Tuesday, December 18, 2018

"Mukfaktaki Mucize": the Miracle in the Kitchen: Olive Oil

You all need to check out our own Zeynep Delen Nircan explaining in an interview in Turkey, the Magic of Olive Oil in the kitchen. 
View the show on YOUTUBE and make sure you give it a thumbs up.
 

Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Pat's Interview with Nicole Jolly of "True Food"




I had a lively hour long interview with Nicole Jolly, a journalist and co-director of the Web and PBS TV series "True Food" and  "How Does it Grow."  Nicole is planning on an episode on olive oil and called to see if I could help her make heads or tails of the conflicting information she has received on the authenticity of olive oil and how consumers could avoid fraud.  Her interest is getting information to the consumers about how they can become more educated consumers.

We spoke at length about the need to change the mindset of consumers who think that olive oil is a durable staple like salt or flour with an almost infinite shelf life and for which there isn't much difference between one product or another (salt and flour aficionados will of course protest - but hey - you know what I mean.). She and her film crew are hoping to travel to Andalusia to visit a harvest.

We talked about everything from DAG molecular clocks that give the age of the oil to safe cooking with EVOO and why the literature values for smoke points for extra virgin olive oil vary by almost 100 degrees F.  I referred her to our book - which she ordered while we were talking and we wish her the absolute best of luck.

You can find the webversion of her other shows by checking out the following link:
http://www.howgrow.org/home/

Nicole Jolly of True Food



Friday, October 19, 2018

Olive Health Benefit Symposium at Yale University


Olive oil’s health benefits explored at Yale School of Public Health symposium

From Yale News (university blog for alumni), Thursday, October 18, 2018
by Denise Meyer October 10, 2018

Yale’s Olive Oil and Health symposium drew a deeply invested group to New Haven this month—chefs, growers, importers, scientists, associations of producers, entrepreneurs and business people—to celebrate this amazing fruit juice and begin mapping out a new olive institute at the Yale School of Public Health.
Olive oil is the cornerstone of Mediterranean nutrition and speaker after speaker cited its vital role in better health outcomes throughout the region. Athanasios Panagiotopoulos, the mayor of Delphi, Greece, home to the Delphi Grove, a UNESCO world heritage site, was among the international attendees.

“There is no greater crisis in public health today than diet, diabetes and cardiovascular diseases,” 

Sten Vermund, dean of the Yale School of Public Health, told the gathering in Winslow Auditorium in his opening remarks for the two-day event that begin on October 3. 

An olive oil institute at the Yale School of Public Health would include research in chemistry, and metabolomics to develop assays and datasets to enhance further health research. “We are extremely excited about the interest from around the world in participating in an interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary institute that will fill such an important void, said Professor Vasilis Vasiliou, chair of the YSPH’s Department of Environmental and Health Sciences.

For decades Americans have been told to reduce calories and cut fat, even healthy fat like olive oil. “We are paying a hefty price for that,” said Rafi Taherian, associate vice president of Yale Hospitality. Over the last decade, he has spearheaded a shift toward Mediterranean-style nutrition—rich in vegetables, seafood, legumes and extra virgin olive oil (EVOO), among other staples—in the university dining halls, increasing the consumption of produce by over 40 percent.

The symposium was organized by Tassos C. Kyriakides, an olive oil sommelier and associate research scientist in biostatistics at the Yale School of Public Health and director of the VA West Haven Cooperative Studies Program coordinating center, “It is time to bring together people from all the olive oil sectors to break down silos, open up the olive groves and find ways to support and enhance their work with this amazing fruit and inform future research directions,” he said.

Health benefits
Olive oils that are high in oleocanthals have high profiles for bitter taste receptors and have a peppery affect at the back of the throat. This pungency is associated with many health benefits—a reduced risk for cancer, Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative diseases and added protection against viruses, said Catherine Peyrot des Gachons of the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia. 

In addition to prevention of neurodegenerative diseases, Amal Kaddoumi, a professor at the Harrison School of Pharmacy at Auburn University in Alabama, has found that EVOO increases the activity of the drug donepezil that is used to treat dementia.

Mary Flynn, an associate professor at the Miriam Hospital and Brown University in Rhode Island, has studied the effects of a plant-based olive oil diet since the 1980s. Albeit small in sample size, numerous comparative studies among cancer patients consistently show better weight loss compared to National Cancer Institute diet plans, and when the patients are given the opportunity to self-select which diet to follow for the final period of the study they largely choose the olive oil diet. Her data reflect improved weight, insulin, blood pressure and triglyceride levels. 

By shifting to more plant-based meals on this diet, Flynn also finds that the money saved on groceries ($14.36 per week) not only reduces food insecurity, but also results in weight loss and reduced blood glucose. “Most Americans eat too much protein and that turns to fat,” said Flynn. With the decrease in fasting blood glucose, people don’t get hungry.”

It is time to bring together people from all the olive oil sectors."
 TASSOS C. KYRIAKIDES
Among the natural chemicals that make EVOO such a super food are oleocanthal, a phenolic compound, and elenolide which is associated with lowering hypertension. Exploring the line between food and medicine, Propopis Magiatis, associate professor at the University of Athens, is researching efficacy of medical foods, or nutraceuticals, supplements and drugs—a rapidly growing sector. 

Consumer education remains important in traditional olive oil producing countries, such as Greece," said Maria Kapsokefalou, professor of human nutrition at the Agricultural University of Athens. Consumption of olive oil has dropped 50 percent in Crete since 1960 as the country has shifted from an agricultural to a service economy. Through genomic research, Kapsokefalou’s group is identifying specific healthy properties in cultivars to link quality with the genome.

Industry perspective

Industry representatives agreed that market opportunity in the United States requires further consumer education on health benefits and incorporating olive oil into one’s cooking. After decades of steadily increasing consumption, rates began to decline after a 2010 report on the quality of olive oil from California.

“We have a population in dire need of dietary correction,” said Joseph Profaci of the North American Olive Oil Association in New Jersey. “If 20 percent adhered to the Mediterranean diet, we’d save $20 billion from 10 major health outcomes,” he said. Currently, only 40 percent of American households regularly use olive oil.
Alexandra Devarenne, founder of the Extra Virgin Alliance, said that consumer trust can be restored through better labeling practices, pricing that reflects quality and an increased emphasis on flavor. “People’s souls are also hungry. Olive oil is like wine with its richness of culture and food possibilities,” she said.

For farmers, growing olives is a good way to diversify crops, said Kimberly Houlding of the American Olive Oil Producers Association. Olive trees require far less water than nut trees that are widely grown in regions of the United States and can provide crop diversification to monocultural farms.

In the race to develop EVOO with higher phenolic levels, producers are experimenting with new pressing methods, precision farming and organic practices. Nicholas Netien told the story of Atsas Organic Farm which was founded on abandoned land located in the U.N. buffer zone between the Greek and Turkish controlled parts of Cyprus. Situated in a manmade dessert with no ground water, Netien has concentrated on collecting rainwater, preventing run off and enhancing the soil. Compost, no tilling, and aromatic plants in the fields around the trees have worked to “re-green” the grove. He plans to use olive pits to produce electricity for the farm and introduce a small herd of cattle. The cows will feed on the plants around the trees, and while their manure acts as fertilizer, hoof prints create cavities to hold water.

An industry as large as olive oil is not without a downside. In order to protect the health of the land, control release of polyphenols into the environment, the production and waste products need research driven solutions. 
Demetrios Kouretas, a professor at the University of Thessaly in Greece, has developed a low-cost animal feed containing the pomace of the olive that remains after pressing. Livestock also show the health benefits of EVOO’s antioxidants and it improves their nutrition. Other presenters spoke of the need to preserve heritage groves from pests, disease and fire as well as to document the genetic properties of approximately 1,000 cultivars.

The conference culminated with attendees joining some 250 Yale students for a dinner featuring celebrity chef Michael Psilakis of New York. The dinner was part of Yale’s Hospitality’s Food Conversations series and demonstrated the use of olive oil to enhance and compliment flavors.

The group that convened formed a planning group to work towards developing the mission, vision and structure of the olive institute.

Watch a livestream of the morning session and the afternoon session



Senior Seminar on Olive Chemistry to be Held Nov 7 at GCC

Please come join us for a two hour seminar and guided tasting session at Greenfield Community College on Wednesday November 7 from 2-4 PM in downtown Greenfield.  Trace an olive from its time on the tree through its harvesting and pressing and finally to its appearance as an oil in your kitchen.

The Story of Olive Oil from Grove to Table

Senior Symposia classes are offered to ages 50 and older. Unless otherwise noted, all classes take place at GCC's downtown building, 270 Main Street in Greenfield.

https://greenfieldcc.3dcartstores.com/The-Story-of-Olive-Oil-from-Grove-to-Table_p_1544.html

Saturday, August 11, 2018

Issue 16 Olive Odyssey in Japan

After a two year hiatus, we have had the good fortune to add to our olive expeditions with a trip to Japan.  We were on hand to witness the blossoming of the olive trees on the island of Shōdo in the inland sea of Japan.  While we had seen olive trees in summer, at harvest, and in their winter dormancy, this was our first opportunity to see the delicate white-green blossoms with bright yellow pistils.  Thanks to Toshiya Tada, Chairman and Founder of OLIVE JAPAN/The Olive Sommelier Association of Japan, who helped to set up our visit and to our host on the island, Takeyasu Kubota who was tireless in showing us everything the island had to offer.  Thanks also to the farmers, millers, and scientists who took time out of their busy schedules to talk with us at length about what they saw as their challenges and opportunities.  In the end, we were left with a deep admiration for how the Japanese have succeeded under the difficult conditions of humidity and moisture.

Read further to learn some highlights of the 500 year old history of olives in Japan and how modern day farmers are feeding olive products to cattle and tuna to enhance their products.