The sensory panel
& the defects
The other gate for extra-virgin, in detail: the trained tasting panel and the specific faults it hunts. Learn these and you can do at home what disqualifies most bad oil — catch the defect the label ignores.
The faults that void "extra-virgin"
A short vocabulary of defects is the most practical thing in the whole course. Click through:
Chemistry needs a lab; the defect check needs only your nose. A trained panel disqualifies an oil the instant it detects rancid, fusty, or musty — and you can learn those three well enough to do the same in your kitchen. Since most disappointing supermarket "EVOO" is simply rancid, this single skill upgrades every future purchase.
Learn rancid on purpose
Find something old
An old open bottle, or a cheap one that’s sat a while. Warm and smell it.
Name the fault
Old nuts, crayon, putty, flat — that’s rancid. Fix it in memory against your fresh EVOO’s green vibrancy.
Apply it forward
From now on, if a "premium EVOO" smells like that, you know the label is lying — whatever it cost.
Questions
Flashcards
Lock it in
From memory:
- What is the Panel Test and who runs it?
- Describe rancid — and why it’s the most common defect.
- Fusty vs musty — the difference and cause?
- What is the winey/vinegary defect?
- What does one confirmed defect do to the grade?
Reading
the label
The practical payoff of the grade block: turning a bottle from a marketing object into a source of information. A short checklist that, applied in the aisle, does most of the work of buying well.
What the label really tells you
Most of the label is theater; a few things are signal. Click through in priority order:
Grade a shelf
Find the harvest date
On your bottles, locate a harvest date. Rank them by freshness — not by how green or premium they look.
Score the signals
For each, tally the real signals: recent harvest, dark glass, named growing origin, third-party seal, sane price. More signals = safer bet.
Predict, then taste
Call the best bottle from the label alone, then taste to check yourself.
Questions
Flashcards
Lock it in
From memory:
- What is the single most useful label item?
- Why prefer dark glass or tin?
- What makes an origin claim meaningful?
- What backs up the words "extra virgin"?
- Why is a bargain price a warning?
Regional
styles
Olive oil’s terroir, kept in proportion. Countries and regions do have signatures — but cultivar and harvest choices shape the glass more than a flag on the label ever will.
Two poles, many regions
Most oils sit somewhere between two style poles. The vs-card sets them out:
Robust / intense
- Green, bitter, peppery, high-polyphenol.
- Cultivars like Coratina, Picual, Koroneiki; classic Tuscan style.
- Early-harvest, assertive — a finishing oil.
- Think: cut grass, artichoke, pepper, a throat catch.
Delicate / mild
- Buttery, nutty, mild, sweet, lower-polyphenol.
- Cultivars like Arbequina; many everyday oils.
- Riper harvest, gentle — versatile all-rounder.
- Think: almond, ripe apple, soft and round.
Region is a real signal, but secondary. A Spanish estate picking early and milling fast will out-express a Tuscan one cutting corners — and "Italian olive oil" spans everything from delicate to fierce (and may not even be Italian, Session 17). Read cultivar + harvest + producer first; treat country as a hint, not a verdict.
Taste the two poles
Get a robust and a mild oil
Ideally a green Coratina/Picual-type and a soft Arbequina-type.
Contrast on the instrument
Log both. The robust one should spike bitterness and pungency; the mild one, fruit and roundness. Name which you prefer — that guides future buying.
Questions
Flashcards
Lock it in
From memory:
- Describe the robust style and its cultivars.
- Describe the delicate style and its cultivars.
- What drives regional style most?
- Why is "Italian olive oil" a weak signal?
- How should you weigh origin vs cultivar/harvest?