    This Markiplier-lookin' Tom Scott that cooks is a pretty cool fella

    • @Azubi_Meatball4349
      @Azubi_Meatball4349 Год назад +2

      I knew i wasn’t the only one who thought he looked like markiplier

    • @bonogiamboni4830
      @bonogiamboni4830 Год назад +2

      Now that i think about it you're right, i always joked about him being the food version of vsauce but he's a bit closer to tom scott.

    • @entirelybonkers8832
      @entirelybonkers8832 Год назад

      It’s just the hair and stuff lol

    • @zorinus3340
      @zorinus3340 Год назад

      Very apt description

  • @lielasolas
    @lielasolas 2 года назад +101

    I couldn’t help but smile when Adam got excited about the word ‘SHMUZZLES”

  • @Bipolar.Baddie
    @Bipolar.Baddie 2 года назад +118

    Adam, please do a video about how spicy foods have interacted differently from culture to culture. I know that many cultures ate spicy food during hot months, as the sweating it caused actually helped cool people down, while it seems that modern western culture saves spicy food for cold occassions.

    • @FrostJarl
      @FrostJarl 2 года назад +23

      Another reason for traditionally eating spicy foods during warm months, most of the compounds that make something spicy are also natural fungicides/antimicrobials, so they could help keep food edible for a bit longer, they also could help hide off flavors of food going bad, something that happens much quicker when food can't be kept cold. It's a hypothesis I've seen in a few places that that is also a reason why most spices grow in warmer climates and heavily spiced foods are more common as you get closer to the equator, there's not as much necessity for that form of preservation/masking when it's cold enough for food to keep longer.

    • @Gr3nadgr3gory
      @Gr3nadgr3gory 2 года назад +1

      @@FrostJarl capsaicin was initially evolved as an pesticide.

  • @thebyk348
    @thebyk348 2 года назад +149

    I remember when i used to watch Adam's videos after school, now i watch them after work, still having a good time

    • @gaminikokawalage7124
      @gaminikokawalage7124 2 года назад +13

      I remember when I used to watch him after school. Now I watch him after nothing cus I'm not employed or in college yet

    • @gaminikokawalage7124
      @gaminikokawalage7124 2 года назад

      @@professionaldunce6312 glad I stuck around too. It's cool to watch a channel grow from the ground up. Adam's definitely taught me alot

    • @33s60
      @33s60 2 года назад +2

      Been watching him since his board steak video blew up, and it's great since he always uploads in time for my lunch break

    • @CaptainPIanet
      @CaptainPIanet 2 года назад

      Same except now during lunch break

    • @ethanlevy5412
      @ethanlevy5412 2 года назад +1

      Still in school and learned more on youtube

  • @ChibiQilin
    @ChibiQilin 2 года назад +66

    10:05 It's less so an issue about people getting "snobby" about it being fake, and more so the fact that it's considerably expensive compared for something that doesn't have actual truffle in it. It uses the high-class luxury associated with the food to justify considerable mark-ups, which is definitely something we should look down on.

    • @entirelybonkers8832
      @entirelybonkers8832 Год назад +2

      Eh I’ve seen plenty of people in the food industry shit on it because it’s not real truffle

    • @Chevsilverado
      @Chevsilverado Год назад +3

      Yeah nah realistically the ONLY difference between real and fake truffle oil is the fact that one is fake and one is real. Taste and aroma is literally the exact same. Anyone who is snobby about it is only snobby because “oh it’s fake truffle I guess you couldn’t afford real truffle”, when really theyre the idiots for buying a vastly more expensive product when it literally tastes the same and is harder to get. Idk what truffle oil you see but it doesn’t cost much more than a nice quality finishing olive oil. Every time I see it I don’t find it particularly expensive for a high quality, nice tasting oil when compared to other options. You’re looking at only $15 CAD for a nice mimic truffle oil. The real stuff gets into the $100s at minimum, so I’d say the $15 stuff is the best option when it tastes the same. You can find “real” truffle oil for $30 but that contains like 1% “real truffle” or they use another loophole which allows them to lie about the contents.

    • @TheRealTruffleHunters
      @TheRealTruffleHunters Год назад

      This!

  • @DiscGolfDom23
    @DiscGolfDom23 2 года назад +733

    Can you do a WTF is seitan video? As a consistent meat-eater I only recently discovered the stuff and I really think it's wonderful as a chicken substitute and can even taste better in some contexts.

    • @aenorist2431
      @aenorist2431 2 года назад +73

      Its just a ball of gluten (with some water and spices).

    • @SanskarWagley
      @SanskarWagley 2 года назад +16

      @Garunix Dragan meat substitute made from gluten

    • @jayluck8047
      @jayluck8047 2 года назад +15

      Blasphemy! Now I need to drown my sorrows in bacon.

    • @topdeck55
      @topdeck55 2 года назад +9

      @Garunix Dragan Is it the bad guy from Wheel of Time?

    • @faridmahnad4985
      @faridmahnad4985 2 года назад +4

      Nothing called satan could ever be possibly good for you. . .

  • @KruxusFromSweden
    @KruxusFromSweden 2 года назад +75

    My parents had a lagotto romagnolo and taught him to find chanterelles instead. During season he would drag them out 50 meters into the woods to find a few 1 cm sized mushrooms

    • @iododendron3416
      @iododendron3416 2 года назад +5

      That is some dedication.

    • @edwardlm87
      @edwardlm87 2 года назад

      awesome funghi! You can use them in a variety of ways. Dried, or even macerate them in liquor for a superb spirit

    • @nahum3557
      @nahum3557 2 года назад +1

      I'm yet to find my first good fungi in the woods. All I've found so far that's edible and easily identifiable is staghorns but they're of such little value

    • @CharmEng89
      @CharmEng89 2 года назад +2

      but WHAT A GOOD BOY

    • @k.ebartlett1830
      @k.ebartlett1830 2 года назад

      @@edwardlm87 curious about the latter, how does one use a chanterelle spirit?

  • @ygdrana
    @ygdrana 2 года назад +92

    As a cook its more interesting for me to try lesser known but more local varieties of ingredients. Like the video said black truffle is hard to cultivate where it isn't native and if you go to a restaurant in the US it makes more sense to get something unique to that region of US not one unique to France or Italy. And that pecan truffle sounds really good.

    • @WolframiteWraith
      @WolframiteWraith Год назад

      But it can also be nice to try a delicacy from another country without having to fork out the plane fair and set aside the time.

    • @entirelybonkers8832
      @entirelybonkers8832 Год назад

      @@WolframiteWraith except that if you’re ordering from the restaurant in the us that’s using genuine truffle it’s 1 not going to be fresh truffle 2 going to be VERY VERY expensive might as well just take a trip tbh

    • @WolframiteWraith
      @WolframiteWraith Год назад

      @@entirelybonkers8832 A few hundred bucks is not going to get you to Italy, a place to stay and a restaurant to go to. Not sure why you think they're in the same ball park.

  • @c.m.7489
    @c.m.7489 2 года назад +85

    8:43 in the background
    Adam has got a real Pizza oven now
    Ny Pizza 3.0 is coming

    • @JP44SU
      @JP44SU 2 года назад +4

      Oh you know he's testing that baby now

    • @FutureCommentary1
      @FutureCommentary1 2 года назад +9

      Maybe he'll make truffle pizza?

    • @johncoleman1930
      @johncoleman1930 2 года назад +6

      @@FutureCommentary1 He absolutely is and is definitely going to use the native truffles!

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 2 года назад

      oh hell yes

  • @JesmondBeeBee
    @JesmondBeeBee 2 года назад +42

    Video title: "Truffles and the doggies-"
    Me: I'm in.

  • @CrazyFireTriangle
    @CrazyFireTriangle 2 года назад +192

    White Truffles can be very fragrant, we're actually working with freeze drying our white Truffles in order to intensify their flavor. Though I agree the $50 an Oz is steep, but it accurately reflects the effort we've put into cultivation.

    • @Animal-Reaction-Clips
      @Animal-Reaction-Clips 2 года назад

      You buy ? Europe version . I am a truffle hunter with truffle dog

    • @CrazyFireTriangle
      @CrazyFireTriangle 2 года назад +1

      @@Animal-Reaction-Clips No, were expecting a harvest over 100 kg this year. So we're only selling, though we do sometimes buy for comparison.

    • @leftblank3482
      @leftblank3482 Год назад +1

      Have you researched that? Seems to me that freeze drying would do nothing to preserve the volatile chemicals that make truffles so fragrant.

    • @CrazyFireTriangle
      @CrazyFireTriangle Год назад +2

      @@leftblank3482 It’s true that the fragrance isn't as potent, but quite a bit of the flavor remains. And I have found that the flavor can be even more pronounced when introduced to a fatty medium. It also tends to be easier to work with in my experience, being less volatile when exposed to too much heat.

    • @leftblank3482
      @leftblank3482 Год назад +1

      I just read something this morning that said freezing at 0 degrees can actually make the flavor more intense. Learn something new everyday

  • @martonmehesi-melis5072
    @martonmehesi-melis5072 2 года назад +49

    As my father is a renowned cheesemaker of 30 years, and he makes cheese with black truffles, I have a pound of black truffles in my fridge and half a head of white truffle.
    The white truffle has a much weaker scent.
    Also, if you have the right connections, you can get truffles at about half the price stated in the video.

    • @jamescanjuggle
      @jamescanjuggle 2 года назад +12

      xD black market truffles

    • @bensoncheung2801
      @bensoncheung2801 2 года назад +1

      Who's unloading truffles at half price? Are you friends with them?

    • @martonmehesi-melis5072
      @martonmehesi-melis5072 2 года назад +4

      @@bensoncheung2801 my father's friend is doing it, he harvests it himself, last year he sold us 6 heads for the equivalent of 20 dollars

    • @TomDestry
      @TomDestry 2 года назад +4

      "You want a toe? I can get you a toe, believe me. There are ways, Dude. You don't wanna know about it, believe me. I'll get you a toe by this afternoon--with nail polish."

    • @_SPREZZATURA_McGEE_
      @_SPREZZATURA_McGEE_ Год назад +1

      @@TomDestry Obviously a Golfer🎳

  • @hotelmario510
    @hotelmario510 Год назад +3

    "Katie Learn" is the best name for a graduate researcher ever.

  • @muhammadbdawood9771
    @muhammadbdawood9771 2 года назад +26

    near where I used to live, in Mosul, Iraq, We had desert truffles or Terfeziaceae (in Arabic الكمأة) and it would show up for a season during spring and then disappear, the price varies depending on when you purchase it, it could be any where from ~4 USD to ~100 USD per kilogram. it is also associated with heavy lightning and thunder, when there is a lot of lightening and thunder there is a lot of desert truffles in the market. some people call it (بنت الرعد) meaning daughter of Thunder.

    • @ExpandDong420
      @ExpandDong420 Год назад +1

      Thor's Daugher would be a sick name for a mushroom

  • @standardtoaster10000
    @standardtoaster10000 2 года назад +16

    About 20 years ago a small group of entrepreneurial types got together in New Zealand and started planting trees for truffles. The earliest ones were oak trees and the more recent ones were hazelnut. From what I understand none of them yet produce any truffles despite the trees being successfully inoculated with the fungus.
    The people that planted oak trees are quite secretive about where they are.

  • @random8646
    @random8646 2 года назад +37

    "why i eat shmuzzles, not truffles."

  • @exaltedfinalist9488
    @exaltedfinalist9488 2 года назад +24

    I remember when I was 5 and had a baby sitter over, I was watching chowder on CN and she told me that all the names in chowder are named after foods and when she searched up a character called truffle, I was confused on why it was a rock. Fast forward years later and now I’m learning about truffle mushrooms from this channel.

  • @lauraainslie6725
    @lauraainslie6725 2 года назад +10

    Having read Rowan Jacobsen before... that was THE most Rowan Jacobsen quote ever. Loved it.

  • @LyricWulf
    @LyricWulf 2 года назад +57

    Shmuzzles!! ✨

  • @timallen7830
    @timallen7830 2 года назад +58

    Has anyone tried farming these things on rotation and letting the local animals (yes, even pigs) eat them and then recycle the spores in the traditional digestive way?
    I've always felt like inoculation is as hit or miss as it is because it is missing an enzymatic or catalytic step. Maybe the truffles would grow more abundantly and reliably if the natural process was allowed on a cycle the way we rotate crops for their own health and sustainability.
    Thoughts? Great videos, Adam, and greetings from a fellow east Tennessean! I made your malted milk coffee cake last week and it is now a legal requirement on every future Saturday morning in my house. Next stop, malted bagels! Thanks.

    • @bobdelorenzo6715
      @bobdelorenzo6715 2 года назад +24

      As someone who majored in Chemistry and minored in Biology, I think your hypothesis should be tested at the very least. Sometimes our attempts to duplicate nature work well, even very well. Other times they don't. When they don't it's often because there's some part of the life cycle we're not aware of or just can't reproduce.

    • @mzaite
      @mzaite 2 года назад +3

      You mean try to get it established as an invasive species?

  • @malokegames
    @malokegames 2 года назад +35

    Maybe the local truffles would be almost as difficult to produce and with the lower market price it would be too risky for it not paying itself, so the producers peffer to go with the classic European ones to not take that risk and rest assured that they will sell it for a good price.... it's the consumer's mind that needs to be changed first to generate a viable demand!

  • @ferp26
    @ferp26 2 года назад +13

    10:25 I like how she uses old gelato containers to keep her materials in! I do the same thing lol

  • @grahamrankin4725
    @grahamrankin4725 2 года назад +4

    Each year, the Oregon Truffle Festival takes place. We won a weekend a few years back. Part of the weekend was going out with dog and its trainer. We found some small whites. Oregon is a great site for wild truffles.

  • @anonimus370
    @anonimus370 Год назад +8

    "Monza and her human Lois" had me laughing way more than it should.

  • @bakedpretzels1378
    @bakedpretzels1378 2 года назад +6

    I just started working on one of those few truffle farms in northern california! We grow black truffles and are bringing out what I think is the only truffle dog in california because the guy charges A LOT for his services. They'll be here later this month for harvest and I'm beyond excited! We grow off of about 100 hazelnut trees so I guess it's fairly large scale. Really cool to see this video up after having started this job. :)

    • @andrewli2656
      @andrewli2656 2 года назад

      Ooh!!! Please keep me updated!!!

  • @PaulSkeptic
    @PaulSkeptic 2 года назад +58

    8:38 I wonder how Adam trained the squirrel to run in background

    • @culvuil
      @culvuil 2 года назад +5

      Lol, how did you observe that so casually.
      Even after knowing what I am looking for it took me 2 attempts to find the squirrel😅

    • @aaronmischel4552
      @aaronmischel4552 2 года назад +4

      @@culvuil Some of us are trained squirrel hunters

    • @culvuil
      @culvuil 2 года назад

      @@aaronmischel4552 😉😆

  • @troyounce3295
    @troyounce3295 2 года назад +34

    That dog is super cute, what a good buddy

  • @mlovecraftr
    @mlovecraftr 2 года назад +40

    "Sometimes things that are expensive... Are worse."

    • @gingermcgingin4106
      @gingermcgingin4106 2 года назад +2

      I find that the most expensive things tend to also be the most overrated. It's usually in the upper-middle-ish price tier that you get the best value.

    • @maagic2031
      @maagic2031 2 года назад

      say it aint so

    • @jan_Masewin
      @jan_Masewin 2 года назад +1

      fantastic quote from a fantastic series

  • @jimsiggy
    @jimsiggy 2 года назад +40

    I own a truffle orchard in Northern AL, so far I have found what I believe to be pecan truffles.

    • @truffledogco
      @truffledogco 2 года назад

      We should Chat! Would love to see them !

    • @jimsiggy
      @jimsiggy 2 года назад +1

      @@truffledogco I'd love to. I will send you an email.

    • @vizprave6721
      @vizprave6721 2 года назад +1

      I hope you have good harvests

    • @kaemincha
      @kaemincha 2 года назад

      Is this open to the public or do you sell anything? I would love to know (if you are comfortable sharing of course).

    • @jimsiggy
      @jimsiggy 2 года назад

      @@kaemincha I haven't sold anything yet, mostly because I want to be sure of positive ID. Eating an unknown fungus could be deadly, and IDK enough about truffles to be positive. I am relatively sure that I do have pecan truffles, but not sure enough to eat one or offer them to someone.

  • @albertozino1474
    @albertozino1474 2 года назад +34

    If you want to make the most out of your expensive truffle, ditch the shaver and use a Microplane. Less elegant, but much greater surface area.

  • @nodical802
    @nodical802 2 года назад +30

    Can’t wait for the ytps

    • @YourWifesBoyfriendHoe
      @YourWifesBoyfriendHoe 2 года назад +1

      Be careful saying that around here

    • @harmonic5107
      @harmonic5107 2 года назад +1

      @@YourWifesBoyfriendHoe why? Adam doesn't care that I am aware of. He sees the humor in them. Unlike other content, they aren't made with bad intentions.

    • @Oscar4u69
      @Oscar4u69 2 года назад

      @@YourWifesBoyfriendHoe
      acronyms are dangerous! 😰😰😰😱😱😱

  • @AzathothLives
    @AzathothLives 2 года назад +4

    Today I learned that truffles are the good guys of the mushroom kingdom. Helping out trees and not associating with their more base cousins that only are into the recycling business.
    High class to the end, mister truffle.

  • @curlygurly2112
    @curlygurly2112 2 года назад +4

    everyone say thank you to Monza right now !! he is doing so well!!!

  • @jobda1211
    @jobda1211 2 года назад +5

    In my country (Poland) exists summer truffle Tuber aestivum (and some other species of truffles, most notably radish truffle, which looks like white truffle and tastes like radish) if you know where to search for them it's very easy to collect them (when they're ripe they start to stick out of the ground) people in Poland don't foraged them, so there's no competition and you can even found them alongside of the forest path

  • @guitebaldi6067
    @guitebaldi6067 2 года назад +10

    Never thought I would learn something about Stardew Valley on an Adam Ragusea video, but now I know what the hell truffles are, why they sell for so much gold, why my pigs keep finding them and why I turn them into truffle oil.

  • @macsarcule
    @macsarcule 2 года назад +15

    Really outstanding piece! I think you’re spot on with the white truffles.

  • @torkelsvenson6411
    @torkelsvenson6411 2 года назад +8

    The Lagotto is a great doggy just as a companion too, they've become one of the most popular breeds in Sweden. Quite challenging though, they're stubborn little bastards!

  • @imjstcl
    @imjstcl 2 года назад

    just want to say once again, the interesting ideas you pull out of topics and the great research interviews you add make these consistently amazing

  • @JogerJ
    @JogerJ 2 года назад

    I've been waiting for a video on this subject for a while. Thanks for delivering!

  • @rocknrollmanic
    @rocknrollmanic 2 года назад +5

    I remember being in Florence, Italy and seeing these little shops dedicated to every and I mean EVERYTHING truffle. I bought some truffle salt and truffle oil, which I still have but that was expensive

  • @wernerviehhauser94
    @wernerviehhauser94 2 года назад +18

    At some point, I want to accompany my saffron bulbs with a couple of hazelnuts for truffles. But I'm not expecting anything near the 300 kg/hectar that some australian orchards produce. I'm fine with enough for a couple of pasta dishes each year.

  • @michaelfowler6239
    @michaelfowler6239 2 года назад +2

    Australia is growing about 20 tonnes of black truffles annually making it the 4th largest producer

  • @evanricard6468
    @evanricard6468 2 года назад

    Adam! Your videos are such high quality & so consistent, accurate & scientific. Great job as always!

  • @fernandoribeiro4051
    @fernandoribeiro4051 2 года назад +2

    It's great to see you getting more into the fascinating world of fungi!

  • @KwameCrawford
    @KwameCrawford 2 года назад +39

    Truffles? Adam, we need to know how to use Debroglie's equation!

  • @ciaociara
    @ciaociara Год назад +1

    I find it very cute how the truffles are paired with the trees when they are young: built-in bestie

  • @comradecid
    @comradecid 2 года назад

    the varying personalities of the researchers is wonderfully entertaining.... including to the poetic "early summer evening breeze" quietly countered with a background counter of "wellll...."

  • @kiru4802
    @kiru4802 2 года назад +45

    Waiting for Adam to make truffle risotto and then aggressively throw the whole piece of truffle as garnish just as he did with the apple in THAT episode

  • @tezla6332
    @tezla6332 2 года назад +3

    Earliest I've been to one of your videos Adam, I'm sure it'll be great as always

  • @Daniel-Munoz
    @Daniel-Munoz 2 года назад +2

    Awesome video Adam. Loved it. Also shmuzzles is just so gosh dang adorable. Keep up the amazing work. You are a beacon of quality content on RUclips.

  • @ryanjamesj44
    @ryanjamesj44 2 года назад +9

    I've had true, fresh truffle before in Italy. It was not what I expected, it does had the strong smells which made things taste different. It was good, but I don't know if I would regularly drop that kind of cash to have it often haha.

  • @rickpawl
    @rickpawl 2 года назад +3

    New subscriber here, just found your channel and I think it’s amazing. I love your style and your common sense, down to earth, intelligence. Watched a few so far and I am learning so much. Thank you for what you do and for doing it so well.

  • @Knatrick
    @Knatrick 2 года назад +13

    About what you said about white truffles versus black truffles, while I've never had proper truffle myself. A lot of trendy crap that looks like it's overpriced, normally is.

    • @CrazyFireTriangle
      @CrazyFireTriangle 2 года назад +2

      It mostly depends on availability. Pecan Truffles can be as cheap as $6 an oz, because the grow in abundance. Bianchetto Truffles are usually around $50 due to a shorter harvest season and how temperamental they are. The stupid expensive ones are the Alba, which are like $250 + per oz since they are nearly impossible to cultivate and therefore must be hunted in the wild.

    • @mellie4174
      @mellie4174 Год назад

      Omg! I live in France. I LOVE truffles!

    • @justinlee7866
      @justinlee7866 Год назад

      had both black and white varieties. truffles spoil easily and the aroma degrades as soon as you remove it from the root. Places where adam lives like knoxville/macon that require lots of travel time away from main transport centers will degrade the flavor. Anyone who has had a fresh white truffle will tell you that the aroma is stronger than the black variety by a mile.

  • @maxineyoung3236
    @maxineyoung3236 2 года назад

    love that you interviewed folks from NC state about this! I'm from a town in NC that's home to the oldest and only truffle tree nursery in the United States I believe. Also big ups to manza she's doing so well

  • @malko8477
    @malko8477 2 года назад +4

    Thanks for these great insight videos, super neat to see. Cheers.

  • @inf0phreak
    @inf0phreak 2 года назад +81

    So, apparently some unscrupulous people in the industry have started to lay out poisoned meat in truffle hunting grounds to kill competitors' dogs. If something is rare and valuable enough, it *will* produce novel and "interesting" criminal behaviour.

    • @Plyply99
      @Plyply99 2 года назад

      Indeed! Just like a certain Novel virus that pharma companies and big corporations are making a "killing" off of.

    • @ifuckedurmom
      @ifuckedurmom 2 года назад +70

      @@Plyply99 maybe start talking about the real issues with big pharma instead of diminishing them with your conspiracies

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad 2 года назад +54

      @@Plyply99 really feels like you just hijacked OP's comment to push your own agenda

    • @Plyply99
      @Plyply99 2 года назад +3

      @@ifuckedurmom Don't forget your booster shots!

    • @Plyply99
      @Plyply99 2 года назад +2

      @@WanderTheNomad Don't forget your booster shots!

  • @LeoBeale
    @LeoBeale 2 года назад +8

    Oh no.
    He built a brick pizza oven.
    He's getting stronger.

  • @methos-ey9nf
    @methos-ey9nf 2 года назад +1

    I love seeing how happy Adam is that the word to start hung truffles is schmuzzles! It is a great word to go with such a cute dog 😁.

  • @jameshampton8055
    @jameshampton8055 2 года назад

    I love saying goodbye whenever things fall around me so that bye added in at 4:11 is much appreciated.

  • @Sannuaki
    @Sannuaki 2 года назад +8

    Read about this in this cool science manga called Dr. Stone. They used boars to find truffles but they ate them lol.
    But thr boars did give them a clue on where the sagara oil field was.

    • @csar07.
      @csar07. 2 года назад +1

      It also has a really good anime.

  • @Craxin01
    @Craxin01 2 года назад +6

    I've been told by the 2 people I know that have actually sampled truffles that they tasted like dirt. Now, that could just be a case of poor cleaning, two people do not make a good sample. I've noticed any poorly cleaned mushroom I've ever eaten tasted like dirt (or worse, lots of mushrooms are grown in manure).

    • @BigHenFor
      @BigHenFor 2 года назад +2

      Not now they aren't. Horse manure isnt easy to get. Most commercial mushrooms are grown in special compost now as health and safety concerns. Also, you can grow mushrooms in coffee grounds. Adam did so when he did his previous mushroom videos in Mâcon.

  • @hechbaan
    @hechbaan 2 года назад

    I've always wondered this! Thank you so much!

  • @atatdotdot
    @atatdotdot 2 года назад

    Gotta be one of your smoothest and most natural ad transitions yet. Nice work.

  • @mrgallbladder
    @mrgallbladder 2 года назад +3

    Lol I love how excited Adam is for shmuzzles

  • @complainer406
    @complainer406 2 года назад +14

    Can you do a video on saffron farming?

    • @CrazyFireTriangle
      @CrazyFireTriangle 2 года назад +1

      Ya Adam, Just fly to India all casual like 👍

    • @complainer406
      @complainer406 2 года назад +2

      @@CrazyFireTriangle ??? There's saffron production in the US. And why India of all places? It's not the original source, and Iran produces 90% of the world's supply

    • @CrazyFireTriangle
      @CrazyFireTriangle 2 года назад

      @@complainer406 sorry, was just making a joke

  • @randmayfield5695
    @randmayfield5695 2 года назад

    As always....great instructional Thanks. I learn so much.

  • @geosci1
    @geosci1 2 года назад +1

    I had white truffle tagliatelle while working in Umbria a few weeks ago. Glad I tried it but like black truffles a lot more!

  • @IngloriousBastard1337
    @IngloriousBastard1337 2 года назад +12

    here we go, the next 5 videos will be completely dedicated to truffle history, recipes and trivia. love it :D

  • @cthrugrl
    @cthrugrl 2 года назад +3

    This sounds weird but I feel like whenever I watch a video about some luxury food item I learn some horrifying secret about how it's produced so I'm glad this video was pretty wholesome

  • @thatdudebro
    @thatdudebro 2 года назад +1

    wait a second, nothing can out-compete the native fun guy!!! he's always the life of the party.

  • @Drinklessbutdrunk
    @Drinklessbutdrunk 2 года назад +1

    This video reminded me of how much I love Lagotto Romagnolos and I value it for that

  • @jaspervanheycop9722
    @jaspervanheycop9722 2 года назад +6

    The most decadent dish I've ever had was a starter at a two star Michelin restaurant, it was a mousse of white truffle, tuna confit and foie gras. It tasted delicious but I had the same experience as you: white truffle tastes like a weak black truffle, maybe a bit creamier (though honestly that was probably the foie...) and tuna confit is pretty much indistinguishable from... a good oil packed canned tuna...
    I find truffle in general to be on the same level as saffron, there's a cheaper alternative (you can get a reasonable approximation for saffron's supposedly "unmatched" colour with some turmeric and paprika, and truffle oil/mayo is honestly just fine, or even some dried porcini) and it's so overhyped.

    • @pipongds
      @pipongds 2 года назад +1

      i dissagree in the safron part, never buy the powder because that taste like nothing, but the strands give ti a rissotto an incredible flavor

    • @jaspervanheycop9722
      @jaspervanheycop9722 2 года назад

      ​@@pipongds I've never had the powder, just regular saffron threads and I honestly barely taste anything of note. At the very least not something worth spending that much money on. (but of course you do you!)

    • @pipongds
      @pipongds 2 года назад +1

      @@jaspervanheycop9722 I dont believe its that expensive compared to the black truffle for example, but as you said, you do you

    • @CrazyFireTriangle
      @CrazyFireTriangle 2 года назад

      White Truffles do have a more subtle flavor, one that tends to lessen as they are heated. The way to get the best flavor out of them is to add them to a Dish as it is Cooling, completely away from any heating elements. Even a heat lamp can destroy their flavor.

  • @WilhelmScreamer
    @WilhelmScreamer 2 года назад +4

    Back on mushquest, good to see

  • @Arthur-rh9tf
    @Arthur-rh9tf 2 года назад

    Love your channel. Great work as always

  • @pandiyaya8704
    @pandiyaya8704 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you doggies for your service 🫡

  • @wheresmysanity
    @wheresmysanity 2 года назад +4

    Something cool to see from you would be the history of what we call 'kumara'. In North America, where it came from its called sweet potato, but it has made its way all around the Pacific, whether through pre columbian trade, or carried through ocean currents, I don't really know.

    • @TryinaD
      @TryinaD 2 года назад

      Omg yes please, a sweet potato feature! I come from another country whose people are big fans of sweet potatoes, so I would be curious about its development!

  • @cgourin
    @cgourin 2 года назад +9

    One thing don't cook/heat them. Growing up in France the truffled foie gras was mandatory during winter hollydays. I'm somewhat proud to have found by my young self, throug experiments, that the small black dot in the center of the foie gras had no taste and that the truffled foie was no better than the non. This was later confirmed by truffle ayatollahs that I got the pleasure to meet.

  • @AlvinLeowProperty
    @AlvinLeowProperty 2 года назад

    Black truffles are soooo good. I had it once in pasta in a expensive Italian restaurant. I never forget it.

  • @jonescity
    @jonescity 2 года назад +1

    Adam I love when you do these types of videos. I had no idea you could farm Truffles.

  • @pjacobsen1000
    @pjacobsen1000 2 года назад +6

    I've only had truffle on a couple of occasions and I was not hugely impressed, though they were not bad. My favorite mushrooms/fungi are still chanterelles, porcini and morels. China (where I'm currently located) has some good, wild mushroom species such as Termite Mushroom (collybia albuminosa) which is delicious dried and reconstituted.

    • @adog3129
      @adog3129 2 года назад

      i thought you couldn't use youtube in china?

    • @pjacobsen1000
      @pjacobsen1000 2 года назад

      @@adog3129 Most foreigners use VPN

    • @adog3129
      @adog3129 2 года назад

      @@pjacobsen1000 ah, i thought those didn't work there

    • @pjacobsen1000
      @pjacobsen1000 2 года назад

      @@adog3129 Most of them don't work well. In addition, you're not supposed to download them and domestic app stores are banned from carrying them. Google Play Store is blocked, so that creates a problem: You need the Play Store to download your VPN, but you can't get on the Play Store without a VPN. That requires creative thinking....
      In reality, a large number of educated Chinese people, especially those who have some foreign experience, all use VPNs.

    • @adog3129
      @adog3129 2 года назад +1

      @@pjacobsen1000 that's really interesting, thanks for explaining!

  • @alexanderchippel
    @alexanderchippel 2 года назад +9

    I want that "feed a dog a truffle to help them find it" applied to all sniffer dogs.
    I want coked up dogs running around airports making everyone nervous.

  • @echognomecal6742
    @echognomecal6742 Год назад

    "Shmuzzles" is super-close to a sort of endearment between myself & a dear friend & I can't wait to tell her about this!!!

  • @julesgro8526
    @julesgro8526 2 года назад

    I have only ever eaten regular truffle, never the white one.
    I love this stuff, it is soooo good.

  • @annbrookens945
    @annbrookens945 2 года назад +12

    After years of reading about truffles, the mystique and allure, my sole personal experience with truffles was a tiny bottle of truffle oil that came with one of my entrees from Hello Fresh. It was actually a let down. I found it unpleasantly musty and felt like there must be something wrong with me!

    • @billdickhaus
      @billdickhaus 2 года назад +1

      Nothing wrong with you! I love all kinds of mushrooms and there are very few foods I don't like. But I do not like truffles. Also, truffle oil may not be the best way to experience them because of the flavors of the oil, particularly if it is not fresh or has gone rancid.

    • @MartinThmpsn
      @MartinThmpsn 2 года назад +1

      It’s definitely not for everybody. I’ve never had real truffle shavings, but have had truffle oil a lot of times and I just don’t care for it.

    • @billdickhaus
      @billdickhaus 2 года назад

      I have tried it many times as truffle oil. Once with shaved truffle in a risotto and also shaved truffle in cheese. It is one of the very few flavors/aromas that I am not crazy about. I don't hate it, but I don't like it. I also have the "fresh cilantro tastes like soap" gene.

    • @mellie4174
      @mellie4174 Год назад

      That is synthetic. It's not the same

  • @SpiritLife
    @SpiritLife 2 года назад +6

    I knew his next video would be about shrooms because of the books he was ordering in his last video!

  • @anythingbutmyrealnamegoogl9615

    Yeah east TN! We’re never known for anything good, what a treat.

  • @bulletproofblouse
    @bulletproofblouse 2 года назад

    I had to pause this video to listen to Truffles by Wheatus and for that Adam I thank you, that song can live rent-free in my head any time of the day or night.