Thursday, December 15, 2016

Another semester comes to a close

We first taught the Chemistry of Olive Oil as an upper level science course at Boğazici University in the fall of 2014.   One of us (ZDN) has continued to teach the course since the summer of 2015.  One of us (RAB) taught an honor's class at Keene State College in the Fall of 2015 that focused on numerical literacy using olive oil science as a case in point.  This semester, Fall of 2016, one of us (POH) taught the course as a First Year Seminar Introduction to the Liberal Arts at Amherst College titled "Liquid Gold."  What is amazing is that it works in all of these different capacities.

Listed below are the activities we developed which for the most part, flow from the organization of our book, "The Chemical Story of Olive Oil from Grove to Table" which is to be published by the Royal Society of Chemistry and will be out early next year if we get the galleys back soon.  If anyone is interested in getting detailed copies of the activities, email pbohara@amherst.edu.

Chapter 1:  Olive Origins

  • Activity 1A:  Explorations and presentations from ancient texts ranging from the Talmud to the Koran to the Old and New Testaments, to the writings of Pliny, Hippocrates, Homer, and Calumut.
  • Activity 1B:   A "like dissolves like" lab in which students in groups of three extracted different botanical samples with both olive oil and water to discover which components of the plant were solubilized by the different solvents.  Extracts were analyzed by color and odor immediately, after four days, after one month, and at the end of the semester.  The botanicals analyzed were orange peel, sun-dried tomato, vanilla bean, dried ghost pepper, star anise, and cinnamon.
  • Activity 1C:  Olive Oil Anointing Ceremony:  After reading of several ancient practices that included olive oil in a ritual practices such as the anointing of a king, the birth of a child, or the death of a loved one, the class designed its own Olive Oil Ritual Anointing Ceremony complete with a scriptural reference (The Colleges Catalog), a special "prayer" to be said (reading the preamble to the College's Mission Statement) and a creative anointing ceremony with oil that bound us as part of a group together.  We did this on the last day as well. 

Chapter 2:  Planting the Tree
  • Activity 2A: Visit to a local Centurion Tree.  Western MA has, of course, no ancient olive trees, but we were able to visit the "Buttonball Tree", a sycamore tree that is over 400 years old in nearby Sunderland MA.  A tree forester from UMass joined us on the field trip and discussed how ages of trees are measured, how they aged and some of the stresses that they undergo in their lifetime.

Chapter 3:  Growing the Tree

  • Activity 3A:  Students set up "Facebook Profiles" for the major chemical components in olive oil including triolein, hydroxytyrosol, vitamin E, chlorophyll, oleoeuropein, and ligstroside.They were instructed to put up basic info (structures, molar mass) and to include who they would be "friends" with and what their special talents were.

Chapter 4:  Harvesting the Olives
  • Activity 4A:  Not quite Olives but Apples  Class took a trip to a Cider Mill and observed the picking and pressing of apples in the mill and the fermentation and bottling that occurred in the nearby hard cider facility.  The trip was especially valuable for allowing them to see how the filtering process works on an industrial level. 
Chapter 5:  Processing
  • Activity 5A:  Our first Press - with Olives from an Olive Bar (there are no fresh olives in Western MA).  Students were given olives of 5 different cultivars that were brined olives from a local olive bar.  They performed physical analysis of the olives including pit to fruit ratio and density analysis, ground them up in a food mill, centrifuged the paste, and reported % oils for the five varieties. 
  • Activity 5B: Building a scale model of an olive mill.  From the intake side with a fruit handler, to the crusher - students decided to adopt the millstone approach, then to a malaxer, a three phase centrifuge and then the final polisher - students constructed a mock up of the mill from ....... tinker toys.  The parts all integrated and the conveyor belts, hammer mill, rotors, and centrifuges all turned!  The mill is on display in the science library 
Chapter 6:  Packaging and Testing
  • Activity 6A.  Students worked in teams to design tri-fold brochures that described on of the basic chemical tests that an oil undergoes to be certified as EVOO.  Five groups prepared brochures on free fatty acid, UV tests, peroxides, DAG and PPP.  Their brochures put the science into terms that a layman can understand. 
Chapter 7: Tasting
  • Activities 7A, 7B and 7C  Students learned how to taste in three stages.  In the first activity, students tasted monovarietals, and evaluated them using a simple 3 point scale.  They were introduced to the basic strippagio technique.  This activity explored taste saturation and linkages (such as bitter and salty) and explored retronasal and orthonasal analysis.  In activity 7B, they were introduced to standards for pungency, bitterness, acidity, astringency, rancidity, fusty and musty, and muddy sediment after which we tasted a flight of oils and ranked them from mild to robust.  In activity 7C, students blind sampled four high quality oils and two supermarket blends and were asked to rate them on a 10 point scale and report their results in tabular and radar graph format.
Chapter 8: Health Benefits
  • Activity 8A  Presentation of Various Epidemiological Studies, groups of students worked together to explore the websites, study designs and outcomes of five of the largest studies to date on olive oil.  Results were presented in-class presentations and discussion.
  • Activity 8B  Medical Ethics discussion  Students watched the feature film "Alonzo's Oil" which features a treatment for a disabling inherited disease, caused by fatty acid metabolic errors and discussed ethics of research and patient care, and the responsibilities to the families of patients.  
Chapter 9: 1001 Uses
  • Activity 9A  Making Olive Oil Soap by the Cold Processing method with an Immersion Blender.  

Chapter 10:  Sustainability

  • Activity 10A:  Students were provided cost analysis for testing and standards for the California Olive Oil Council and some manufacturing and cost figures.  They were asked to make recommendations to the Olive Grove Owner on the best plan for managing the grove, producing a quality oil, and minimizing green house gas emissions under five different scenarios.


Monday, October 17, 2016

Presentation at Bowdoin College: The Chemical Story of Olive Oil and its Health Benefits


Professor Pat O’Hara 

September 30, 2016


Olive Oil is a substance that has been processed and consumed by humans in the Mediterranean region for millennia.  Today, olive oil is a found around the world including Brunswick Maine, where the nearest olive tree is more than 1000 miles away.  Still, the Mediterranean region, particularly Spain, remains the major supplier of oil to the rest of the world.  What is it about the molecular composition of olive oil that makes it distinct from other types of fat/oil such as corn oil, butter, or canola oil?  How are we to read the labels, and what are the chemical differences in oils labeled as “extra virgin” or “pure” or “light?”  Is this important to the quality of the oil?  Why has the American Heart Association characterized extra virgin olive oil as a “heart healthy oil” and recommends consumption of about 4 tablespoons (60 ml) per day?”  Why do some people say that the oil should not be used for frying?  What are scientists doing to help consumers by identifying fraudulently produced oils or oils that might no longer be extra virgin.  We will explore these and many other interesting questions and find out that, as in many things, the answers lie in an understanding of the chemistry of the oil.

Patricia B. O’Hara is the Lisa and Amanda Cross Professor of Chemistry and has been at Amherst College since 1983. Her current research is in biophysics, where she and her students use fluorescence spectroscopy to detect macromolecular dynamics and function. Most recently, she has expanded her interest in food science, developing a course in Molecular Gastronomy and writing and teaching about Olive Oil Chemistry.  She served Dean of New Students at Amherst College from 2010-2014. She and her husband Rich spent the 2014-2015 academic year exploring the production of olive oil around the Mediterranean and in the Southern Hemisphere.  Their upcoming book, “The Chemical Story of Olive Oil From Grove to Table” will be available in 2017 from the Royal Society of Chemistry Press. 

Saturday, September 24, 2016

Finally - The Summer World Olive Press Newsletter

For Spacious Skies.....California Olive Production

It didn't take much urging from early reviewers of our book for us to be convinced that our knowledge would be more complete if we visited olive groves and producers in the United States.  While olive production in the US is growing and today, groves can be found in Texas and several southeaster states, it is the state of California that is the center of the olive industry "stateside."

So it was that we dedicated two weeks to travel to CA in June and visit 10 different olive centers, from small organic groves such as Grumpy Goats in Capay Valley to massive California Olive Ranch near Chico.  We traveled up and down the Central Valley and learned about water rights and regulations and innovative milling processes and the diversified wine/oil estates.  There we found as we have always found on every continent we have visited, wonderful people happy to share their olive oil knowledge with us.  We were so glad we went and you can read about all of this in our newest post.

While we were already out in California, we were lucky enough to be able to take the Sensory Evaluation of Olive Oil Workshop at UC Davis.  This four day course showed us how tasters are trained and how a panel's taste responses are honed by repetition and consultation.  It was an amazing course - well worth it and now, Rich and I are indeed "CERTIFIED" as having taken the class.  Note that we are not certified as tasters or certified as having PASSED the class, but yes, we certainly did take it and enjoyed tasting what felt like close to 500 different oils over the four days.  

Apologies for the delay, but getting our book to the publishers at the end of July and then preparing for Fall classes took precedence.  We hope better late than never.

You can get the newsletter here.




Friday, September 9, 2016

August 1: The Chemical Story of Olive Oil is submitted and our Book is in Production!

Midnight August 1:  Rich has just pressed "SEND" on the zipped file containing our ten chapters, the 190 images, the cameos, and references.  The files are so large, that the Royal Society has a special website devoted to the FILE TRANSFERS necessary for this book project.  We watched as the seconds ticked by until we got the "SUCCESSFUL TRANSFER" screen that told our book has been submitted!!!

Despite bombings in the Istanbul airport and an attempted coup, we worked with almost daily conversations and hourly emails with Zeynep across in Turkey, and finished on time.

A BIG HUGE THANK YOU to all of our reviewers, who gave us important feedback on a tight schedule and without a stipend, and photographers, whose generosity in freely sharing their images, time and talent, and our cameo people who reviewed our vignettes of them and their lives and provided important corrections and better images, and even to the people whose work we hoped to include, but the space limitation precluded our adding them.
Our acknowledgements list about 150 people.


Our recuperation began with a quick drive up to New Hampshire to visit our youngest daughter, Becca, at her job as an Assistant Camp Director.  Then, we headed out to Cape Cod, presented a talk to Amherst College alumni at a luncheon at the Eastward Ho! Private Golf Club in Chatham.  We spoke on "Tales from the Grove" our olive oil story, and did a tasting with about 40 attendees.  Alumni were excited to taste the oils we has assembled from many of the places we had visited on our travels.  When I got to the section on cardiovascular health, and remembering I was in a crowd of Amherst College alumni, I made a point to ask how many in the audience were cardiovascular physicians or surgeons.  Three alums shyly raised their hands but gave me a thumbs up.  I was doing good!  Phew!  Later, we relaxed with some peaceful walks along Nauset Beach, ate some amazing fish at Freddie's Fish Shack on the bay, and got a wonderful night's sleep at Ship's Knees in Orleans.

Back home for a day, then headed north to Maine for a week long Mission trip with our church youth group.  Later, we enjoyed some really welcome family time with our Denver duo of Sarah and Julia before the semester descended upon us.  We found that it was just a short hop from our family cottage on Owasco Lake to the Anyelas winery on Skaneateles Lake in the Finger Lakes Region of New York. 

So, with September staring us down, syllabi had to be prepared, class lists set up, and labs directed and life is back to normal (?)



Friday, July 1, 2016

July HIghlights: Closing in on the Book Submission Deadline

We are both happy and frenetic in our efforts to submit our final manuscript to The Royal Society of Chemistry for "The Chemical Story of Olive Oil: From Grove to Table" by July 31.

In an attempt to fill the giant gap in our knowledge about California olive oil producers and meet the good people at the UC Davis Olive Oil Center, we spent 14 days in June taking the Olive Center's Sensory Analysis Course and visiting a random sampling of 10 different groves and producers from the Mega producers such as California Olive Ranch and boutique producers such as Grumpy Goats and everything in between.

Reproduced below to whet your whistle:  The book cover for our soon to be released masterpiece, by the way, Rich took the cover art photograph in Turkey.  Let us know if you want to get an alert when the book is available.


Friday, January 22, 2016

World Olive Press in the News....

Followers of this blog may be happy to see that a summary of our sabbatical project on olive oil has been published yesterday (1/21) in the Keene State College online magazine.  You are welcome to take a look:
http://www.keene.edu/news/stories/detail/1452716284347/

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Where can I buy olive oil I trust?


We've had a lot of friends write to ask us about sources for olive oil that is authentic and not rancid.  The 60 minutes expose of fraud in the industry that aired Sunday night (1/3/16) certainly has consumers worried.  http://www.cbsnews.com/news/60-minutes-overtime-how-to-buy-olive-oil/

I've copied here a response to one friend that might be useful to others who want to know more:
"Yes, it is true that bad, leftover, rancid and leftover oil from the Mediterranean is often dumped in the US where it is thought consumers won’t know any better.
Here is a website from Tom Mueller, author of Extra Virginity,  that documents the best and worst of oils available in the US.  I trust Tom. http://extravirginity.com/2012/09/toms-supermarket-picks-quality-oils-good-prices "