Product Description
250 ml Bottle - Umbria, Italy
The flowery, citrus flavor of organic bergamot balances well with Giuseppe of Etruria's organic Late Harvest extra-virgin olive oil. This is an unusual, delicious oil, perfect for brightening salads, vegetables, and especially fish.
Unlike infused oils, which tend to lose flavor, crushing fruit and olives together maintains the pure flavor of each. Here, Giuseppe uses one of the rarest citrus fruits in Italy, the tiny green bergamot grown in Calabria, which has gained worldwide fame as the essence added to black tea to make Earl Grey.
About the Producer:
In ancient times, portions of Umbria were conquered by the Etruscans and became part of what the Romans called Etruria -- adopted by Giuseppe for the name of his Umbrian specialty products company.
Giuseppe Cagnoni produces his olive oil in the small Umbrian town of Trevi. The small town of Trevi in Umbria is perched on a pyramid of a hill surrounded by miles and miles of olive groves. This is where five generations of Giuseppe Cagnoni's family have grown olives and pressed them into exceptional oil. As in the old days, much is done by hand - and everything is organic.
The primary olive used is Muraiolo, an Umbrian specialty, with small amounts of Leccino and Frantoio rounding out the blend. Only the first pressing of his finest organically grown olives are pressed for this oil. In various parts of Italy, farmers often press small amounts of olives with fresh citrus fruit to create heavenly scented oils for family and friends.
About the Olives:
University researchers have dated the rootstock for some of Giuseppe's trees back to 1,000 B.C. . . it seems the olives were there even before the Etruscans. The main olive variety planted on the Cagnoni property is Moraiolo, a specialty of Umbria. However, Moraiolo is not self-pollinating, and so the property is also planted with small amounts of Frantoio and Leccino, Tuscan staples. The groves are planted on the rugged hillsides in parcels that 380-600 m. above sea level.
Giuseppe's father Eugenio is a master pruner who carefully prunes all the trees once a year, the old-fashioned way: climbing a ladder and working from the top down. His services are in demand by other producers.