About Olive Oil

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Extra virgin olive oil has become such a symbol of healthy eating that it is hard to believe that it was once accused of increasing the harmful cholesterol. It was fat, so it had to be bad for us. Fortunately, we left those times behind, and now olive oil and most fats are much better understood.

The main reason olive oil is healthy is that it is rich in healthy monounsaturated fatty acids. About 75% of that monounsaturated fat is oleic acid, which is stable even at high temperatures. Moreover, our body processes oleic acid easier than other fatty acids.

Secondly, organic extra virgin olive oil also contains high levels of antioxidants like phenols, and vitamins E and A, which fight free radicals and thus prevent premature aging. Those antioxidants help neutralize the oxidation process, common to all fats and preserve the properties of olive oil too.

So, the fact that olive oil can resist oxidation at higher temperatures much better than seed oils makes it the safest vegetable oil for frying.

Many in the non-Mediterranean industrialized countries feel uneasy when a Mediterranean recipe calls for frying in olive oil. Frying is an old cooking technique that is very popular in Mediterranean cuisines, and it is as much an integral part of the healthy traditional Mediterranean diet as consuming raw olive oil with bread and salads.

Some olive oil tips for the kitchen

When heated up, olive oil expands in volume, and food absorbs less than other cooking oils. Therefore, you need a smaller quantity of olive oil.

If it didn’t burn in your frying pan, you could reuse olive oil up to three times. Some say even five times, but I personally never use it more than twice.

Olive oil transmits flavors between foods, so never fry the meat in olive oil you used to fry fish and vice versa. My grandmother always kept a jar for fish and one for meat next to the olive oil bottle, which is the best way not to mix flavors.

Finally, olive oil looks thicker than other vegetable oils, but this only appears as, contrary to popular belief, it has no more calories than sunflower oil, for instance.

Olive oil for your health

In the 13th century Arnau de Vilanova, a doctor of the Catalan royal family, already realized that a moderate intake of olive oil enhanced the body’s vital functions. In the 20th century, the late American doctor, Ancel Keys MD, documented that the olive oil-based Mediterranean diet reduces the risk of cardiovascular disease.

We see that contemporary research has confirmed what the Mediterranean people knew and practiced intuitively.

Heart disease is the Achilles’ heel of modern societies living at a frantic pace since Dr. Keys and his followers realized that we in the Mediterranean have better cardiovascular health. The first medical studies on olive oil focused mainly on that area.

They proved that olive oil balances cholesterol levels reduces the risk of a heart attack can play a role in the prevention of arteriosclerosis and fights high blood pressure.

Later, research was extended to other areas like digestion, cancer, and diabetes. The results have been very positive; olive oil usually comes through with flying colors.

One study concluded that with only two tablespoons of virgin olive oil daily, you can begin to experience the health benefits that the Mediterranean people have enjoyed for so long. Incorporating it naturally into your eating practices is simple.

How to integrate olive oil into your eating practices

The easiest way is to get into the habit of drizzling olive oil over slices of bread or toast, consuming it as a dressing for sandwiches instead of butter, and adding it to salads with some salt.

Wherever you go in the Mediterranean, Morocco, Provence, Tunisia, Italy, Greece, Catalonia, Andalusia, or Majorca, you’ll find people eating their combination of bread and raw olive oil.

As a Catalan, I eat pa amb tomaquet, literally bread with tomato, almost every day: as part of my breakfast, as a snack, or, I admit, when I am too lazy to cook dinner. It is the Catalan bruschetta, so to say, and you can prepare it in no time with slices of bread or toast, and both are fine.

Here is the most basic recipe for pa amb tomaquet. Cut a ripe tomato crosswise, rub the bread with one half on both sides, drizzle olive oil liberally over the bread and sprinkle some salt.

You can eat it plain or add any topping and accompaniment you like: prosciutto-style or cooked ham, cheese, tuna fish, an omelet, anchovies, figs, or olives. Even with a chocolate bar for tea or coffee, it may sound weird, but it is delicious.

Other recipes with raw olive oil are authentic allioli, salads with olive oil dressing, cold sauces like romesco, and SOPA de farigola or thyme soup. As the Catalan saying goes, Sopa sense Oli no val un demons Soup without oil isn’t worth a devil, meaning that a soup with no oil is junk.