Posts Tagged ‘extra virgin olive oil’

Gold Oak Ranch Olive Oil Wins Gold

Saturday, June 19th, 2010

Just got the results in today.Our 2009 Gold Oak Ranch Extra Virgin Olive Oil won a gold medal at the 2010 Los Angeles International Extra Virgin Olive Oil Competition! As you know from previous posts, we grow Leccino variety olives, which make a strong, fruity oil, and indeed our oil won a gold in the robust olive oil category. Gold Oak Ranch EVOO is definitely not for those who like bland oil.  But if you’re like me and love a pungent, flavorful oil, I think you’ll like this year’s oil as much as the judges did.

To find out more about the competition or check out other award winners, take a look at L.A. International Extra Virgin Olive Oil Competition. Or if you’d rather see the award winning olive oils in person, you can see all the colorful bottles displayed at the Los Angeles County Fair September 4-October 3, 2010.

For now however, I think I’ll crack open a bottle of wine, get some good bread, and enjoy dipping  it in our gold medal oil!

Four Things You Should Know About California Olive Oil

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

I love to host olive oil tastings for people not familiar with California olive oil. It’s wonderful to watch people’s expressions as they taste different styles of oils and realize that olive oil can vary as much as different varieties of wine or coffee. Many of these first-timers also appreciate how bad the olive oil they’ve previously been using tastes.

Are you new to California olive oil? Then here’s four facts about California olive oil you ought to know:

1) Not all olive oil is extra-virgin olive oil–even if it’s labeled ‘extra virgin.’ Unfortunately, this is a consequence of lax labeling laws in the United States. Basically, with the exception of olive oil sold in California, Connecticut, New York, and Oregon, any olive oil can be sold as ’extra virgin’ in the U.S., even if it’s not. This fraud is especially true of imported olive oils. Buyer beware!

2) Extra virgin olive oil is high quality oil. True extra virgin olive oil is cold-pressed. That means it is processed without chemicals or heat. It must also meet acidity requirements and undergo taste-testing by a certified tasting panel to rule-out taste defects.

3) True extra virgin olive oil is expensive to produce and buy. Is it any wonder that it’s big business for olive oil producers to sell inferior oils with fraudulent labeling?

4) California olive oil is an emerging industry. I like to compare it to the California wine industry forty years ago. I predict in the next ten years more and more consumers will be buying our high quality olive oil as production and marketing increases. The numbers bear this out. Over 12,000 acres of super high-density olives (the main commercial production method) have been planted since 1999. That’s a lot of olives!

Of course, there’s so much more to understanding olive oil, and I’ll tackle those topics in a later post. But for now, try some California olive oil. I think you’ll be impressed!