Your feet (athlete's foot) and sometimes hands.
Banana "mold" (the black spots' edges).
Your credit cards and IDs (usually a bird on VISA and "AMEX" on so-named).
Money (embedded denomination "strip" is different for each modern bill).
Centipedes and Scorpions (seriously, just go into your yard at night and scan the ground for wigglies).
If you have beehives, the Varroa Destructor (species/pest) also shines brightly on their little carapaces.
I heard this on the Internet and didn't believe it, but tried it for myself, and yup. It glows.
Orange and green fluorescent dyes (such as on tennis balls), white clothes washed in detergent, etc.
This can be useful when inspecting the cleanliness of toilets.
My good EV olive oil in a glass bottle goes a sort of pinkish colour. With the natural colour of the oil & the way the glass reflects/refracts light, it makes it look like copper.
I don't get the same effect with cheapo refined olive oil in a plastic bottle. I get a bit of fluorescence - the normal violet colour and much less than say a white piece of paper - but all or most of that is just from the container.
Used about 1 fluid ounce, first in a 'Schnapsglas(s)', then in 2 different plastics. In an otherwise dark room.
Still pinkish shine, but different hue. Hard to tell because the light is so BRIGHT and I didn't want to use more oil in other containers. Just what I needed for cooking anyways ATM ;-)
Nothing special, no hypersuperduper, just https://kodakbatteries.com/flashlights/focus-120/ for 4 EUR with batteries included.
On this:
https://global.filippoberio.com/products/olive-oils/extra-vi... from them
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filippo_Berio
So... reading the wikipedia-article about them and their (former?) practices, and the bottle which says mixture of olive oils from the EU, makes me wonder if this is useful at all?
Or is it just a 'good' mixture?
Edit: I mean, it's ok for my taste and sense of smell. But what does that say about the biochemical quality of the oil?
The article mentions differences between brands, but IDK if there's a specific correlation with quality other than that fake olive oils certainly won't turn red/pink.
I always assumed that products like olive oil sold in thick green bottles were sensitive to degradation by (UV, sun)light, so if that is true then by definition a casual in store test is not going to work. But perhaps green bottles mean nothing vis a vis light.
I do recall that brown bottles were a thing in brewing to prevent beer from becoming funky by the action of light, but perhaps oils aren't susceptible to that.
I wonder if this could be a way to test for purity. I know that most EVOO is garbage.
I don't know about "garbage". What do you mean by "garbage"? Do you mean not from olives? Not extra-virgin? Or just not very nice? Where? Perhaps this is true in the USA? I'm in Europe, and I don't know anything about the US olive oil market.
I do believe that a lot of EVOO isn't what it purports to be; for example, I believe a lot of purportedly Italian EVOO is cut with Spanish oil; but I can't substantiate that belief.
Kind of like how younger people think tomatoes and strawberries are supposed to be flavorless and odorless.
Anyway, for me that's incomprehensible. I have stir fried with EVOO all my life and I have never seen it burn. The only exception is when I've accidentally, and stupidly, left the pan with only olive oil in it in full heat and went off to do something else, at which point it starts smoking and smelling bad. I have also never had it turn bitter, no matter what I've done with it. I've burned food cooked in olive oil, and occasionally the food has turned bitter (burned onions and garlic taste bitter for example; eugh) but mostly it just tastes burnt.
I've also used olive oil for deep frying and again it has never burnt on me, although lately I prefer to use cheaper oils, like sunflower oil, also because I find that deep frying with olive oil makes food taste too heavy, as if you cooked it in lard or fat (and that's not what I'm going for when I make chips or falafel, say).
So my conclusion is that people outside the Mediterranean, including in the US, just don't normally cook with good quality EVOO. I can certainly see lower quality olive oils behaving badly at high temperatures.
I think the issue was most were more like “pure” olive oil, with food coloring.
Many of the pricey ones that come in small, expensive bottles, were not actually what any decent European would expect from the cheapest canned oil.
[0] https://www.ucdavis.edu/news/imported-olive-oil-quality-unre...
Thats why I buy Californian or Greek olive oil. Not that I trust Greeks more than any other European, but their very good stuff is so good its obviously olive oil.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olive_oil#Adulteration
Some excerpts from the article (cherry-picked to be relevant to the conversation):
>> There have been allegations, particularly in Italy and Spain, that regulation can be sometimes lax and corrupt.[75] Major shippers are claimed to routinely adulterate olive oil so that only about 40% of olive oil sold as "extra virgin" in Italy actually meets the specification.[76]
>> On 3 January 2016 Bill Whitaker presented a program on CBS News including interviews with Mueller and with Italian authorities.[85][86] It was reported that in the previous month 5,000 tons of adulterated olive oil had been sold in Italy, and that organised crime was heavily involved—the term "Agrimafia" was used. The point was made by Mueller that the profit margin on adulterated olive oil was three times that on the illegal narcotic drug cocaine. He said that over 50% of olive oil sold in Italy was adulterated, as was 75–80% of that sold in the US. Whitaker reported that three samples of "extra virgin olive oil" had been bought in a US supermarket and tested; two of the three samples did not meet the required standard, and one of them—with a top-selling US brand—was exceptionally poor.
>> A Carabinieri investigator interviewed on the program said that "olive oil fraud has gone on for the better part of four millennia" but today, it's particularly "easy for the bad guys to either introduce adulterated olive oils or mix in lower quality olive oils with extra-virgin olive oil".[88] Weeks later, a report by Forbes stated that "it's reliably reported that 80% of the Italian olive oil on the market is fraudulent" and that "a massive olive oil scandal is being uncovered in Southern Italy (Puglia, Umbria and Campania)".[89]
I'm from Greece; you know, the other major oil producing country :P We, too, like the Italians and the Spanish, value olive oil very highly. I don't know of any adulteration scandals for Greek EVOO, but that doesn't mean it doesn't happen. It's easy to believe that a producer whose oil turns out not very good in a particular year, even if it is normally good-quality would feel rather desperate and it's easy to see how some would be tempted to do something about it. For example, a few years ago in Corfu, there was much anger when much of the olive oil produced on the island were found to be unfit for human consumption because of very high levels of pesticides. That year, the communally organised spraying of olive groves from the air was stopped and produces had started spraying their olives on their own. Apparently many just overdid it, presumably following the age-old wisdom that if a little is good, a lot is better. Even without that little mishap, olive oil from Corfu is normally too acidic, because of the way the olives are collected (they are left to fully ripen on the trees and collected when they fall off naturally). That means that even extra virgin olive oil produced in Corfu may not be the best quality. That in turn means it won't be bought at the same price as better quality oils by the large bottling corporations. So it might well end up sold to the Italians and blended with their own oils, of whatever category. In that case, the consumer may buy "Italian" and "extra virgin olive oil" but even if it is really EVOO, it might still be not the best quality; but it will be sold at a high price anyway.
I have to confess I can't be sure I haven't inadvertently bought second-quality, or even adulterated, EVOO at some point in my life. I consume vast quantities of the stuff. I only cook my food with it, basically, rarely anything else. I am pretty sure I could identify non-EVOO with eyes closed. A couple of weeks ago my partner bought some olive oil and when I went to cook with it, it looked... different? Kind of too thin and too clear. I checked the container and it was blended oil that included refined oils. The container was exactly the same as the one of the EVOO we normally buy so my partner mistook it for our standard. But it was obvious it wasn't our standard. There's a clear difference. On the other hand, I'm not sure that the people who adulterate EVOO make it so easy to tell.
Simple amine/nitrogen tests for protein is how we got poisonous melamine in fake milk and wheat gluten killing babies, dogs, and cats.
It comes down to Goodhart's law.
If easy tests are out, you go to a very complex test immediately?
For a technical delve into olive oil fluorescence: https://cdn.intechopen.com/pdfs/27027/InTech-Analysis_of_oli...
It's interesting to note that California Olive Ranch's 100% domestic olive oil costs quite a bit more than their 'world blend.' I'm guessing that world blend includes imported not-really-olive-oil.
I believe most use a synthetic version. I’ve only had the natural one a few times and it was quite different, but the drink wasn’t as sweetened so that might have been the difference.
- the label of every bottle of EVOO uses short country codes to indicate where the oil came from, which is often multiple countries. this doesn't mean it's worse, but there are more ways some part of it could have not been great.
- extra virgin olive oil is a juice that will go rancid from excessive light, oxygen, or temperature fluctuation. it's basically like red wine. once you open the bottle, use it quickly, and keep it in a dark dry place. make sure the bottle is glass and is darkened.
- high phenolic olive oil is more expensive to produce (and thus buy) but contains more polyphenols.
- more olive oils now carry seals of authenticity. find one, Google it, see if it looks legit. there are many different certifications. Italy was the country with the most EVOO fraud, so be more circumspect with oil from there.
- a list of oils sold in America certified as pure: https://www.aboutoliveoil.org/79-certified-pure-and-authenti...
- all EVOO is cold pressed and unrefined, by definition. ignore any marketing jargon you see on different bottles.
- don't pay a bunch of money for infused oil. buy whatever oil you want, put some aromatics in a jar, pour in oil. use it up in a month.
> Fluorescence spectra of some common vegetable oils, including olive oil, olive residue oil, refined olive oil, corn oil, soybean oil, sunflower oil, and cotton oil, were examined in their natural state, with a wavelength of 360 nm used as excitation radiation. All oils studied, except extra virgin olive oil, exhibited a strong fluorescence band at 430–450 nm. Extra virgin olive oil gave a different by interesting fluorescence spectrum, composed of 3 bands: one low intensity doublet at 440 and 455 nm, one strong at 525 nm, and one of medium intensity at 681 nm. The band at 681 nm was identified as the chlorophyll band. The band at 525 nm was at least partly derived from vitamin E. The low intensity doublet at 440 and 455 nm correlated with the absorption intensity at 232 and 270 nm of olive oil. The measurements of these fluorescence spectra were quick (about 5 min) and easy and could possibly be used for authentification of virgin olive oil.
From a Halloween website, may provide a clue to the red.
> Chlorophyll is green under regular light, but will fluoresce red under a black light. Chlorophyll fluoresces red under UV light.