Extra-virgin olive oil has overtaken Perelló olives and Torres crisps as the “present du jour” to take to “trendy” dinner parties, said Arabella Bowes in House & Garden. The trend is being driven by the “sober curious movement”, especially at this time of year as more people look for Dry January gifts.
With around 1,600 olive varieties and “thousands of flavour profiles”, there is plenty of choice. But with each bottle lasting up to six months, an olive oil’s provenance is becoming more and more important. People are “demanding” to know “what ingredients have gone into it, where the olives were grown and who’s behind the brand”.
“Extra-virgin olive oil is now a cultural marker of taste,” Delli’s Octavia Pendrill-Adams told The Telegraph. The bottles look great on kitchen shelves and the oil is so versatile in cooking. “Premium, pretty and, crucially, ethical brands” have become a “status symbol for our pantries”, said Elinor Griffin, oils buyer at Waitrose.
I recommend treating extra virgin “like seasoning”, Katia El-Fakhri, co-founder of Glug olive oil, told The Telegraph. Use it to finish a salad or a pudding, “tasting as you go to judge the balance”. The paper’s reviewers found Glug’s Evoo For Drizzling, £16 for 750ml, “grassy, refreshing and a little appley”.
Those who “aspire to be on MasterChef” should also check out the Evoo from Two Fields Zakros, £18.50 for 500ml, said Chloe Mac Donnell in The Guardian. A top-notch brand, it is “used by restaurants including Primeur in London, Sargasso in Margate and The Pig hotel group”. |