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Note from Donna:
When it comes down to it, oil is necessary.
You need it to make hormones, to stabilize
moods, to keep your cholesterol down and for
overall health. Without it, our bodies won’t
function properly and more importantly, when
we leave it out of our diets, we never
really feel full, which leads to overeating
and needless calorie consumption.
Unfortunately, we can’t trust the oils that
are out there because of manufacturing
processes that eliminate all the goodness
from the oils and leave only the fat. Below
is an article from Raymond Francis that
outlines some of the dangers, do’s and
don’ts of buying and consuming olive oil. In
addition, there is an article on the
Elikio olive oil
site that is also helpful. |
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If you have any other brands that you enjoy and have
researched for quality, please email me at
donna@donnamartini.com so we can share with others.
Olive Oil
Scandal
REPRINTED FROM
BEYOND HEALTH® News
by Raymond Francis
Here
is a scandal in the olive oil industry,
and if you use olive oil, you need to
know about it. It's always advisable to
substitute healthy olive oil in place of
the toxic refined oils typically
available in the supermarket. Here is
the problem: not all olive oils are
created equal. Only real olive oil will
provide all the health-promoting
benefits of olive oil, and trying to
find real olive oil is like looking for
a needle in a haystack.
Olive oil has been part of the human
diet for more than 5,000 years.
Millennia of human experience as well as
modern research indicate that olive oil
is beneficial to health, and can safely
be included in our diet. In fact, olive
oil has been singled out as a key
contributor to the health of the Greek
centenarians. To preserve the same
health benefits that these Greeks
received, modern oil must be produced in
a manner that does not damage the oil's
nutrients.
Unfortunately, most commercial olive oil
is processed in a manner that damages
its nutritional content, and this is
only the beginning of the problems with
it. Most of the olive oil on the market
today does not duplicate what our
ancestors were eating, and frequently
people are not getting what they think
they are buying. Almost all olive oil is
processed and diluted in ways that
result in the loss of nutrients, which
are essential to health. Olive oil is
almost unique among the oils, in that it
can be consumed in its crude form
without refining. Not refining the oil
has the benefit of conserving the
vitamins, essential fatty acids,
antioxidants, and other nutrients. The
powerful antioxidants, in real extra
virgin olive oil are beneficial to
health and protect us from damage caused
by free radical oxidation.
Cell membranes contain fatty acids that
are highly susceptible to free radical
damage. This damage produces lipid
peroxides that can kill the cell. Real
olive oil contains antioxidants (polyphenols,
vitamin E, and other natural
antioxidants) that prevent this type of
damage. Numerous studies show that olive
oil reduces cholesterol, lowers blood
pressure, inhibits platelet aggregation,
and lowers the incidence of breast
cancer. Because it is so rich in
antioxidants, olive oil appears to
dramatically reduce the oxidation of LDL
cholesterol, thereby preventing heart
disease. These same natural antioxidants
also add to the stability, shelf life,
and flavor of the oil.
Historically, high quality olive oil,
rich in antioxidants, was easy to
obtain, but not any more. Today, high
quality oil is almost unobtainable. One
has to seek out the small family-owned
farms, where the oil is literally
produced in ways similar to the Greeks
and Romans. On these farms, organic
olives are picked by hand so as to not
damage the skin or pulp. They are
transported in well-aerated containers
and milled within 48 hours of
harvesting. Before milling, leaves and
twigs are removed; the olives are
washed, dried, and then crushed. The oil
is separated from the olive paste
without the use of heat, hot water, or
solvents, and it is left unfiltered, as
filtering also removes many nutrients.
The first pressing produces the best
extra virgin oil.
Producing olive oil the old way is more
time consuming and expensive. The costs
of harvesting by hand, to protect the
fruit from damage, are astronomical, but
necessary to making good oil. The
increasing demand for olive oil has
moved production toward automation and
mass production. Modern factories
extract more oil more cheaply, but their
processing methods substantially reduce
the nutritional quality of the oil.
To reduce costs, olives are machine
harvested along with leaves and twigs.
Olives that have dropped on the ground
are often mixed with the good ones. They
are shipped in all kinds of containers,
many of which are poorly ventilated, and
heaped in large piles. (Here, olives are
stored for too long and often become
moldy.) The oil is then extracted in a
continuous centrifuge while hot water is
used to help separate out the oil.
Antioxidant polyphenols are soluble in
water and are washed away in this
process, thereby lowering the shelf life
and the nutritional quality of the oil.
Italy alone produces 800,000 cubic
meters of waste water per year from this
process. Because substantial amounts of
antioxidants are washed away, factory
produced olive oil has a short shelf
life of only months, whereas real olive
oil lasts for two to three years.
Most people think that by purchasing
extra virgin olive oil, they are
guaranteed of getting the best quality
oil. Not so! Almost all the "extra
virgin" olive oil on the market does not
supply the nutritional value and
healthful properties that we have a
right to expect from olive oil. A major
criterion for grading olive oil is its
level of acidity. Extra virgin oil
should have a free oleic acid acidity of
no more than one percent, whereas
ordinary virgin olive oil can have an
acidity of up to 3.3 percent. Lower
quality oils can be diluted or refined
to bring the acidity down so they can be
labeled as extra virgin. But now the oil
has been adulterated, and that's not
what you want. The "extra virgin" label
is no guarantee of quality. Most of it
has been processed in ways that reduce
its nutritional value. To complicate
matters more, the term "extra virgin"
has no official meaning in the United
States. The U.S. is not a member of the
International Olive Oil Council. So
olive oil sold here can be labeled
"extra virgin" without meeting the
accepted international standards.
Nowhere does it say that "extra virgin"
olive oil has to be made 100% from
olives. Soaring demand for olive oil has
outstripped the available supply. Very
simply, more olive oil is sold than is
produced. Manufacturers often dilute the
olive oil with other oils. This may be
the biggest food fraud of the 20th
Century. Investigators have gathered
evidence indicating that the biggest
olive oil brands in Italy, Bertolli,
Sasso, and Cirio, have for years been
systematically diluting their extra
virgin olive oil with cheap,
highly-refined hazelnut oil imported
from Turkey. Despite the fact that
details of this scandal have been
published in Merum, a Swiss-German
magazine, and in Italian journals such
as Agra Trade, and the newspaper
Gazzetta del Mezzogiorno, this
information has been successfully
suppressed and is known to only a
handful of people. International arrest
warrants have been issued and seized
documents indicate that at least 10,000
tons of hazelnut oil is involved. As
much as 20% refined hazelnut oil can be
added to olive oil and still be
undetectable to the consumer.
In 1996, a study by the FDA found that
96% of the olive oils they tested, while
being labeled 100% olive oil, had been
diluted with other oils. A recent study
in Italy found that only 40% of the
olive oil brands labeled "extra virgin"
actually met those standards. Italy
produces 400,000 tons of olive oil for
domestic consumption, but 750,000 tons
are sold. The difference is made up with
highly refined, nut and seed oils. Less
strict guidelines make the situation
even worse in the United States. Like in
Italy, more oil is "produced" in
California than there are olives
available. The difference is made up
with less expensive oils such as corn,
soy, and sunflower. The problem is these
other oils have been refined. The high
temperatures of the refining process
change the molecular structure of the
oils, making them toxic.
This is scary stuff when you consider
how extremely important oil is to human
health. Our modern chronic disease
problems are the result of, in a short
period of time, fundamentally changing
our diet. One of the most fundamental
changes has been the type and the amount
of fats and oils that we consume. The
mass-consumption of refined and
hydrogenated oils has proved to be a
disaster for human health. Hydrogenated
oils have been implicated in both our
cancer and heart disease epidemics. All
modern processed oils are toxic and
injurious to human health. To reverse
our pandemic of chronic disease, we have
to return to eating a more traditional
diet, and high quality olive oil can
safely be included in that diet. It's
not so much the case that olive oil
should be added to the diet as it is
that healthy, real olive oil should be
used to replace the unhealthy, processed
oils now being consumed.
How does one ensure that they are eating
the most healthful oil? Find an extra
virgin olive oil that is cold pressed,
unfiltered, and looks cloudy. Factory
produced olive oil looks clear. If it's
clear, it has been filtered which
further reduces the nutritional quality
of the oil. Real olive oil is not
filtered and looks cloudy. The oil
should be packaged in dark glass bottles
to protect it from the damaging effects
of light. Real olive oil is still
produced in small estate bottled
settings. The challenge is to find one
that does it all right.
After selecting the oil, it has to be
stored properly. When properly stored,
real extra virgin olive oil can last two
to three years. Because of processing,
most of the extra virgin oil on the
market has a shelf life of only a few
months. A good rule of thumb is to
purchase oil in small bottles and
consume it within a year of purchase;
this will also ensure getting the best
flavor. Store the oil away from both
heat and light. Storing in a dark place
is important because exposure to light
causes reactions that destroy the oil
thousands of times faster than just
oxygen alone. During storage, olive oil
oxidizes and undergoes a slow,
continuous, and irreversible
deterioration until it becomes toxic and
inedible. Oxidized (rancid) oils should
never be consumed.
The bottom line is that modern,
factory-produced olive oil has been
stripped of its health-enhancing
nutrients, and the task of selecting a
high-quality oil has been made very
difficult. That's why Beyond Health has
made the selection process easier for
you by providing its own olive oil. We
have found a source that meets our
strict standards. The oil is produced on
a small family farm in the Central
Valley of California. Their olives are
grown without pesticides. They are hand
picked from the trees, carefully washed
and dried, and milled with a stone wheel
within 12 hours of harvesting. The paste
is then pressed in a hydraulic press,
and the oil collected in stainless steel
vats, decanted, and bottled to our
exacting specifications. This first cold
pressed oil is the genuine stuff and
retains all the natural flavor and
goodness.
Beyond Health Olive Oil is
available at 800.250.3063 or online at
www.beyondhealth.com.
Raymond Francis is an M.I.T.-trained
scientist, a registered nutrition
consultant, author of Never Be Sick
Again and Never Be Fat Again, host of
the Beyond Health Show, Chairman of the
The Project to End Disease and an
internationally recognized leader in the
field of optimal health maintenance. He
spent four months researching the
scandal in the olive oil industry and
studying olive oil chemistry and
production methods. Finding an olive oil
he could recommend took several more
months.
Reprinted with permission from:
Beyond Health® News
Subscriptions: Call 800-250-3063
website:
http://www.beyondhealth.com
email: mail@beyondhealth.com
Copyright 1998, Raymond Francis
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