After decades of failed attempts, scientists in France have revealed that they have finally been able to grow white truffles.
The prized delicacy had so far proved impossible to cultivate, meaning the only way to acquire the pungent fungus was to buy from a dealer or directly from a truffle hunter. The rarity of the white truffle means it can fetch prices as high as €10,000 at auction. If the French experiment succeeds in cracking how to farm white truffles at a commercial scale, it could bring down the cost significantly.
Growing white truffles: the experiment
The experiment was carried out at a secret location in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, western France by the National Research Institute for Agriculture, Food and the Environment (INRAE) and the findings were published in Le Trufficulteur, the magazine of the French Federation of Truffle Growers.
“This significant increase in production is very promising,” said mycologist and project leader Dr Claude Murat, of INRAE and the University of Lorraine, Nancy.
“It confirms the truffle is well established. With black truffles, it is usual to have just a few truffles at first and then a quick increase, and it seems the white truffle is behaving in the same way, which is good news for future cultivation.”