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Truffle Hound: On the Trail of the World's Most Seductive Scent, with Dreamers, Schemers, and Some Extraordinary Dogs Hardcover – 5 October 2021
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A Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year
A captivating exploration into the secretive and sensuous world of truffles, the elusive food that has captured hearts, imaginations, and palates worldwide.
The scent of one freshly unearthed white truffle in Barolo was all it took to lead Rowan Jacobsen down a rabbit hole into a world of secretive hunts, misty woods, black-market deals, obsessive chefs, quixotic scientists, muddy dogs, maddening smells, and some of the most memorable meals ever created.
Truffles attract dreamers, schemers, and sensualists. People spend years training dogs to find them underground. They plant forests of oaks and wait a decade for truffles to appear. They pay $6,000 a pound to possess them. They turn into quivering puddles in their presence. Why?
Truffle Hound is the fascinating account of Rowan's quest to find out, a journey that would lead him from Italy to Istria, Hungary, Spain, England, and North America. Both an entertaining odyssey and a manifesto, Truffle Hound demystifies truffles--and then remystifies them, freeing them from their gilded cage and returning them to their roots as a sacred offering from the forest. It helps people understand why they respond so strongly to that crazy smell, shows them there's more to truffles than they ever imagined, and gives them all the tools they need to take their own truffle love to the next level. Deeply informed, unabashedly passionate, rakishly readable, Truffle Hound will spark America's next great culinary passion.
Review
"Jacobsen captivates with this dual narrative, both an eloquent and sensuous treatise on truffles and the enthralling story of his obsessive quest to learn everything there is to know about them... Jacobsen offers a thrilling dive into the secretive and lucrative world 'of this subterranean wonder.' The real delicacy here, though, is the arresting prose used to convey his reverence and awe." - Publishers Weekly, starred review
"A Mark Kurlansky-esque romp through the science, history, and culture surrounding that most elusive of foodstuffs, the truffle...The author depicts a culture of truffle finding, trading, and eating that is as complex as the aromatic stew of ingredients that goes into one, and he commits to paper lovely images that combine both intrigue and a certain level of surrealism....It's an altogether delightful narrative. Fans of pungent flavors--and pungent prose--will enjoy this mouthwatering grand tour of a culinary treasure." - Kirkus Reviews, starred review
"A deep dive into all things truffle...well written and full of interesting characters and fascinating facts." - Library Journal
"Jacobsen goes on a fruitful quest to discover what makes truffle one of the most sought-after ingredients in the world... You'll leave Truffle Hound understanding why people feel so strongly about truffles and how to appreciate the extraordinary fungi." - Veranda, 25 Best New Books To Cozy Up With This Fall
"A worldwide catalog of truffle resources invites exploration, and some recipes give ideas for using the bounty." - Booklist
"Jacobsen delves into the sometimes twisting history of this food, as well as into the science that makes truffle farming possible. Even as he examines the fungi's complex history and analyzes questions about who gets access to truffles, Jacobsen's writing remains accessible, unlike the costly object of his desire. Truffle Hound is a compelling story, but Jacobsen doesn't leave readers empty-handed when the tale ends. The book also includes a glossary of truffle types, resources for acquiring your own truffles and recipes for after the decadent fungi arrives. It's an appropriate finish to a delicious book." - BookPage
Jacobsen sheds light on the opaque fungus, with the help of a passionate and eccentric cast, including the Grand Master of the Saint Ladislaus Order of Truffle Knights in Hungary...Truffle Hound's achievement is to demonstrate the diversity of truffle culture beyond the traditional strongholds of France and Italy. - Times Literary Supplement
A gripping adventure story...There's so much in here, about dogs and trees, science and romance, about smells and cooking. Rowan Jacobsen previously wrote an award-winner about oysters, and Truffle Hound should sweep the board: it is funny, fascinating and fearless. - Country Life
Truffle Hound offers a unique insight into the secretive hunts and black-market deals that take place before chefs shave them over luxury dishes and serve them to you in restaurants. Jacobsen also meets a few good dogs along the way. - Modern Farmer
"Delightful, informative, and so much fun to read, this book will inspire you to grab your four-legged friend and scramble into the forest, noses twitching, in search of your own dirt-covered delicacies." - Fern Watt, author of ADVENTURE DOGS AND GIZELLE'S BUCKET LIST: MY LIFE WITH A VERY LARGE DOG
"Truffle Hound, like a truffle, charms by seducing us." - Mark Kurlansky
"For centuries the truffle has been cooking's most mysterious ingredient, from its forest-floor secret locations to its high-luxury dishes. This enlightening book opens a whole new window onto this terrific tuber." - David McMillan, chef and co-owner, Joe Beef
"With wit and intrigue, Rowan Jacobsen casts a spell as alluring as the truffle itself, pulling readers into a foodie fever dream that moves like an Italian trifulau through the woods: brisk, clear-eyed, and full of high spirits." - Langdon Cook, author of THE MUSHROOM HUNTERS
"A terrific addition to the oeuvre. What is special about Truffle Hound is its investigation of many truffles from many places. For all those who think of truffles in binary terms, as in T. melanosporum and T. magnatum, Truffle Hound will be a revelation." - Eugenia Bone, author of MYCOPHILIA
"One of the most remarkable single-subject books to come along in a while . . . Jacobsen covers oysters in exhaustive detail, but with writing so engaging and sprightly that reading about the briny darlings is almost as compulsive as eating them . . . There may be no more pleasurable food than a raw oyster, there almost certainly is no better guide." - Los Angeles Times on A GEOGRAPHY OF OYSTERS
"Written in an accessible style by a hard-core ostreaphile, A Geography of Oysters is a fun read, inviting you to join Jacobsen on his quest for an oyster-rich life. Yes, please!" - Washington Post on A GEOGRAPHY OF OYSTERS
"[H]ere are the Winesap, the Pound Sweet, the Maiden's Blush and Black Twig, rendered in a vivid prose rarely seen outside of the wine list . . . For anyone who's willing to get swept up in the grand romance of food, this handsome volume will make for seductive reading." - Morning Edition, NPR, on APPLES OF UNCOMMON CHARACTER
About the Author
- Print length304 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBloomsbury Publishing
- Publication date5 October 2021
- Dimensions14.81 x 2.92 x 21.74 cm
- ISBN-101635575192
- ISBN-13978-1635575194
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Product details
- Publisher : Bloomsbury Publishing (5 October 2021)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 304 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1635575192
- ISBN-13 : 978-1635575194
- Dimensions : 14.81 x 2.92 x 21.74 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 490,846 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 183 in Meal Garnishes
- 351 in Gourmet Cooking (Books)
- 2,702 in Natural Food Cooking
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Rowan Jacobsen is the James Beard Award-winning author of A Geography of Oysters, Fruitless Fall, The Living Shore, American Terroir, Shadows on the Gulf, Apples of Uncommon Character, The Essential Oyster, and Truffle Hound. He has written for the New York Times, Harper's, Outside, Mother Jones, Orion, Scientific American, Smithsonian, Newsweek, Yankee, and others, and his work has been anthologized in The Best American Science & Nature Writing and Best Food Writing collections. He was an Alicia Patterson Foundation fellow, writing about endangered diversity on the borderlands between India, Myanmar, and China, and a Knight Science Journalism Fellow at MIT. He has performed with Pop-Up Magazine, lectured at Harvard and Yale, and appeared on CBS, NBC, and NPR. Learn more at www.rowanjacobsen.com
Customer reviews
Top reviews from other countries
Rowan Jacobsen is an American writer writing about food and the environment.
Reading about truffles was not high on my to-read list but lately I'm fascinated by the mycelial network and I'm forever interested in food related topics so this book caught my attention. Through Jacobsen's colorful narration, we learn about truffles, truffle hunting dogs, terroir related to differing types of truffles, and truffle culture and its secrecy surrounding curating and harvesting. Truffle descriptions left my mouth watering. This book includes truffle stories from England, Spain, Italy, Croatia, Hungary, California, Oregon, Washington, Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, Maryland, New York Vermont, and Quebec. The dirty dozen are described using Latin Name, Alias, Appearance, Size, Season, Habitat, Region, Price, Availability, Use, Fragrance, and notes. Each description includes an accompanying color photo. Tuber Aestivum Scorzone Black Summer, Tuber Uncinatum Burgundy Black Autumn, Tuber Borchii White Bianchetto, Tuber Brumale, Tuber Oregonense or Tuber Gibbosum Oregon White, Leucangium Carthusianum Oregon Black, Tuber Macrosporum, Tuber Canaliculatum Appalachian, Mattirolomyces terfezioides Honey, Tuber Himalayensis or Tuber Indicum Chinese. Seven more: Tuber mesentericum Bagnoli, Tuber Maculatum, Tuber Excavatum, Kalapuya Brunnea Oregon Brown, Tuber Lyonii Pecan, Melanogaster, Terfezia Desert. An appendix includes recipes.
"Truffle fungi live as mycelia: mats of microscopic filaments that feel their way through the soil. They partner with trees for their daily existence, sheathing the root ends in a net of hyphae, like a glove on a hand. The fungal threads actually penetrate the root, snaking into the interstices between the cells so they can share resources. The tangle of intimacy is known as a mycorrhiza, literally a 'fungus root.'"
Reviewed in the United States on 14 July 2023
Rowan Jacobsen is an American writer writing about food and the environment.
Reading about truffles was not high on my to-read list but lately I'm fascinated by the mycelial network and I'm forever interested in food related topics so this book caught my attention. Through Jacobsen's colorful narration, we learn about truffles, truffle hunting dogs, terroir related to differing types of truffles, and truffle culture and its secrecy surrounding curating and harvesting. Truffle descriptions left my mouth watering. This book includes truffle stories from England, Spain, Italy, Croatia, Hungary, California, Oregon, Washington, Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, Maryland, New York Vermont, and Quebec. The dirty dozen are described using Latin Name, Alias, Appearance, Size, Season, Habitat, Region, Price, Availability, Use, Fragrance, and notes. Each description includes an accompanying color photo. Tuber Aestivum Scorzone Black Summer, Tuber Uncinatum Burgundy Black Autumn, Tuber Borchii White Bianchetto, Tuber Brumale, Tuber Oregonense or Tuber Gibbosum Oregon White, Leucangium Carthusianum Oregon Black, Tuber Macrosporum, Tuber Canaliculatum Appalachian, Mattirolomyces terfezioides Honey, Tuber Himalayensis or Tuber Indicum Chinese. Seven more: Tuber mesentericum Bagnoli, Tuber Maculatum, Tuber Excavatum, Kalapuya Brunnea Oregon Brown, Tuber Lyonii Pecan, Melanogaster, Terfezia Desert. An appendix includes recipes.
"Truffle fungi live as mycelia: mats of microscopic filaments that feel their way through the soil. They partner with trees for their daily existence, sheathing the root ends in a net of hyphae, like a glove on a hand. The fungal threads actually penetrate the root, snaking into the interstices between the cells so they can share resources. The tangle of intimacy is known as a mycorrhiza, literally a 'fungus root.'"
The author seems a tenacious truffle hound himself and has not left a stone unturned.







