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The unstoppable rise of extra virgin olive oil

The unstoppable rise of extra virgin olive oil

Eat This Podcast · Jeremy Cherfas

March 9, 202628m 49s

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Show Notes

Green and purple olives tumbling from a chute in an industrial olive mill

An older man looking directly at the camera and smiling, against a black background. His hair is receding and he wears a striped scarf.
Carl Ipsen
Extra virgin olive oil, as a formal classification, owes its existence to the disastrous state of Italian olive oil in the 1950s. At that time, esterification, a chemical process designed to extract the last drop of oil from the crushed olives, was permitted. It could also be used to extract oils from all manner of unlikely sources, and those too found their way into “olive” oil.

When extra-virgin was first codified, only around 20% of oil qualified. Today, you would be hard pressed to find any oil on sale that does not claim to be extra virgin. Is that any guarantee of quality? Not really, says Professor Carl Ipsen, author of a forthcoming new book tentatively entitled A True History of Olive Oil. In it, he traces the evolution of olive oil from its early role as a lubricant of industrial development, when less than 1% was considered edible, to today, when it is almost exclusively used for food.

Notes

  1. Carl Ipsen’s website contains links to some of his publications, including From Cloth Oil to Extra Virgin: Italian Olive Oil Before the Invention of the Mediterranean Diet, the essay that won the Sophie Coe Prize in 2021.
  2. Here is a transcript. Thank supporters of the podcast.

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