People are so confused about what to look for and how to buy it but I think it’s really simple. The highest quality extra virgin olive oil should come in a light-blocking container. It should be produced and bottled on the same estate, which should be clearly labeled and marked with the harvest date, not just an expiration date. I pretty much steer clear of bulk Italian olive oil at this point, as there is just so much corruption in the production and selling of it.
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The olive oil I’m using now I got from the farm it was made on, in the Golan Heights. The (Israeli) farmers didn’t think they were occupying anything Syrian, as a side note; they claimed their families had been there for centuries, and I tend to believe them. They had tasting stations you could walk around to and dip bread into oils of different taste, color, thickness, and of course price…
The Golan makes really good olive oil. Next time anyone’s on vacation they should go to Israel and schlep up into The Golan, and buy as much olive oil as they can. Just sayin’.
Her first sentence is wrong: “Traditionally in the Mediterranean there was really only one fat, olive oil.”
Zubaida, Sami. “National, Communal and Global Dimensions in Middle Eastern Food Cultures.” In A Taste of Thyme: Culinary Cultures of the Middle East, edited by Sami Zubaida and Richard Tapper, 33-45. London: Tauris Parke, 2000.
Good to see you’re finally tackling major global issues