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Home | FREE Italy Articles | ** NEW: Italian Olive Oil 101 (Free . . .
 

** NEW: Italian Olive Oil 101 (Free Italy Travel Advice)**




In a yearly ritual that dates back thousands of years, Italian olive producers have either begun harvesting their fruits or are preparing to do so in the next month or so. Much of their bounty will be turned into olive oil. Homer called olive oil, “liquid gold” and the oil produced from the area that is now Italy has had a stellar reputation throughout history. Pliny the Elder, an author and military commander in the Early Roman Empire, called it “the best in the Mediterranean” and “excellent olive oil at reasonable prices.”

Italy ranks second in the world for olive oil production (behind Spain) and number one in consumption. This is no surprise to those who've visited Italy and know what a staple olio is in the Italian diet; hardly any lunch or dinner can be complete without olive oil as an ingredient in or dressing for one of the dishes. While Tuscan olive oil may be the most celebrated around the world, most olive oil production actually takes place in southern Italy, particularly in the region of Puglia, which has the largest production of any region.  Other areas with large and/or notable olive productions include Calabria, Lazio, SicilyTuscany and Umbria. The regions of Piedmont and the Valle d'Aosta are the only ones that don't produce olive oil in any significant quantities.

Italian olive oil has skyrocketed in popularity throughout the world in recent years and number one country for its export is the United States. Yet, popularity has also given rise to poor imitations. Most consumers are unaware that huge quantities of olive oil from other countries are shipped into Italy for bottling so that it can be labeled as Italian olive oil.

Those who produce authentic, organic Italian olive oil are fiercely trying to protect their product and their craft. Franco Lombardi, who has an orchard of 4,000 olive trees, at his farm, Il Pornanino, in Radda in Chianti, Tuscany, believes the best defense is to educate consumers. He runs olive oil tastings every Tuesday at his farm and travels to the U.S. several times a year to instruct Americans on the fine points of olive oil. As he gathered his family and friends to work on this year's harvest, he shared some important things we should all know about Italian olive oil:

A natural harvest: We don't use tractors to harvest the olives because we might break some of the branches. Then we would have to seal the ends, and that would mean introducing chemicals to the tree. We do not use fertilizers or insecticides as some farmers do, to weaken the stems and make them wither, so that the olives drop off. We gather our olives by hand. Our oil has to be totally pure, as nature intends it to be, and we introduce nothing to change that.

Making the oil: The age-old stone press is a wonderful yet simple machine, which is still in use wherever oil is made the traditional way. Olives are gently and slowly mashed by a stone wheel into a thick paste, which is spread on mats called ifiscoli that are stacked in piles. The stacks are then pressed for about 45 minutes. The liquid created, called must, contains water and bits of flesh and skins that will be eliminated in a process similar to decanting. New oil is characteristically soft and pungent, but its strong and distinctive aroma will mellow in time.

Reading the label: The best olive oil is derived from first cold pressing (neither heat nor chemicals are used in the process). It will be labeled and marketed as “extra virgin olive oil” if the acidity does not exceed 1%, and “virgin olive oil” if acidity is between 1% and 2%. Acidity level is the only qualification to be met by law by extra virgin olive oils, since flavor and aroma cannot be measured. The only guarantee of quality is to buy from reputable producers.

Storage: Olive oil has three enemies -- light, heat and smells. It is best stored in the dark, since light accelerates oxidation, which day after day imperceptibly alters flavor. This is why we use dark bottles. Heat dulls the flavors and aromas as well.

For good health: A mother's milk is perfectly balanced in its fat content. Extra virgin olive oil is the closest in composition and can be an alternative during weaning. Bones, muscles and particularly the heart need the A, D and E vitamins contained in olive oil. It helps protect the elderly against the risk of cholesterol and osteoporosis since it slows the demineralization of bones and enhances calcium absorption.

Photo credit: communicati, flickr.com

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