5 Most Frequently Asked Olive Oil Questions
Share
As Pasolivo’s Olive Oil Sommelier, I am asked many questions when it comes to all thing’s olive oil related. I thought it would be helpful to share the top 5 questions that have been asked lately and provide my expert answers!
- How to choose real extra virgin olive oil?
- Is the olive oil you are purchasing certified extra virgin? Most producers who make high quality extra virgin olive oil, take the additional steps to get it certified. The California Olive Oil Council certifies most California extra virgin olive oils, but there are also the International Olive Oil Council for International oils, and a few other approved organizations for certification. Some extra virgin olive oils will have their certification on the packaging, but some producers choose not to include this because the seals design change frequently. You can usually look on the websites of the places that certify extra virgin olive oils to find whether the oil you are looking to purchase is certified.
- Does the oil have a Harvest or Best by Date? Many oils will list the bottling date, but this tells the consumer nothing about when the oil was produced. You typically want to consume high quality EVOO within two years of the harvest date to ensure ultimate quality. Some award- winning extra virgin olive oils can go longer than that, but it depends on storage and quality of the oil.
- Does the packaging say who produced the oil? Sometimes, the olive oils will say who bottled or distributes the oils, but it does not tell you who produced it. This means that the oil had to travel from the producer to the company that ultimately packaged or distributes it for sale. Also, sometimes if the producer is listed, there will be a list of multiple countries: Italy, France, Spain. While that sounds romantic, that means that the oil had to travel from all those places to eventually be bottled together. So, single source oil from a real olive oil producer you trust is always key!
- What are the health benefits of olive oil?
- Heart Healthy
- Lowers Blood Pressure
- Lowers Bad Cholesterol
- Anti-inflammatory properties
- Helps Cognitive Function
- Is cooking with olive oil toxic?
- Can I use olive oil after the best before date?
- How to make flavored olive oils?
- Co- Milling: This is when you mill the fresh herbs or other flavors with the olives at the time of Harvest. Pasolivo co- mills most of their flavored oils.
- Oil to Oil Flavoring: This is where you blend the extra virgin olive oil with the oil extracted from the herb or flavor you are trying to use.
- Infusion: This is where you put the fresh herb or flavor you are trying to use into the olive oil, and you let it soak. This is fine for a home method, but when you produce oils in large quantities, you cannot do infusions this way as it can cause the risk of botulism since oils and the other products decompose at different rates.