Lesson 1Fresh versus preserved forms: whole fresh, vacuum-packed, frozen, oils, butters, pastes, salts, conservesCompare fresh and preserved truffle formats and their best uses. You'll examine whole fresh, vacuum-packed, frozen, oils, butters, pastes, salts, and conserves, weighing shelf life, aroma intensity, cost, and menu applications.
Whole fresh truffles and gradingVacuum-packed and chilled productsFreezing techniques and quality impactTruffle oils, butters, and pastesSalts, sauces, and jarred conservesLesson 2Reliable sourcing channels and seller evaluation: truffle hunters, specialty importers, wholesale markets, farmers’ markets, online retailersUnderstand how to source truffles safely and ethically. Compare truffle hunters, brokers, importers, markets, and online sellers, and learn evaluation criteria such as transparency, handling practices, documentation, and after-sales support.
Working directly with truffle huntersSpecialty importers and distributorsWholesale and restaurant market optionsAssessing farmers’ and local marketsScreening and rating online retailersLesson 3Storage best practices for fresh truffles (rice vs paper, refrigeration, humidity, refrigeration time limits)Learn evidence-based storage methods for fresh truffles. Compare rice and paper towel techniques, ideal refrigeration ranges, humidity control, and realistic time limits, while avoiding common mistakes that strip aroma or cause spoilage.
Initial cleaning and preparation stepsPaper towel wrapping and containersRice storage: pros, cons, and mythsRefrigeration temperature and humidityMaximum holding times and spoilage signsLesson 4Regional production maps and key terroirs (Italy: Piedmont, Tuscany, Umbria; France: Périgord, Provence; Spain; Australia; USA)Gain a geographic overview of global truffle regions and terroirs. You'll locate classic European zones and newer areas in Spain, Australia, and the USA, and relate soil, climate, and host trees to typical quality and flavour style.
Piedmont, Tuscany, and Umbria in ItalyFrench Périgord and Provençal zonesKey Spanish producing regionsAustralian plantations and climatesEmerging terroirs in the United StatesLesson 5Typical aroma and flavor profiles described in culinary terms (earthy, musky, garlicky, hazelnut, honeyed, floral)Develop a precise sensory vocabulary for truffles. You'll map earthy, musky, garlicky, nutty, honeyed, and floral notes to specific species and terroirs, and learn how heat, fat, and pairing choices shape perceived aroma and flavour.
Core earthy and musky descriptorsGarlic, leek, and allium-like notesNutty, hazelnut, and toasted nuancesHoneyed, creamy, and dairy impressionsFloral, forest, and undergrowth tonesLesson 6Major truffle species and scientific names (Tuber melanosporum, Tuber aestivum/uncinatum, Tuber magnatum, Tuber borchii)Get familiar with the main commercial truffle species and their Latin names. Learn how Tuber melanosporum, Tuber aestivum and uncinatum, Tuber magnatum, and Tuber borchii differ in appearance, aroma, season, and typical culinary uses.
Tuber melanosporum: black winter truffleTuber aestivum and T. uncinatum traitsTuber magnatum: prized white truffleTuber borchii: bianchetto profileVisual and microscopic ID basicsLesson 7Retail and wholesale price ranges by species and season (how prices fluctuate, premium white truffle pricing, black winter vs summer truffle)Explore how truffle prices move across seasons, species, and grades. Learn why white truffles command premiums, how black winter compares with summer truffles, and how to read market signals when buying retail or negotiating wholesale.
Retail vs wholesale price structuresPremium white truffle price dynamicsBlack winter vs summer truffle pricingSeasonal scarcity and peak weeksReading and comparing market reportsLesson 8How to read product labels and provenance claims; spotting common frauds and adulterationLearn to decode truffle labels, from Latin names to origin and grading terms. Understand protected designations, typical provenance wording, and the most common tricks used in fraud, dilution, and aroma adulteration across products.
Mandatory vs optional label elementsProtected origin and consortium sealsInterpreting species and grading termsRed flags for fraud and mislabelingDetecting synthetic aroma adulterationLesson 9Seasonality calendars and harvest windows for each speciesMaster the seasonal rhythms of key truffle species. This section explains typical harvest windows by region, how climate shifts affect timing and yield, and how seasonality shapes availability, pricing, and menu planning decisions.
White truffle peak and shoulder seasonsBlack winter truffle harvest periodsSummer truffle and burgundy timelinesRegional shifts in start and end datesPlanning menus around peak supplyLesson 10Cited reference types to consult: specialist truffle sites, regional consortium pages, market reports, classic culinary texts (how to find trustworthy sources)Learn where to find trustworthy truffle information. You'll compare specialist websites, regional consortium pages, market reports, and classic culinary texts, and develop habits for cross-checking data and spotting biased sources.
Specialist truffle and mycology sitesRegional consortium and PDO pagesWholesale and auction market reportsClassic cookbooks and chef monographsCross-checking and bias detection