Attention To Detail
Attention To Detail
Attention To Detail
INFLUENCES ON QUALITY
Paul Vossen
An olive consists of three basic parts: the skin
OIL FRACTION
(epicarp), the pulp (mesocarp), and the pit
Fatty Acids
Skin - Epicarp
(endocarp). It is made up of about 70 % juice
Waxes
Sterols & Methyl-Ster ols
(water and oil) 40 - 60% water and 10 - 30% oil.
Aliphatic Alcohols
Pulp - Mesocarp
Terpenic Alcohols
An olive is about 30% solids on a dry weight
Pit - Endocarp
Hydr oc ar bons
Squalene
basis. The solids are made up of 12 - 25% pit
Carotenoids Xanthophylls
solids, 1 - 3% seed, 8 -10% skin and pulp solids,
WATER FRACTION
3% sugars, 2% proteins, and 2% other compounds
Phenols
such as acids, vitamins, minerals, and pectins. On
Tocopherols
Water (40 to 60%)
Glucosides - Oleuropein
a dry weight basis, the skin, which represents only
Oil (10 to 30%)
Al dehydes
Solids dry (~ 30%)
Ke tones
about 3% of the fruit weight, contains about 3%
Sugars (~ 3%)
Organic Acids (short chain)
Proteins
(~
2%)
Es ters
oil. The pit represents about 23% of the olive
Minerals & Other (~2%)
Chlor ophyll
weight and contains about 1% oil. Most of the oil
is in the pulp, which represents about 75% of the
weight and contains about 50% oil. Not all of the
oil can be extracted from the solids with just
a
physical process, so the solids usually contain about 6-10% oil depending on the variety, maturity, and efficiency of
the extraction. The solids contain from 25-70% moisture depending on the processing system used.
The Olive
The oil fraction is made up of six primary fatty acids: Oleic (55-83%) and Palmitoleic (0.3-3.5%), which are monounsaturated; Palmitic (7.5-20%) and Steric (0.5-5.0), which are saturated; and Linoleic (3.5-21%) and Linolenic
(0.9-1.5%), which are poly-unsaturated fatty acids. Olive oil is classified as a monounsaturated fat because of the
predominance of Oleic acid. Other fatty acids in olive oil at low concentrations are Myristic, Heptadecanoic,
Arachidic, Gadoleic, Behenic, and Lignoceric.
Other oil-soluble or semi-oil-soluble compounds in the oil fraction are the waxes, which primarily come from the
skin of the fruit. Levels are quite low in virgin olive oil, but appear in higher concentrations when the fruit skins
are worked more intensely as in second and solvent extractions of the pomace. The composition and concentration
of sterols in olive oil is used primarily to determine its genuiness or authenticity, so that it is labeled correctly in the
marketplace. The aliphatic alcohols, terpenes, hydrocarbons, squalene and pigments (carotenoids and
xanthophylls) give olive oil some of its flavor and color. They are there in only trace amounts and some are more
important than others. The fatty acids, sterols, methyl-sterols, and some alcohols are nonvolatile compounds that
do not add to the flavor of olive oil, but very important in authentication of olive varieties. The volatile aromatic
hydrocarbons and some alcohols are responsible for much of the ultimate flavor of the oil.
When the cell walls are ruptured and all of these oil, water, protein, mineral components, and complex
hydrocarbons are mixed together with air, enzymes, and microorganisms the oil fraction absorbs many of the
volatile compounds and takes on their flavor and aroma characteristics. The harmony between the oil and water
fractions produces the olive oil elixir unique compared to any other fruit product. It is a short-lived, delicate, and
positive union that can be amplified, diminished, or disturbed by changing the quality of the fruit, way it is handled,
manipulation of the paste, extraction process, and finally cleaning and storage of the oil.
The negative influence of oxidizing, rotting, and fermenting solids and water must be removed as quickly as
possible once the oil has had sufficient contact with the positive aromatic volatiles. Some smaller droplets of oil
remain with their protective lipoprotein covering and stay as a fairly stable emulsion within the paste. Some of the
oil forms micro-gels; a sort of water-oil-solids mixture colloid, but most of the oil becomes free, rolls around with
the water and solids, and begins to unite with other oil droplets.
Disc mill
Pitter mill
- Bitter
+ - Sweetness
+ - Pungent
+Bitter
+ Sweetness
- Pungent
- Bitter
- Green
+ - Fruity
+ - Green
- Fruity
- Green
mill type and paste fineness. The ease and cost of operation plus the
initial cost of the machinery will also influence the type of mill used.
All mill types can produce excellent quality oils, but there is
considerably more labor required and care necessary in the operation
of stone mills. They are bulky, work very slowly, and are more
costly, but may be better for some varieties and are quite romantic.
The disc mill produces oil that is similar to the stone mill, which are used for varieties with very high polyphenol
contents. Hammermills are the most harsh, should be used with caution on some varieties, and yet are best for
others. They are fast, easy to clean, take up less space, are less expensive, and work in a continuous flow system.
The pitter mill is a relatively new invention that pits the fruit, but has no particular advantages.
If the paste is made too course (large chunks of pulp and pits) the cell walls containing the oil will not be broken up
enough to release all the oil, consequently oil will be lost in the solid waste (pomace). If the paste and pits are
ground too fine an emulsion is more likely to be created and fine particulates with oil can be lost in the wastewater.
Each decision also affects the length of time and temperature necessary in the malaxation process later.
The mill operator needs to evaluate each batch of olives with an emphasis on quality and style. Each change in
paste fineness should be evaluated for oil flavor. That is why the master miller needs to know what to look for.
The best decision is one, of course, that produces the best oil with a high oil yield that takes a lot of experience.
The temperature of the paste should not exceed 25 C in order to preserve most of the volatile aromatic compounds
and the time of malaxation should never exceed 90 minutes. Slightly higher or lower temperatures can
significantly influence the amount of oil extracted from the paste. Malaxation for longer than 90 minutes only
reduces ultimate quality. Many excellent quality oil producers in Europe and America operate on the lower side of
the temperature scale and mix for about 45 minutes or less. Some oil is lost, but quality can be higher. Higher
temperature extracts more oil, increases polyphenol content and bitterness of the oil, but lowers the volatile
aromatics. Longer malaxation (within the limits of 30-60 minutes) reduces polyphenols, bitterness, and stability,
but increases color and oxidation of the oil.
Some olive oil pastes, usually from olives that are excessively high in moisture are difficult to extract, because the
water remains with the oil as an emulsion even if malaxated perfectly. Talc, which is hydrated calcium magnesium
silicate, is sometimes added to olive paste that has excessive moisture. It is a naturally occurring inert mined
mineral that is purified and ground into a very fine powder according to International Olive Oil Council and
European Union specifications. The mineral particles have a very large convoluted surface area that is very
absorptive (can absorb 10-15 times its weight in water). Using talc in some problem pastes can increase
extractability by up to 5%.
Good mill operators spend much of their time looking at the paste in the malaxation tanks watching for floating oil,
the paste color, fluidity, and cleanliness of the paddles. They speed up or slow down the process, modify
temperatures, and or add talc to perfect the process.
Phase Separation
Natural decantation would be considered the worst for oil quality because it is so slow and the fermenting solids
and fruit-water remain in contact with the oil for a long time. The method that produces the best quality oil is
generally recognized as the selective filtration system, because it uses no pressure or force on the paste to quickly
remove the free run oil. Unfortunately the selective filtration system is complicated to operate and most people
believe that the slight difference in quality is not worth the effort. The Sinolea and Acapulco systems use gravity
and the physical adhesion law between oil and stainless steel, which removes the oil and leaves the water and solids
behind. Neither removes more than 80% of the oil so some other type of extractor must also be used.
The press system simply stacks up layers of paste and under pressure pushes the liquids (oil and fruit-water)
through a woven filter mat of some type leaving the solids behind. The big problem of keeping the filter mats
clean, free of oxidized-rancid oil, and fermentation defects is difficult, but not impossible. The mats can be used
continuously or placed in cold storage frozen when not in use for short periods.
Centrifugal decanters spin on a horizontal axis at about 3,000 rpm and create enough force to separate the oil form
the fruit-water and solids. There is an auger inside a stainless steel cylinder that moves the paste through in a
continuous flow and very efficient system. The three phase decanter or horizontal centrifuge, requires the addition
of water to the system, which dilutes out the water soluble components (polyphenols), separates the paste into three
distinct phases (oil, fruit-water, and low moisture solids), and generates the most wastewater for disposal.
The two-phase system decanter does not require the addition of water in most cases, generates less wastewater for
disposal, and most importantly does not dilute out the polyphenol content of the oil. Olive variety and fruit
maturity may influence the choice of decanter type in that low polyphenol varieties made with a 3-phase decanter
might be insufficiently fruity, bitter, pungent, and stable.
Most of the worlds oil is made with centrifugal decanters and the trend is toward the 2-phase system. The mill
operator needs to keep track of the cleanliness of the oil (water and fine solids content) and the oil content of the
fruit-water, pomace, and or fruit-water/pomace. The master miller can change the speed of the machine, injection
volume of the paste, water injection rate and temperature, plus the port location for each phase to manipulate the
extraction efficiency and oil quality. There are some visual cues and laboratory analyses that can be used to kept
track of the efficiency of the system. Tasting the newly made oil as a knowledgeable taster used in conjunction
with the desired oil style is the best quality indicator.
PRINCIPLE ADVANTAGES and DISADVANTAGES of the PRESS, SELECTIVE
FILTRATION, 2-PHASE, and 3-PHASE SYSTEMS
SYSTE
ADVANTAGES
DISADVANTAGES
M
The old way romance factor, uses less
Less capacity, requires more labor, difficult to
Press
energy, less cost to establish, produces
maintain cleanliness of mats, more paste and
relatively dry pomace
oil contact with oxygen
Extracts more oil in conjunction with
Difficult to keep clean, greater maintenance,
Selecti
decanter systems than decanter system
extracts only half of the oil, greater quality
ve
alone, produces unique quality oil
may not be worth the extra effort
Filtrati
Uses more water, needs more power to heat
Produces relatively dry pomace, easier to
3extra water, washes out too many polyphenols
monitor extraction efficiency than the 2phase
in some oils, produces a lot of waste water,
phase system, continuous flow
Decant
needs 2 vertical centrifuges
er
No fruit-water effluent, oil has higher
2Produces very wet pomace, more difficult
polyphenol content, uses less water, needs
phase
to determine extraction efficiency
only one vertical centrifuge, continuous
Decant
Vossen, compilation of data from several sourcesflow
Technically, the wastewater effluent from the vertical centrifuge should have less than 0.1% oil and less than 0.5%
suspended solids in it. The cleaned oil should contain less than 0.1% of water or solids.
Tank Sedimentation
The cleaned oil still contains some solids and water, which must be purged from the bottom as they settle out, so
normally the oil is allowed to settle for about 2 months prior to bottling or filtering and bottling. If tank settling is
not done correctly the defects of muddy sediment, or anaerobic fermentation (fustiness) can occur in the bottle.
Tank settling and long term storage should be in sealed stainless steel tanks, with nitrogen topping, and kept at
o
about 13-16 C so that is does not oxidize and breakdown due to light, high temperature or oxygen exposure.
o
Temperatures below about 12 C will cause the oil to settle very slowly and some of the saturated fatty acids will
congeal. New oil can be sold immediately from the vertical centrifuge, but the customers should be cautioned to use
it up within about 2 weeks.
Blending
Blending oils should be done very carefully and methodically by a knowledgeable taster, so that the best
composition is obtained. Each tank must be tasted and various blend ratios can be tried to achieve the ultimate oil.
Since the oil will mellow with age, even in the bulk tank, some of the stronger oils should be saved for later release
and blending in a just-in-time bottling scheme.
Filtration
Oil does not have to be
filtered prior to bottling and
the trend is toward selling
unfiltered oils, but they must
be properly settled and
almost all will develop some
sediment in the bottom of
the bottle. Filtered oils are
less stable, because some of
the
watersoluble
components
have
been
removed, but they will
form fewer deposits in the
bottle. The two principle
types of filters use either
diatomaceous earth (DE) or
fine filter paper or both
Bottling
The ideal olive
oil
container
would
be
recyclable,
inexpensive,
impermeable to oxygen,
not transmit anything into
the oil, block light, have an
airtight closure, and resist
impact. Before making a
choice it would be prudent
to first take a look at as
many of the products on
the market as possible.
Then match the type of
container with the price,
label, and style for the
targeted consumer. Some
consumer study would be useful. Oils in clear glass exposed to light at room temperature can go flat in two months
and rancid shortly thereafter. The following is a list of some common container characteristics: