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Did You Know That Wednesday


By Sweet Basil (Visit website)





Do you use olive oil or veggie in your cooking?



We are big fans of olive oil. It's healthier and I love the fruitiness. I buy cheaper olive oil for pan grilling etc where taste doesn't matter and I use better quality olive oil when flavor matters like in pasta caprese or salads etc where you are definitely going to taste the oil.



Please don't use olive oil to fry things. Really. It burns faster than say canola or especially peanut oil. Now, you can use it to pan fry etc, but if want the temp to get a little higher you may want to throw in a little butter.



Here are just a few facts about olive oil. (I've "bolded" my favorites. You're welcome ;)





*The olive tree is native to the Mediterranean, where olive oil has been an important part of life for thousands of years.





*In Ancient Greece, women applied olive oil to their skin and hair
after bathing as protection from the elements and to maintain a pleasant
fragrance.









*The women of Ancient Greece created eye shadow by mixing ground charcoal with olive oil.





*Dead bodies were often anointed with olive oil to mask the smell.







*During training and competition, Greek athletes slathered their naked
bodies in olive oil and a light dusting of sand in order to protect
their skin from the sun and to regulate body temperature.


After training or competition, the athlete would then scrape the oil,
sweat, and sand from their skin with a tool called a strigil.






*Hippocrates called olive oil "the great therapeutic."





*In Ancient Rome, pregnant women applied olive oil to their skin to
prevent stretch marks. Many woman today still follow this practice.





*In the Bible, King Solomon pays for wood to build his temple with olive oil, wine, barley, and wheat.





*Castile soap made from olive oil is believed to have originated in
Castile, Spain (the territory was known then as the Kingdom of Castile).





*Christopher Columbus introduced olive oil to the Americas in 1492.
Olive oil was unavailable in the United States until Italian and Greek
immigrants began importing it from their home countries.





*Olive oil is technically a fruit juice rather than an oil. The
olives are pressed to release their juices just like an orange or a
lemon be pressed.






*Extra virgin is the highest quality and most expensive form of olive
oil. It comes from the first pressing of the olives. It is the least
acidic and has the fruitiest flavor.






*Spain is the world's largest overall producer of olive oil. Italy is second.





*Greece is the world's largest producer of extra-virgin olive oil.
Italy and Spain come in second and third in the extra-virgin race.





*Greece consumes the most olive oil per capita. Spain, Italy, Tunisia, and Portugal also top the per-capita consumption list. 





*Italy exports more olive oil to the United States than to anywhere else.





*There is an International Olive Oil Council (IOOC) that creates
quality guidelines, guarantees authenticity, and promotes olive oil
around the world.





*The United States, unlike all other countries that produce olive oil,
does not recognize the guidelines of the IOOC. The U.S. instead goes
by USDA guidelines and recognizes four grades of olive oil: Fancy,
Choice, Standard, and Substandard.





*Because the IOCC regulations don't have any meaning in the United
States, U.S. olive oil producers can slap the "extra-virgin" label on
any old oil, even if there aren't any extra virgins in it.(I so wish this was done differently)






*Olive oil is high in healthy monounsaturated fats.



 It has a 10:1 ratio of fatty acids: 10% Omega-6 and 1% Omega-3 fatty acids.





*Olive oil has 5mg of flavenoid polyphenols for every 10 grams of oil.
These polyphenols are natural anti-oxidants that can prevent heart
disease, lower cholesterol and blood pressure, and reduce the overall
effects of aging.









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