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Olive oil is good for you. It is leagues ahead of every other type of plant oil bar perhaps coconut oil. That being said, the olive oil supply in the US has many issues.

Firstly, the types of olive oil -

Extra virgin olive oil: the highest quality oil and the first batches that come off of the press. Also the best for you.

Virgin olive oil: still high quality, comes from the second press of the olives. Still good for you. Does not taste quite as good.

Olive oil: decent, better than seed oils but inferior to most things that are not seed oils. Comes from further processing of the raw olive fruits.

Lampante olive oil: a byproduct from pressing low quality or already heavily processed olives. Rancid and nasty. Not purchasable from grocery stores, but it's important to know what lampante oil is.

Refined olive oil: goyslop-ified olive oil. Overly processed standard olive oil.

What to watch out for when buying olive oil:

Imports from Europe. Several companies (which have not been caught by police yet) will cut ev olive oil with either inferior olive oil or even lampante, or seed oils, and then bottle it for import to the United states. This is particularly a problem in Italy because of the mafia, but has happened in the past with spanish olive oil before too. Know what you're looking for. Real Imports from italy should have everything down to the farm that it came from listed on the bottle by italian law. Spanish Imports must still have the nation and region of origin listed as well. Dubious "italian" olive oil in a plastic bottle that says nothing is probably adulterated.

A safe bet is buying American produced olive oil in glass bottles. It's not the greatest olive oil, but you can trust that it's real because it has to pass through a lot of guidelines that Imports don't.

Another point: plastic bottles. Real evoo usually comes in glass (unless it's in bulk, in which case it does oftentimes come in large plastic bottles). This is true for Europe as well as america.

The taste test: the best way to be 100% sure is to taste it. If it tastes like nothing, it's fake, it is cut with slop. Spanish olive oil should taste fruity and nutty, italian olive oil should taste vegetal and herbaceous (I don't remember what American olive oil tastes like, sorry, but I would 100% guarantee that it does not taste like nothing).

And, if you want to be even more sure, put the oil in the fridge. Vegetable oil stays the same thickness, olive oil will become more viscous. Some say that it has to harden completely like butter to be real olive oil, but this is not true. The problem with this test is that it can only detect oil cut with seed oils, it cannot detect olive oil cut with inferior olive oils.

Stay away from gosylop.

Furthermore, I consider that Israel must be destroyed
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35 comments:
10
fvckface on scored.co
1 month ago 10 points (+0 / -0 / +10Score on mirror ) 1 child
Olive oil is good. Animal fats are arguably better.

Canola oil is an industrial lubricant. No shit.

Seed oils cause inflammation in the brain and demonstrably contribute to brain disease. Full stop.

The cure is to eat more wild-caught seafood. Especially salmon, shrimp, crab, lobster, clams, and any other seafood rich in omega-3 fatty acids.

Flaxseed and walnuts are also sources with high ALA which is a type of omega-3 fatty acid.
GoldenInnosStatue on scored.co
1 month ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror ) 1 child
japs are pretty healthy for two reasons: eating lots of fresh fish

2: eating lots of seaweed

most people don't realize this but seaweed is actually a superfood, it contains an absurd amount of iodine and iodine does the opposite of flouride

americans should increase their consumption of seakelp, esp the boomers.
pepesp on scored.co
1 month ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror ) 1 child
don't forget that they deworm twice a year out of principle, it's a common thing to do with over the counter stuff
GoldenInnosStatue on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
yeah, i have a steady supply of wormwood at hand

i also drink concentrated ginger juice, shit pretty much sanitizes your whole throat and stomach
TallestSkil on scored.co
1 month ago 6 points (+0 / -0 / +6Score on mirror ) 2 children
>cut

You want the bottle to say “single source, cold pressed” to avoid this. It may not say single source; in this case, look for the country of origin, which is legally required anyway. If it *only* says one country as the source of the olives, there you go.
devotech2 on scored.co
1 month ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror ) 1 child
Cold pressed is a bit complicated, at least here in Europe. Olives that are picked for processing in the winter physically have to be heated up to about summer temperatures to get oil out of them (because olive oil thickens in the cold), which means that they are not technically cold pressed even if they are not heat processed to physically extract it. You cannot wait for the olives to get to room temperature naturally either, because then they will make inferior oil. This is especially a "problem" with olive oil produced in northern italy, France, or northern Spain. But all of southern Europe still gets too cold in the winter to technically cold press olives. Therefore, bottles of oil here will almost never have this labeled, and this is instead used for cold pressed seed oils.

But the olive growing regions of Europe are incredibly weird about the production of it anyways, I have been to olive farms before and it is almost always "cold pressed"

California, which grows most American olives, on the other hand, is almost never cold and has a constant "mediterannean" climate, unlike Southern Europe. So this does apply for American oil.

I believe that there is a difference in definitions too. In europe, "cold pressed" means that oil comes from nothing that was heated at all. In america I believe it means that the oil has to have not been heated specifically as the method of extraction, and over a certain temperature.

Furthermore, I consider that Israel must be destroyed

GloboHomoErectus on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
If I'm buying a big brand here in Europe I'm buying De Cecco or Monini, they both never disappoint. Although obviously it's factory scale production and buying from a small farmers cooperative will basically always be better, but more expensive and only seasonally available before they are sold out.
devotech2 on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
If you ever want to get a lot of good cheap oil, a trip to one of the big olive producing regions is a good idea. Puglia in Italy, Jaén in Spain, Messenia in Greece, near Toulon and Marseilles in France.

Of course olive oil doesn't justify an entire trip, but if you ever find yourself wanting to tour around then you can buy really good olive oil in bulk from these places. Plus there's not much of a worry about quality, national law in all of these places are extremely tight assed about the oil (this is also why the mafia resorts to adulterating exported oil)

Furthermore, I consider that Israel must be destroyed
GloboHomoErectus on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
One thing I would stay away from is Spanish mass produced oil, it's notoriously of bad quality, and always try to get a sample of something before you buy in bulk, I've been burned buying something people have said was of good quality but I was very disappointed.
devotech2 on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
That's the gist of anything mass produced. Spain just makes the most supply in the entire world (twice as much as the next biggest producer) so there's a whole lot more of it. You cannot pay attention to quality when you are pursuing quotas and quantity.

I respect Greece and France for that reason because they sell almost nothing and consume about 90% of the olive oil they produce. I can barely even get Greek or french olive oil in spain, another region of the mediterannean (it is easy to get italian oil here though). I can imagine that it hardly even exists in America, which is why I never even mentioned them.

But still, the biggest producing regions in spain became that way for a reason. The small producers there are still some of the best in the world, and I say this being well educated, because I have had EVOO from almost every country that produces it (besides Israel. I will not purchase an Israeli product)

Furthermore, I consider that Israel must be destroyed
Butttoucha9k on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
Except that can also be a lie which is the primary issue with olive oil.

Olive oil, honey, and maple syrup are BILLIONS of dollars in counterfeiting/aldulterating.

ImBillCurtis on scored.co
1 month ago 3 points (+0 / -0 / +3Score on mirror ) 3 children
Good luck finding olive oil that was not extracted using a benzene derivative LOL.

Stick to animal fat only.
Xachariah on scored.co
1 month ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror )
Anything certified by the USDA as "Extra Virgin Olive Oil" needs to be mechanically extracted only without Hexane.

So even your basic Kirkland brand EVOO, which is cold pressed, doesn't have the chemicals you're worried about.
Knight_Of_Saint_John on scored.co
1 month ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
Is America really that jewish that they'd need solvents on a fucking fruit oil???

Just squeeze the fucking olives, its not fucking seed oil
GoldenInnosStatue on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
you must be confusing with seed oils, olive oil extraction does not need to use petrulem solvents for its extraction

unless of course, there is some new jewry i'm not keenly aware of?
x79q3pb on scored.co
1 month ago 3 points (+0 / -0 / +3Score on mirror ) 1 child
Should add in here for those who might not already know, DO NOT fry with EVOO. Use it for low or no heat dishes, like pasta sauce, drizzles on salads and bread. For frying, use coconut oil (it will be hardened if it's any good unless your house is a furnace, use a spoon).
devotech2 on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
Frying is fine if it's below smoke-point. If it's above smoke point you would probably be burning your food anyways. Standard olive oil also has a higher smoke point and is a bit more resistant to frying at higher heat and I have seen people deep fry with standard quality olive oil before (I think this is the domain of lard, though). I saute with olive oil about every day, if you accidentally burn the oil it will taste disgusting, so it's easy to tell when it's past the smoke point.

Furthermore, I consider that Israel must be destroyed

ImBillCurtis on scored.co
1 month ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror ) 1 child
Frying oxidizes the fat which destroys the lipids and creates an inflammatory response in your body. It’s not good for your body.
devotech2 on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
Olive oil is significantly more resistant to oxidation than vegetable oils are (well, technically not, but vegetable oils are literally already oxidized when you buy them). It *has* to hit the smoke point to oxidize, and as I said, it has to get really hot to hit that smoke point, too hot for any reasonable person to cook 99% of things anyways (unless you're a retarded ape nigger that cooks everything on high) And this is EVOO. Medium quality olive oil (labeled as simply "olive oil") has a high enough smoke point to deep fry with.

EVOO's oxidation point is about the same as butter (yeah, butter oxidizes)

Furthermore, I consider that Israel must be destroyed
ImBillCurtis on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
I’ll stick with animal fat as we were created for. But do you.
Knight_Of_Saint_John on scored.co
1 month ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror ) 1 child
I buy my olive oil in tin containers that come by the liters which specify the olive cultivar, the acidity rating and the place of harvest

To me its the ideal way to consume olive oil because jewmarket slop is both overpriced or riddled with fakery

And yes, real olive oil solidifies when put in the fridge so all my olive oil is genuine

You know, i haven't had any spanish cultivars in literally years, any cultivars you'd recommend for those who enjoy oil that is spicey and herbal?
devotech2 on scored.co
1 month ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror ) 1 child
>And yes, real olive oil solidifies when put in the fridge so all my olive oil is genuine

It does, but it depends on how cold your fridge itself is. If your fridge doesn't get that cold, it'll just get thicker. Compressors in fridges that are old or fridges with any kind of blockage, or even just different models that suck aren't going to get cold enough usually to solidify it like butter. A lot of people actually have fridges that fucking suck, which is why i put that disclaimer there. What makes it even more complicated is that cultivars are all very different from each other so some will harden at higher or lower Temps than others because of varying amounts of wax, but all of them should at the very least get *more* hardened at low temperatures.

The taste test is legitimately less subjective than the fridge test. Olive oils have very specific flavor profiles and those flavor profiles are strong, always. Weak EVOO does not exist. If it has a weak flavor, it is definitely cut with either refined olive oil or seed oil. If it has a sour and rancid flavor, it is cut with either lampante oil or the bottle was just in storage for too long and went rancid, the date of expiry should tell you which one is the case. If you have a way to report it to the Italian police though (this almost always happens with italian oils, more often than others), they will get absolutely fucked for it. Yes, it is taken very seriously by the italians. Hidden adulterated oil is actually a lot more rare than it used to be, but a lot of companies find loopholes with US and Italian laws to hide whatever its mixed with as much as possible (like the finest technically legal print possible, etc).

>spanish cultivar

My favorite is Lechín which is grown in Sevilla, Córdoba, and Cádiz mainly. It's quite pungent and strong. Picual is the most common variety and you've probably had it before without noticing, it's likely in the olive oil you eat, similar to Lechín but less intense. Good flavor, but I'm used to it. Arbequina is rather sweet and fruity and also strong. Hojiblanca is quite good and is also grown in Andalucia. Lastly I'll mention Royal olives, which are grown specifically in the mountains of Cazorla in Jaén. The olive oil from these olives is considered one of the best in the world, but it's also one of the most expensive. It has no bitterness at all and is lightly sweet and doesn't have much fruitiness, slightly peppery aftertaste.

Furthermore, I consider that Israel must be destroyed
Knight_Of_Saint_John on scored.co
1 month ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
>taken very seriously by the italians

Italian oils are riddled with kikery

They imported the olives from poverty stricken shitholes like Tunisia, process it in one of the southern cities like Bari or Taranto

And its dogshit quality, i'm certain kikery is involved since southern Italians are defacto niggers and jews

If you're buying Italian olive oil, make sure it comes from Liguria or Lake Garda regions

It is MILES superior to the Messina crap they peddle in the south

Or cut the nonsense and get yourself a Greek source (essentially Italians but with less judaism)

Rodian oil is by far the best your money can buy and they sell it right outside the walls of the city for like 16€ a liter (tin can)

I'd like to know more about Royal olives, are they like Kalamata? And how much would a liter cost me?
GoldenInnosStatue on scored.co
1 month ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror )
Now these are the kind of effortposts i want to see on the ConPro

and yes, goyslop americans are missing out on that mediterranean gold

i fry everything in olive oil, chicken, beef, mushrooms it has the right consistency and delivers heat evenly

plus the herbal peppery taste of a proper Kalamon with truffles ascends any regular dish into a meal fit for the Gods

unfortunately its pretty hard to find Kalamon olive oil these days, but i have my sources... and i'd like to keep them private for the sake of supply...
AnotherAlt on scored.co
1 month ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror ) 1 child
The best olive oil ive purchased was imported from greece. The italian shit is run by the mafia and is adulterated
devotech2 on scored.co
1 month ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
In america it is, because it's easier to skate by laws with Imports in both italy and the US. Though, a caveat, stricter american and italian laws are making it harder for the mafia to do this. In europe and Italy proper it's not and this is highly illegal so it isn't something that anyone wants to risk, don't shit in your own backyard as the saying goes. In northern Europe you do get olive oil "mixtures" but they have to make it obvious that it's adulterated slop by law. In southern Europe this isn't a thing that happens.

Furthermore, I consider that Israel must be destroyed
revtreynine on scored.co
1 month ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror )
Costco has some really good affordable ones for cooking and it's the only oil we cook with now. Even smash burgers I get no smoke, just throwing some on a pan and spreading it around with a paper towel.

For stuff you are dipping bread in, there are more expensive options. That is where to spend a lot of money imo.
GloboHomoErectus on scored.co
1 month ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
Keep your olive oil in a dark place, never on the counter in a clear bottle! Any light at all oxidises olive oil which is why you should only buy it if it is bottled in something completely opaque like a green or brown bottle. If you are buying in bulk it will always come in 5 liter metal tins which obviously let in 0% light.
eyehealth on scored.co
1 month ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
You heard about them inoculating Olive trees with microrysal fungi? The level of polyphenols were off the charts. Check out Ralf Utterpohls videos on it it's amazing.
deleted 1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
deleted 1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
PolandCanIntoSpace on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
Just wanted to add that olive oil often comes in metal containers too. I remember when I was last in italy we bought a couple of 5 liter juggs and it was in rectangular metal containers.

We then pour it into glass bottles. Drop in a few cloves of garlic in one, a few chili peppers in another (how many and what kind is up to you - i've even used ghost peppers). Rosemary is also good. Let it sit about a week like that. This is less of a problem with garlic and chili since it just sinks to the bottom but whatever you add has to be submerged in the olive oil or else it will start getting moldy.

The best i've had was Greek. Croatian wasn't very good. French was OK, Italian was OK.

I can't speak to what is available in north america or what it actually looks or tastes like by the time it gets there.
cosmicscrotum on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
I like to rub it on my dick. It's grown two inches in the last seven years.
deleted 1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
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