Bananas, Coffee and Olive Oil: Rethinking How an Industry
Works
Part Three of Three
The Road Ahead...
I've been doing a lot of reading lately on olive oil quality.
And I've been talking first-hand with producers, marketers
and those that make oil for their own consumption. It's a
lot of information to absorb.
It's so big that you could spend your life studying olive
oil quality (I have friends that are doing just that). It's
such a massive subject in fact that I had problems keeping
this essay under seven pages, just the text. Then last night
I deleted it all and decided to go in a different direction,
fixating rather on what I would have liked to know if I were
not a food-person living in olive land.
I decided to ask: What's the skinny? What does it mean
to you? How can you be assured you're not getting ripped
off? How can we use our buying power to improve the culinary
world rather than further eroding it? What's the real take
away? These came to the forefront last night at 3 a.m. as
I rewrote the newsletter, the wind howling through the green
Persian shutters of my school's library.
I sat in the dark, laptop on my legs, creating a few files.
I then cut and pasted it all into a few basic factoid-like
nuggets, leaving behind the magazine, newspaper and blog
rants, the lectures notes (both my own, and Chris Butler's)
and the pages and pages of European legal journals. Those
interested in further can find it all though, most it even
online.
But for those that want the shorter version, here is what
I know:
1) Few industries are as corrupt, virtually all of it on
the top-end. Massive, massive tankers are routinely filled
with low quality olive or non-olive oils and sold to the
large corporations that we all know (I'd tell you the names
but they'd sue me out of existence and besides, you already
know them, they live on your supermarket shelves). Adulterating
olive oil is as big as the narcotics trade. The incoming
olive and other various oils are blended by the large firms,
bottled and shipped to your grocery store. To buy a bottle
of these oils, we as consumers are playing a significant
role. It's no less significant a role than buying canned
tuna that was harvested in a way that kills dolphins. Or
coffee or tea in a way that destroys rural farms and villages.
Consumer awareness is everything.
2) Like bananas, coffee, chocolate and tea, the vast majority
of what we spend on olive oil goes towards blending a 'house-style',
marketing, selling and shipping, rather than to the grower,
who often lives at the poverty level, or worse yet, has to
be subsidized by the government. Even with my limited understanding
of economics, it's clear that this is not only immoral but
just bad consumerism on our part. Especially when we remember
that olive oil is an agricultural product, and there is nothing
that anyone can do it to improve it once it's pressed. Or
put into other words, there is no 'value' to 'add'.
3) These large multinationals (the ones with the pretty
labels of those same 30 tiny trees lining the walls of Lucca),
buy up all sorts of oil from various parts of the Mediterranean,
providing that the locals never label it as oil from that
place, effectively squashing the development of local, quality-minded
producers. Take a moment and think about how wine works,
the more specific the person or place, the higher the quality.
What propels Chateau Snooty-Pants is reputation. On the other
end, jug wines announce only a state or country, and few
of us are eager to drink a lot of jug wine when better is
on offer. Everyone loses on such a concept, EXCEPT the multi-nationals:
growers can't feed their families, you'll never be able to
taste what high-quality Turkish, Tunisian or Croatian oil
tastes like, and those that grow high quality oil in Italy
can't compete with cheap, low-quality imports. I'm not about
protecting Italian jobs. But I am against the bait and switch
at the consumer's expense. For the record, buying oil labelled
as Italian and buying Italian oil is not the same thing.
4) Judging the over-all quality of real, unadulterated
olive oil is partially subjective, but mostly... not. 'Extra
virgin' is an archaic term, when oil was decanted naturally.
It no longer really applies and many serious producers now
prefer 'Premium' in its stead. Today, both refer to oil with
less than 0.8% oleic acid. This is qualifiable. It's a simple
test that in ten minutes you could train a monkey to do (I
mastered it in just under an hour). The lower the acid, the
more a producer can expect to charge. No one argues this.
As my friend Chris Butler points out though, don't confuse
'quality' with 'standard', which is really just another way
to say 'the minimal level of acceptance'. The second part
of 'Extra virgin' or 'Premium' is 'free of defects', which
means free of extra flavours not normally thought of as good
qualities, such as mould, soap, wet cardboard, etc. As with
all tastes, this part is more subjective, the way some believe
that proper Sauvignon Blanc should smell of cat pee or that
parts of Spain prefer their tripe to smell a bit like you-know-what.
Yesterday I asked a olive farmer friend of mine about this:
he did away with any thoughts of subjectivity regarding judging
quality olive oil, saying only, 'In farming, things only
stink when something isn't right'.
What to do about it?
Easy. You're already doing it with other foods. You just
need to treat olive oil the same way you would as something
from a farmer's market. In short, you need to cut out all
the middlemen. Here's how.
1) Most of the scandals involve large multinational companies,
the kind that live on your olive oil shelf in your local
supermarket. Scan the shelves and these are the ones to avoid.
No little producer that puts his or her name and address
on the label would adulterate their oil, as their reputation
is all they have. Be sceptical of anyone big enough to have
a marketing department. Ideally, you'd visit an olive-producing
region, taste their oils and choose one you like. Make a
human contact. Arrange for the producer to ship to you directly.
Yes, the shipping will cost more because of the small order,
but the savings on the back end will be so significant as
to be worth it. Other tips include buying a bottle from the
producer and taking it home with you but then ordering oil
in five litre cans, lighter and more break-resistant that
bottles (and you'll already have one to refill left over
from the trip anyway). Send a thank you card upon acceptance
of the oil and tell them you'd like to order again next year.
And if you're happy, then do. The fact that you're subscribed
to the newsletter probably means that you're already aware
of the beauty of meeting the folks that produce your food.
If you won't be travelling in an olive region anytime soon,
talk to a friend that will be. But that's about as far away
as you want to go, two generations.
2) Learn to hear 'Ware' 'House' 'Club' as three words that
virtually guarantee the scams will continue (as long as there
is an enormous, price-driven, under-informed buying pool,
this is not going away anytime soon). Be willing to pay more,
but only if that money goes directly to the producer.
3) Host an olive oil party, where folks bring a bottle
(ask some to bring some hand-made oil and others to bring
supermarket oil). Taste blind, preferably in small glasses,
coloured blue if at all possible (the greenness forms opinions
but is not a good indicator of freshness, fruitiness, etc.,
and blue masks the colour). You can find tasting notes online.
We do this at the school a lot and it's shocking how a favourite
quickly stops being so when tasted against others. Don't
be intimated or slow down conversation by talking about how
little you know. Taste. Really, really taste. You're ahead
of the game more than you think. Southern Europeans tend
to be horrible comparative tasters as they tend more towards
place-based chauvinism and social inertia ('I don't have
to taste others, I know ours is best'). New Worlders tend
to be remarkably good at not only noting differences but
also stating preferences.
And that is more or less it. I buy my oil from the same
people that make it, and occasionally I make it myself. It's
always one of the proudest things on my table and it enriches
my life considerably, that I'm that close to the source.
In the end, it's up to each of us.
For
those that will be in Europe this year, we invite you to
join Chris Butler and me and my staff for our Olive program,
a weeklong exploration of all things-olivey. We'll cook with
the stuff, learn how olives are grown, pressed and bottled.
We'll even introduce you to some small quality growers that
we trust (and buy from, year after year).
If you're looking
for your source, consider coming to our new course.
Reserve your place now!