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We arrived here just in time for the olive harvest and, although I was glued to my computer editing the biography, Neil spent some beautiful autumn days on a ladder jiggling branches with a length of bamboo.
After this hi-tech operation, the olives fall into nets spread under the trees and are scooped up into plastic bins, brought inside and spread on the floor to dry off. It’s a job for lots of friends.
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Then they have to be picked through to take out leaves, mouldy olives, bits of twig etc, before being put into sacks to take to the local Frantoio for pressing. ![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhc8tAae6HcCEDeoyRRwyhMJWcAr80VqyMRv2_JqQ7rQDpt_PqARhdJ4O8bWLQLtTAH1yPPIlMmN-_vAtS5kntTBObWgskbh-4pLVSvK2CY7HFR7yEjJJTin_4R9ksjQvWWdvRw1qAEsSz-/s320/olivesifting.jpg)
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They don’t press in the traditional way any more, mashing the olives and spreading the paste on woven mats before screwing the whole lot down.
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This year it’s yellow rather than green - something to do with the soil apparently. It’s nothing like the olive oil we buy in England - even the posh Extra Virgine. There’s something nectar-like about it - medicinal in the tradition of magic potions and elixirs.
My grandmother used to keep a small bottle in the cupboard for earache - to be warmed on a heated teaspoon! But this stuff is much better ingested, preferably with warm bread, Tuscan tomatoes, some home-made pasta and a sprinkling of Peccarino cheese.
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