TRUTH IN OLIVE OIL - OIL FRAUD
Please check
before you purchase olive oils.
As much as two
thirds of the high quality olive oil we buy and maybe even more is NOT what it
says on the bottle.
We're being
duped into paying premium prices for a poor quality product that may contain
little or no olive oil at all.
And even if it
does, it likely won't be of the quality you think you're paying for.
A book
published late last year lifted the lid on the great olive oil scam but it's
been known for years that, knowingly or unknowingly, the people who sell the
stuff to us may be offering a phony product.
For example, a
report produced in 2010 by UC-Davis found that more than two thirds of common
brands of extra virgin olive oil being sold in USA were nothing of the sort.
Sellers of
inaccurately labeled oil included one of the biggest names in grocery retailing
in the US, though there's no suggestion the store chain knew of the deception.
In fact, of
the dozens of stores whose sales were analyzed, only six were selling the
genuine product.
There are
actually hundreds of varieties of olives but only a few main classifications for
olive oil, including:
-
Extra virgin, which is literally the "juice" of freshly picked olives. It is produced by pressing or a low heat process but, importantly, does not use chemicals of the type employed in the refining of other oils.
-
-
Virgin olive oil, produced the same way but comes from riper olives or a second pressing, though it is still wholesome.
-
-
Blends -- sometimes referred to as "light" or "pure." That they may be, but they include "refined" olive oil, which usually means some or all of it has been chemically processed.
-
-
Poor quality oil, known as "lampante," using the Italian word for lamp oil -- considered unfit for human consumption -- which may be derived from old, rancid olives, often ones that have been lying on the ground for some time, and likely has been chemically processedIn fact, lampante often turns up in olive oil mixtures. But, if the oil is phony, it's just as likely to contain mainly a cheap seed oil like sunflower oil..
Just last
year, two Spanish businessmen were jailed for selling supposed extra virgin
olive oil that was, in fact, 75% sunflower oil.
WWW.SCAMBUSTER.ORG
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