OLIVE OIL STORAGE INSTRUCTIONS
SUNLIGHT. Keep at dark for storage, avoiding any exposure to direct sun light.HEAT. Optimum storage temperature is +18 °C to +20 °C (+64 °F to +68 °F). Refrigerating or freezing does not harm any type of olive oil. But olive oil expands about 2-4 % by refrigeration or freezing and may shatter the glass bottle if bottle head space is not sufficient to compensate the expansion!
Refrigeration or ambient temperatures less than +15 °C (+59 °F) may causes partial crystallization at extra virgin type olive oils. Crystallization effect is less in blends of refined olive oils.
This effect is harmless and when olive oil container stored at room temperature of maximum +25 °C (+77 ° F), when olive oil temperature exceeds +16 °C (+60 °F), olive oil crystallization disappears and returns to golden clear color without any quality loss.
Virgin and Extra Virgin Oils must never exceed +25 °C
(+77
°F).
Otherwise nutritionally valuable vitamin E is degraded.
AIR. Oxygen inside air may cause olive oil to become rancid. This
starts from the top surface where air exposure is continuous. This the reason
the necks of the bottles are narrow, surface exposed to air is minimized. When
the rest of container will not be used, say within a month, it is better to
transfer the olive oil to a smaller container and fill till to half neck and
seal the lid tightly to prevent air penetration.FOREIGN ODOURS. Olive oil easily absorbs foreign odours and smells carried by air. You must keep olive oil in a tightly sealable container and tightly seal the container after every use and stow away from synthetic or natural odours, fuels, chemicals, exhaust gases, organic debris, etc.
CONDENSATION. Differences of temperature due to night and day, rainy days or climate changes may cause condensation of moisture in air on the walls of container as pure water droplets. When the container is tightly sealed, outside moisture shall not effect olive oil. However temperature drops by night may cause condensing of water droplets on outside of olive oil container. If container is tin, rust may start and if there is a paper label, paper may absorb the water and swell and deform and may partially peel off. The corrugated carton boxes containing olive oil containers can absorb the condensing moisture and become softer and not be able to carry the containers and may be easily torn by slight forces.
To avoid this situation, the ambient relative humidity must be less than 60% and cartons should be stowed about 10 cm (4”) above the ground on pallets and cartons should be covered with cloth or plastic in high ceiling spaces.
The Olive Oil History
The olive is a subtropical, broad-leaved, perennial tree which produces
edible fruit. Its ancestor, Oleastro, dates back millions of year.
Archaeological records indicate olives have been eaten for over 35,000 years,
and that man has cultivated the tree for at least 6,000 years. The olive tree
ranges in height from 10 to 40 feet, or more, and can attain a great age — some
in the eastern Mediterranean are estimated to be over 2,000 years old.
The olive came from Asia Minor and spread along the coasts of
the Mediterranean, in the area between the 30th and 45th parallels. About 6,000
years ago, in the Fertile Crescent — what is today Syria and Palestine — olives
first began to be cultivated. The practice quickly spread to Crete, flourishing
in the island's dry climate. Cretans became wealthy by exporting the oil and
making lotions and cosmetics from it. An entire shipping fleet was made for
selling oil to the Egyptians and the Greeks, carrying large quantities of oil in
amphorae (vase-like jars) known as pithoi.
The first recorded oil extraction mill was in Palestine in 1000
B.C. Over 100 olive presses have been found in Tel Mique Akron, where the
Philistinese first produced oil. These 100 presses managed to produce between
1,000 and 3,000 tons of olive oil per year.
The Olive Tree
The wood of the olive tree resists decay, and when the top of the tree is killed
by bad weather or human mistakes, a new trunk will grow back from the roots.
Despite harsh winters and burning summers, the olive continues to grow and
produce fruit. The branches are able to carry a large amount of fruit on their
numerous twigs, which are so flexible that they sway with the slightest breeze
but remain very strong.
Olive leaves are thick and leathery. Each leaf grows over a
2-year period and flowers bloom in late spring. They are small and white,
grouped in loose clusters in the axels of the leaves. There are two different
kinds of flowers: perfect flowers, containing both male and female parts, which
are capable of developing into the olive fruits; and staminate flowers, male
only, which contain the pollen-producing parts.
How Olive Oil is Made
HarvestingProduction of olive oil begins with the harvest, the timing of which is a major factor in the final product. The picking of the olives starts as early as September, when the olives are underripe and still green. They yield little oil, but their flavor is intense. These oils have the longest shelf life and are richer in sensory properties such as flavor and aroma. Oil from olives harvested early has a low percentage of acid and the characteristic deep green color typical of the Tuscan oils.
Harvests generally come between early November and let December. Some olives are harvested in the red-ripe stage and blended with the earlier harvested oil to create a more balanced product. In general, the oils from fruit harvested in the black-ripe stage are of inferior quality, containing more acid and less flavor.
The youngest green olives are hand-picked off the branches, whereas riper olives can be beaten or shaken down and collected beneath the trees. Since olives are delicate, the best oils are made from olives that are picked by hand or by machines that do not beat or bruise the fruit.
Milling and Pressing
Olives should be crushed within the first 24 or 36 hours of picking. If left to wait, the level of acidity rises, creating olive oil of poor quality. Just before being crushed, the olives need to be run through a washer to eliminate any remaining impurities. Generally the olives are crushed whole, without prior stoning in roller mills.
The simplest method of crushing olives is with a varying number of granite millstones. The olive paste obtained through milling is layered on nylon, or natural fiber, mats, called "fiscoli," which are stacked high, with metal disks between them. These mats of olive pulp are then subject to a great deal of pressure from a screw or hydraulic press. The liquid produced by the pressing drains through the mats and cylinder and is collected for the final separation.
This liquid is made up of water and oil that need to be separated from one another. The liquid is put through a centrifugal separator, where the rapid spinning eliminates all remaining water and all of the impurities from the oil.
After centrifugation, oil appears amber in color, with an opaque quality—a characteristic feature of superior oils. The more acidic the oil, the clearer and brighter it appears, and the worse it is for your health. Oils processed by anything but centrifuges and mechanical or hydraulic presses cannot be called virgin olive oil.
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