sundevilpeg wrote:It's astounding how expensive so-called truffle oil is, especially white truffle oil. According to one of the more stellar French chefs I worked with this summer at the Chicago Botanic Garden, who has no reason to fib about such matters, "truffle oil" is flavored solely with an artifically produced essence - just like cheap vanilla or almond extract. No actual truffle has ever gone anywhere near one of those extravagant little bottles. Zut alors!
sundevilpeg wrote:It's astounding how expensive so-called truffle oil is, especially white truffle oil. According to one of the more stellar French chefs I worked with this summer at the Chicago Botanic Garden, who has no reason to fib about such matters, "truffle oil" is flavored solely with an artifically produced essence - just like cheap vanilla or almond extract. No actual truffle has ever gone anywhere near one of those extravagant little bottles. Zut alors!
Mike G wrote:
So: I would buy small bottles and I would use them generously, lavishly until they are gone. It is ephemeral, which is not a bad thing.
mike, i hope you're storing it in the refrigerator
messycook wrote:I asked a woman the other day what her secret was to appear 60, but she in actuality she was 90 years old. She simply said, "Eat a lot of vegetables. The ones that grow around here."
Since there is a piece of something swimming around the bottom of the bottle, I am inclined to believe that there is at least SOMETHING that is truffle related in it. It does not specify whether the flavor itself is natural or artificial, but it certainly looks like a small piece of white truffle at the bottom of the bottle.
sundevilpeg wrote:Since there is a piece of something swimming around the bottom of the bottle, I am inclined to believe that there is at least SOMETHING that is truffle related in it. It does not specify whether the flavor itself is natural or artificial, but it certainly looks like a small piece of white truffle at the bottom of the bottle.
The chef in question - OK, Michael Lachowicz, late of Le Deux Gros and Le Francais, now the owner of the mighty fine Michael in Winnetka - was very emphatic about his point, and also addressed the truffle-in-the-bottle "trick." A scrap of truffle trimmings in a bottle of EVOO is going to do diddly-squat to flavor the oil - it's purely there for sexiness, meaning marketing purposes.
I should add here that I feel comfortable with passing along his thoughts here, as this was not whispered to me in a corner of the walk-in - Chef Lachowicz addressed his remarks to the entire audience during the demo, and he is not exactly a shrinking violet, nor one to beat around the bush. I stand by the veracity of his statement - what would he possibly have to gain by telling a fungus falsehood?
"truffle oil" is flavored solely with an artifically produced essence - just like cheap vanilla or almond extract. No actual truffle has ever gone anywhere near one of those extravagant little bottles.
could have gotten it for $10.50 at marcy st. market
Bill/SFNM wrote:... Hugues Martin, head of an international trade group of truffle culturers. Aside from being one of the most interesting and charming persons you could ever meet, he was adamant that the vast majority of truffle oils have no trace of real truffles in them. Now, he is certainly biased, but he also made the claim that Italian white truffles are superior to French black truffles, and for a Frenchman to make such a claim is an indication of some level of integrity.
sundevilpeg wrote:"truffle oil" is flavored solely with an artifically produced essence - just like cheap vanilla or almond extract. No actual truffle has ever gone anywhere near one of those extravagant little bottles. Zut alors!
Wikipedia wrote:Cook's Illustrated ran several taste tests pitting vanilla against vanillin in baked goods and other applications, and to the consternation of the magazine editors, all tasters preferred the flavor of vanillin to vanilla.
There absolutely may be some truth to what the chef said, but I have to point out that you're waffling a little now. If you admit to the trifle of truffle, then it's a wee bit of waffle. Your original post stated:Quote:
"truffle oil" is flavored solely with an artifically produced essence - just like cheap vanilla or almond extract. No actual truffle has ever gone anywhere near one of those extravagant little bottles.