1 / 20

OLIVE OIL

OLIVE OIL. Eric Decker. (olive oil). (olive #1). (olive #2). (olive #3). History. Native to Asia Minor and spread from Iran, Syria, and Palestine to the Mediterranean basin 6,000 years ago. Brought to America by the missionaries, and started in southern California. (Asia Minor).

nyx
Télécharger la présentation

OLIVE OIL

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. OLIVE OIL Eric Decker

  2. (olive oil)

  3. (olive #1)

  4. (olive #2)

  5. (olive #3)

  6. History • Native to Asia Minor and spread from Iran, Syria, and Palestine to the Mediterranean basin 6,000 years ago. • Brought to America by the missionaries, and started in southern California.

  7. (Asia Minor) Asia Minor

  8. Growing • Main types are Frantoio, Leccino, Moraiolo, and Divastro. • Tuscany: Sweet & Fruity • Umbria: Hot & Sweet • Sicily: Hot & Zesty

  9. (Map of Italy)

  10. Harvesting • Early Harvest (Fall) • Less Oil, takes more olives • Bitter, peppery, leafy taste. • Late Harvest (Winter) • More oil, but riskier due to frost • Mellow, sweet, floral taste

  11. Picking • Hand picked results in better quality control, but is slow • Machine picked allows more olives to be pressed quicker, but quality is reduced.

  12. Before Pressing… • Cleaned • Grinded into paste by mill • Malaxation: Paste is slowly mixed to help remove oils from the paste.

  13. Pressing • Centrifuge, not vertical press • Cold Press: Olives are not heated above 80º F. • Heating degrades flavor but increases quantity.

  14. (Press “Il Molinetto”)

  15. Extra-Virgin Olive Oil • First cold press • No solvents or chemicals • Low acidity (less than 0.8%-1%) • Green to gold in color, but does not indicate quality. • Low smoke point (~406º F) • Best used cold

  16. Virgin Olive Oil • First cold press • No solvents or chemicals • Higher acidity than Extra, but must be under 2% • Subtler flavor than Extra Virgin

  17. Olive Oil • Mixture of virgin and refined • Refined by chemical, heat, solvents, or excessive pressure • Light in color and flavor • Higher smoke point, use for cooking or light flavor. • Acidity less than 1.5%

  18. Light Olive Oil • Lightest in color and flavor • NOT lower in calories • Still 120 per Tablespoon • High smoke point (~468º F)

  19. Other Types • Flavor / Blended • Blended for constancy • Mixed with other oils to decrease cost • When adding flavors like lemon, basil, etc, it’s technically “fruit juice” • Lampante • Refined, for technical use only • Olive Pomace Oil • Made from oil of the ground up pits, used mostly for soap.

  20. Questions? The Joy of Cooking http://www.oliveoilsource.com/definitions.htm http://www.italianvirginoliveoil.com http://www.foodnetwork.com

More Related