Where Have All the Truffles Gone?
- Share via
Why did turn-of-the-century French cuisine call for so many truffles? Sure, it was upper-crusty showoff cooking, but it’s also true that there were just a lot more truffles in those days. About 2,000 tons of black truffles were harvested in 1914, but recent years have been averaging only five or six tons. One reason: A lot of France’s truffle-bearing oak forests got in the way of one or another of this century’s world wars.
Tea Reading
Mary Mac Press, publisher of Mary Mac’s TeaTimes, a bi-monthly newsletter dedicated to the gentle Victorian pleasures of afternoon tea-drinking, has branched out into the book world. It publishes a recipe collection “Easy Tea Treats for Busy Tea Lovers,” three “Tea Time Zone Guides to Tea Rooms” (organized by time zone--Pacific, Mountain/Central and Eastern) and a workbook-format guide “How to Open a Tea Room.” If you can’t inquire by mail (on unlined stationery, in black or brown ink) to P.O. Box 841, Langley, Wash. 98260, you can call (800) 331-1885.
Fight Lactose Intolerance
If milk or ice cream upsets your stomach, you may be unable to digest lactose, a sugar found in all dairy foods. McNeil Consumer Products Co. will send you a free test kit to settle the matter: Call (800) HELP-KIT. McNeil also offers a lactose-intolerance newsletter and samples of Lactaid, a dietary supplement to make dairy foods easier to digest.
Hot Sauce in Christmas Colors
Hey! McIlhenny--which has never changed anything, even its label, since 1868--is now selling a jalapeno sauce! Green Tabasco! Where will it all end?
More to Read
Eat your way across L.A.
Get our weekly Tasting Notes newsletter for reviews, news and more.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.