Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Dodgy geezers

The life of the olive mill owner is one which is cast in shadow as they is invariably cast as an untrustful character.

They will 'cook' your olives so as to extract more oil in which case they get paid more for the milling. They have a secret pipe that siphons off your oil during the process or they are just don't pay you. These are amoung the kinder ones.

This is an oft repeated conversation between olive growers this time of year as one of the stock conversation pieces is "and what mill did you use"?

Monday, November 29, 2010

It's done

We picked the final few trees today so we have finished the 2010 harvest.

The trees are now bereft of their fruit and so the grove after having been full of trees laden with fruit only a month ago now looks bare with the trees somewhat bedraggled after having their fruit stripped from them.

Friday, November 26, 2010

What type are they?


Here we have the three different types of olive that we are picking from the Casa Margherita grove. From the top we have frantoio, moraiolo and leccino and the picture does reflect their different sizes.

These are the traditional Umbrian varietals and our grove is 95% moraiolo with the rest made up of the other two.

We are getting itchingly close to finishing picking - we only need another days picking but the weather is poor with lots of rain.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

What to wear!

What to wear for the market this weekend. My lucky yellow olive oil selling trousers are finally hors de combat and so I have to find something to replace them with.

I have recently bought a red lumberjack shirt - my mother said I could carry a check - and rather thought this would replace my trousers but it did not cover itself itself in glory last weekend. Maybe I should give it second chance..

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

La resa

One of the key moments when you are having your olives pressed at the Frantoio is when they tell what your resa is. This is the yield of oil in kilos compared to the weight of olives you have had pressed. This can be a matter of pride or of quiet reflection if it is low.

I have had yields from 13 to 18% which reflects the different times of picking and pressing. The higher yields are from the most recent pressing when the fruit was all ripe.

Other regions will have very different yield levels. I was speaking to someone from Tuscany the other day and he spoke of yields around 24% being more the norm.

Cup of tea and a couple of slices please luv

 Mostra Mercato Nazionale del Tartufo e dei Prodotti tipici


Last weekend and this coming weekend is the above market in Valtopina. I was surprised nay amazed at the number of vendors of jams/fruit conserves there were and who were selling an incredible variety of fruit based products. I would not have thought of Italy as a country with such a passion for jams. How wrong I was.

Such is my surprise that I think a little research into the “current European consumption levels of jams and fruity conserves on a by country basis” would not be time unwisely spen
t. 

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Pants

Today it has been pouring with rain so no picking. This was a chance, like many others, to catch up on things that had slipped whilst picking.

For us this included picking up some jeans that Rachel had taken to be altered. Whilst she was doing this I was idling wandering around the shop when some underpants caught my eye - gents I hasten to add.
As is common with quite a few cheaper clothes brands these used an english word together with italian on them. They had "just cavalli' sown into the waistband. Who'd want to wear pants with just horses written on them I thought.

Much better with no english like mine -  with 'caos' written on them.