California Olive Oil News©
A Publication of The Olive Oil Source 
 
California Olive oil news - www.oliveoilsource.com

Volume 8 Issue 1

February 2005

San Francisco Fancy Food Show Events:
New Dietary Guidelines Briefs:
Olive Oil Helps Prevent Breast Cancer Comments from the Internet:

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Taste Trends at the 2005 San Francisco Fancy Food Show

--------Flavors-------

Asian influences popped up in many products at this year's event which tends to herald food trends for the coming year.  The NASFT food show in San Francisco is a place for specialty food producers to get noticed by supermarkets and food distributors. Retailers cruise the aisles looking for unusual or unique flavors and packaging that will set their store apart from others.

Tea was big again for the fourth year with more companies emulating The Republic of Tea's focus on tea with a story. Tea also showed up in bite sized mints, fruit drinks and even in a candy bar; Earl Grey dark chocolate. Tea strainers, new and improved tea bags, gift packs for "tea for two" and other tea accessories were for sale.  We didn't see any tea infused olive oil however.

Thai noodles, soups and seasoning mixes incorporated Asian spices lemon grass and citrus leaf, mirroring the trend to citrus flavored olive oils. 

Another trend noted was the "Red Bull" effect. Many teas, juices and energy drinks in small cutesy containers. 

Is loquat the fruit du jour? LuLu was betting on it with three products: Loquat Mint Jam with Currants, Loquat Chili Grilling Glaze and  Loquat White Balsamic Vinegar.

Other buzzwords this year: free trade, functional, herbal, organic, and key lime.

----------California---------

Many California olive oil producers bought booth time at the California Olive Oil Council booth.  Executive Director Patty Darragh said that some producers had bought time for all three days.  Alan Green of California Olive Ranch offered tastes of their excellent Arbequina and Arbosana oils.

Alan Green with Mary Lou Banahan

Attendees at the COOC booth also tasted Stonehouse oils and Mary McCarthy's Tutta California oil.  Ms McCarthy, a former corporate development expert, feels that California oils haven't done enough to market themselves nationally.  After conquering California, she plans to market her oil aggressively countrywide. The oil is a blend of four varietals including Arbequina, Mission and Koroneiki and has tested at a .12% acidity.

Mary McCarthy of Tutta California

Greg Hinson of O Olive Oil was showcasing their Porto barrel aged vinegar made from California port wine.  Oil companies continue to  broaden their lines with flavored oils, dippers, vinegars and even companion oils from overseas. O is selling an "Ultra Premium Extra Virgin olive oil" from a family estate in Cordoba, Spain as well as a line of three rice vinegars.

Greg Hinson of O Olive Oil shows off Porto

Edmund Merritt was offering tastes of his Balzana Olive Oil at the Rogers Collection booth, distributor of the much vaunted Nunez del Prado brand.

--------Packaging--------

Different packaging ideas for olive oil included ArteOliva's TetraBrik soft paper/foil package with screw cap.  Their rep flatly stated that within 5 years all olive oil would be sold in this container.

The Village Press from New Zealand was showing a tiny screw cap bottle with 1 tablespoon of oil for airline use, explaining that standard blister packs might squirt oil on a business traveler's suit,  putting a pending business meeting in jeopardy.

This newsletter is constantly getting requests for recipes for olive oil dippers.  Victoria Gourmet of Woburn, MA sells spices and has cleverly packaged a bottle of Morea oil with several different spice mixes specifically made for oil.  Add the spices to the oil and the mix is ready in minutes, no need to infuse the oil for days or weeks.

----------International-----------

The number of high quality extra virgin olive oils from foreign producers continues to grow.  These oils for the most part were excellent, coming from small estates, often organic and with DOP appellations.  Many such as Mistra Estates Ladopoulos from Greece  were single varietal and had acidity and date produced prominently displayed on the label.  The story from most of them was the same, "we want to market our best oil directly to consumers  instead of selling it at low prices to the Italian companies which blend the bland supermarket brands". The group in the booth seemed intensely and personally proud of their oil.

Mistra Estates of Greece wants US customers

The countries of origin were the usual Spain, Italy, Greece, and Turkey.  The show had many oils from New Zealand and Australia.  One Argentina producer, Golden Andes, was looking for distribution channels for their Arbequina oil and Dulce de Leche.

Roger Ley of ollo olive oil, one of the Australians, was predicting a glut of oil in the next few years.  Emphasis there has been on planting while brand development has lagged.  In California, savvy producers start selling with "borrowed" oil when their trees are first planted, years before they get any yield so that they can introduce and test market their brand. 

Australian brand ollo has a KISS (keep it simple stupid) labeling philosophy which would do well here in California.  Instead of making consumers guess what  a "Manzanillo winter" or "early harvest Frantoio" will taste like, they have labeled their two oils "Fresh and Fruity" and "Mild and Mellow".  The Mitolo family which has created the ollo brand owns 400 hectares with over 100,000 trees.

Roger looking more intense than fruity or mellow

Pieter Koopman of Hopes Grove in New Zealand was busy trying to sell food guru Ari Weinzweig of Zingerman's on his blend of Barnea, and Spanish varieties.  Most of the New Zealanders had oil with a heavy dose of Barnea in the blend

Oil from 34 degrees latitude south of the equator

Importer Miguel & Valentino was showing a vanilla infused olive oil.  It was an interesting combination of flavors but what the consumer would use it for was unclear.

To finish, here are a few products we saw that we dare you to imagine: peanut butter flavored with bacon and tomato, unsweetened peppermint water for that swish and spit dentist visit flavor, pepper & beer flavored peanut brittle, pasta with 14 colors in each noodle,  and a tea drink  with grape, cinnamon, currant and cardamom.

USDA Announces New Dietary Guidelines

Agricultural Secretary Ann Veneman announced the release of the sixth edition of Dietary Guidelines for Americans.   It stresses calorie restriction and physical exercise for the fatter and more sedentary average American.

Consumers are encouraged to limit intake of fats and oils high in saturated or trans fatty acids and in general choose products that are low-fat or fat-free. Recommendations are to keep total fat intake to between 20-35 percent of calories.

The guide recommends polyunsaturated or monounsaturated fatty acids such as those found in fish, nuts, and vegetable oils. Specific oils mentioned include those high in omega-6; soybean, corn, and safflower, those high in omega-3; soybean, canola, walnuts and flaxseed, fish oils, and monosaturated oils; canola, olive, safflower and sunflower.

The new guidelines influence the school lunch program, WIC program and Food Stamp program. These changes will also be incorporated into a new Food Guide Pyramid which is not yet public.

Olive oil is never singled out for mention, usually it is lumped with corn, canola and safflower oils.

Click for full document from the USDA

Olive Oil Helps Prevent Breast Cancer

by John Deane MD

Several studies have shown that women who eat a Mediterranean diet high in olive oil have lower breast cancer risk.  Whether this protective effect is due to oleic acid, the main monosaturated acid in olive oil, or some other component of the diet has been a longstanding question.

Dr Javier Menendez, of Northwestern University in Chicago along with other investigators now think they have the answer.  They completed a study of this problem which was published in the January 2005 issue of Annals of Oncology.  They found that oleic acid suppressed the cancer causing gene in breast cells grown in cell culture.  When oleic acid was combined with Herceptin, an anticancer antibody drug made by Roche pharmaceuticals which can kill breast cancer cells, the effect was synergistic and led to death of cancer cells. 

The good news is that this is the first molecular proof that the Mediterranean diet can affect cancer cells.  Also, olive oil is known to be safe, cheap and readily available. Caution should be given that this is a study of cancer cells grown outside the body and no study has actually been done on breast cancer patients. Hopefully this discovery will lead to future epidemiological studies and perhaps dietary counseling for those with breast cancer.

Click for full article in Ann Oncol
 

Great Olive Tours is Launched in the Napa Valley

St. Helena, CA - - (December 15, 2004) - Napa valley resident Carol Ainsworth has announced the formation of a unique tour company focusing on the boutique olive oil business in California’s premier wine country. Great Olive Tours promises its guests the exciting world of private olive estates: old world olive orchards, private tastings, food pairings, demonstrations for pressing and crushing olives, and jaw-dropping vistas. By arrangement, Great Olive Tours can also provide a cooking demonstration and lunch at a private estate.

“I complemented my passion for locally produced, high quality olive oil by enrolling in the Olive Oil Appreciation seminar at Napa Valley State College and the Sensory Evaluation of Olive Oil seminar at the University of California at Davis. It was an incredible learning experience that can be shared with touring guests,” said Ms. Ainsworth.

Great Olive Tours kicked off its tours last spring; and since then it has added a web site, www.greatolivetours.com for people to contact Carol online and to book tours. “Tasting olive oil is a little like tasting wine,” said Carol, “but there are differences. Color does not indicate quality. Olive oil ranges from green to golden to pale yellow. And freshness, not age, corresponds to quality.” “The properties we visit are all interesting in different ways, but they have two things in common: they are private, family producers who offer unique, high-quality products and a very special experience. Each producer visited is also a member of the California Olive Oil Council, an organization that requires its certification for all member olive oils that are labeled ‘extra virgin’.

  

Olive Oil Mill Consultation

Meet with Pieralisi and Il Molineto reps to investigate mills for installation later this year.  Factory experts can help you design an efficient olive processing plant.  Assistance also available for permits, site design, financing, waste disposal and marketing. 

Orders must go in before May so that customized equipment can be manufactured, shipped and installed before next fall's harvest.

Stone wheel, hammermill, small batch process or large throughput, let us know how we can custom design a plant for you

 Please call 805-688-1014 for appointments or   email

Briefs:

Health Benefits pique Consumer Interest

As they look forward to the new year, observers of the food business say they expect health benefits to be a key factor in market promotions. Trend-watchers predict increased popularity for blueberries. That's encouraging news for California farmers, who have planted more blueberries in the past couple of years. The experts also forecast enhanced consumer interest in exotic foods such as lemongrass, Meyer lemons and blood oranges. Courtesy Food and Farm News
 

Olive Propagation Manual

This new book out of Australia is an authoritative guide to olive propagation, providing extended information on seed germination, rooting of cuttings, grafting and micropropagation ISBN: 0643066764 See Books

New COOC Membership Category

Friends of Olive Oil is for those who love olive oil and fine food and would like to be in the inner circle for communications on events, seminars, tastings and other fun opportunities. Friends of Olive Oil members receive a quarterly email newsletter, email notification of events, seminars and other items of interest as well as receive discounts from participating COOC members. contact the California Olive Oil Council for details.

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Mail  from the Internet:

Patsy Asks: I am chemically sensitive. Are any of the olive oils treated with chemicals, preservatives, gases, hydrogenation, nitrous oxide, etc?

Olive Oil News responds:  by International Olive Oil Council law, EU law, and the California Olive Oil Council seal, nothing can be added to olives to make olive oil. Olive oil is high in natural antioxidants. The Extra Virgin definition:

"This oil is obtained only from the olive, the fruit of the olive tree, using solely mechanical or other physical means in conditions, particularly thermal conditions, which do not alter the oil in any way. It has not undergone any treatment other than washing, decanting, centrifuging and filtering. It excludes oils obtained by the use of solvents or re-esterification methods, and those mixed with oils from other sources."

Look at our definitions page

Nearly 100% of seed oils such as corn, canola, sunflower and safflower are extracted with chemicals. Many oils, especially nut oils have had stabilizers and antioxidants added to them to extend their normally short shelf life. During storage in large tanks, inert gas is often added to the top of vegetable oils to prevent oxidation. These gasses do not end up in the bottle however and do not combine with the oil.

Joe Asks: I am interested in planting four or five fruit bearing olive trees on my property. I would then cure the olives for home consumption. My problem is that I have a high boron content (12PPM) in my well water. Are olive trees sensitive to this level of boron in water? Do you recommend any varietals of olive trees that would be boron water resistant? Would dry farming be successful when the olive trees would receive no well water at all? By the way I live in the northeast side of Santa Rosa in Sonoma County California.

Paul Vossen, UC Davis Extension expert responds:
Olives are classified as "somewhat tolerant" of boron in irrigation water, accepting water levels of boron of 1 to 2 mg/liter (roughly equivalent to 1-2 ppm). Water with 12 ppm will cause problems for olives and most other crops that are not tolerant to high levels of boron. Just because the well water is high in boron does not mean the soil is also high in boron. A soil analysis would be the only way to determine if there is a soil problem. I suspect that in Sonoma County there is a good chance that the soil will not have a high level of boron, so growing the trees without any irrigation may possible and really your only choice.

The amount of water required by a tree is dependent on climate, that is, how hot and dry and windy the growing season days are to cause the plants to transpire and keep themselves from burning up with drought stress. Olives are trees that are quite drought tolerant, in that they will not die if given little water, however if given insufficient water the trees will grow very slowly (taking 30+ years to reach full size instead of 10) and the fruit will be small (only a problem for table fruit). The rooting depth of your soil is the key factor for dry farmed fruit trees. Just because someplace can be dry farmed does not mean that other sites will also work. Success (growth and production of trees) is highly dependent on how much water is stored in the soil. A good rule of thumb is that most loam soils will hold about 2 inches of water per foot of rooting depth. So if you have a hillside location with 2 feet of rooting depth you will have 4 inches of water available for those trees for the whole season. If you have a deep valley soil with 5 + feet of rooting depth you will have 10 + inches of water for the season. If we get 40 inches of rain that means that all the rest ran off. An olive tree in the coastal climate of NE Santa Rosa, will require about 12 to 18 inches of water per season to be as productive as possible, that is growing well and producing large sized table fruit. For oil the trees might get by with only 10 to 16 inches. Little or no supplemental irrigation would be required to get adequate, but not maximum growth and production, if you have a deep soil. In a shallow soil, the trees would just grow very slowly, have severe alternate bearing, the fruit would be small, there might be fruit shrivel, and the fruit if used for oil, could be quite bitter.

By the way, the amount of water available for the trees is ONLY if you allow no cover crop or weeds to steal the water first. Excellent weed control is extremely important for dry farming any crop. For 4-5 trees put 6 inches wood chips under the trees out to the drip line (or at least a 6 ft. diameter circle) to smother all the weeds and hold as much moisture in as possible. Good luck

Debbie Asks: I'd like to use olive oil on my face as a moisturizer. Will it clog my pores, making me breakout?

Olive Oil News responds:  Olive oil has been used for thousands of years on human skin and does not typically cause clogging of pores. For more information see: Skin and Cosmetics pages

Scott Asks: Is there any way to start a tree from a pit? It is more for the memory than large growth, but I would still like to try.

OO News replies: See the page on our site about growing olives from seedlings

Herb Asks: Sir: we've heard news reports here in Chicago about the good effects of  Virgin Olive Oil…but we could not find amounts per day and practical ways to take it…Are you suggesting the "Mediterranean Diet" as a good guide ?...

Dr. Deane responds: Please Herb, don't treat olive oil like a drug which you take a certain amount of every day. Just substitute olive oil for other cooking oils such as corn oil or canola when frying, sautéing, or baking. The "Mediterranean Diet" would be a great way to eat more olive oil and reduce your intake of high cholesterol animal fats such as lard and butter.

Larry Asks:  I have used olive oil in a deep fryer and was wondering if I can reuse the olive oil and how I should store it after being used.

Olive Oil News Replies: You can re-use oil many times. According to Presto's appliance manuals:

After each use strain oil through a filter or a double thickness of cheesecloth to remove the accumulated residue.
It is time to replace the cooking oil if any of the following occur:
The oil is dark in color.
The oil has an unpleasant odor.
The oil smokes when it is heated.
The oil foams excessively during frying.

Best storage is in a cool, dark, airtight container. Oil will go rancid much quicker once heated and exposed to air than in a sealed bottle. Plan on using the oil again in weeks and consider tossing it out in a few months. Use common sense, don't plan on frying donuts in oil you have fried fish in.

Events

-----  2005  -----

February

UCCE Olive Day 9:00-12:00 February 2 at the CLFP food processors expo Sacramento. Latest industry supported research from various olive fruit fly projects.. Jan Nelson of the California Olive Committee will present the latest olive industry production and sales figures

First Annual COOC Recognition Dinner February 5, 2005 Monterey, CA Join the COOC Board of Directors and your fellow members for the annual member meeting and First Annual Recognition Dinner in Monterey. That evening, a reception and dinner will take place honoring the Best of Class winners and the Best of Show winner from the 2004 Los Angeles County Fair Olive Oils of the World competition. This year's Pioneer Award recipient will also be announced at the dinner.

Sonoma Olive Festival "Olive" Carneros Chefs' Showcase - February 12th and 13th
Eight wineries host olive cooking demonstrations by their own caterers. Includes a free cookbook and special discounts. 11 am, 12:30 pm, 2:30 pm, and 4 pm at Homewood, Nicholson Ranch, Schug, Robledo Family, Cline, Roche, Gloria Ferrer and Larson wineries-start at any winery and proceed down the olive trail to the next demo. Free. 707-996-6353.

Curing Olives Workshop in Kenwood, CA February 19 presented by Don Landis: demonstration of the "Greek style-no lye" method. Workshop covers everything from selecting trees to pick, through storing cured Olives. Followed by tasting Don's olives paired with cheese from The Sonoma Cheese Factory and wine from Kunde Estate Winery and Vineyards. FREE Limited space, held at the Kunde Estate Winery and Vineyards, Kenwood. Reservations required RSVP Don 707-829-0497

Sonoma Olives & Wines Saturday, Sunday, + Monday February 19, 20, + 21 Enjoy Italian Wines paired with Olive Creations at Six Wineries throughout Sonoma Valley. Taste with Winemakers and learn about Sangiovese, Dolcetta, Barbera, Arneis & more!  Wineries include Blackstone Winery, Family Wineries of Sonoma Valley, Kaz Vineyard & Winery, Kunde Estate Winery & Vineyards, VJB Vineyards & Cellars, & Wellington Vineyards. Cost: $15.00 per person for the weekend. Includes logo glass & recipe cards!  For more info: (866) 794-WINE(9463) info@heartofsonomavalley.com

5th International Symposium on Deep-Frying February 20-22 San Francisco/CA additional information

Specialty Olives for Oil and Table - February 25 9:00AM to 12:00 noon at the Amador UCCE office in Jackson, CA - an olive production meeting sponsored by the University of California Cooperative Extension.  Topics: Biology and management of olive fruit fly by Dr. Marshall Johnson, results from local trapping studies by Lunn Wunderlich, growing and processing olives for oil by Paul Vossen, growing and curing specialty table olives by Bill Krueger, oil and olive tasting. call Nancy Starr 530-621-5528

The Artisan Market on Sonoma Plaza - February 26th & 27th The grand finale of the Sonoma Valley Olive Festival, the Artisan Market features olive-themed food, wine, art, and entertainment. 11 am to 5 pm on Sonoma Plaza. $15. Free for children under 12. 707-996-1090

March

Sensory Evaluation of Olive Oil Santa Barbara CA Friday and Saturday, March 11 & 12, 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m., Santa Barbara.  Led by UC Davis Extension farm advisor Paul Vossen, who directs the California Olive Oil Council taste panel. Following the International Olive Oil Council official exam procedures, potential tasters for the COOC Panel of Tasters will be selected. 800-752-0881, or email  or visit www.extension.ucdavis.edu/agriculture The enrollment fee of $565 includes two lunches and all tastings.

Natural Products Expo West 2005 March 17-20, 2005 Anaheim Convention Center, Anaheim, CA USA

April

Olivex 2005 The 3rd International Exhibition for Olive & Olive Oil Processing
14 -17 April 2005
Syria at the New Damascus Fairground MORE

Prince Albert Olive, Food and Wine Festival April 30, 2005 South Africa princealberttourism@intekom.co.za MORE

May

Oil China 2005  31th May to 2nd June 2005  China International Exhibition of Olive Oil and Edible Oil Beijing www.regalland.com E-mail: regalland@163.com

June

Olive 2005 June 4,5 Munich.  a major public show focusing on the topic of olive oil.  Organized by Der Feinschmecker  - Germany's leading gourmet magazine. For more information: contact Kersten Wetenkamp Kersten.wetenkamp@der-Feinschmecker.de

September

15th IFOAM World Congress  20-23rd September 2005 Adelaide

October

8th Annual Cañada College Arts & Olive Festival Sunday, October 2nd 2005 for information call: Julie Mooney olivefest@smccd.net or go to www.olivefest.org
 

November

International Trade Fair for Fats & Oils and related Technologies, 2-4 November 2005, Frankfurt, Germany

Olive Oil Class at Cakebread Cellars November 5. Help harvest the 2005 crop. Marvin Martin, olive oil expert and consultant will provide the tools to harvest.  Our resident Chefs will then teach you how to brine and cure as well as cook with olive oil.
 

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