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Old November 19, 2016   #1
heirloomtomaguy
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Default Anyone Love Olive Oil?

I thought yall might like to see how I made olive oil for the first time. I did not use a store bought press but rather my own poor man press. It worked really well and was super easy. Here in Southern California olive trees are like citrus and avocado trees.....they are on every corner. I found a couple dozen trees in a Parkway where no one lives....virtually no man's land. I picked these trees since I did not have to ask permission before harvesting the olives. Now I do not know how to tell the different varieties of olives apart but these particular olives were leaching oil hanging on the tree. The trees were loaded so harvesting get was a breeze. We filled a 5 gallon bucket in around 2 hours. Below are pics and descriptions.
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Old November 19, 2016   #2
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Here we are harvesting the olives. We shook the trees, used a rake, and picked them in order to get them out of the tree. In the second pic my son is doing his best to catch them falling from the tree with a bug net.
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File Type: jpg 20161022_140612-1328x747.jpg (496.2 KB, 79 views)
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Old November 19, 2016   #3
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When we got home we used our farm style sink to wash the olives. The kids loved getting to swish all of the olives around in the sink. This is where we picked out sticks and leaves.
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Old November 19, 2016   #4
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Here is one part of my press I scored for a few bucks. I drilled holes in the bottom so the oil can collect in the bottom of a bigger stock pot that was used to catch the oil.
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Old November 19, 2016   #5
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First things first I had to blend the olives into a mash pits and all.
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Old November 19, 2016   #6
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Next I put the mash into my wife's kitchen aid mixer for 30 minutes. This causes small droplets of oil to collide with other small droplets. Doing this creates larger droplets that start to pool up on top of the mash. You can really see this in action in the second pic.
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Old November 19, 2016   #7
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To someone from a northern climate that is quite amazing to see olives growing on a residential street in suburbia. I pictured them growing in scenic groves in villages in the hills of Greece.
Helpers is a bonus too!

I dip toast in garlic flavored olive oil from Costco all the time. I scramble eggs in olive oil. My DR says I have enough good cholesterol to sell off some of it. Of course I have plenty of the bad stuff too as I am not perfect when it comes to the drive thru. I also buy olive oil mayonnaise and margarine. I bet fresh is to die for!

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Old November 19, 2016   #8
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You probably have the fountain of youth in your mixer. How long does it keep?


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Old November 19, 2016   #9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by greenthumbomaha View Post
You probably have the fountain of youth in your mixer. How long does it keep?


- Lisa
Not quite sure yet but I would imagine it keeps the same or longer than store bought oil. Mine did not sit in a warehouse, then on a shelf for months before buying it.
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Old November 19, 2016   #10
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Keep shaking those trees. I use about 75 liters a week.
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Old November 19, 2016   #11
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It will get better in 3 to 6 months.
I imagine they are mission olives.

Get some more and cure them in salt water enough salt to float a fresh egg.

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Old November 20, 2016   #12
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That's very cool! As you know, we lived in Corona. There is an olive oil company in the Temecula old downtown that has their own orchard that they produce from. So delicious! There is a guy up here in So Oregon trying to grow an olive orchard and produce oil. We do have a Mediterranean climate in this area but it does get cold in the winter. He's in a really iffy place but he has been successful so far. But all it will take is a real good cold snap to kill those trees.
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Old November 20, 2016   #13
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Very nice process you have. I am an avid fan of extra virgin olive oil and use it for almost everything. I love olives too with balsamic vinegar and feta cheese. Have U tried just eating the olives?
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Old November 20, 2016   #14
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Thanks for sharing.
I have a theory that if it's too cold for olive trees it's too cold for humans, yet still stuck in zone 6.
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Old November 20, 2016   #15
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Gardenboy, from what I've heard fresh olives are very bitter. As Worth suggested you have to brine - essentially pickle - them to make them edible.

LOVE good olive oil, so I am quite jealous, HTG. Thanks for the tutorial.
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