Olive Oil - Real or Fake - Who Decides?
Olive Oil - Real or Fake - Who Decides?
The evidence is overwhelming - Real extra virgin olive oil not
only enhances the taste of food but is good for you, consider
the following headlines:
Olive oil 'acts like painkiller' - BBC Mediterranean Diet Adds
Years to Your Life (high intake of ... olive oil) -
MedicalNewsToday.com Oleic Acid Key to Olive Oil's Anti-Cancer
Effect - Reuters.com
However, there is a dark side - fraud in the olive oil
marketplace:
Olive oil's slippery supply line - denverpost.com Extra Virgin
Olive Oil - Are You Getting What You Pay For? - ABC News 7Online
"A clear case of fraud ..... almost all of the virgin and extra
virgin olive oil produced by large commercial Italian olive oil
plants" Italianfood.about.com "of 73 olive oils ... in the U.S.
Only 4 per cent were pure olive oil. The rest were adulterated"
- New York Times
The health benefits of extra virgin olive oil only apply to real
extra virgin olive oil and not to fraudulently mislabeled
products.
As most olive oil consumers know, the price of real extra virgin
olive oil has risen dramatically. At the same time the quality
of the products being offered has deteriorated dramatically.
Logic would dictate that a significant percentage of olive oil
consumers would prefer real extra virgin olive oil instead of
the over-priced, mislabeled and adulterated products that have
flooded the market.
However the olive oil consumer's freedom to choose their product
is limited to what is actually offered.
Food importers, distributors. brokers and retailers essentially
decide between two types of products when it comes to the
distribution of olive oil: A) A cheap mixed product or B) Real
extra virgin olive oil:
A) Mixed products have no guarantee of quality, the paperwork
may say 'extra virgin olive oil' but what is in the bottle is
pomace, canola or some other cheap refined oil. Mixed products
have no quality stated or implied, they are entirely price
sensitive. So the distributor, broker, importer or retailer
needs to constantly offer either the cheapest product or be very
close to it for fear that at some point their supply will
disappear and they will be undersold due to the market realities
of working with this type of product.
This is where the consumer gets cheated - the labeling does not
accurately reflect what is in the bottle. Take for example
'light olive oil' - what is 'light' olive oil? Olive oil made
from 'light' olives? Light olive oil is 95% pomace, canola or
some other cheap oil mixed in with 5% virgin olive oil. It
stretches the imagination to think that olive oil consumers
demand this type of product.
B) Real extra virgin olive oil obviously costs more to produce
than the cheap, mixed products. But olive oil consumers benefit
because they get what they pay for - the product. Real extra
virgin olive oil is always that - real extra virgin olive oil -
the product, the quality does not vary. Olive oil consumers
always get what they want and what they pay for - the flavor
enhancing attributes and all of the health benefits of real
extra virgin olive oil.
It should be noted that due to current market factors, the price
difference between real extra virgin olive oil and the cheap
mixes has pretty much closed and in some cases is now inverted.
Real extra virgin olive oil being less expensive than the cheap
mixes.
So, who gets to decide what olive oil consumers consume?
We believe that this decision belongs to the consumer. Olive oil
consumers should demand real extra virgin olive oil.
Kelly Martinez Antonio Celentano Extra Virgin Olive Oil -
http://www.antoniocelentano.com
Antonio Celentano Extra Virgin Olive Oil is extracted from
locally grown olives, bottled on site in C