Out of sheer curiosity today (I have never eaten truffles before), I bought a small jar of preserved Italian black truffles from Fox & Obel. I was at the deli counter ordering my usual lunch of Greek gigantes beans, roast chicken, and grilled vegetables. I noticed them next to the counter and was very intrigued. A bit steep at about $30, but very cheap compared to the real (fresh) thing. I thought, hey it's my birthday this week, let's blow 30 bucks on something for the hell of it.
As soon as I left the store I opened the jar to take a whiff and was greeted by a mild, earthy aroma with some rather powerful top-notes. Now, I have used "truffle" oil before, and while there was a hint of the same aroma in the jar I bought (the top note mostly), it was a totally different animal. "Truffle" oil always struck me as overpowering and rather artificial, even if I don't know what fresh truffles are supposed to smell like.
So I got home and opened the jar again. I sliced off a bit of truffle and popped it in my mouth - it tasted exactly like mushroom. Nothing special. Hmmph, I thought. What a rip for 30 bucks.
Disappointed, I did a bit of research online. Apparently preserved truffles should be patted dry and then sauteed in butter or oil to release their flavour. I immediately pulled out a pan, threw some olive oil in it, some garlic, fresh ground black pepper, and finally half a preserved truffle chopped. I let the garlic brown gently before adding the truffle the let the whole thing go for about 5 minutes on a low flame. I poured the sauce over some rigatoni I had prepared and threw a bit of bread crumbs and a handful of parmigiano in to thicken (and flavor) things up.
The result? One of the nicest, simplest, 10 minutes pastas I have ever had. The truffles definitely blossomed into something different. Far from the abrasive, gasoline-like pungency that truffle oil imparts, these babies added an earthiness unlike any I've ever tasted to the pasta. Along with the garlic and parmigiano, this made a fine meal. I can't wait to do it again.
Was it worth $30 bucks? Sure, why not. I still have two and a half truffles left, and the pasta tasted damn good. I'll do it again. Can't wait to try the real thing now.
"By the fig, the olive..." Surat Al-Teen, Mecca 95:1"