Hi All
For all the Italians and those of us who use Olive Oil.
How is olive oil made?

Background

The olive and the tree on which it grows have been revered since ancient 
times. Archaeological digs have unearthed evidence that olive trees existed 
on
the island of Crete in 3500 B.C. The Semitic peoples were cultivating the 
tree's fruit by 3000 B.C. They particularly liked to use the oil of the 
olive
to
anoint
the body during religious ceremonies, and to light their lamps. An ancient 
Hebrew law prohibiting the destruction of any olive tree is still obeyed.

By the time of the Roman Empire, olives were a
mainstay
of the agricultural economy. The Romans also used the oil to
grease
the axles of wagons and chariots. The Greeks traded it for wheat; the 
elaborately decorated clay pots that they used to transport the oil became 
part of
the civilization's burgeoning art industry.

The olive tree is mentioned frequently in the Koran and in the Bible. Noah 
receives the message that land is near when a dove arrives at the ark with 
an
olive branch in its mouth. Greek mythology associates the goddess
Athena
with the olive tree and credits Acropos, the founder of Athens, with 
teaching the Greeks to extract oil from the tree's fruit.

A member of the evergreen family, the olive tree features a
gnarled
trunk and leaves with a
silvery
underside. Its strong root system is perfect for
penetrating
sand, limestone, or heavy, poorly aerated soil. The trees thrive best in 
regions with rainy winters and hot, dry summers. Although it may take up to 
eight
years before a tree produces its first harvest, a single tree can live for 
centuries.

Early oil producers pressed the olives by crushing them between huge 
cone-shaped stones as they turned slowly on a base of granite. Today, most 
factories
employ hydraulic presses, exerting hundreds of tons of pressure, to separate 
the oil from the olive paste. Spain and Italy are the primary commercial 
producers
of olives and olive oil. Greece is close behind them. However, California, 
Australia, and South Africa are emerging as leaders in the industry. Some 
wineries
are planting olives to offset poor wine harvests. Ironically, olive trees 
were planted in California by missionaries in the 1800s, which by the turn 
of
the century were producing an excellent grade of olive oil. However, the 
market demand was weak so the trees were uprooted and grape vines were 
planted
in their place.

In the late twentieth century, emphasis on good nutrition and a
fascination
with the so-called Mediterranean diet has resulted in a
resurgence
in the olive oil trade. Olive oil is touted as a monounsaturate that is
healthier
for human consumption than corn and vegetable oils. The oil is also promoted 
as a
dandruff
reliever and, when mixed with
beeswax,
a homemade lip
balm.
In the late 1990s, the United States and Canada consumed olive oil at a 
yearly rate of 147,600 tons (150,000 metric tons). The demand often exceeds 
the
supply, and during the 1990s prices rose significantly.

Raw Materials

The primary ingredient of olive oil is the oil that is expressed from ripe 
olives. In the late spring, small flowers appear on the olive trees. Wind 
pollination
results in the blossoming of the olives, which reach their peak oil content 
approximately six months later. Thus, the olives are harvested from November
to March, after they have progressed in color from green to
reddish
violet to black. It is often necessary to harvest olives from the same trees 
several times in order to gather olives at the same stage of maturation.

Since ancient times, workers have knocked the fruit from the trees with 
long-handled poles. The process has not changed significantly over the 
centuries.
Modern poles resemble rakes. Originally, nets were spread under the tree to 
catch the falling olives. Many producers are now using plastic covers to 
cushion
the fall and to allow for
cleaner,
faster gathering.

One quart (0.95 L) of extra virgin olive oil, the highest level of quality, 
requires 2,000 olives. The only added ingredient in extra virgin olive oil 
is
the warm water used to
flush
away the bittemess of the olives, caused by the presence of oleuropein. 
Extra virgin olive oil contains not more than 1%
oleic acid.
Pure olive oil, that which results from the second pressing, is often mixed 
with extra virgin olive oil. The commercial, or non-edible, grades are put 
through
a refining process that may leave traces of soda solutions and
bleaching
carbons.

The Manufacturing
Process

Collecting and grading the olives
. After the ripe olives have been combed from the trees, they are picked 
over by hand to
weed
out
unsound
olives. The olives are divided into categories according to their plumpness, 
state of ripeness, and quality. Then the olives are taken to the press and
stored for a short period of time, from a few hours to several days. The 
period is short enough to prevent
fermentation
but long enough to allow the olives to get warm so that they release their 
oil easily.

Washing and milling the olives
. The olives are rinsed in cold water and then passed along a conveyer belt 
between rollers or continuous hammers. This machinery, often called the 
olive
crusher,
breaks down the cells and de-stones the olives. Depending on the
resiliency
of the olives' skin and the stage of maturation, it may be necessary to pass 
the fruit through the mill a second time.

Creating an olive paste through malaxation
. In ancient times, the olives were mashed into a paste with a simple
mortar and pestle.
This principle was expanded upon until the stone mortars were large enough 
to require slaves or pack animals to operate them. In the modern process, 
the
milled olives travel from the mill into vats in which slowly turning blades
mash
the olives into a homogenized paste.

Cold-pressing the olive paste to extract the oil
. The oil is extracted by loading the paste into a hydraulic press. The 
olive paste is evenly spread over
hemp
pressing bags or disks covered with synthetic fibers. Each bag or disk is 
covered with approximately 9-13 lb (4-6 kg) of paste. Between 25 and 50 bags 
or
disks are stacked onto a press plate. Plate guides are inserted at intervals 
of five to six bags. The plates serve to maintain the balance of the stack
and to distribute the pressure evenly. A piston pushes up against the stack, 
and the oil seeps slowly through the pressing bags to attached tubes. The
solid material remains inside the pressing bags.
. The term cold-pressing refers to the fact that the oil is extracted 
without heating the paste, furthering insuring the purity of the oil. The 
oil that
is expressed is a reddish mixture of the oil and the inherent vegetable 
water. This is the oil that receives the
appellation
of "extra-virgin" olive oil. The paste is removed from the bags and run 
through several more presses to obtain the lesser grades of oil that remain.

Separating the oil from the vegetable water
. Originally, the oil and water mixture was stored in vats until the oil 
rose to the top and was skimmed off. Some fermentation was inevitable, 
affecting
the taste and smell of the olive oil. Today, the separation is accomplished 
swiftly by pumping the mixture into a
centrifuge.
The centrifuge is comprised of a rotating drum and an
auger
that are spun on the same axis at great speed. Because the oil and the 
vegetable water are of differing densities, the centrifuge forces them apart 
and
into separate receptacles.

Storing and packaging the oil
. The oil is stored in underground vats until it is ready to be shipped. 
Then the oil is canned or bottled on an assembly line. Cans or dark-tinted 
bottles
will keep the deep-green color of the olive oil intact. Oil placed in 
clear-glass bottles will fade to a yellowish-green. However, the flavor is 
not affected.
. In many cases, olive oil distributors purchase the olive from the 
producers and rebottle it. Packaging has become more
ornate
as the popularity of olive oil has grown. It is not unusual to purchase 
olive oil in unusually shaped bottles topped with netting or rope. Some 
packagers
also hire professional artists to design their labels.

Quality Control

The olive oil industry is regulated by government food agencies, such as the 
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in the United States. By regulation, 
olive
is classified into five grades. Virgin olive oil is that which is obtained 
from the first pressing. Pure is a mixture of refined and virgin oil. 
Refined,
or commercial, consists of the lower grade lampante oil from which the acid, 
color, and
odor
have been removed through processing. Lampante is a highly acidic grade; its 
name is derived from its use as lamp oil. Sulfide olive oil is chemically 
extracted
from the olives through the use of solvents and is refined many times.

The popularity of olive oil in the late twentieth century has spawned many 
bottlers who are combining various grades of olive oil and labeling them 
illegally
as virgin or pure. A 1995 FDA report charged that only 4% of the 73 
domestically produced or distributed olive oils it tested were pure. The 
North American
Olive Oil Association disputed the findings, stating that of the 300 oils 
the association tests each year, only a handful are found to be
impure.
In any event, the situation has become one of "buyer
beware."

The Future

Finding workers who are willing to perform the
laborious
task of picking olives is becoming more difficult. Therefore, the olive oil 
industry is pursuing methods for mechanizing the collecting process. Among 
the
larger olive oil companies,
centrifugation
methods are becoming more popular for the pressing process as well as for 
separating the oil from the vegetable water. Although centrifugation 
requires
more energy and water, the method takes up less space in the factory and 
requires a shorter set-up time. Centrifugation also eliminates the need for 
pressing
bags, which must be washed after each pressing.



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