Numenvia guest smelling a truffle during truffle hunting at Poggio a Campoli with another guest nearby

Poggio a Campoli — Truffle Hunting

Photo by Giuditta
Why we love this place

As a teenager, I hated truffles. It took Daniele, his cute dogs, and the wonderful food we cooked together to change my mind. The Tuscans call it convivialità: people coming together to make and enjoy a meal--and maybe to be changed by the experience!

— Giuditta

This farm has been in the same family for twelve generations. Podere Poggio a Campoli — known by its wine label name “Campolaia” — sits in the green hills near Mercatale in Val di Pesa. Daniele is the winemaker and truffle hunter. His wife Daniela is the host, the cook, and the one who runs the experience. Their son Edoardo is a composer who helps with the hunts. And Giuseppe — grandfather, licensed member of the Tuscan Truffle Hunters Association — is the professional.

Truffle hunting in the oak woods at Poggio a Campoli
Photo by Giuditta

The Truffle Hunt

The hunt lasts five hours. You start with coffee at the farm, then a lesson on truffle varieties and seasons. Then you walk into the woods with three Lagotto Romagnolo dogs — Bia, Billo, and Ciccina. The only sounds are twigs snapping under your feet and the heavy breathing of the dogs running ahead of you.

Lagotto Romagnolo truffle dogs in the Chianti woods

Back at the farm, you clean the truffles together and sit down to lunch: antipasti, homemade pasta with shaved truffles, Chianti Classico from the estate, and tiramisù.

Fresh homemade pasta with shaved truffles
Photo by Giuditta

Truffle Seasons

Different truffle varieties can be found throughout the year:

  • Black Summer Truffle (Tuber Aestivum) — June to November
  • Black Autumn Truffle (Tuber Uncinatum) — September to December
  • White Truffle (Tuber Magnatum Pico) — September to December (the most prized)
  • Black Winter Truffle (Tuber Melanosporum) — November to March
  • Bianchetto Truffle (Tuber Borchii) — January to March
Hands-on cooking at Poggio a Campoli
Photo by Giuditta

Campolaia Wines

The estate produces Chianti Classico under the Campolaia label — Annata, Riserva, and Gran Selezione — all from estate-grown grapes. They also make extra virgin olive oil and infused oil dressings including white truffle, basil, lemon, and garlic.

The farmhouse at Poggio a Campoli
Photo by Giuditta

Listen to the podcast

I recorded a podcast episode about my truffle journey at Poggio a Campoli — how I went from hating truffles as a teenager to understanding that they are one of the pillars of Tuscan convivialità. Listen to “My Truffle Journey” →

Experience Poggio a Campoli — Truffle Hunting on our tour:

Let me take care of curating the best possible experience for you. — Giuditta

127.9ms