Olive oil is different from the spirits: you don't need a shelf of bottles, and the real deliverable isn't a purchase — it's a buying habit. This companion gives you a few oils to actually taste the lessons, the vetted everyday picks worth owning, and the five-point routine that beats both the fraudsters and the far more common problem: a stale bottle sold as fresh. Buy real extra-virgin, by harvest date. Tick items as you go.
Where. Unlike spirits, olive oil is a grocery + specialty + direct-from-producer buy. Favor high-turnover sources so stock is fresh: a busy grocery or specialty store, brand-direct online (Graza, Brightland, Fat Gold, California Olive Ranch all ship recent harvest), and Costco for value (Kirkland Organic). Beware dusty bottles that have sat on a shop shelf under lights.
The check (every bottle, every time). 1) Harvest date within ~12–18 months (not just "best by"). 2) Dark glass or tin, never clear. 3) A named growing origin + a seal (DOP/PDO, COOC, NYIOOC award). 4) A sane price — a "premium EVOO" at a bargain price is a warning, not a deal. 5) Taste on opening: real oil is fruity and often bitter/peppery; flat or crayon-rancid means it's not fresh EVOO, whatever the label says.
If you're building this over time rather than all at once:
The whole non-optional set runs roughly $50–90 — and note that unlike the spirits courses, the most important "purchases" here (#8, #9, #11) are free habits, not bottles.