Why Greece is the word when it comes to olive oil – Greek is the world’s best EVOO
Getting to the Greek: Why Greece is the word when it comes to olive oil
(SOURCE: The Independent UK – www.independent.co.uk)
If you say olives to people, they say Greece. If you say olive oil, they say Italy,โ declares author, journalist and all round expert Judy Ridgway. โThe reason for that is two words: good marketing.โ
From the moment us Brits started developing a taste for this green gold of the Mediterranean โ as early as the 19th century โ the Italians were paving the way for their country in general (and Tuscany in particular) to be considered the place for good olive oil.
The olive oil bottles looked expensive; the labels boasted family crests.
โIt sounds superficial โ and it was superficial, but the Greeks hadnโt really got it together on the packaging front,โ says Charles Carey. โOur British connection with Italy and our historic fondness for it as a country meant we have always assumed Italian olive oil was the best.โ
The founder and owner of the Oil Merchant in west London, Carey speaks from personal experience. Though today he sources olive oils from across the Mediterranean, when he first embarked upon his quest to bring fine olive oil to London it was to Tuscany he initially headed.
In Greece, everyone uses extra virgin olive oil, even for cooking and baking cakes and biscuits
Judy Ridgway
Think Italy has the best virgin olive oil? Think again โ it actually imports a lot of olive oil from Greece, finds Clare Finney. But with better marketing and word spreading, Greek Extra Virgin Olive Oil is finally being recognised for its superior quality
A few years later, with Spanish and French oils in his stock now as well as Italian, he turned to Greece and tried importing to here โ โbut there just wasnโt the market for itโ he recalls. The perception โ if there was one at all โ was that Greek oil was for cooking with. โOnly in the past year or so have people started looking at Greek olive oil with the respect that it deserves.โ
Of course, Carey is talking pretty mainstream here: his customers include Waitrose and Harvey Nichols. South of the Thames, Marianna Kolokotroni has been selling organic, single estate Greek olive oil at Borough Market from her shop Oliveology since 2009. Many of her customers have been with her for years.
The main reason the oil of her homeland isnโt known more widely, she says, is because it hasnโt had much going spare until recently. โWe were exporting our olive oil to Italy in bulk, where it was mixed with other European oils, bottled and sold as Italian oil. It was the easiest way for our farmers to sell it, so thatโs what most people were doing.โ With neither the resources nor business acumen of their Italian counterparts, only a handful of Greek olive oil producers (Kolokotroniโs among them) could afford to bottle and sell their own.
Which is a shame, Ridgway explains โ because when it comes to quality, Greek olive oil has always been very consistent. โI am right behind the idea of going for Greek olive oil. It doesnโt have the reputation or cache of Italian โ but that can mean it offers better value for money,โ she continues.
You donโt really find the lower grade industrially produced olive oils โ because the landscape of Greece is so mountainous, you canโt get big machines around the olive groves
Judy Ridgway
It is also versatile, being โgenerally speaking milder and more delicate in tasteโ. Kolkotroni agrees: โI am biased of course, because Iโm Greek and used to what I grew up with โ but Iโve been to many trade fairs, and I do find the Greek olive oils a bit smoother, a bit more easy-going. I love the pepperiness of Italian, but Iโd probably use it more for salad โ whereas the Greek olive oil you can drizzle over everything.โ You can โ and they do.
With more than 24 litres of olive oil per capita, per year, the Greeks are by far the biggest consumers of olive oil in the world. They are also the biggest producers of extra virgin olive oil: the highest grade of olive oil classification, which must be extracted entirely by mechanical means โ that is, without the use of any solvents โ and under temperatures that will not degrade its quality.
โIn Greece, everyone uses extra virgin, even for cooking and baking cakes and biscuits,โ Kolokotroni continues. โYou donโt really find the lower grade industrially produced oils โ because the landscape of Greece is so mountainous, you canโt get big machines around the olive groves. The producers still have to pick and process by hand: thereโs no large-scale, commercial production, and that makes for better qualityโ
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Greece boasts the largest percentage of olive tree coverage per land area in the world
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The sadness is that for decades so much of this hand-harvested olive oil was ending up in pan-European blends of varying standards, bottled and sold as Italian olive oil. Labelling laws today are stricter than they were, but that doesnโt stop big Italian brands passing off oil they have sourced from a variety of countries off as entirely their own. Carey describes one he found the other day: โFarchioni. Italyโs favourite olive oil, it says on the front. Nice Italian name, Farchioni. On the back it says โcold extraction, produce of Farchioniโ. Only below that does it say โproduce of the European Unionโ. Itโs probably mostly Spanish.โ
Selling to huge brands like these, Greek producers were never going to make much of a profit โ either to invest in marketing advice or in better equipment. Then the Greek financial crisis hit and, while big business floundered, Greekโs food and drink offering began to gradually improve.
Kolokotroni recalls how young people who had been working the white-collar jobs born of Greeceโs joining the EU (and the subsequent cash-injection it brought) came back to the land, as the opportunities dried up in the city: โThey took over the vineyards and olive groves of their parents and grandparents, and started to put their ideas and their energy into packaging the product properly and promoting and exporting it.โ
โThey brought their banking skills, their marketing skills,โ says Ridgway โ and the thing that had previously impeded their profits, their having to harvest olives by hand, began to work in their favour, as a rich and varied offering of single estate olive oils emerged from the ruins of their economy.
Growing up in Greece, olive oil was just olive oil, says Jenny Pagoni, a Greek-born photographer and restaurateur. โIt was everywhere, and it was good quality, and we sort of overlooked it.โ Today, a beautiful, single estate Cretan olive oil is front and centre of the menu of Ampรฉli, the Greek restaurant she has just opened on Londonโs Charlotte Street. In fact Carey believes Greece is now one of the biggest producers of single varietal and single estate olive oils โ that is olive oil produced by one estate, or from one variety of olive from a single estate.
โOther countries tend to blend varietals. The one weโre importing and selling now, Lia, won 2019 Best Extra Virgin Olive Oil Monovarietal Award at the Flos Olei.โ Youโll find it in Waitrose โ and if youโre looking for proof that Greece has upped its design and marketing game, this is it. A tall, shapely bottle in Grecian statue white with fine gold lettering carries a price tag of ยฃ18.50 โ the most expensive extra virgin olive oil on the shelf, and yet given its quality (it is the only single estate, monovarietal there) great value for money.
After years of being in thrall to Italian and then Spanish olive oils, even non-Greek chefs are starting to clock onto the affordability, quality and versatility of Greekโs liquid gold. โRecently we were sent a free sample of Greek olive oil, and we loved it so much Iโve started buying it and using it on some of our pasta dishes โ donโt tell the Italians!โ laughs Ben Cooke of Little Gloster on the Isle of Wight.
โItโs cheaper, and the one we have is beautifully smooth and balanced with a delicious buttery acidity.โ Tom Kemble, of his eponymous at Tom Kemble at The Pass, in Sussex, is another convert: โIt was only a few years ago that I started to work with Greek olive oils, and my favourite is a new season Koroneiki olive oil. I use this over everything; dressing bread, salads, fish and meat. In the restaurant we actually pair this kind of olive oil in a dessert, seasoning a lemon and basil curd accompanied with blood oranges.โ
Discerning customers looking for an easy and affordable way to bring an extra dimension of flavour โ and indeed beauty, olive oil bottles being one of the more โon showโ ingredients there are โ to their homes could do worse than follow their lead.
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