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In This Issue
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Celebrating Eight Years of Quality
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Star Customer: Nectar Rorris
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Greek Harvest Late, but Fruitful
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Olive Oil: A Breast Cancer Foe?
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Sante Magazine
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The Malabar Pepper Company
·
Phish website
·
International Olive Oil Council (IOOC)
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Mistra Estates
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University
of Granada
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WebMd.com
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BMC Journal |
Celebrating
Eight Years of Quality
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In January, Elaioladon-Contis Imports
turned eight. In 2001, Vasilios Contis launched the Vermont-based
company in an effort to bring the best olive oil of his native Greece to
the US.
Contis
stands behind his products 100%. He says, “The quality of my product has
been consistent for the last eight years. In other words - it’s the best
olive oil available in the world today.”
Good
olive oil is a science, depending on soil, olive varieties and farmer’s
tender care of their trees. The olives are always picked by hand. Contis
explains, “You can see the difference in the greenish hue of the oil and
its fresh olive aroma. Each variety of olive has a different taste.”
In 2005
the family business expanded, as Elaioladon-Contis Imports began
importing India’s highest quality Black Tellicherry Pepper.
The Malabar Pepper Company’s
select large peppercorns add a flavorful fire to any dish. |
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Elaioladon-Contis Imports’ President Vasilios Contis at a tasting at
City Market on Valentine’s
Day
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Today,
Elaioladon-Contis Imports stocks co-ops and food shops throughout the
Northeast with the pepper and three types of oil (organic, non-organic
and unfiltered). The company also provides online sales to individuals
throughout the US.
Contis
recalls how it all started, with olive oil tastings at stores. The
feedback was instantaneous, “People were amazed with the way the olive
oil tasted.” They would often ask, “Is this really olive oil?” and
Contis would answer, “Yes! It’s the real thing.” The company is proud to
include
Sante magazine’s food panel
among its many fans.
Elaioladon-Contis Imports thanks its customers for their continued
support and assures them that its prices will continue to be affordable
in these cost-cutting times.
Check the company’s site for special offers.
Wholesale prices are available.
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Star Customer: Nectar Rorris
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For almost 30 years, Nectar Rorris was
known around Burlington, Vermont for two things. The proprietor of
Nectar’s nightclub/restaurant offered a venue for a lively music scene
(including the band
Phish) and he made the best
French fries and gravy.
Now
that Rorris has retired, he makes an even more mouth-watering version of
his fries at home. For the past seven years, he’s used Elaioladon-Contis
Imports olive oil for frying potatoes, Greek-style. He notes his son is
crazy about the result of what Rorris calls the “phenomenal” oil of his
native Peloponnese. |
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Nectar Rorris
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The Rorris
family also drizzles olive oil over salads and in many other recipes.
“Instead of using butter in the morning for breakfast, for scrabbled
eggs for example, we use olive oil,” Rorris notes.
The
restaurateur says relatives and party guests alike say, “This tastes
different!” when they detect the oil in familiar dishes.
Rorris
believes Americans are becoming increasingly familiar with the nuances
of olive oil. He likes the range – from light to rich – of the
Elaioladon-Contis Imports oils.
Rorris’
friendship with Elaioladon owner Vasilios Contis spans back to the 1970s
Vermont Greek community. He doesn’t hesitate to recommend Contis’ olive
oils to his favorite local supermarkets.
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Greek Harvest
Late, but
Fruitful
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A long, dry summer pushed back the olive
oil harvest this year, reports Eugene Ladopoulos of Mistra Estates. He
adds, “We picked our olives in January and February.”
The
time for harvesting olives varies in Greece, depending on factors like
olive varieties, climate and grove altitude. The olive oil harvest
normally takes place in Greece’s
Peloponnese region between
November and January.
The
2008/2009 late harvest was fruitful, however. Ladopoulos proudly notes,
“The quality is very high, as always, with acidity levels close to 0.2
percent.” |

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Harvesting
olives at Mistra Estates
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US
customers will taste the quality soon. Mistra Estates company supplies
Elaioladon-Contis Imports with its excellent Extra Virgin First Cold
Pressed Unfiltered Olive Oil.
Mistra
Estates’ groves are located on the foothills underneath the Byzantine
castle of
Mistra,in the Peloponnese’s
Laconia region. Mistra is a
popular tourist destination with abundant greenery.
Mistra
Estates will be among the exhibitors at the 2nd Laconian Products Fair
in
Athens, Greece. The event will
be held March 10-13. This year’s fair is dedicated to sustainable,
ecological development. |
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After
hand-picking each olive, workers enjoy a meal in the Estates’ Dizzy Bee
barn |
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Though some regions of
Crete
reported decreased harvests, olive oil production was up in
Greece this year. The country normally produces between 300,000 and
400,000 tons of olive oil. About half of the oil is exported. |
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Olive Oil: A Breast Cancer Foe?
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In December, Spanish scientists reported that extra virgin olive oil
may be a good basis for the next breast cancer-fighting drug. Published
in the
medical BMC
Journal, their report quickly swept the globe.
In the
lab, polyphenols (natural anti-oxidants) derived from extra virgin olive
oil combated HER2-positive human breast cancer cells. HER2 cells occur
in one-fifth of breast cancer cases, according to the site
WebMD.
While
the study does not claim that eating olive oil treats breast cancer, it
does point towards yet another possible health application of olive oil.
The study focused only on extra virgin oil, because it retains the most
valuable natural antioxidants.
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In the lab,
extra virgin olive oil combated breast cancer |
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