Certainly must try this Olybio if I can get to where it's sold.
City Olive certainly seems to have a lot of integrity, but I really can't afford their stuff in the volume that I use olive oil. I do like to get up there for a 750ml of something nice just for dressing fresh summer salads or grilled meat and fish.
As Alain40 points out, labelling laws are not our friend with "product of" and "packed in" meaning that the contents can be almost anything from anywhere. In addition, there's the handling, which one can never be sure of. If the wholesaler or retailer have a 120-degree storeroom, it's going to get cooked. If the pretty bottles are all stacked beautifully in the store window with the sun streaming in, ditto. Then there's the harvest date, which is pretty rare to find, but which is, at least, on the more expensive Kirkland bottling.
I was looking at Treasure Island's collection just a couple of weeks ago and there were several with sufficiently purple prose on their labels to pique my interest, but then I saw that they did have harvest dates on them: 2008. I just ain't paying top dollar for 2 year old oil.
FYI, L'Appetito carries a line of regional oils which all have harvest dates. I've only tried one or two and it's been too long to comment.
I've tried a handful of Trader Joe's bottlings, both Italian and Spanish, and none seemed to stand out for me. I may well not have hit on the one mentioned upthread.
Colavita seems to have decent, consistant flavor, though I stick to Kirkland as much as I can. I've also tried a handful of greek Kalamata oils sold at Middle East bakery that had some real aroma and flavor.
Not completely on topic, but I recently had this experience and was surprised and perplexed by it: Hyde Park Produce had a display of oil by the door. $5.99 for a 750ml, or maybe even a liter. I was skeptical but picked up a bottle just to see what the label might divulge. On the front it said clearly "Extra Virgin Olive Oil"---the brand name was something generic-sounding like Campagnola. I was looking for the tell-tale fudge terms on the back ("packed in" etc.), and what I found was even worse. Under ingredients it listed: "vegetable oil, extra virgin olive oil".
Is't possible! Can you call something "Extra virgin" on the front, if that's what you have on the back?
I wouldn't have thought so.
Any experts.
Finally, totally off evoo, but in the labelling vein: I just noticed that my jar of Claussen dill pickles lists "less than 2% high fructose corn syrup." I mean really??? WTF???? In dill pickles????
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