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To make flavored olive
oil our friend Tony Pennisi at Big Paw Grub uses dried wild herbs. He says that the intensity of
the flavor varies with the season, whether the herbs are wild or domestic,
how the local growing conditions have been, etc. etc. It takes a lot of
trial and error. Its more art than science and the people who are good at
it are reluctant to share their trade secrets. The oil will pick up the
flavor fairly quickly, in the first few weeks, and then slowly intensify.
Its OK to leave the herbs in for a long time, eventually all the flavor
leaves the herbs and the oil flavor stabilizes. Most oil sellers keep it
simple and use one herb at a time. I have seen smoke flavoring added to an
herb or peppers added to any one of the herbs. When mixing herbs, think
salad dressing. Look at some recipes for dressing and substitute the dried
herbs for any fresh herbs called for in the recipe. A dipping blend is like
an Italian dressing with much more oil than vinegar.
Flavored olive oils and dressings make
great gifts but watch out; there are safe and unsafe ways to make flavored
olive oil. The unsafe way is to put anything in the oil that contains
water. That would include garlic, lemon peel, fresh peppers, fresh
herbs and spices. The oil will not support bacterial growth but the
water containing herbs will. Botulism bacteria can grow in this type
of environment. There are several ways to get around this
1. Mix all
the ingredients, refrigerate them and use them within a week
- Add whole cloves of garlic, lemon peel, fresh or dried peppers,
ginger, rosemary sprigs, etc.
- Use a recipe for Italian salad
dressing but cut down on the vinegar or lemon juice
- Anchovy Caper dipper:
Here is our favorite dipper. It is also used
throughout Italy as a sauce on main courses:
Rinse the salt from 2-4 anchovy fillets depending on size; dry
them and cut them into small pieces
Wash and drain 2 tablespoons of salt cured or capers in brine.
In a small casserole warm up 1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil;
add the anchovies and the capers and cook, mixing constantly,
until you obtain a mixture that is homogenous and fluid.
Here's some recipes from
Carapelli:
2. Preserve
the added ingredients:
Maybe you have
seen garlic or herbs mixed with olive oil. The way it is done
commercially is to first preserve the water-containing garlic, herb, etc.
with a strong brine or vinegar solution, then put it in the olive oil.
The vinegar solutions used commercially are up to 4 times stronger than the
vinegars you find in the supermarket. You can find them at commercial food
supply outlets. Many of the herb mixes have both salt and vinegar which
both prevent bacterial growth. You could use one of the olive
pickling solutions listed under
curing green olives
3.
Dry the herbs to remove all water, leaving the essential oils:
This can be done with a food dehydrator or just by
leaving in the sun. Then add the spices and herbs to the olive oil.
Whole sprigs of thyme, rosemary, dried peppers, dried mushrooms, etc. can decorate the
inside of the bottle this way.
4. Press the olives with the spices
Putting lemon, garlic, etc. in the olive press
with the olives is the safest way to flavor olive oil. You must have
your own olive press (See First Press),
or take it to a commercial press. The oils from the added
ingredients mingle with the olive oil and the watery part of the
spices are removed along with the olive water.
You could mix a small amount of oil with the fresh ingredients, let
the flavors mingle, then decant the oil off leaving the herbs and any
water behind. Mix this flavored oil with a larger amount of oil.
You could add essential spice oils to the olive oil to achieve the
same effect.
Check out our bottle
selection for home cooks who want beautiful containers for their gift
oil, dressing or vinegar. We also sell
bulk oil for your private labeling
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