Embrapa tests Moroccan olive tree cultivation
By Isaura Daniel,
Translated by Gabriel Pomerancblum,
Approximately one year ago, the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa) planted 40 different types of olive trees in the Brazilian semi-arid. The seedlings came from eight different countries, including Morocco. In 2008, they should begin bearing fruits, which will attest to the viability of olive planting in the country.
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Chicken with Olives & Lemons
Bubba ordered this wonderful dish our first week in Italy and never saw it again on a menu. He loved the salty olives baked with the succulent chicken, so it was up to me to recreate it for him! You will need a large covered casserole dish. I use chicken breasts, but any bone-in pieces would work well.
Fun Facts about Olives
Olives appear in one of the earliest cookbooks ever discovered, a 2000-year-old text by a Roman named Apicius.
Olives were so revered in Biblical times that it is said that Moses granted olive growers an exemption from military service. Traditionally, olive oil was the oil burned in Hanukkah lamps. The earliest Olympic flame was a burning olive branch.
Carvings of olives appear on pharaoh’s tombs in the pyramids of Egypt.
Traditional Chinese Medicine uses olive soup as a sore throat recipe—the only occurrence of the olive in Chinese cuisine.
The conventional canned “Black Mission” olives are actually green olives that have been cured with lye, which changes the color to black. (This is not true of canned Black Mission olives at Whole Foods Market.)
Governments have begun to grant Controlled Designation of Origin to olives, just as with fine wines and cheeses. Thus, only the olives produced in Kalamata, Greece are permitted to carry that name.
For thousands of years the olive branch has been used as a sign of peace and goodwill. This may be partly due to the fact that in early cultivation of the olive, it took decades to bear fruit for harvest, and, therefore, it was believed that anyone who planted olive groves was expecting a long and peaceful life. The symbolism is also likely related to the Biblical story of Noah’s Ark and the dove.
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Curing Kalamata Olives
Kalamata olive curing process
From Chris Smith,
Developed by Basil Papahronis,
- Pick olives when their color is red to purple and the texture is still firm. Avoid olives on the ground, unless they’ve just been knocked there for picking ease. Minimize bruising by collecting olives in buckets containing water and not by knocking them to the ground.
- Rinse and clean olives with fresh water. Discard leaves, stems and any partially eaten (pecked by birds) olives. Also discard any prune-appearing olives (usually the result of dehydration) because they will result in a mushy olive after processing.
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New Hopland olive press in operation
By Ben Brown,
The Daily Journal
Although picking and processing may be winding down among the county’s grape growers, for the growing number of farmers who have dipped into the olive market, the season has only just begun.
At Olivino, at the foot of Duncan Peak in Hopland, where a new olive press has been installed in time for the harvest, olives grown locally and across the state are being processed into oil.
Olive picking begins in late October and will usually continue until December, said Yvonne Hall of Olivino.
On Thursday, Olivino was pressing olives from a grower in Healdsburg and olives grown by Real Goods founder John Schaeffer.
The Olivino press can process olives one of two ways. After being washed and destemmed, the olives, with pits, can be ground by three large granite wheels that turn on a granite base.
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