
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In the previous episode, Carl Ipsen explained how the EU regulations for extra-virgin olive oil include tasting notes, and that if an oil has any of the forbidden flavours, it cannot be classified as extra virgin. So I was very surprised to read (in an issue of Edward Behr’s Art of Eating newsletter) about oils being produced in Provence that go out of their way to develop some — but not all — of the EU’s “defects”. Just as with modern extra virgin, these old-fashioned oils rely on up-to-date equipment and the skill of the miller.
In this episode, the paradox of old-fashioned modern oil.
Huffduff it
By Jeremy Cherfas4.9
5757 ratings
In the previous episode, Carl Ipsen explained how the EU regulations for extra-virgin olive oil include tasting notes, and that if an oil has any of the forbidden flavours, it cannot be classified as extra virgin. So I was very surprised to read (in an issue of Edward Behr’s Art of Eating newsletter) about oils being produced in Provence that go out of their way to develop some — but not all — of the EU’s “defects”. Just as with modern extra virgin, these old-fashioned oils rely on up-to-date equipment and the skill of the miller.
In this episode, the paradox of old-fashioned modern oil.
Huffduff it

91,297 Listeners

43,837 Listeners

32,246 Listeners

30,609 Listeners

26,242 Listeners

14,353 Listeners

6,188 Listeners

1,107 Listeners

259 Listeners

6,467 Listeners

113,121 Listeners

14,969 Listeners

3,563 Listeners

3,624 Listeners

16,525 Listeners