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

Volume 9 Issue 5

 May - June 2005

COOC Olive Oil Taste Panel Woes Events:
Comments from the Internet: Briefs:
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COOC  Olive Oil Taste Panel Woes
by John Deane

The truth about California Olive Oil Council's (COOC) taste panel demotion last fall by the International Olive Council (IOC) has finally leaked out. Embarrassing headlines such as  "State's Olive Oil Tasters Flunk " and
"Stripped of authority to certify grades such as extra virgin, an industry panel weighs its future" have appeared in newspapers such as the L.A. Times, Monterey County Herald,
Contra Costa Times, etc.  Everyone loves a scandal but the brouhaha fails to reveal some of the deeper problems and issues.

The California Olive Oil Council initiated the taste panel when progress on changing the USDA's decrepit rating system slowed to a crawl. Unlike virtually every other olive growing country, the US has chosen since 1948 to label olive oil with meaningless terms such as fancy, choice and substandard.  Other countries support the extra virgin, virgin, refined and olive pomace oil definitions set by the IOC out of Madrid.  

Most of the olive oil consumed in the US is imported and with no labeling oversight, olive oils which must be labeled Refined in Italy have been routinely sold in the US as Extra Virgin.  This strategy has historically been allowed by the importers industry organization; the North American Olive Oil Association (NAOOA).  Negotiations between the COOC and the NAOOA became contentions several years ago (although the NAOOA now accepts the FDA changes with reservation).

The problem was well phrased by Antoinette Addison of Figueroa Farms in her USDA comment: "The fact that these companies can label their olive oil as extra virgin legally when it is in fact cheaper and lesser quality oil makes it extremely difficult for people like us to be competitive. We are not asking for special protection, trade barriers, or subsidies, but for standard definitions that allow grocery stores and consumers to compare apples to apples."

Unable to compete on price, the COOC came up with a divisive solution; the COOC seal.  COOC directors wanted the public to understand that California olive oil was more "extra virgin" than the imported stuff sold at mass market retailers.  Disputes over whether all COOC members would be required to acquire the seal for their oil, how the oil would be tested and how much it would cost, the size of the lot which would be included in the enforcement, whether flavored oils could be labeled extra virgin, the consequences of oil mistreated at the retail level flunking spot tests, etc. caused some major supporters and pioneers in the industry to walk away from the COOC.

The oldest producer in the state, Nick Sciabica & Sons, was put off by the fact that they would have to certify the dozens of  oils they regularly make in small amounts for sale at farmer's markets.  Certifying a single 55 gallon drum of an unusual variety or an estate pressing can cost hundreds of dollars in direct and indirect expenses.

In an attempt to further differentiate themselves from imported extra virgin olive oil, the COOC decided on a standard which is actually stricter than the international one.   A California producer today could make an oil with .8% acidity, which would qualify as extra virgin by the IOC but which would not be allowed the COOC extra virgin seal.  That same oil might sit on the grocery shelf next to an imported refined oil which is labeled as extra virgin. This also didn't sit well with some.  COOC founder but lapsed member Ridgely Evers who owns the DaVero Sonoma label, was quoted in the LA Times article as saying  "we are confident in the quality of our oil . . . I don't think I sell a single bottle less because I don't have a seal on the label."  Tasting panel politics and rancor have led panel leaders Paul Vossen and Roberto Zecca to quit for retire.

Early efforts to educate the public on the COOC Seal were expensive and took energy away from the primary mission of the COOC to help California olive oil producers with growing, marketing and selling their product. Precious dollars spent on the seal (the "consumer confidence" part of the COOC's mission) were lost in a sea of money promoting other olive oil food awards, labels and certificates.

The tasting panel should be complemented on their efforts.  Composed of volunteers, many paid thousands of dollars to be trained in the formal ritual of detecting olive oil defects.  After extensive testing, the US panel was recognized in 2001.  As the industry has grown, the number of oils submitted has at times exceeded the heroic efforts and the taste palates of the volunteers.  Many travel long distances to participate and have voyaged overseas on their own dime to hone their tasting skills. 

The IOC periodically makes sure the many taste panels throughout the world are uniform in their judgments by submitting "standard" oils with known defects.  Last fall the  panel failed the test and lost their certification authority.  The panel can regain their authority with further training and testing in the 3rd quarter of 2006.  In the interim, the COOC will help producers send their oils to other IOC approved taste panels for certification. A producer in California can take the round-about way of sending their oil to an Australian panel to qualify for the California COOC seal.

At the January annual COOC meeting in Monterey, CA, the news of the taste panel's failure was not fully disclosed, an omission which later angered many members. Explanation of the problem would not have detracted a bit from an otherwise excellent program and would have been helpful to start debate on whether the COOC should be administering the tasting panel and seal.  President Karen Guth has since posted an explanation in the members only section of the COOC website. 

The COOC president was quoted in the L.A. Times article as saying the organization would gladly hand the certification business to a responsible third party.  Executive director Patricia Darragh has said the organization would rather concentrate on point of sale advertisers and store educational materials.  Bob Bauer, president of the NAOOA at the time of the USDA comment period, requested the USDA take the job of creating a taste panel certified by the IOC.

Instead of testing every oil made, some California olive farmers prefer the way it is done in the EU where oil producers self certify their oil and are not required to pay for panel testing. A regulatory body may then do spot tests of oil on the market shelf and penalize producers who don't measure up.  Producers would also be susceptible to civil action from consumers. 

News of the panel's failing could not come at a worse time in regards to consumer confidence. Huge FDA seizures of imported soy oil labeled as olive oil and lower grades labeled as extra virgin have hit the news lately. Hopefully the COOC's taste panels' failure and the publicity surrounding fraudulent oil will spur the USDA to take action and come up with a standard.

Lodestar Farms:

OROVILLE, CALIF.  Among some of California’s finest producers of extra virgin olive oil, Lodestar Farms has claimed the prized title of People’s Choice for the “Favorite Olive Oil” award from the Sonoma Valley Olive Festival -- for the third year in a row.

“To our family farm, it feels like we have just won an Olympic Gold Medal!” said Jamie Johansson, owner and farmer for Lodestar Farms. 

"As a long time producer of California Olive Oil, Lodestar Farms has been a strong supporter of the Sonoma Valley Olive Festival since its inception. They have consistently produced a great product, farm their own olives, and have a great story behind their brand," said Wendy Peterson, executive Director of the Sonoma Valley Visitors Bureau

Considering himself a “farmer first,” Johansson first started making California olive oil in 1993. The inspiration for his olive oil was the unique history of the Mission olives in Oroville, which is located approximately one hour north of Sacramento. The history dates back to 1898, when Freda Ehmann, known as the “Mother of the California Olive Industry” started California’s first commercial olive production in Oroville.

Today, 75 percent of the Mission olives are grown in Oroville. There are more than 2,500 acres of olives in Butte County, and of those, 90 percent are Mission olives. Oroville is considered California’s only olive oil province, as it is the only region in the state with a history of consistently producing the same style of olive oil.

Lodestar Farms is also a 6-time medal winner at the Los Angeles county fair, winning Gold Medals for its Late Harvested Mission Olive Oil and for packaging and design.

 For more information on Lodestar Farms, visit www.lodestarfarms.com or call 530-534-OLIV (6548).

For more information on the Sonoma Valley Olive Festival, visit www.olivefestival.com.
 

MOPREP Open House

Tuesday, 23 May, from 130-300, the Mission Olive Preservation, Restoration, and Education Project is holding an open house and special viewing of North America’s Mission Trail video at the Sonoma County Library, 755 North Napa Street, Sonoma, California.

Two-hundred years ago, most of the twenty-one missions that stretch the length of California, from San Francisco de Solano to San Diego de Alcalá, included their own olive groves. Today, only one grove remains, but from the thirty-seven trees that managed to survive, the Mission Olive Preservation, Restoration, and Education Project (MOPREP) has propagated over 1000 new trees now growing from Salinas to Los Angeles, Sonoma to Santa Cruz.

The public is invited to an open house and special showing of North America’s Mission Trail video. MOPREP members will be there to discuss the work they’ve done to preserve and restore the olive groves at many of the California missions, including Sonoma and General Vallejo’s home, Lachryma Montis, and how the public can help with future projects.

Rarely within the mission walls, olive trees were usually planted outside, closer to a consistent source of water. Unfortunately, between the time the Missions were secularized by the Mexican government in the 1830s and contemporary restoration efforts, which have been focused on the missions themselves not on their agricultural legacy, most of the original groves have died from neglect, were built over, or were simply lost and forgotten.

In 1998, Gabrielle Leonhard found the Mission La Purisima grove and organized MOPREP, a nonprofit project dedicated to finding and restoring any remaining Mission olive groves; propagating truncheons and cuttings from the La Purisima grove, from which over 1000 new trees have resulted; providing support and expertise in replanting Mission groves that, eventually, will allow each mission to produce its own sacramental and commercial oil; educating the community on the cultural, historical, agricultural, and nutritional importance of olive oil; and  raising funds for MOPREP to continue its restoration efforts, to DNA and date test various groves as they are discovered and to develop educational materials.

Using the same methods as the padres did to bring the olive trees from Spain to Baja to Alta California, each MOPREP tree is grown from truncheons or cuttings taken from the only known remaining Mission grove. (Truncheons are twelve to fourteen-inch logs propagated for several months in warm, wet sand until they sprout and can then be transplanted to pots or into the ground.)


Contact Ron Chapman, MOPREP President, at 707-996-8984

Olive Grove Wanted

contact Philip G. Jameson, Esq. Jamesonpgjameson@mac.com

520-577-6654

 

 
FATTORIA Continuous System

 

  

FATTORIA is the new two-phase continuous system featuring reduced dimensions and designed by Pieralisi to meet the processing needs of small quantities of olives.

 Please call 805-688-1014  or   email

 

 

Briefs:

Spanish food group Sos Cuetara has bought Italian olive-oil maker Carapelli Firenze for EUR127.7m (US$154.2m).

Specialty Food

Specialty Food magazine documented their booming industry in the latest issue  with new statistics:  Specialty food sales at retail in 2005 totaled $34.8 billion, a jump of 15% over the year before.  Natural food stores are the fastest growing retailer of specialty foods, a jump in 33% over year before. Condiments are the largest specialty food category with 21% of all sales.  Nearly half of specialty food manufacturers recorded sales of less than $1million, 20% made less than $100,000. in annual sales.


Olive Oil for Cooking

If you buy cooking oil, chances are much greater that it’s olive oil. By next year, marketers say, olive oil could account for half of all cooking oil sold in the nation. Sales have risen at least 12 percent in each of the last two years, according to a study by ACNielsen. Reports about how olive oil fits into a heart-healthy diet have boosted sales.  courtesy Food and Farm News

Tunisia has a good year

Tunisia's olive oil crop is expected to total 210,000 metric tons (MT), up nearly 70% from previous year's output, notes the U.S. agricultural attaché for the country

Safflower Oil Joins Health Claims

An enhanced form of safflower oil promises health benefits for consumers and new markets for safflower growers. An agricultural biotechnology firm in Davis has finalized an agreement with a Northern California seed cooperative, to develop the new safflower variety. It contains added levels of an omega-6 fatty acid. The acid, known as G-L-A, naturally battles inflammation and can benefit the heart, joints, skin and neurological system. courtesy Food and Farm News

Mail  from the Internet:

Pam Asks:   I just read with interest your answer to a woman's question about allergies to different forms of olive. a chiropractor tested me positive to olive or olive oil perhaps no difference.  It was recently recommended by a homeopath I contacted online that I should take a garlic supplement--kyolic--containing among other things, medicinal mushrooms and olive leaf. I believe I have gotten very sick from it (a bit confusing as at the same time I have bronchitis) and am trying to figure out if it may have been the olive leaf or the mushrooms or perhaps both

Dr. Deane Answers:
 
Allergy to olive oil is rare, to olive pollen is common; they are very different substances. Standardized allergen testing kits usually contain olive pollen; I have never seen one with olive oil so I doubt you were tested for allergy to olive oil. It is unlikely that olive oil would be contaminated by olive pollen as the pollen is around in the spring, the olives are harvested in the winter. Oils in general are not as allergenic as proteins and polysaccharides like pollen. Between garlic, olive leaf and mushroom, I would guess that mushroom would be the most likely thing to cause an allergy. I hope your medical professionals can help you figure this one out.

Jeff Asks: One major source of the myths concerning hydrogenation and oxidation of olive oil to undesirable compounds when olive oil is heated is the marketing arm of the macadamia nut oil industry. The claim in many web based and published articles is that its smoke point is higher than that of olive and other unsaturated oils and that macadamia nut oil is not subject to trans or (other) conversions.

A proper scientific reference/citation by either group would put the matter to rest.

Olive Oil New: We contacted several of the macadamia websites asking for references for the claim that olive oil is subject to trans conversions.  They were not able to substantiate the claims.  The internet is a wonderful resource but not as policed as a peer reviewed scientific journal.

Steve Asks: Are there any inherent risks with getting olive oil in the eye?  Upon accidentally getting aviation hydraulic fluid (Skydrol LD4) in the eye I observed a mechanic putting an eyecup full of olive oil in that same eye to relieve the pain. At that point he then went to an eyewash fountain to clean up the eye. Olive oil is the tool of choice but the practice has been questioned. The manufacturer suggests mineral oil or castor oil be used so I am trying to track down where our use of olive oil came from. If there is no hazard I would prefer to leave a tried and trusted method.

We asked safety consultant Ernie Schulze about this: I've never heard of this practice and it is not recommended by Cal OSHA. They say to wash out the eye with water for ~15 minutes.

Kerry Asks:  I recently started using olive oil to fry my chicken with it and I love it!!! the only issue is that I noticed that it is extremely high in fat for one table spoon. I am easily using 20 or thirty tablespoons when I fry it. I have noticed I am also starting to gain weight. the only part of my diet that I have changed is the olive oil. is there anyway to fry stuff with olive oil and not gain weight from it?

Dr. Deane responds: All foods can be divided into protein, carbohydrate or fat. All oils are fats and they all have the same amount of calories. It doesn't matter whether it is peanut oil, flax seed oil, canola or olive oil. They all have 120 calories per tablespoon. I think your problem is that you are frying your food instead of grilling, sautéing or steaming. Try lightly sautéing or steaming meats or vegetables and then drizzling on a tiny amount of a flavorful olive oil at the table.

Muthu asks: Due to Acne, my skin has little black spots and small holes, will Olive Oil solve the problem?

Dr. Deane responds: Skin problems are tough to diagnose over the internet. I doubt olive oil is the answer. See a dermatologist

Stacy asks: My mother-in-law believes that olive oil actually "sucks" the cholesterol out of foods that it is added to or cooked in. She visited recently and did the majority of the cooking. She put olive oil in everything including scrambled eggs and oatmeal. Chicken, vegetables, and rice swam in cups of olive oil. In the five days that she was here, she used about 3/4 of a liter of olive oil. She is really pressuring us to adopt this kind of diet. Is she right, the more the better? We already use olive oil instead of other oils and use butter very infrequently.

Dr. Deane responds: You have reason for concern. You could ADD a pint of olive oil a day to your diet and it would not lower your cholesterol. Only by using less of the fats that contain cholesterol like lard and butter will your blood cholesterol go down. SUBSTITUTING olive oil where you would use a fat containing cholesterol is a healthy choice. Adding a greater amount of fat to your diet just adds calories.

Meg asks: I have a medical condition which requires me to avoid all sources of Vitamin D. Your website states that olive oil contains all the fat soluble vitamins including Vitamin D. Since very few plants contain Vitamin D, I am wondering if you are you just surmising that olive oil contains Vitamin D.

Olive Oil Source responds: Olive Oil does not have Vitamin D. On our chemistry page there is a chart with vitamin content of olive oil. Vitamin D is not listed.  In the sentence you refer to, Vitamin D was listed as an example of a fat soluble vitamin, it was not meant to imply that olive oil has Vitamin D. We have changed things to make this more clear.

Events

-----  2006  -----

May

Oil China 2006 May 13th to 15th, 2006 2nd China International Exhibition of Olive Oil and Edible Oil at Beijing International Convention Center.  Go to  www.eoliveoil.com. for details

Hands on Olive Fly Workshop May 17, 2006, 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. Glenn county, California
Who should attend: Olive Growers, especially if you have less than 500 trees. Topics - How to make an Olipe trap (bring your own 1 liter bottle). - How to mix, load and apply GF-120 (Spinosad) with a handcan, back pack sprayer or a 4-wheeler. The pesticide and sprayers will be available for demonstration. - How to identify the olive fruit fly. - How to assemble a sticky trap. Sticky traps will be available at no charge to take home. contact: Jean Miller (934-6501), Ernie Simpson (865-9829)

Getting Started in the Specialty Food Business May 20,21 2006 UC Davis extension www.extension.ucdavis.edu

MOPREP Open House May 23 Sonoma County Library Contact Ron Chapman, MOPREP President, at 707-996-8984

July

NASFT Summer Fancy Food Show - New York July 9-11, 2006

August

Paso Robles Olive Oil Festival, August, 2006 E-mail: mainstreet@tcsn.net
http://www.pasoroblesdowntown.org

September

EDIBLE OIL 06 - International Edible Fats and Oils Show 19–22 September 2006 Seville Spain, C/ Noguera 9, 17300 Blanes (Girona) Tel: +34 902 364 149, Fax: +34 972 355314, http://www.edibleoil.net

October

9th Annual Cañada College Arts & Olive Festival October 1, 2006 Canada College
4200 Farm Hill Blvd. Redwood City, CA 650-306-3428 contact Julie Mooney

Mission San Jose Chamber of Commerce 6th Annual Olive Festival October 7, 2006 Festival Link

ECOLIVA 6th annual meeting, October 2006. in Sierra de Segura, Jaén ,Spain.
This event consists of a International Olive Oil Trademark Fairground Sample and several meetings: Organic Olive Grove International Scientific Technical Meeting, Farmers' Programs, Local knowledge of Olive Groves, Environmental Education and Organic Consumers.  Tel/Fax: +34- 953 480409 e-mail: ecoliva@ecoliva.net http://www.ecoliva.info

2007

September

5th Euro Fed Lipid Congress, 16-19 September 2007, Gothenburg, Sweden

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