Bring out the bianchetto!

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Earlier this year, Jeff Weston’s Borchii Park truffiere near Christchurch produced its first bianchetto truffles. It was an early fruiting, brought on by late summer rains, and the truffles didn’t achieve full ripeness. But it augured well for the season – which has just got under way in earnest. Hugo (above) has been busy…

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These are good ripe truffles – the southern hemisphere’s first commercial crop of Tuber borchii, and Jeff is beginning to sell them on to keen chefs around the region. The largest so far have been 136g and 137g. Being a scholar and a gentleman, he’s popped a sample in the post to me. Tomorrow night’s dinner is going to be interesting…

Tasmanian truffle grower’s breakfast

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Breakfast last Thursday, courtesy of Tim and Adele Terry at their home near Deloraine in Tasmania. It was followed by a tour of the extensive (and I mean extensive) truffiere, discussion of Tim’s new “11 herbs and spices” treatments designed to enhance fruiting, and a demonstration of his new truffle washing machine.

[Picture of truffle washer removed at Mr Terry’s request]

Designed, scavenged and built by Mr T Terry. Every home should have one…

And so it begins…

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First one of the 2008 season. Only 14 g, not very ripe (see the reddish tinge between the warts on the skin?). The flesh is whitish brown, and there’s not much aroma. Peg showed a tiny bit of interest, and when I put the rake through the surface, up popped this little treasure. Same tree as our first truffle, back in 2006. I reckon it will be a week or two before any others will be approaching ripeness. Fingers crossed…

Meanwhile, I’m flying across to Tasmania in the morning to research an article for Food & Wine magazine in the USA. Apparently I have to stay at a selection of top lodges, taste fine wines and whiskeys, and eat in the best restaurants. It’s a tough assignment, but someone has to do it. I hope to catch up with Tim Terry of Truffles Australis, who’s very pleased with a 477 g truffle he found a week ago. No doubt he will point out that his is bigger than mine… Back in NZ, the Langham Hotel in Auckland is boasting about its first truffle purchase of the season, and lagotto owners Chris and Jane Counsell have proved fine truffle dog trainers. Their Flickr collection shows Mia finding truffles at Alan Hall’s Gisborne truffiere at her first attempt. Congratulations!

Catching up with truffle news

It’s been far too long, I know, but the other place has been taking up most of my time. Here’s an early winter update of things truffle. Prospects at Limestone Hills look reasonable. Good rain in February after a hot summer should have got the fungus moving, and we’ve finally completed an irrigation upgrade which allows us much better control over the water we apply to the trees. There are good reports from other Canterbury growers, and Peg has been showing interest in one or two places when we’ve been out on training runs – including the hazel where we got our first harvest. Fingers are firmly crossed, wood is being touched, etc & etc.

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Oregon Truffle Festival coming up

This year’s Oregon Truffle Festival is coming up at the end of this month. I had a great time there last year – even if I did have to sing for my supper – and I’m sure this year will be even better. Ian Hall and Alessandra Zambonelli are doing the keynote, the grower’s forum, and launching their new book, Taming The Truffle, so those sections will be certainly be well worth attending [Note: they’re both friends, so I’m biased]. I’ll be briefing Alessandra on what to expect in Eugene and how to harvest Oregon whites when she visits us at Limestone Hills next week.

Charlie and Leslie: good luck, and fine truffles for all!

Things are happening behind the scenes

Limestone Hills has moved to a new host, and the On The Farm blog will be transferred to a new WordPress blog over the next few weeks. This involves quite a lot of work, as there are a lot of posts to move and categorise etc etc. Please be patient. For the time being the old blog will remain live, but new posts will appear here (if I get round to doing any!). I have a lot to learn about running WordPress…

Five things to eat before you die

I‘ve been tagged for a food blog meme, which is a first (thanks Bron). Not being a proper food blog, but a blog that does food from time, I’m probably a bit of an interloper — and I’m certainly going to find it hard to “tag” five more food blogs (one of the rules). I’ll do my best.

The meme comes from The Traveller’s Lunchbox, and the idea is to come up with five “things you’ve eaten and think that everyone should eat at least once before they die”. It’s an interesting challenge, and over the last couple of days I’ve been remembering all sorts of meals in all sorts of places. And therein lies one of the challenges. I have especially fond memories of a plateau de fruits de mer, eaten in a restaurant on the inner harbour at La Rochelle, but do I remember it because of the excellence of the plateau, or the happy combination of circumstances surrounding that meal? Same thing with a bottle of white vin de savoie that was elevenses at a little restaurant on the slopes at Serre Chevalier. A magic moment to be sure, but worth inflicting that wine on everyone? Probably not. So I have settled on five things that I have eaten and enjoyed and remembered and loved, not simply because of time and place, but on culinary merit (though you may choose to differ). And whakapapa plays a part too.

  1. Andouillete
    Offal sausage, or awful sausage? A specialty of Troyes, and found in every Relais Routiers in France, this is a working man’s saucisse, a sausage of strong flavour and challenging appearance. Cut it open and admire the strips of pork tripe and large intestine, flavoured with onion and parsley. I’ve seen grown women turn away in horror… but with good mustard and some fine pommes frites, the andouillette is something I have to eat at least once when visiting la belle France.
  2. Bara lawr
    Welsh seaweed dish, known to the Sais as laver bread, traditionally eaten fried in oatmeal with bacon for breakfast. The seaweed is quite common around the world (I’ve eaten it in NZ) — there is a Japanese name, but I can’t recall it — and in Wales it’s washed and then boiled for four hours or more until it’s a green glutinous mass, still redolent of the sea. And if the bacon you eat with it is farm-cured and bought in the market at Carmarthen or Cardigan, then you have something simple but wonderful.
  3. Germknodel
    This is pretty close to a time and place thing, because I have only eaten it in restaurants on the slopes at St Anton or Lech, although it is a speciality throughout the Tirol. Consider a dumpling the size of a baby’s head stuffed with stewed plums, topped with poppy seeds and icing sugar and dressed with melted butter, and reflect on the challenge this presents to post-prandial skiing. Delicious, but difficult.
  4. A sun-ripened apricot, warm from the tree
    Looking through other bloggers’ lists of five, there are plenty of exhortations to take freshly picked, sun-ripened or just landed things and apply them to the palate. So I am not being original, but I include my apricot because I planted apricots (and other fruit trees) at Limestone Hills because this was an experience I’d read about (Jane Grigson’s Fruit Book, I think) and wanted to try. Every summer I watch the apricots, willing them to ripen, so that I can revel in the sheer apricotness of the fresh, sun-warmed article. This isn’t just worth doing, it’s worth moving to a place where it’s possible in order to do it.
  5. Tuber magnatum, on anything
    No surprises here. The first meal of this truffle set in train a sequence of events that led me to Limestone Hills, and it is one of the tragedies of modern science that no-one has yet worked out how to successfully cultivate this fungus (though there are tantalising hints that it might soon be possible). Not oil — never oil — just the fresh article, shaved thinly on a buttery tagliatelle, or plain risotto, or stirred into and shaved onto an emperor amongst omelettes. So good I wrote a book about it.
    So who to “tag” with this: I can’t do five, but I will suggest that Mark Bernstein — another occasional foodie like me — might like to have a go.

Truffles on the BBC

Aunty’s been showing a bit of interest in truffles recently. Aunty BBC, that is. I don’t quite know how they got hold of the idea, but the Charlie Crocker Show on BBC Radio Kent decided they wanted to talk to someone about truffles in New Zealand, and they picked on me. Charlie invited me on to her sofa (virtual, in this case) on Monday evening, Kent time – 7-15am, sunrise in NZ, and we chatted merrily for half an hour. You can listen to the show on the web, at least for a week. It’s a fair while since I’ve been on the BBC. Back in the early 80s, when I was being a video guru, I used to claim that the only BBC station I’d never been on was Radio Three (the classical music station).

Meanwhile, over on Radio Four, their correspondent has been truffling his way round Bill & Pat de Corsie’s truffiere south of Sydney, where 500 five year-old trees have produced six kilos of truffles this winter. On the way they’ve encountered one or two uniquely Aussie problems…

“The bloody wombats were getting in over the fence,” Bill tells me. “We had no idea they could climb.” Installing an electric wire has solved that problem, but it is still no deterrent to the local kangaroos, which simply hop over.

You can probably ferret around on the BBC and find the audio. From Our Own Correspondent was broadcast on Saturday 26 August, 2006 at 1130 BST on BBC Radio 4.

Ringworld examined

Over the last few months, I’ve been a regular visitor at the web site of the NZ Climate Science Coalition, a loose affiliation of local global warming deniers who are trying (rather desperately) to influence the public debate about policy responses to climate change. I don’t want to go on about them at great length here, but I have been spending time debating and debunking some of their more outrageous misrepresentations (I’m being polite) of the science of the issue. Suffice to say they don’t like the Kyoto Protocol…

One man has been particularly vociferous in those debates – the “long range weather forecaster” Ken Ring. He believes that the Moon and its movements allow him to predict New Zealand’s weather years in advance. Random House publish Ring’s forecasts in a thick ring-bound almanac – the 2007 almanac is due out in September (and this year, there’s an Australian version). Ken is an aggressive debater — and denier — of global warming, but his grasp of the subject is rather idiosyncratic (I’m being polite again). You can find some of his views if you track back through this thread at the NZ CSC site, or get added perspective at Tim Lambert’s excellent Deltoid blog.

And so, in the course of dispute, I found myself undertaking to “audit” Ken’s forecasts. Not quite a climate audit, perhaps (not a hockey stick in sight), but an attempt to see if his published forecasts have any skill (ie, are they useful). Ring isn’t shy about claiming successes – after all, public profile helps to sell books (as I know) – but is there any real merit in his method? Has the world of weather and climate forecasting overlooked a real breakthrough?

I have therefore created a new Ringworld topic (see sidebar), and over the next couple of weeks I’ll be posting the first results of my review of Ring’s forecasts for the year to date. The posts won’t appear on the front page (if I can work out how to do that in Tinderbox…). Ordinary truffle and farm posts shouldn’t be affected too much.

Oh to be in England

Email of the morning arrives from Nigel Hadden-Paton at Truffles UK, who has just had a good day out in Wiltshire:

“We sat at a table in the garden and brushed our spoils clean, then weighed them. Over 4 kilos of top quality [summer] truffle and a further 2.5 kilos of damaged or maggotted truffle – to be used for inoculum. Not a bad day at the office!”

In 40 minutes. With time to take some excellent pictures. I feel a bout of Home Thoughts From Abroad coming on.