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travel / travel magazine / march 2008

Live & Learn

The hills are olive (page 2)

I HAVE BEEN READING Mort Rosenblum's Olives: The Life and Lore of a Noble Fruit. This is now my bible. The honouring of conquering gladiators; the ritual burial of golden olive carvings with Egyptian Pharaohs; the stark beauty of the olive bough with its silver-green leaves.



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Rosenblum writes of the caillet roux variety, hanging in thick bunches, "red as cherries, until ready for picking.” Picholines - such a merry and mischievous name - are tiny French olives, much prized and picked green. I think they must dance off the tree, with a name like that.

The kalamata, that's an olive I know. And the fat Spanish olives I throw into a chicken casserole. I know that when buying olive oil, "extra-virgin” and "cold-pressed” are words to look for. This is the sum total of my olive knowledge.

The learning road is long, for Rosenblum informs that Olea europaea comes in at least 700 cultivated varieties. And the oil! "'Italian' oil ranges from syrupy yellow southern oils to this green Tuscan crus with a 'peppery' (that can mean bitter) afterbite that may last through a long siesta,” writes Rosenblum. "In an hour's drive, you can go from the sweet, buttery oils of Liguria, past the green and fruity Luccas, to the sharp elixirs of high Chianti.”

The train sighs to brief stops. Alviano. Orvieto. I am headed to Chiusi and from there, by car, to Montepulciano. Pamela Sheldon Johns - Pa-MEL-a, as the Italians pronounce it - a gourmand and cookbook author from Santa Barbara, California, purchased a Tuscan villa nearby early in 2001. She has christened it Poggio Etrusco and, from there, runs cooking classes and cooking tours, and for just one week in November, she harvests the olives from the 1,000 trees in her olive grove. La raccolta, the harvest.

The days leading up to this moment have brought with them their anxieties. "I have been fretting about the weather,” Johns writes early in the month to the group of travellers who will gather for this purpose. "We had a too warm winter, a too early spring, near-drought/hot weather in the summer … this year, the harvests have been early.”

Now, though, the olives are ready, the greens and reds of their skins turning to shiny black. Conventionally, Johns harvests her olives before they complete this transformation, ensuring that peppery back-of-the-palate Tuscan taste.

"I've been hoping for cool weather and no wind so the olives don't get too mature while I make them wait,” continues Johns. "I've been tempted to go out with thread and tie them on.” Just kidding, she says.

As my taxi approaches Montepulciano, it passes two elderly gentlemen in caps and woollen scarves, feet planted in place as they pluck the olives from a roadside tree. The tree is perhaps three metres tall. Its branches are full with olives and decorated with leaves that are not green and not quite gray, but a greenish silvery grey, as if they have donated all their lustre, all their richness, to the olives themselves. There must be a word for that.

Renoir and Van Gogh struggled with their painterly renderings of the great trees and their great fruit. Van Gogh, casting his eyes upon them, said the green of the trees appeared "saddened with grey.”


IT IS MORNING. The day is cool, the sky is blue, and the air is full of fragrance. The lemon tree at the foot of the stairs leading to my villa bedroom has not yet been brought indoors for the winter, and I find on each ascent and descent the perfume of the blooms knocks me sideways, as if this were a Tuscan summer with the fields awash in poppies.

A cock is crowing - no kidding. A dog is barking somewhere in the distance. Now and then, the crack of a hunter's rifle splits the air: pheasant, pigeon, thrush are in season.

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