Charles E. Gillman Company Accounting Specialist Health Care CENTRAL ARIZONA COLLEGE DIRECTOR OF HEALTH INFORMATION MANAGEMENT Mechanical Komatsu Equipment Co Resident Field Mechanic Administrative & Professional Tucson Urban League CEO/President Health Care Dependable Health Services Physical Therapists Trades/Construction RANCHO RESORT MAINTANANCE POSITION Sales and Marketing Everready Glass Sales Reps NationConn. consumers can now be sure olive oil is pureFirst-in-nation law to ensure quality, safety
The Associated Press
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 11.22.2008
HARTFORD, Conn. — When food importer Luciano Sclafani spied a 3-liter tin of extra virgin olive oil a couple of years ago selling for $9.99, he could tell without tasting a drop that it wasn't legitimate.
Lab tests proved him right. The oil, which should have sold for $25 or $30, was a cheap knockoff, 90 percent soybean oil and 10 percent pomace, the oil that's collected from the ground flesh and pits after pressing.
"Olive oil is the closest thing to my heart that I sell," said Sclafani, president of his family's 97-year-old food-importing and distribution business in Norwalk, Conn.
His revelation helped lead to Friday's announcement by Connecticut consumer-protection officials that Connecticut is now the first in the nation to set quality standards for olive oil.
Many nations have standards for olive oil, and its virgin and extra virgin varieties. Extra-virgin olive oil is derived from the first pressing of the olives and has a stronger taste; it is popular to eat with salads or on bread.
But U.S. standards haven't been updated since the late 1940s, making it easy for some suppliers to cut corners and quality.
Connecticut officials say lax standards are also a safety issue — people allergic to soy, peanuts or other foods should know their olive oil is pure.
"It could be a fatal event," said Jerry Farrell Jr., Connecticut's consumer-protection commissioner. "At the very least, even if your allergies are more mild, you're going to be sick from what you eat."
Farrell's office received some reports of people in Connecticut experiencing adverse reactions from adulterated olive oil. There have been no reported deaths.
Connecticut's regulations, which took effect Nov. 5, adopt a "standard of identity" for olive oil sold in the state that mirrors the standards developed by International Olive Oil Council. The regulations define virgin olive oil as "those oils obtained from the fruit of the olive tree solely by mechanical or other physical means … which have not undergone any treatment other than washing, decanting, centrifuging and filtration."
No additives are permitted in virgin olive oils sold in Connecticut, according the standards.
Other states, including New York, New Jersey and Rhode Island, have told Connecticut officials they're interested in creating their own regulations. A new law in California, similar to Connecticut's regulations, takes effect in January.
Connecticut's regulations also give the state's consumer- protection department the power to levy fines and pull misleading products from store shelves.
Stopping fraudulent olive oil from reaching consumers is nothing new overseas. In Italy, for example, there's a special police unit trained to distinguish fake extra virgin olive oil from the real thing.
|
|