New Recipes for the wonderful NOVELLO!

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Posted on : 20-12-2011 | By : OlioVerde | In : Appetizers, Gabriella Becchina (GaB), Maria Vano (MaV), Novello, Olive Oil, Recipes, Side Dishes, Vegetarian

SICILIAN ORANGE SALAD — A simple, yet refreshingly wonderful recipe for any time! Serve as an appetizer or side-dish

(Serves about 6)

Toss 3 thinly sliced, peeled, pitted, sweet oranges (Washington Navel, e.g.) and 1 freshly shaved fennel heart into a bowl. This slicing style is preferable if serving this dish as an entrée. If served as a side-dish, you should choose to dice all ingredients in small cubes, which, in terms of texture and flavor combination, also works wonderfully.

Drizzle a generous amount of Olio Verde, sprinkle with freshly ground sea salt and black pepper, and bits of brine-cured green olives or dry-cured black olives (not pizza-style black olives!). Add a touch of vinegar (preferably Sicilian balsamic, of the Laudicina brand*, available in the USA via Attavola.it). Add toasted Sicilian pine nuts (not Chinese ones, though Californian are good too).
Last but not least, if so inclined, add slices of brined herring or red, fleshy salt-packed sardines (not oil packed sardines, nor anchovies) with a sprinkle of just squeezed lemon juice.  And… now truly last, if pomegranates are in season, consider sprinkling a few ruby red seeds over your salad for an extra touch of health and beauty. ENJOY!

 

* Here’s some recent information regarding retail locations for Sicily’s only vinegar, and one of the world’s best vinegars…in our modest opinion!

  • Shop: Dorothy Lane Market – 6177 Far Hill Avenue Dayton Ohio
  • Shop and restaurant: Il Buco – 47 Bond Street New York
  • Shop: Arvella Imports – 710 N. Van Ness Ave Los Angeles California
  • Shop: Sickles Market – Little Silver New Jersey
  • More here: http://www.condiaroma33.it

 

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PASTA AL VINO E OLIO NUOVO  – first course

(Serves about eight)

This is a recipe borrowed from Chef Celsa Carissimi and her good friend Marco Gargiulo, both from Genova. It is a Ligurian traditional oil mill recipe, quickly put together over a fire by the frantoio… once upon a time.

Pour 1 bottle of GOOD white wine in a deep nonstick pan or pot. Preferably use anything but chardonnay, and nothing sweet… think fruity and acidic, dry and mineral… say inzolia, cataratto, grillo (here depicted: Barraco’s biodynamic monovariatal Cataratto from Marsala, less than an hour away from us - www.vinibarraco.it). Add 1 peeled whole clove of the freshest garlic and, if no fresh laurel of bay leaf is available, then 2 dried bay leaves, and 1 generous pinch of sea salt (yes, we are partial to Sicilian Trapani sea salt). Start on high heat, and add 1.5 to 2 lbs of dry pasta from the start (choose a Ligurian cut such as trofie, or strozzapreti, or Sicilian busiate; or a large, short cut such as Neapolitan paccheri or pennone, or a long flat cut such as candele or festoni www.rustichella.it is our favorite in terms of easily located, high quality pasta, worldwide).

Cooking it like you would a risotto, allow it to simmer, and add at least 2 tbs of Olio Verde Novello (a spicy fresh-pressed olive oil with personality is what you want) and gradually more white wine (another bottle may suffice) until all of it is absorbed by the pasta. In other words, you keep tasting the pasta for texture and add only as much liquid as needed for the pasta to reach an al dente stage, at which point it is done. Do not oversalt while cooking, given that at the end you will add a cup of grated semi-aged pecorino and parmigiano cheese to season. Toss vigorously and finish with 2 more tbsp of Olio Verde Novello and quite a bit of freshly ground black pepper. Remove clove of garlic and bayleaf before serving. Enjoy as hot as possible! Drizzle some more Olio Verde Novello on pasta while serving to keep it from sticking.

- GaB & MaV

Tom Mueller’s new book “Extra Virginity” about fraud and olive oil

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Posted on : 12-12-2011 | By : OlioVerde | In : Books, Education & Training, Fraud, Gabriella Becchina (GaB), Olive Oil, Regulations, USA, Web

“Naturally the honest people are getting terribly undercut,” he says. “There’s a huge unfair advantage in favor of the bad stuff. At the same time, consumers are being defrauded of the health and culinary benefits of great olive oil.”

To download PDF article (exerpt of the book) click here Stampa – Losing ‘Virginity’_ Olive Oil’s ‘Scandalous’ Fraud _ NPR

Link to the original article: http://www.npr.org/2011/12/12/143154180/losing-virginity-olive-oils-scandalous-industry?sc=fb&cc=fp

 

And the best article on the question, to date, by Nancy H. Jenkins, on the state of olive oil today, from a commercial point of view: http://nancyharmonjenkins.com/posts/eternal-question-reliable-olive-oil/

 

- GaB

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fresh, spicy olive oil on your hands? Try seasoning black bread…

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Posted on : 12-12-2011 | By : OlioVerde | In : Appetizers, Gabriella Becchina (GaB), Maria Vano (MaV), Olive Oil, Vegetarian

PANE CUNZATO, our daily snack in Castelvetrano.

Source one pound of hearty, rustic, sourdough bread (like Castelvetrano’s unique Pane Nero made with rare Tumminia & Russulidda durum wheat or the French Pain Poilâne, which both have a shelf-life of 4 and more days). Substitute with Ciabatta bread which, of course, always works.

Warm the bread in the oven, whole, then remove and slice in half lengthwise. Plate. Scatter 2 chopped garlic cloves on it, 3 to 5 diced cherry tomatoes (remove seeds). Add ½ cup shaved pecorino primo sale (use fresh goat cheese if you can’t find Sicilian primo sale or tuma), preserved sardine filets (flesh should be as pink/red as possible). Drizzle generously with Olio Verde Novello, sprinkle flaky sea salt, and grind black pepper over it. Finish with a dusting of oregano (green, not grey one).

A note on salt: Hold the salt in case you are using salty cheese and salty sardines. Do not hold the salt if you realize you are not using either. Salt brings out flavors, if in measure. Sea salt is best, and we cannot but be partial to our local Trapani or Mozia sea salt (think Flamingo on the packaging, or picturesque windmills, but plain, cheap Stallone-un-branded salt out of a plastic bag works great too…. if in Sicily, a must-buy!).

- GaB & MaV

Omelette with chard, what would it be without Olio Verde?

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Posted on : 12-12-2011 | By : OlioVerde | In : First Courses, Gabriella Becchina (GaB), Olive Oil, Side Dishes, Vegetarian

On this year’s Olio Verde Novello 2011 necker, the producer suggests the following recipe:

Omelette with chard, of the kind that grows wild in the olive grove, orchard and veggie garden at Tenuta Pignatelli.

The variety of chard needed is a tender, small-stalked leafy green which can be reddish at times (Swiss chard is close), known in Italian as “bietola da foglia” or “erbetta”; or substitute with young spinach. Locally another wild, sometimes cultivated green of old days is making a come-back: bitter chicory (cicoria), the third, skinny leaf depicted in the middle of the picture below. Do not add chicory to the sweeter chard in this frittata recipe, nor to sauté together in the pan as a side-dish. Only combine both when preparing a delicious detox soup which we will post the recipe for shortly.

Separate and rinse about 3 to 4 handfuls of stems (if using organic vegetables, soak in water and 1 tsp baking soda to allow for any “visitors” to come floating up to the surface, scooping them away). Place the dry-spun greens into a hot skillet, in which you will have poured at most 1 tbsp Olio Verde, 2 or 3 peeled and halved garlic cloves, and a piece of medium-hot, preferably fresh chilli pepper, only minutes earlier (don’t allow the garlic to brown though, and watch out for splatter). Sprinkle with sea salt. Cover and let greens wilt over medium heat. Sauté to make sure all leaves are cooked. Remove the vegetables from the pan and add them to a bowl with 6 to 8 fresh, beaten eggs and ½ tbsp Olio Verde (no worries if a bit of sautéing juice falls in too). Mix and pour back into a hot skillet over low heat. Cover and flip halfway through cooking. Or, to avoid the flipping hassle, pour batter into a cast-iron pan or cake mould and place in oven at medium-heat on the lowest rack. Serve warm or at room-temperature. Also makes for a great sandwich filling when cold…  - GaB

Some truth about olive oil, on national TV today!

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Posted on : 04-12-2011 | By : OlioVerde | In : Education & Training, Gabriella Becchina (GaB), Olive Oil, Regulations

TV show today on our Valle del Belice products, including some truth about OLIVE OIL

 

…circa minuto 30′ a 38”

…(in Italian, translation coming up soon) from about minute 30′ to 38”

 

- GaB

How do we produce Olio Verde al Limone… and why? “LEMON NOVELLO” just in from the 2011 harvest!

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Posted on : 04-12-2011 | By : OlioVerde | In : Gabriella Becchina (GaB), Lemon, Novello, Olive Oil, USA

When considering the market introduction of our new, food-Oscar winning Olio Verde al Limone, there is little one can say to chefs, home cooks, journalists, retailers, who respond that they do not care much for “flavored” olive oil. They are mostly right to think badly of such items. Plus, why meddle with their conception, since quite often, they are already happy consumers of our “classic” Olio Verde (without lemon) which has achieved a ton of success, garnered worldwide recognition and appreciation, but still needs as much consensus as possible to keep growing. Why push its lemon-scented twin… never mind how excellent it too is.

Well, the question however begs to be resolved. The general take on flavored olive oil, amongst gourmets and the culinary world’s top palates, that it is bad, is based on the same misunderstanding as once upon a time beliefs that olive oil had to be heavy, not suited for cooking, good only to relieve a Mediterranean culture’s nostalgia for its pre-immigration past.

Firstly, Olio Verde al Limone is produced by Gianfranco Becchina in a unique way. Nobody else manufactures flavored olive oil in the manner he does, and still very few produce olive oil in general following the same exacting principles. Both products, Olio Verde and Olio Verde al Limone are the fruit of one man’s invention. And to diffuse any doubts once and for all, his flavored olive oil does not entail any infusing or adding of incongruous elements to the pure olive oil base… Therefore, no alteration is involved.

Why, to start from the beginning, is the flavored olive oil “category” perceived as risky by many olive oil aficionados and connoisseurs? Aromatized olive oils, as they are called in Europe, have in fact served the dishonest purpose of covering up the imperfections of less than pristine olive oils, of old, irregular, expired ones, in need of resuscitation as it were.

Olive oil, especially the “extra virgin” grade, already has more lives than a cat, as it is, given that over 95% of e.v.o.o. labeled products out there have undergone more tampering, cutting, extending, cleansing, deodorizing, recoloring, reflavoring, reshaping, remarketing than recycled plastic or any petrol byproduct! When lucky, in most cases, you get less than 1% real extra virgin olive oil in a batch labeled as such… that’s how bad things are… and flavored olive oils are more likely to be on that wrong side of the fence than regular olive oil. The consumer fraud quotient is higher too, given that extra flavor is often falsely considered as added value, so that the product can be sold for even more than the non-flavored version, for no good reason at all, and at the total expense of gullible, of un- or misinformed customers.

Inauthentic olive oils, let us clarify that, whether passed as top-grade (extra super premium virgin) or fancily flavored with white truffle bits and the likes, are not worth anyone’s wallet nor time nor tastebuds! However, few notice when an olive oil is true or not. Such is the sad state of the olive oil market, in producing countries and internationally. Despite increasing consumer awareness, and actions on part of exporting countries’ customs cracking down on the fraud, the situation isn’t currently getting any better. And farmers who supply millers, bottlers, packagers and resellers with bulk product, and as opposed to the latter, aren’t making a living from the production of olives, no matter how artisanal (read: better quality yet costlier because less cost-efficient production) or industrial (read: south of Spain, South America, Australia’s hyper mechanized setups) the method employed. It’s the market’s inability to recognize, evaluate, absorb the product that is the cause, not production logistics and costs! More customer education is needed, honest marketing and laws to stop the 95% fake olive oil distribution.

So why, would one be tempted to ask the producer of the classic, food-oscar winner Olio Verde (yes Becchina has won 2 such awards), why mess with customers’ already fine-line perception of a product’s purity, by creating a twin product, Olio Verde al Limone attached to a commercial category generally viewed as dubious?

Well, for one, Becchina loves a good challenge. Even flavored olive oil can be produced right!

In 1989, with his first olive oil, the classic Olio Verde, Becchina set new standards in olive oil production. They remain unmatched to this day. Sure, there are other methods, other philosophies out there, but come visit Tenuta Pignatelli in October, witness the harvest and production, and compare, and be the judge of it yourself. He has created expectations in chefs and home cooks that no one dared to dream of in the days of buttery (as in heavy), refined (as in laundered), nutty (as in close to rancid) olive oils. He introduced green, fresh, fruity and cookable (yes, you can’t cook with olive oil unless it’s authentic AND fresh). He also happened to have been born in the land of one of the world’s best olive, the Nocellara del Belice. The grandest olive, only from Sicily. It is unlikely he would have come up with his personal take and innovation on the product had he not grown up in that context, being five years old and seeking warmth amidst the piles of rotting olives in the days… Of course not.

The same motivation and conditions brought about Olio Verde al Limone around 2007. Becchina’s olive grove is also interspersed with lemons of a fantastic variety, the Femminello: 3000 olive trees and 700 lemon trees, growing in the richest of clay soils, with plenty of water, nourishment, and attention. Trees which Becchina refused to cut down, despite the lacking commercial outlet for its fruit, since Europe’s citrus markets are monopolized by the Spaniards, and Sicilians say of lemons that they have such little value that “They throw them at you!” when you go buy them. However, lemons, such as olives, as understood by Becchina, have huge potential, despite being widely underestimated by farmers and by the industry alike. Their day will come, but until then, most Sicilian lemons are abandoned, a small percentage  harvested only to go into maceration for the manufacturing of essential oil. At local food markets, the retail price on the street is inferior to €0,50/kg (between 10 and 15 pieces). Compare that to €0,50/piece for Spanish lemons and €1/piece for Sicilian lemons at select London, Paris, Zurich or NY stalls.

Becchina had long been producing his much admired house recipe of Green Limoncello Liquor, and Gabriella, his daughter, had been serving guests her own very personal take on Green Lemon Marmalade pairing it with cheeses, ricotta, breads, yogurt, using the Tenuta Pignatelli fruit, but with five crops a year, no way the sales of limoncello and jam would ever take up all of the production. This was leaving fruit to sit unpicked as a decorative frame for the olive grove’s visitors, who’d find themselves invited to pick as many as they wanted to accompany them on their further journey through Sicily, filling their bags, suitcases, cars, vans, buses, with lemon and lemon blossom scent.

So in 2007 Becchina decided to try and apply his lemon peeling technique to olive oil making, just for the fun of it. One day before the end of the harvest and the pressing of his olives, he announced that everyone would be needed in the kitchens the next day to help peel off the thin zest of thousands of lemons picked that same morning. And so it was, amongst moans and raised eyebrows, office and farm staff proceeded to the task and that afternoon, Becchina added the lemon zest to the olives being crushed. The result was outstanding right off the bat. Two years later the product was being distributed across the world. And in 2010 it won another Sofi Award in NYC.

For the sake of completing the experiment, Becchina did try and infuse lemon peel in some olive oil over a couple of days at room temperature, to see what that would taste like. And sure enough, it tasted wonderful. But was the biochemical and microorganic makeup of an infused olive oil going to be as stable and safe as the extraction of the essential oils from the fresh fruit peel at the same time as the oil was being extracted from the olive fruit, in the mill, via crushing, malaxing and spinning? Two oils being extracted together, from the olive fruit and from the lemon zest – there couldn’t possibly be a more genuine, simple, direct technique.  - GaB

Current Production Underway!

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Posted on : 17-10-2011 | By : OlioVerde | In : Distribution, Gabriella Becchina (GaB), Maria Vano (MaV), Novello, Olive Oil

 

OLIO VERDE NOVELLO 2011 — “Novello”, when used to describe olive oil, refers to its distinctive flavor, and color and textural characteristics, within the first two months of the first day of olive harvest and pressing. As in our previous harvests, this year’s Novello is showing:

 

 

  • Color: bright green (think wheat field in the Spring)
  • Nose: very grassy & fruity (green banana meets freshly mowed lawn)
  • Palate: full, slightly bitter, with a spicy kick along the backside (like raw artichoke and freshly picked baby fava beans)
  • Finish: long and delicately peppery
  • Texture: light and smooth (almost weightlessly silky)

 

A few thousand bottles are currently being prepared of this freshly cold-pressed gorgeous and delectable nectar, ready to be shipped worldwide!

 

 

 

Distribution sources in the US and ASIA:

 

Manicaretti.com (USA) – info@manicaretti.com – tel. 1800 7999830

 

Mercato Inc. (Japan) –  maiya-mercato21@aioros.ocn.ne.jp

 

- MaV & GaB

Olio Verde Novello 2011

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Posted on : 13-10-2011 | By : OlioVerde | In : Maria Vano (MaV), Novello, Olive Oil, Tasting Olive Oil

The anticipation of the first fresh-pressed Olio Verde for 2011 . . .

This morning I tasted the eagerly-anticipated extra-virgin olive oil from the first harvested trees … and it was worth every minute of waiting! Sitting down to my small cup, I gazed into its bright lime-green color, swirled it around and was rewarded with a huge burst of aroma – I felt I had just dropped down into a field of freshly-mowed grass. As I sipped, I was presented with a smooth, silky texture on the palate … best of all was the surprise of a bold, peppery finish that stayed with me for a few moments.

On my second pass, after letting it sit for a moment, the nose was slightly lighter, while still grassy and earthy. On the palate it was still silky with a long, slightly less peppery finish.

I am excited to use this first fresh-pressed Olio Verde Novello in my dishes tonight!

The first of Olio Verde’s 2011 Novello harvest are being bottled, labeled and prepared for immediate shipment to our distributors worldwide. -MaV

New E.U. Law Does Little To Protect Olive Oil

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Posted on : 15-04-2011 | By : OlioVerde | In : Alicia Masciulli (AM), Olive Oil, Regulations

Nocellara del Belice olives have been growing in western Sicily since it was colonized by the ancient Greeks thousands of years ago, but it wasn’t until 1989 that someone thought to make an olive oil made from 100% Nocellara olives to put onto the market. Why? The answer is quite simple: The olives are too good. There are  over 600 olive varieties growing in Italy, and the Nocellara del Belice olive is one of the top 3. It is huge as far as olive proportions go, round like the walnut, or rather hazelnut after which it is named and has a flavor and crunchiness that is very hard to beat. There are companies all over the world who want to buy these olives to sell whole, cracked, marinated, in brine, for martinis, etc. and they are willing to pay good money for them. Why, then, would you press them into olive oil? Olive oil is so much easier to disguise.

If you tried to sell these companies a bunch of bruised, overripe, half-oxidized olives, they would take one look and decline. You need olives that are beautiful to see, big, green, round, fleshy, and full of flavor, just like Nocellaras, to sell. Those bruised, overripe, half-oxidized olives? They very often become olive oil. And not just plain old olive oil, but also olive oil labeled as “first pressed”, “cold pressed” and “extra virgin”…because that’s what they are…technically speaking. Who’s to know? Who can tell? “Cold pressed” just means that the temperature during pressing didn’t rise above 80°F (27°C) and “first pressed” means that the olives were pressed by mechanical means, instead of extracting the oils using chemicals, “Extra Virgin” means that the acidity level in the oil is 0.8% or lower (easily doctored by additives or blending). All are very important, but alone, they don’t make the oil quality. What about the olives themselves? First, cold pressing needs to be paired with a high quality olive, correct harvesting methods and time frames and proper storage. It sounds like a lot, and maybe it is, and that is what most olive oils companies out there are counting on: the fact that seeing “cold pressed” is enough for you to put it in your shopping cart and take it home.

At Olio Verde, we remain true to the best and most natural ways of making extra virgin olive oil, but sadly, most olive oil producers do not. There are many ways to “get around” the tedious and costly production process and still slap “extra virgin” on the bottle that we could go on forever. But today, we would like to call your attention to only one of them, the most recent.

One of the ways of doctoring and olive oil’s organoleptic characteristics is known as “deodorizing”. When an olive oil is made with olives that have begun the fermentation process, due to damaged fruit or too much time between the harvest and the pressing, they produce an oil with an unpleasant taste and smell, along with a higher acidity level. These faults would not allow the oil to be called “extra virgin”, and as a result, the oil gets “deodorized”. What does that mean? Well, the process of deodorizing does exactly what the name implies, it rids the oil of these unwanted characteristics so that it can then be blended with a small quantity of high quality extra virgin, allowing it to pass as the real thing (at least in sensory tests).

But there is one substance that olive oil producers cannot get rid of when dealing with inferior quality olive oil: alkyl esters. These are the compounds present in olive oil as a result of the fermentation process. They cause the production of methyl and ethyl acids and free fatty acids from triglycerides. A high level of alkyl esters will still be present in the oil’s chemical makeup, leaving a trail of evidence. A simple test will reveal the levels present in the oil, and, subsequently, the quality of the oil.

The European Union passed a law that went into effect on April 1, 2011, which authorizes the sale of “extra virgin” olive oil with up to 75 milligrams of alkyl esters per kilo of olive oil. The problem is that a high quality extra virgin olive oil made using the correct methods, will only have about 10-15 milligrams of alkyl esters per kilo of oil. This new regulation allows for much more than that amount! In short, this new regulation allows inferior quality olive oil to have a premium name. Furthermore, it does nothing to discourage olive oil companies from producing low quality olive oil and using unethhical and dishonest methods! Basically, it’s legal to call an olive oil “extra virgin” if its acidity level is 0,8% or less and its alkyl ester level is no greater than 75 milligrams per kilo, but it doesn’t matter if the oil is within that range naturally or if it’s been doctored to the high heavens!

To be anywhere near an acceptable amount, it would have to go down to 30-40 mg per kg, but, then again, for an extra virgin to have an truly acceptable acidity level, the percentage would have to go from 0,8% to 0,4%…a 50% decrease! So the E.U. has done here what they previously did with the acidity level: make it higher than it should be, but not so high as to cause an all-out scandal. After all, less stringent regulations allow for the most European producers possible to fit into the extra virgin category, thus helping Europe’s income. I guess some limit is better than no limit at all, as it was before April. At least now the European Union has a way to analyze oil and minimize (somewhat) fraud.  - AM

Esca’s Dave Pasternack Mentions Olio Verde!

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Posted on : 18-03-2011 | By : OlioVerde | In : Acknowledgements, Alicia Masciulli (AM), Olive Oil, Restaurant, USA, Web

Famous chef Dave Pasternack of Mario Batali’s New York City restaurant Esca mentions Olio Verde in his favorite way to prepare tuna fish. Check it out:

esca chef mentions OV in Food&Wine