Italy produces the most valued olive oil on Earth. It also imports the most olive oil in Europe โ because 80% of "Italian olive oil" sold in supermarkets worldwide is blended with Spanish, Greek, Tunisian, or Turkish oil, bottled in Italy, and sold as "Product of Italy." This is legal. And it's why that โฌ8 bottle of "extra virgin Italian olive oil" from the supermarket tastes like nothing. Real Italian extra virgin olive oil โ pressed from Italian olives, within hours of harvest, by a producer who owns the trees โ costs โฌ12-25/liter and tastes like something between fresh grass, green tomato, artichoke, and pepper. The difference between real and fake is the difference between wine and grape juice. This guide teaches you to taste the difference, find the real thing, and bring it home.
Plan my olive oil trip โ1. Pour into a small glass. Warm with your hands. Smell first. Real EVOO smells like: fresh-cut grass, green tomatoes, artichoke, herbs, pepper. Fake oil smells like: nothing, or slightly rancid/musty.
2. Sip and let it coat your tongue. You should taste: fruity (olives), bitter (antioxidants โ this is GOOD), and peppery in the throat (polyphenols โ the burn is the quality indicator). If it burns the back of your throat: congratulations, it's real.
3. Defects: If it tastes waxy, musty, or like crayons โ it's oxidized or old. If it tastes like nothing โ it's refined or blended. Good olive oil is AGGRESSIVE. That's the point.
Puglia โ produces 40% of Italy's olive oil. 60 million olive trees, some 1,000+ years old. Coratina and Ogliarola varieties: intense, peppery, herbaceous. Masseria visits with oil tasting: โฌ15-30/person. The ancient trees in the Monopoli-Ostuni area are UNESCO-worthy landscapes.
Tuscany โ Moraiolo, Leccino, Frantoio varieties: balanced, grassy, peppery. Chianti and Val d'Orcia producers do combined wine + oil tastings. November harvest visits: watch the pressing, taste olio novo (new oil) on bruschetta.
Umbria โ smaller production, intense quality. Moraiolo variety around Spoleto and Assisi: bold, green, artichoke notes.
Liguria (Cinque Terre) โ Taggiasca variety: delicate, sweet, almond-like. The mildest Italian oil. Perfect for fish. The terraced olive groves of the Cinque Terre are part of the UNESCO landscape.