Benton’s ham and bacon 
This Tennessee producer makes some of the best bacon ($24 for four one-pound packages) and smoked country ham ($60) to be found. Whole hams are aged a year to a year and a half and are around 15 pounds. Available at bentonscountryhams2.com.
Minus 8 Wine Vinegar
 This restaurant-kitchen favorite is made from ice wine at a Canadian vineyard. You need only a few drops of the sweet, tangy vinegar to brighten up a dish. It’s $29 for 100 milliliters at minus8vinegar.com.
Manni oils
 This Italian company’s olive oil is used at such restaurants as the French Laundry in Napa and Pierre Gagnaire in Paris. R.J. Cooper, chef/owner of the soon-to-open Rogue 24 in DC’s Shaw neighborhood, loves both it and the white-truffle oil, which he calls “beautiful and aromatic.” The rub: It’s available only at buymanni.com with a minimum order of five gift boxes ($65 per box), or ten bottles total.
Morels
 These fibrous mushrooms come into season  in early spring and are prized for their intensely earthy, nutty flavor.  The sooner you get them, the firmer—and better—they’ll be. When buying,  avoid those with soft spots. They’re $24 to $29.99 a pound at Whole  Foods.
Nantucket bay scallops
 One of the  bright spots of winter is the November arrival of these small,  ultra-sweet scallops, which are usually available through March. They  don’t need much—just a quick sauté with butter and lemon or shallots and  white wine. Available at area seafood markets, they’re $43 a pound at BlackSalt.
Plugrá butter 
“It’s the Cadillac in our garage,” says Northside Social  pastry chef Rob Valencia of this richer, higher-fat, European-style  butter. Though it’s double the price of conventional versions, most  pastry chefs agree Plugrá is the best baking butter out there. It’s  $5.99 a pound at most supermarkets.
Sottocenere cheese with black truffles 
This  ash-covered cow’s-milk cheese from Italy is smooth and mild but is  punched up with slivers of truffle and a rub of aromatic spices. Sliced  and served on crackers, it makes a quietly luxurious snack. It’s $22 a  pound at most cheese shops.
Valrhona chocolate
There’s  lots of high-end chocolate on the market, but this French brand is the  granddaddy—and a favorite of pastry chefs. Ashley Hubbard of the area  chocolatier Fleurir  likes the Orizaba bar, a milk-chocolate blend, and partner Robert  Ludlow prefers Guanaja, which is 70 percent dark chocolate. For  bittersweet chocolate, look for Manjari; all are $7. Valrhona is sold at  Biagio Fine Chocolates and the Curious Grape.

|   Spices, Sauces, and Secret Ingredients
 |   Chef-Recommended Pantry Essentials |   Ethnic Markets | 
 
                         
                        







 
                                










