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Hi all,

As we have been talking about oils lately, thought I would pass this on to

those of you who are still using olive oil.

Terri

 

THE OLIVE OIL SCANDAL

 

For more than a decade I have advised people to

substitute olive oil for the regular oils available in

the supermarket. Good advice. But here's the problem:

trying to find real olive oil is like looking for a needle in

a haystack. Olive oil has been part of the human diet for

more than 5000 years.  These millennia of human experience

plus modern research indicate that olive oil is beneficial

to health and that we can safely include it in our diet.  In

fact, olive oil has been singled out as contributing to the

health of Greek centenarians. But, to get the same health

effects as the Greek centenarians, the oil has to be made

the way they made it. The problem is most of the olive oil

on the market does not duplicate what our ancestors were

eating, and people are not getting what they think they are

buying. Almost all olive oil is processed in ways that result

in the loss of nutrients that are essential to health.

 

Olive oil is almost unique among oils in that it can be consumed

in the crude form without refining. This has the effect of conserving

all its vitamins, essential fatty acids, and other nutrients.

Because it contains all these nutrients, including powerful

antioxidants, real extra virgin olive oil is beneficial to health

and protects us from damage by free radical oxidation. Cell

membranes contain fatty acids that are highly susceptible to

free radical damage. This damage produces lipid peroxides

that can kill the cell. Real olive oil contains polyphenols, Vitamin E,

and other natural antioxidants that prevent this damage.

 

Numerous studies show that olive oil reduces cholesterol, lowers

blood pressure, inhibits platelet aggregation, and lowers the incidence

of breast cancer. Because it is so rich in antioxidants, olive oil

appears to dramatically reduce the oxidation of LDL cholesterol,

thereby preventing heart disease. These same antioxidants also

add to the stability, shelf life, and flavor of the oil.

 

Historically, high quality olive oil, rich in antioxidants, was easy to

obtain, but not anymore. Today, high quality oil is available only in

relatively small quantities, usually from family owned farms, where

the oils are produced in ways similar to how the Greeks and Romans

made theirs. On these farms, olives are picked by hand so as not to

damage the skin or pulp. They are transported in well-aerated containers

and milled within 48 hours of harvesting. Before milling, leaves and

twigs are removed, the olives washed and dried, and then stone pressed

the same way as it was done in antiquity. The resulting olive paste was

then pressed in a hydraulic press without the use of heat, hot water, or

solvents.  The oil is left unfiltered as filtering removes many nutrients.

The first pressing produces the best " extra virgin " oil.

 

The problem with most of today's olive oil is that it is rarely produced

in the old way, which is more time consuming and expensive. Due to

the increasing demand for olive oil, the trend has been to reduce production

costs by moving toward more automation and concentration of production

in ever-larger installations. These modern factories extract more oil more

cheaply, but their processing methods substantially reduce the nutritional

quality of the oil.

 

To reduce costs, olives are machine-harvested along with leaves and twigs.

Olives that have dropped on the ground, which can be said to contain bad oil,

are often mixed with the good ones. They are shipped in all kinds of

containers,

many of which are poorly ventilated, and heaped in large piles where the

olives are stored for too long and often become moldy. The oil is then

extracted in a continuous centrifuge where hot water is used to help separate

out the oil.

 

Antioxidant polyphenols are soluble in water and are washed away in this

process, thereby lowering the shelf life and the nutritional quality of the

oil.

Italy alone produces 800,000 cubic meters of wastewater per year from this

process.  Because substantial amounts of antioxidants are washed away,

factory produced olive oils have a short shelf life of only months, whereas

real olive oil lasts for two to three years. Factory produced olive oil is

filtered and looks clear. Real olive oil is not filtered and looks cloudy.

 

Most people think that by purchasing " extra virgin " olive oil they are

getting

a high quality oil.

 

Unfortunately, in most cases, this is not true. It's more complex than that.

A label reading extra virgin is no guarantee of quality. For one thing,

nowhere does it say that extra virgin olive oil has to be made 100% from

olives.

An major criterion for grading olive oil is its level of acidity. Extra

virgin oil

should have a free oleic acid acidity of no more than one percent, whereas

ordinary virgin olive oil can have an acidity of up to 3.3 percent.

 

Lower quality oils can be refined to bring the acidity down so they

can be labeled as extra virgin. But now the oil has been refined,

and that's not what you want.  That's why being labeled extra virgin

is no guarantee of getting high quality oil, which has not been

processed in ways that reduce its nutritional value. To complicate

matters even more, the term " extra virgin " has no official meaning

in the United States.  The U.S. is not a member of the International

Olive Oil Council. So, olive oil sold here can be labeled extra virgin

without meeting the accepted international standards.

 

Another reason why you can't trust extra virgin olive oil is exemplified

by a problem that manifested last year, and may turn out to be the

biggest food fraud of the 20th Century. Despite the fact that details

of this scandal have been published in Merum, a Swiss-German

magazine, and in Italian journals such as Agra Trade, and the

newspaper Gazzetta del Mezzogiorno, this information has been

successfully suppressed and is known to only a handful. Investigators

are gathering evidence indicating that the biggest olive oil brands in

Italy, Bertolli, Sasso, and Cirio, have for years been systematically

diluting their extra virgin olive oil with cheap, highly-refined hazelnut

oil imported from Turkey. International arrest warrants have been

issued and so far documents indicate that at least ten thousand tons

of hazelnut oil are involved. As much as 20% hazelnut oil may be

added to olive oil and still be undetectable to the consumer. In fact

olive oil labeled " Italian " often comes from Turkey, Tunisia, Morocco,

Spain, and Greece. Considering what has happened in Europe, where

there are strict regulations, imagine what can happen in California

where there are no regulations. Apparently, more oil is " produced " in

California than there are olives available. The truth is, most of the

extra virgin olive oil on the market does not supply all the nutritional

value and health giving properties that we have a right to expect from

olive oil.

 

This is scary stuff when you consider how extremely important oil

is to human health.  Our modem chronic disease problems are the

result of radically changing, in a short period of time, the fundamental

parameters of human existence, namely: diet, environment, and

behavior. One of the most fundamental changes in our diet have been

the kind and the amount of fats and oils that we consume. For

example, the consumption of hydrogenated oils has proved to be a

disaster for human health.  Hydrogenated oils have been implicated

in both our cancer and heart disease epidemics. In fact, all modern

processed oils are injurious to human health.  To reverse our pandemic

of chronic disease, we have to return to eating a more traditional diet,

and high quality olive oil can safely be included in that diet. It's not so

much that olive oil should be added to the diet as much as healthy,

real olive oil should be used to replace the unhealthy, processed oils

now being consumed.

 

How does one ensure that they are eating the healthiest oil? Find an

extra virgin olive oil that is still made in small estate bottled settings.

The challenge is to find one that does it… all right!

 

After selecting the oil, it has to be stored properly. When properly stored,

real extra virgin olive oil can last two to three years. Because of

processing, most of the extra virgin oil on the market has a shelf life of

only a few

months. A good rule of thumb is to purchase oil in small bottles and

consume it within a year of purchase; this will also ensure getting the

best flavor. Store the oil away from both heat and light.

 

Storing in a dark place is important because exposure to light will

start a chain reaction that will destroy the oil a thousand times faster

than oxygen. During storage, olive oil can oxidize and undergo a slow,

continuous, and irreversible deterioration until it becomes inedible.

 

The bottom line is that modern, factory- produced olive oil has been

stripped of its health enhancing nutrients, and the task of selecting a

high quality oil has been made very difficult.

 

 

Southern Botanicals has made the selection process very easy

for you.  We have searched for a high quality, estate bottled oil that

meets our standards and we  found one years ago to use in our

preparations. The brand name is Lorenzo's Oil. It's produced on a

small farm just north of Sacramento, Ca.  Their olives are grown

organically. They are hand picked from the trees.  The fully ripened

fruit is pressed in an Old World press whereby the temperatures

never rise above the temperature in the air, collected in stainless

steel vats, decanted, and poured into buckets. This first cold

pressed oil is the real stuff and retains all the natural flavor and

nutrients. We then bottle it here in our facility a few at a time so as

to keep just ahead of orders.

 

 

 

 

 

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oh bother...just when I thought I was doing something right! <grin>

 

I buy organic olive oil made by Lupi - which I am assured is not GM....

 

I will have to stick with that.

 

Hey - does this process apply to coconut oil. The person that knows about

coconut oil please respond.... does the coconut oil you recommend become

nasty too?

 

Tracy

-

<annhope1

 

Thursday, 22 November 2001 02:35

olive oil - long

 

 

> Hi all,

> As we have been talking about oils lately, thought I would pass this on to

> those of you who are still using olive oil.

> Terri

>

> THE OLIVE OIL SCANDAL

>

> For more than a decade I have advised people to

> substitute olive oil for the regular oils available in

> the supermarket. Good advice. But here's the problem:

> trying to find real olive oil is like looking for a needle in

> a haystack. Olive oil has been part of the human diet for

> more than 5000 years. These millennia of human experience

> plus modern research indicate that olive oil is beneficial

> to health and that we can safely include it in our diet. In

> fact, olive oil has been singled out as contributing to the

> health of Greek centenarians. But, to get the same health

> effects as the Greek centenarians, the oil has to be made

> the way they made it. The problem is most of the olive oil

> on the market does not duplicate what our ancestors were

> eating, and people are not getting what they think they are

> buying. Almost all olive oil is processed in ways that result

> in the loss of nutrients that are essential to health.

>

> Olive oil is almost unique among oils in that it can be consumed

> in the crude form without refining. This has the effect of conserving

> all its vitamins, essential fatty acids, and other nutrients.

> Because it contains all these nutrients, including powerful

> antioxidants, real extra virgin olive oil is beneficial to health

> and protects us from damage by free radical oxidation. Cell

> membranes contain fatty acids that are highly susceptible to

> free radical damage. This damage produces lipid peroxides

> that can kill the cell. Real olive oil contains polyphenols, Vitamin E,

> and other natural antioxidants that prevent this damage.

>

> Numerous studies show that olive oil reduces cholesterol, lowers

> blood pressure, inhibits platelet aggregation, and lowers the incidence

> of breast cancer. Because it is so rich in antioxidants, olive oil

> appears to dramatically reduce the oxidation of LDL cholesterol,

> thereby preventing heart disease. These same antioxidants also

> add to the stability, shelf life, and flavor of the oil.

>

> Historically, high quality olive oil, rich in antioxidants, was easy to

> obtain, but not anymore. Today, high quality oil is available only in

> relatively small quantities, usually from family owned farms, where

> the oils are produced in ways similar to how the Greeks and Romans

> made theirs. On these farms, olives are picked by hand so as not to

> damage the skin or pulp. They are transported in well-aerated containers

> and milled within 48 hours of harvesting. Before milling, leaves and

> twigs are removed, the olives washed and dried, and then stone pressed

> the same way as it was done in antiquity. The resulting olive paste was

> then pressed in a hydraulic press without the use of heat, hot water, or

> solvents. The oil is left unfiltered as filtering removes many nutrients.

> The first pressing produces the best " extra virgin " oil.

>

> The problem with most of today's olive oil is that it is rarely produced

> in the old way, which is more time consuming and expensive. Due to

> the increasing demand for olive oil, the trend has been to reduce

production

> costs by moving toward more automation and concentration of production

> in ever-larger installations. These modern factories extract more oil more

> cheaply, but their processing methods substantially reduce the nutritional

> quality of the oil.

>

> To reduce costs, olives are machine-harvested along with leaves and twigs.

> Olives that have dropped on the ground, which can be said to contain bad

oil,

> are often mixed with the good ones. They are shipped in all kinds of

> containers,

> many of which are poorly ventilated, and heaped in large piles where the

> olives are stored for too long and often become moldy. The oil is then

> extracted in a continuous centrifuge where hot water is used to help

separate

> out the oil.

>

> Antioxidant polyphenols are soluble in water and are washed away in this

> process, thereby lowering the shelf life and the nutritional quality of

the

> oil.

> Italy alone produces 800,000 cubic meters of wastewater per year from this

> process. Because substantial amounts of antioxidants are washed away,

> factory produced olive oils have a short shelf life of only months,

whereas

> real olive oil lasts for two to three years. Factory produced olive oil is

> filtered and looks clear. Real olive oil is not filtered and looks cloudy.

>

> Most people think that by purchasing " extra virgin " olive oil they are

> getting

> a high quality oil.

>

> Unfortunately, in most cases, this is not true. It's more complex than

that.

> A label reading extra virgin is no guarantee of quality. For one thing,

> nowhere does it say that extra virgin olive oil has to be made 100% from

> olives.

> An major criterion for grading olive oil is its level of acidity. Extra

> virgin oil

> should have a free oleic acid acidity of no more than one percent, whereas

> ordinary virgin olive oil can have an acidity of up to 3.3 percent.

>

> Lower quality oils can be refined to bring the acidity down so they

> can be labeled as extra virgin. But now the oil has been refined,

> and that's not what you want. That's why being labeled extra virgin

> is no guarantee of getting high quality oil, which has not been

> processed in ways that reduce its nutritional value. To complicate

> matters even more, the term " extra virgin " has no official meaning

> in the United States. The U.S. is not a member of the International

> Olive Oil Council. So, olive oil sold here can be labeled extra virgin

> without meeting the accepted international standards.

>

> Another reason why you can't trust extra virgin olive oil is exemplified

> by a problem that manifested last year, and may turn out to be the

> biggest food fraud of the 20th Century. Despite the fact that details

> of this scandal have been published in Merum, a Swiss-German

> magazine, and in Italian journals such as Agra Trade, and the

> newspaper Gazzetta del Mezzogiorno, this information has been

> successfully suppressed and is known to only a handful. Investigators

> are gathering evidence indicating that the biggest olive oil brands in

> Italy, Bertolli, Sasso, and Cirio, have for years been systematically

> diluting their extra virgin olive oil with cheap, highly-refined hazelnut

> oil imported from Turkey. International arrest warrants have been

> issued and so far documents indicate that at least ten thousand tons

> of hazelnut oil are involved. As much as 20% hazelnut oil may be

> added to olive oil and still be undetectable to the consumer. In fact

> olive oil labeled " Italian " often comes from Turkey, Tunisia, Morocco,

> Spain, and Greece. Considering what has happened in Europe, where

> there are strict regulations, imagine what can happen in California

> where there are no regulations. Apparently, more oil is " produced " in

> California than there are olives available. The truth is, most of the

> extra virgin olive oil on the market does not supply all the nutritional

> value and health giving properties that we have a right to expect from

> olive oil.

>

> This is scary stuff when you consider how extremely important oil

> is to human health. Our modem chronic disease problems are the

> result of radically changing, in a short period of time, the fundamental

> parameters of human existence, namely: diet, environment, and

> behavior. One of the most fundamental changes in our diet have been

> the kind and the amount of fats and oils that we consume. For

> example, the consumption of hydrogenated oils has proved to be a

> disaster for human health. Hydrogenated oils have been implicated

> in both our cancer and heart disease epidemics. In fact, all modern

> processed oils are injurious to human health. To reverse our pandemic

> of chronic disease, we have to return to eating a more traditional diet,

> and high quality olive oil can safely be included in that diet. It's not

so

> much that olive oil should be added to the diet as much as healthy,

> real olive oil should be used to replace the unhealthy, processed oils

> now being consumed.

>

> How does one ensure that they are eating the healthiest oil? Find an

> extra virgin olive oil that is still made in small estate bottled

settings.

> The challenge is to find one that does it… all right!

>

> After selecting the oil, it has to be stored properly. When properly

stored,

> real extra virgin olive oil can last two to three years. Because of

> processing, most of the extra virgin oil on the market has a shelf life of

> only a few

> months. A good rule of thumb is to purchase oil in small bottles and

> consume it within a year of purchase; this will also ensure getting the

> best flavor. Store the oil away from both heat and light.

>

> Storing in a dark place is important because exposure to light will

> start a chain reaction that will destroy the oil a thousand times faster

> than oxygen. During storage, olive oil can oxidize and undergo a slow,

> continuous, and irreversible deterioration until it becomes inedible.

>

> The bottom line is that modern, factory- produced olive oil has been

> stripped of its health enhancing nutrients, and the task of selecting a

> high quality oil has been made very difficult.

>

>

> Southern Botanicals has made the selection process very easy

> for you. We have searched for a high quality, estate bottled oil that

> meets our standards and we found one years ago to use in our

> preparations. The brand name is Lorenzo's Oil. It's produced on a

> small farm just north of Sacramento, Ca. Their olives are grown

> organically. They are hand picked from the trees. The fully ripened

> fruit is pressed in an Old World press whereby the temperatures

> never rise above the temperature in the air, collected in stainless

> steel vats, decanted, and poured into buckets. This first cold

> pressed oil is the real stuff and retains all the natural flavor and

> nutrients. We then bottle it here in our facility a few at a time so as

> to keep just ahead of orders.

>

>

>

>

>

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