Olive Oil Rule No. 1

This Is a Harvest, Not a Souvenir Shop

Petr Balcarovsky

Petr Balcarovsky

Tuscany, Italy

An olive oil mill is where agriculture, patience, and timing meet. You’re stepping into a working system—often run by the same family for generations.

Proper etiquette that sets the tone:

  • Be on time and attentive. Milling runs on hours, not hospitality schedules.

  • Dress practically—closed shoes, neutral scents. Oil absorbs everything.

  • Ask before touching machinery or olives. This is production, not a display.

👉 Respect the process and the mill will open up to you.


How to taste like a local (not a tourist)

  • Don’t dip bread first. Taste the oil alone—small sip, warm it in your mouth.

  • Expect peppery bite or bitterness—that’s freshness and polyphenols, not a flaw.

  • Sniff first: cut grass, artichoke, green almond—not “butter” or “smooth.”

👉 Good olive oil should wake you up.


What to ask (and what not to)

Ask:

  • “When were these olives harvested?”

  • “How many hours between picking and pressing?”

  • “Which cultivars are in this blend?”

Avoid:

  • “Is this organic?” as a value judgment

  • “Can I cook everything with this?” (some oils are finishing oils)

👉 Curiosity beats comparison.


The chef’s manners

  • Keep reactions measured, even if you love it—producers value understanding over hype.

  • If you buy, buy small and fresh. Olive oil is seasonal, not collectible.

  • Thank the miller personally—by name if you can.

👉 Acknowledgment matters more than applause.

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