The Syrian Truffles

By: Ibrahim AL Alou*

 


I took this picture yesterday at the market showing fresh raw Syrian truffles.

Truffles are rare. Since they are wild and could not be commercially cultivated people pick them with passion and eventually demand premium prices.

The French gourmet Jean Anthelme Briallat-Savarin called it

“The diamond of the kitchen.”

Let us go on a quick intro.

What are truffles to start with?

Botanically truffles are fungus where the truffle is the fruiting body of a subterranean (underground) fungus belonging to the genus Tuber while the Syrian truffles sometimes called desert truffles belong to the genus Terfeziaceae.

Since they are ectomycorrhizal fungi they live in symposium with other plants or tree roots. They spread their spores through fungivores A.K.A. animals that eat the fungi.

In Arabic it is called kemma(الكمأة). It requires lightning to break the hydrogen bonds of the decomposed plant material on which it feeds. Arabs call it the daughter of lightning (بنت الرعد) because of that and when they see a lot of lightning they say: this is a truffle year. There are 30 kinds of desert truffles some as aromatic as European species.

When it grows underground you see a slight swelling of soil. Locals at the desert dwellings have accumulated the needed experience to dig them as soon as possible. Since they are so pricey they rush them to the markets as soon as possible.

Back then it was not so expensive and in bountiful years people would dry them (no electricity or canning available) with salt and store them for later consumption.

I remember a local puzzle about it in Arabic which goes as follow:

هي بنت البر والبر حاويها

منغنغة بالدهن وعظام ما بيها

It is the daughter of the wild and the wild is her habitat.

Soaked in fat but bones has not.

Today I saw these slightly peeled truffles at another shop.

It is nutritious with 9% proteins, 13% carbohydrates, 1% fats plus minerals like phosphorus, sodium, calcium, and potassium.

It contains Vitamin A, B-1, B-2 plus amino acids that are vital for the body.

Apparently somebody canned these brown local truffles.

So here we are back. Desert is a rich habitat that awaits rain and lightning to show off her gems. When rain comes it blooms so fast as in Arabic people say “desert soil” is hot (حارة) and blooms fast.

In a sense that is true but from an agronomy point of view it is the need for a fast reproduction cycle to grow and form and spread the seeds before it is dry again. Waiting sometimes months long before the next rain comes hoping for a new chance to pick those underground pearls.

 

*The Author is a Syrian researcher and agricultural engineer.

 

 

The Liberum

Vox Populi, Vox Dei
See full bio >
The Liberum runs on your donation. Fight with us for a free society.
Donation Form (#6)

More articles you might like

Baku Initiative Group raises the bar for dialogue on French Neocolonialism in Africa

The consequences of French colonial and neocolonial rule are still eminent today, especially when one zooms […]

Battlefields of the Future… Pan-Africanism

Not so long ago, I attended an interesting Dar Al-Maraya publishing house event, where they […]
- by The Liberum on 10/10/2024

How I lost my respect for the Western ‘civilisation’

Western countries are fond of showing to the rest of the world how civilised they […]

Control your Life

Control your life before you get burned, and it is too late. I have read […]

The paradox of being Lebanese

It is not easy being Lebanese these days if it ever was. Surrounded by unfriendly […]
- by The Liberum on 24/09/2024

Double standards on Western Sanctions Unmask anti-Azerbaijani Propaganda

Azerbaijan is regularly targeted by Western political circles fueled by Armenian and pro-Armenian groups. One […]