Cooks' Ingredients Truffle Salt

TRUFFLE SALT

This luxurious finishing salt is made with flaked sea salt and black summer truffle.

Shop Cooks’ Ingredients Truffle Salt

Truffle Salt



Did you know

You need a sharp nose to sniff out truffles – a kind of mushroom that grows among the roots of beech, hazel, oak and birch trees. Pigs have traditionally been used for this task, but nowadays trained dogs have largely taken over because the pigs used to eat too many of their discoveries! 

Truffle Salt

TRUFFLE SALT

This luxurious finishing salt is made with flaked sea salt and black summer truffle.

Shop Cooks’ Ingredients Truffle Salt

What does truffle salt taste like?

Well, salty obviously, but infused with an earthy, mushroom-like aroma and a deep, satisfying umami flavour.

tips, tricks & hacks

  • Finish butter-basted steaks with a generous sprinkle.  
  • Sprinkle over chargrilled veggies and finish with extra-virgin olive oil or shaved Parmesan.  
  • Add a final flourish to scrambled eggs and avocado.
  • Use to season homemade chips.  
  • Add to a mushroom risotto after cooking, along with the butter and parmesan.
  • Mix into vinaigrettes for salads or add to extra-virgin olive for a dip for slices of focaccia.
  • Add a pinch to a spaghetti carbonara or mushroom tagliatelle.  
  • Sprinkle over popcorn for a savoury treat on movie nights.

easy meal idea

Truffle salt butter

This deeply savoury butter is easy to make and will keep in the fridge or freezer to use on toast, grilled corn on the cob, or steaks.

  1. You’ll want about ½ tsp of Truffle Salt for every 200g butter. Simply mix the salt thoroughly into unsalted butter (you certainly don’t want to use butter that’s already salted). Shape into a log and wrap in greaseproof paper.
  2. Transfer to the fridge, where it will keep for 3 months, or the freezer (cut into portions, if you wish), where it should keep for up to a year.
Did you know

You need a sharp nose to sniff out truffles – a kind of mushroom that grows among the roots of beech, hazel, oak and birch trees. Pigs have traditionally been used for this task, but nowadays trained dogs have largely taken over because the pigs used to eat too many of their discoveries!

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