Ebre Connect Summer 2017 | Page 8

GASTRONOMY to produce even more olive oil. She adds that cultivation techniques, technology and knowledge are constantly improving. What’s more, increasing numbers of consumers are keen to buy organic and premium brands. Passion for the product In the Terres de l’Ebre, the traditional methods continue, but producers are also trying new approaches. Some are going organic, and ambitious companies are applying science to produce award-winning high quality oils. Maite, for example, is a woman on a mission. She and her 87-year-old father grow fruit and vegetables and they have 3,200 olive trees. This was at the last count – they are also taking on neglected neighbouring land and bringing old trees back into production. As they convert their farm to organic, Maite is combining her father’s wisdom with innovative approaches. She’s studied ley lines and the phases of the moon along with the commercial prowess of Italian olive oil producers. Maite is immensely proud of her oil – the carefully designed bottle labels tell the story of the land, she explains, and her next ambition is to install her very own olive 8 Ebre Connect, Summer 2017 press. “It’s difficult and hard work,” she says. “But if I didn’t like it I wouldn’t do it.” At L’Oli del Mar’s headquarters on the edge of the town of El Perelló, company founder Jordi Esparza tells us the science behind creating the best olive oil. His company harvests olives from farms all over Baix Ebre – from the sea to the mountains. It’s all meticulously harvested and exhaustively quality-controlled. The oil isn’t bottled until a customer orders it. Until then, it’s carefully conserved in stainless steel tanks in a protected atmosphere. Tasting notes are available for each of L’Oli del Mar’s single variety oils, some of which have won awards recently. And that bitter taste that sometimes hits you at the back of your throat is good – it’s the mark of a fresh oil full of health-giving polyphenols. “This is a positive attribute,” Jordi emphasises. Maite and Jordi are just two of the olive oil enthusiasts of the Terres de l’Ebre. There are many more – from the elderly grandparents carefully tending their land as they have done for years, to the ambitious youngsters who are pursuing new opportunities. Tradition combined with innovation may see olive oil remain a Mediterranean staple for many more centuries to come. Pa amb tomaquet: How to enjoy olive oil like a Catalan Pa amb tomaquet (bread with tomato) is famous across Catalunya. Toast some rustic bread a little, gently rub a cut glove of garlic on the rough surface of the bread, then squidge on half a tomato. To finish it off, sprinkle some salt and add a generous drizzle of the best Catalan olive oil.