Fresh-Pressed Olive Oil Club

Olive Oil Hunter News #171

Wilted Spinach Salad with Sherry Vinaigrette Recipe, Spotlight on Spinach, The Great Egg Debate Continues, and How Sleep Patterns Influence Health

Spinach salad is a perennial favorite, simple to prepare, satisfying, and chock-full of nutrients. Wilting the spinach before composing the salad was a foodie trend back in the 1970s (the fixings included mandarin orange segments, a nod to the value of eating a food containing vitamin C at the same meal as spinach to better access the green’s iron). My update adds the tasty crunch of hazelnuts. You’ll be intrigued by a new report that suggests fortified eggs may not pose the cholesterol risks of regular eggs. I’m also sharing the latest research on the perils of poor sleep—motivation to improve the quality of your shut-eye.

Wilted Spinach Salad with Sherry Vinaigrette

  • Wilted Spinach and Mushrooms Wilted Spinach Salad with Sherry Vinaigrette

    Fast-forward 50 years from wilted spinach salad’s debut to this version that offers all the benefits of olive oil in the dressing and the prep. Rather than bothering with croutons, try toasted slices of whole-grain bread for its hearty appeal.

    Ingredients

    For the vinaigrette:

    • 1 tablespoon sherry vinegar, plus more to taste
    • 1 tablespoon shallot, peeled and finely chopped
    • 1 teaspoon fresh thyme, chopped
    • 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
    • Coarse salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

    For the salad:

    • 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
    • 1 small red onion, chopped 
    • 4 ounces white or cremini mushrooms, thickly sliced 
    • 8 ounces baby spinach, rinsed and patted dry
    • 2 garlic cloves, minced 
    • 2 medium- or hard-boiled eggs (your preference) quartered
    • 1 ounce hazelnuts, coarsely chopped
    • Optional: 2 slices whole grain bread, toasted and brushed with olive oil

    Directions

    Step 1

    Make the vinaigrette: In a medium mixing bowl, whisk together the vinegar, shallot, and thyme. Gradually whisk in the olive oil until incorporated. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

    Step 2

    Heat a large frying pan or wok over medium heat. When hot, add 2 tablespoons olive oil and the red onions; sauté over medium heat until soft. Push them to the outside of the pan and add the mushrooms in one layer; cook until the edges have browned, then flip and brown on the other side. Transfer the vegetables to a bowl. 

    Step 3

    Add the last tablespoon of olive oil to the hot pan along with the garlic and the spinach, adding the spinach by handfuls—as one batch starts to wilt, push it to the side and add another, stirring quickly. It should only take 2-3 minutes to do it all. 

    Step 4

    Arrange the spinach in two large bowls and top with equal amounts of onions, mushrooms, eggs, and hazelnuts. Drizzle with the vinaigrette. If desired, add a slice of toast to one side of each bowl.

    Makes 2 servings

Healthy Ingredient Spotlight: Spinach-maximizing its nutrients

Healthy Ingredient Spotlight

Spinach: Maximizing Its Nutrients

Fresh spinach

It’s no secret that, as a leafy green, spinach is a healthy food. What is less well known is that your body will better process two of its key nutrients, iron and calcium, when the spinach is cooked. That’s because it also contains oxalic acid, which blocks the minerals’ absorption unless the oxalates are broken down under high-heat cooking. If your recipe doesn’t include sautéing, another option is to plunge the spinach into boiling water for 60 seconds and then right into a bowl of ice-cold water to stop the cooking process and keep it a brighter green. 

To get more of the iron when eating spinach raw, add a vitamin C food, like orange segments, to your meal. 

Your body absorbs more folate and lutein when eating spinach raw, so varying your prep is a good idea.

More reasons to eat spinach: It’s also rich in vitamins K, C, A, E, and B6 as well as folate and riboflavin and in the minerals manganese, magnesium, copper, and potassium. It has many carotenoids, among other antioxidants, to protect cell health and guard against inflammation. 

Quick Kitchen Nugget: A better type of frozen spinach

Quick Kitchen Nugget

A Better Type of Frozen Spinach

When fresh isn’t available, frozen can be a good substitute. The key to more flavorful frozen spinach is to select leaf spinach rather than chopped spinach. The leaves go through a lot less processing, translating to better taste and less freezer burn. Of course, look for pure spinach—no added salt or any other ingredients.

For Your Best Health: An Avocado a Day…

For Your Best Health

The Next Round in the “Are Eggs Healthy?” Debate

Because eggs contain some saturated fat, which is linked to higher cholesterol levels, there’s been much research on finding the right number of eggs to eat per week to help keep cholesterol in line. Results from a prospective controlled trial presented at the American College of Cardiology’s Annual Scientific Session offer positive news for egg lovers. One hundred and forty patients with or at high risk for cardiovascular disease were enrolled in the PROSPERITY study and divided into two groups to assess the effects of eating 12 or more fortified eggs a week versus a non-egg diet (fewer than two eggs a week) on HDL and LDL cholesterol and other key markers of cardiovascular health, including lipid, cardiometabolic, and inflammatory biomarkers and levels of vitamins and minerals. At the end of the four-month study period, cholesterol levels were similar in the two groups.

“We know that cardiovascular disease is, to some extent, mediated through risk factors like high blood pressure, high cholesterol, increased BMI, and diabetes. Dietary patterns and habits can have a notable influence on these, and there’s been a lot of conflicting information about whether or not eggs are safe to eat, especially for people who have or are at risk for heart disease,” said Nina Nouhravesh, MD, a research fellow at the Duke Clinical Research Institute in Durham, North Carolina, and the study’s lead author. “This is a small study, but it gives us reassurance that eating fortified eggs is OK with regard to lipid effects over four months, even among a more high-risk population.”

Dr. Nouhravesh and her team looked specifically at fortified eggs as they contain less saturated fat and have additional vitamins and minerals such as iodine; vitamins D, B2, 5, and 12; selenium; and omega-3 fatty acids. All the participants were 50 years of age or older (the average age was 66 years), half were female, and 27% were African American. All had experienced one prior cardiovascular event or had two cardiovascular risk factors, such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, increased BMI, and/or diabetes. 

Participants had in-person clinic visits at the start of the study and visits at one and four months to take vital signs and have bloodwork done; phone check-ins occurred at two and three months. People in the fortified egg group were asked about their weekly egg consumption, and those with low adherence were given additional educational materials.

Fresh eggs

Results showed a -0.64 mg/dL and a -3.14 mg/dL reduction in so-called good HDL cholesterol and bad LDL cholesterol, respectively, in the fortified egg group. While not statistically significant, the differences suggest, according to the researchers, that eating 12 fortified eggs each week had no adverse effect on blood cholesterol. In terms of secondary endpoints, researchers observed a numerical reduction in total cholesterol, LDL particle number, another lipid biomarker called apoB, high-sensitivity troponin (a marker of heart damage), and insulin resistance scores in the fortified egg group, while vitamin B increased.

“While this is a neutral study, we did not observe adverse effects on biomarkers of cardiovascular health and there were signals of potential benefits of eating fortified eggs that warrant further investigation in larger studies as they are more hypothesis generating here,” Dr. Nouhravesh said, explaining that subgroup analyses revealed numerical increases in HDL cholesterol and reductions in LDL cholesterol in patients 65 years or older and those with diabetes in the fortified egg group compared with those eating fewer than two eggs.

Note that what you eat with your eggs counts: buttered toast and bacon and other processed meats are not heart-healthy choices. As always, Dr. Nouhravesh said, it’s a good idea for people with heart disease to talk with their doctor about a heart-healthy diet.

It’s important to point out that this was a single-center study with a small size and reliance on patients’ self-reporting of their egg consumption and other dietary patterns. It was also an unblinded study, which means patients knew what study group they were in, which can influence their health behaviors, and it was funded by Eggland’s Best, a company that offers eggs from cage-free and pasture-raised/free-range hens.

Fitness Flash: How your sleep pattern influences your health

Fitness Flash

How Your Sleep Pattern Influences Your Health

Poor sleep habits are strongly associated with long-term chronic health conditions, according to decades of research. To better understand this relationship, researchers led by Soomi Lee, PhD, associate professor of human development and family studies at Penn State’s College of Health and Human Development, identified four distinct patterns that characterize how most people sleep and how they correlate to overall health. Results were published in Psychosomatic Medicine.

Using a national sample of adults from the Midlife in the United States (MIDUS) study, they gathered data on approximately 3,700 participants’ sleep habits and chronic health conditions across two time points 10 years apart. The data included self-reported sleep habits, including sleep regularity and duration, perceived sleep satisfaction, and daytime alertness, as well as the number and type of chronic conditions they had.

With that information, the researchers identified these four different sleep patterns:

  • Good sleepers with optimal sleep habits across all data points
  • Weekend catch-up sleepers with irregular sleep, specifically short average sleep duration, but longer sleep times on weekends or non-workdays
  • Insomnia sleepers with sleep problems related to clinical insomnia symptoms, including short sleep duration, high daytime tiredness, and a long time to fall asleep
  • Nappers with mostly good sleep but frequent daytime naps

The MIDUS study may not represent the entire population, researchers said, as it primarily comprises healthy adults, but they still found that more than half the participants were insomnia sleepers or nappers, both suboptimal sleep patterns. Additionally, being an insomnia sleeper over the 10-year period was associated with a significantly higher likelihood of chronic health conditions, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and depression. Results also showed that people were unlikely to change their sleep pattern over the course of the 10 years, especially the insomnia sleepers and nappers. 

“These results may suggest that it is very difficult to change our sleep habits because sleep health is embedded into our overall lifestyle. It may also suggest that people still don’t know about the importance of their sleep and about sleep health behaviors,” Dr. Lee said. “We need to make more efforts to educate the public about good sleep health. There are sleep hygiene behaviors that people could do to improve their sleep, such as not using cell phones in bed, exercising regularly and avoiding caffeine in the late afternoon.”

While the sleep patterns were seemingly not age-related, researchers found that older adults and retirees were more likely to be nappers. They also found that those with less education and those facing unemployment were more likely to be insomnia sleepers.

According to Dr. Lee, the fact that phase of life and economic conditions can influence long-standing sleep patterns suggests that societal and neighborhood influences—including economic stressors and access to health resources—may have significant effects on individual health and, in this case, sleep habits.

The researchers added that their findings strongly suggest the need for programs and interventions to promote healthy sleep and sleep habits and that such programs should not be one-size-fits-all but rather should be targeted based on a variety of factors, including the risk of chronic conditions and socioeconomic vulnerability.

“Sleep is an everyday behavior,” Dr. Lee said. “Sleep is also modifiable. So, if we can improve sleep almost every day, what outcomes might we see after several months, or even several years? Better sleeping habits can make many significant differences, from improving social relationships and work performance to promoting long-term healthy behaviors and healthy aging.”

According to the CDC, these good habits can help improve sleep health:

  • Go to bed at the same time each night and get up at the same time each morning, weekends included.
  • Keep your bedroom quiet, dark, and at a cool, comfortable temperature.
  • Keep all electronic devices, including laptops and cell phones, out of your bedroom.
  • Skip large meals, caffeinated drinks, and alcohol before bed.
  • Get some exercise during the day—it should 
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Wilted Spinach Salad with Sherry Vinaigrette

Fast-forward 50 years from wilted spinach salad’s debut to this version that offers all the benefits of olive oil in the dressing and the prep. Rather than bothering with croutons, try toasted slices of whole-grain bread for its hearty appeal.

Ingredients

For the vinaigrette:

  • 1 tablespoon sherry vinegar, plus more to taste
  • 1 tablespoon shallot, peeled and finely chopped
  • 1 teaspoon fresh thyme, chopped
  • 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
  • Coarse salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

For the salad:

  • 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 small red onion, chopped 
  • 4 ounces white or cremini mushrooms, thickly sliced 
  • 8 ounces baby spinach, rinsed and patted dry
  • 2 garlic cloves, minced 
  • 2 medium- or hard-boiled eggs (your preference) quartered
  • 1 ounce hazelnuts, coarsely chopped
  • Optional: 2 slices whole grain bread, toasted and brushed with olive oil

Directions

Step 1

Make the vinaigrette: In a medium mixing bowl, whisk together the vinegar, shallot, and thyme. Gradually whisk in the olive oil until incorporated. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

Step 2

Heat a large frying pan or wok over medium heat. When hot, add 2 tablespoons olive oil and the red onions; sauté over medium heat until soft. Push them to the outside of the pan and add the mushrooms in one layer; cook until the edges have browned, then flip and brown on the other side. Transfer the vegetables to a bowl. 

Step 3

Add the last tablespoon of olive oil to the hot pan along with the garlic and the spinach, adding the spinach by handfuls—as one batch starts to wilt, push it to the side and add another, stirring quickly. It should only take 2-3 minutes to do it all. 

Step 4

Arrange the spinach in two large bowls and top with equal amounts of onions, mushrooms, eggs, and hazelnuts. Drizzle with the vinaigrette. If desired, add a slice of toast to one side of each bowl.

Makes 2 servings

Olive Oil Hunter News #170

Horiatiki Salad Recipe and The MIND Diet for Brain Health: More Benefits of Olive Oil

I’m a huge fan of both Greek and Middle Eastern salads, the ingredients of which are not only delicious but also mainstays of the MIND (Mediterranean-DASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay) diet, a way of eating designed for brain health. It’s an offshoot of the super-healthy Mediterranean diet and the DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet. Why the distinction? Because the latest research on the MIND diet shows it can slow aging as well as reduce dementia risk. Add this to the list of the benefits of olive oil—it’s one of the super foods that MIND suggests including every day.

Horiatiki: The Sequel!

  • Winter Pear Salad Olive Oil Hunter #247

    Winter Salad Recipe, Spotlight on Homemade Vinaigrettes, Prepping Greens, A New Benefit of Vitamin D, and Aerobics for Knee arthritis

    Salads aren’t just for summer, and if one of your New Year’s resolutions is to eat more fruits and veggies, this winter greens recipe fits the bill. I’ve dressed it with a sweet-tart vinaigrette that you can use with a variety of foods for lighter eating. I’m also sharing two new important findings: how vitamin D can help people avoid a second heart attack and a surprising way to manage knee arthritis.

    Winter Salad

    Healthy Ingredient Spotlight: Homemade Vinaigrettes

    Healthy Ingredient Spotlight

    Homemade Vinaigrettes

    Homemade Vinaigrette

    It’s no secret that most bottled dressings are loaded with sugar, artificial ingredients, and poor- quality oil. On the other hand, it’s so easy to make your own with just a few quality ingredients. Vinaigrettes can be made with a whisk, but using a blender or mini food processor can make fast work of it, especially if some ingredients need to be chopped or minced. As a general rule, you can pulse all the ingredients except the olive oil for a few seconds—let the machine mince any herbs, garlic, or shallots for you. Then with the machine still running, slowly add the olive oil through the feed tube until the vinaigrette is emulsified. Vinaigrette will keep for up to a week in the fridge; shake well or whisk as needed before using.

    Quick Kitchen Nugget: Prepping Greens

    Quick Kitchen Nugget

    Prepping Greens

    To maximize taste when making salads, prep your greens by rinsing and drying them in a salad spinner or with an absorbent kitchen towel—dressing coats them better when they’re dry and won’t be diluted by water clinging to the leaves. Rather than simply pouring vinaigrette over your salad, mix it in with two forks or tongs to really dress the greens. Also, keep in mind that vinaigrettes aren’t just for salads—drizzle them over roasted vegetables, grains, and cold meats. 

    For Your Best Health: A New Benefit of Vitamin D

    For Your Best Health 

    A New Benefit of Vitamin D

    In a large randomized clinical trial, researchers from Intermountain Health in Salt Lake City found that managing the vitamin D levels of people who experienced a heart attack through a “target-to-treat” approach, with blood levels monitored and dosages adjusted to reach an optimal range, cut the likelihood of a second heart attack by 50%. The findings were presented on Nov. 9 at the 2025 American Heart Association Scientific Sessions in New Orleans.

    According to researchers, the results carry global importance, as between one-half and two-thirds of people worldwide have low levels of vitamin D. In the past, most individuals received sufficient vitamin D through sunlight exposure. Today, with lifestyle changes and medical advice aimed at reducing skin cancer risk, people spend less time in the sun and must rely more on dietary supplements such as vitamin D3 to maintain healthy levels.

    Low vitamin D levels have long been linked to poor cardiovascular outcomes in observational studies. However, earlier clinical trials that provided standard supplementation doses failed to show measurable reductions in heart disease risk. Intermountain scientists wanted to test a different idea: Rather than giving everyone the same dose, what if supplementation was adjusted to reach a specific healthy vitamin D level?

    “Previous studies just gave patients supplementation without regularly checking blood levels of vitamin D to determine what supplementation achieved,” said Heidi May, PhD, cardiovascular epidemiologist at Intermountain and the study’s principal investigator. “With more-targeted treatment, when we checked exactly how supplementation was working and made adjustments, we found that patients had their risk of another heart attack cut in half.” 

    The Intermountain study, called the TARGET-D trial, ran from April 2017 to May 2023 and included 630 patients who had suffered a heart attack within a month of enrolling. Participants were followed until March 2025 to monitor cardiovascular outcomes.

    Patients were randomly assigned to one of two groups: One received no vitamin D management and the other underwent active, targeted vitamin D3 treatment. The goal for the treatment group was to raise blood levels of vitamin D to above 40 nanograms per milliliter (ng/mL). At the start, 85% of participants had blood levels of vitamin D below that threshold. More than half of the patients receiving targeted therapy required an initial dose of 5,000 international units (IUs) of vitamin D3 compared to typical supplement recommendations of 600-800 IUs.

    Blood levels of vitamin D were checked annually for those maintaining healthy levels. Patients with lower levels were tested every three months and had their dosage adjusted until reaching the 40 ng/mL target. Afterward, their levels were monitored once a year.

    Researchers tracked major cardiac events, including heart attacks, strokes, heart failure hospitalizations, and deaths. Out of 630 participants, 107 experienced such events. While there was no significant difference in the overall risk between the two groups, the chance of having a second heart attack was cut in half among those receiving targeted vitamin D3 treatment.

    “We’re excited with these results but know we have further work to do to validate these findings,” said Dr. May. Researchers plan to expand their work with a larger clinical trial to confirm and build upon these findings. “A larger study group will allow us to more fully evaluate whether targeted vitamin D management can reduce not only repeat heart attacks but also other forms of cardiovascular disease,” she said.

    Fitness Flash Icon: Knee arthritis? Try Aerobics! 

    Fitness Flash

    Knee arthritis? Try Aerobics!

    A sweeping review of 217 studies representing 15,684 participants found that aerobic exercises like walking and cycling offer the best pain relief and mobility gains for knee osteoarthritis. Compared to other types of exercise, aerobic training showed the strongest evidence across short- and long-term outcomes. All forms of exercise were found to be safe, but experts recommend making aerobic activity the foundation of treatment as it’s the most effective for easing pain, improving movement, and enhancing overall quality of life.

    Osteoarthritis develops when the cartilage cushioning the ends of bones wears down, leading to swelling, stiffness, and discomfort. It can affect any joint, but the knees are most commonly impacted. About 30% of adults over age 45 show signs of knee osteoarthritis on X-rays, and roughly half of them experience significant pain and mobility problems.

    Exercise is a cornerstone of osteoarthritis care, yet many medical guidelines lack clear direction on which kinds are most beneficial for knee osteoarthritis specifically. To clarify this, researchers analyzed the effectiveness and safety of several exercise approaches.

    Exercise for knee arthritis

    The trials varied in quality, but the team assessed the strength of the evidence using the internationally recognized GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation) system. They examined several key outcomes: pain reduction, physical function, gait performance, and quality of life. Each was measured at short-term (4 weeks), mid-term (12 weeks), and long-term (24 weeks) follow-ups. Across these studies, aerobic exercise consistently ranked highest in improving outcomes among all exercise types tested.

    Other exercise forms showed value too. Mind-body workouts likely provided a notable improvement in short-term function, neuromotor exercises likely boosted short-term gait performance, and strengthening or mixed routines improved function in the mid-term. Importantly, none of the exercise types resulted in more adverse effects than the control groups, indicating that these therapies are generally safe.

    The authors did acknowledge some study limitations. Many results came from indirect comparisons, certain outcomes lacked long-term data, and smaller studies may have influenced some early findings. Despite these limitations, the researchers describe their work as one of the most complete and current evaluations of exercise for managing knee osteoarthritis. They believe the findings, which were published in The BMJ, will help doctors make more-targeted recommendations.

    Based on the evidence, the team advises aerobic exercise “as a first-line intervention for knee osteoarthritis management, particularly when the aim is to improve functional capacity and reduce pain” and says if aerobic exercise is not possible owing to individual limitations, “alternative forms of structured physical activity may still be beneficial.”

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  • Winter Pear Salad Winter Salad

    Using sweet and tart vinegars adds complexity to this vinaigrette, which is a delicious foil for the slightly bitter greens and sweet pears.

    Ingredients

    For Vinaigrette:

    • 1 tablespoon red wine vinegar, such as Austrian Red Wine Vinegar
    • 1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar of Modena, such as Condimento Barili Exclusivi
    • 1/2 tablespoon Dijon mustard
    • 1/2 tablespoon honey
    • 1/4 teaspoon coarse sea salt, plus more to taste
    • 1/2 garlic clove, minced 
    • 1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil
    • Freshly ground black pepper to taste

    For the Salad:

    • 1/2 cup hazelnuts or walnut halves
    • 4 to 6 cups baby spinach, baby kale, escarole, or other winter greens, rinsed and dried
    • 2 ripe pears, cored and thinly sliced
    • Block of Parmigiano-Reggiano or 2 ounces mild blue cheese

    Directions

    Step 1

    Make the vinaigrette: In a medium mixing bowl, whisk together the vinegars, mustard, honey, salt, and garlic. Gradually whisk in the olive oil until the dressing is emulsified. Season to taste with pepper and more salt, if desired.

    Step 2

    Make the salad: Heat a small sauté pan. When hot, add the nuts and toast for 2 minutes until they become fragrant, tossing frequently; set aside.

    Step 3

    Divide the greens among 4 salad plates and top with equal amounts of pear slices and nuts. If using Parmigiano-Reggiano, use a cheese plane to make long shavings over each salad. If using blue cheese, crumble it. Drizzle a spoonful of vinaigrette over each salad and pass the rest on the side.

    Yields 4 servings

  • Hydroxytyrosol from Olives Is a Neuroprotective Agent

    One of the most powerful polyphenols in olive oil is hydroxytyrosol. Consuming hydroxytyrosol is linked to benefits in neurological, cardiovascular, and metabolic health, and the compound has demonstrated anti-inflammatory, anti-cancer, neuro-protective, and immuno-protective effects. A recently published scientific review in the journal Foods examines the growing body of evidence supporting the characterization of hydroxytyrosol as a “functional food,” with emphasis on its effects on neurological and cognitive processes.

    What is it?

    Hydroxytyrosol (hi-droxy-TY-roh-sol), abbreviated as HXT, is a phenol, a natural chemical that is both water-soluble and attracted to fats, which means that it can pass through cell membranes. Its chemical structure also explains its strong antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. HXT occurs mainly in olives—olive oil, fruit, leaves, and pulp—as well as in red and white wines.

    What does HXT do in the brain?

    HXT interacts with the brain and its vascular (blood vessel) system in 3 ways: 1) as an antioxidant and anti-inflammatory agent, HXT helps prevent damage to cerebral blood vessels and improves their function; 2) lab studies show that, by reducing oxidation and inflammation, HXT helps maintain the proper functioning of the blood-brain barrier (BBB), a crucial filter inside the brain’s blood vessels that controls what substances enter and exit the brain; 3) in studies in humans, consuming HXT in the form of high-phenolic EVOO resulted in less “leakage” across the BBB and, as reflected in participants’ performance on cognitive tests, improved connectivity between brain regions.

    HXT and its metabolites (the components of a substance that are formed when metabolic processes, such as digestion, break it down) are able to cross the BBB to interact with specific brain processes, enhancing protective activity and dampening inflammatory activity that is linked to depression and cognitive decline.

    How much HXT is needed to obtain its benefits?

    In studies in humans, the above benefits were observed with an HXT intake ranging from 7 to 15 mg/day. In terms of EVOO, this translates to a daily consumption of about 25 to 50 ml of high-phenolic olive oil, or ~2 to 3 tablespoons. Table olives—regardless of their color or brining—also provide an excellent source of HXT.

    What’s next for HXT?

    This body of promising evidence has intensified interest in the development of HXT-enriched foods and other ways of delivering this health-promoting compound. HXT is highly bioavailable, which means that, after it is consumed and digested, it is readily absorbed and transported by the body. So, for now—perhaps for always—the most effective, efficient, and delicious way to obtain the neuroprotective benefits of HXT is “food-first,” via high-phenolic EVOO.

    Reference: Martínez-Zamora Z. Foods 2025;14(21):3624.

  • White chocolate pistachio truffles Olive Oil Hunter News #246

    Fruit and Nut White Chocolate Truffles Recipe, Spotlight on Pistachios, The Scoop on Scoops, Coffee and A-Fib, Walk this Way to Cut Risks to Heart Health

    Perfect for your New Year’s Eve celebration or to bring to a party, these luscious white chocolate truffles are a snap to make but look oh so elegant. As you set health goals for the coming year, simple lifestyle habits can have a big impact, especially on your heart. Read how coffee may stave off recurrent A-fib and how just 10 to 15 minutes of sustained walking can prevent many heart conditions.

    Fruit and Nut White Chocolate Truffles

    Healthy Ingredient Spotlight: Picking Pistachios

    Healthy Ingredient Spotlight

    Picking Pistachios

    Shelled pistachios are the easiest for cooking as well as snacking, but keep in mind that they’re usually roasted and salted—not the best option for sweets. When using pistachios for baking, making truffles, or as a pretty garnish, for instance, look for shelled pistachios marked “raw.” These are in their natural state, unroasted and unsalted.

    Quick Kitchen Nugget: The Scoop on Scoops

    Quick Kitchen Nugget

    The Scoop on Scoops

    Ice cream scoops

    Scoops with a spring-loaded handle are great for dishing out ice cream as well as for forming truffles, cookies, and even meatballs! You might already have one or more in your tool drawer. But if not or if you’re looking to expand the range of sizes you have, know that cookie scoops and ice cream scoops aren’t 100% interchangeable. Some cookie scoops are sturdier and might have sharper edges. I’ve always found that the spring-loaded handle is the most important feature because it allows you to release the food easily, preserving much of its rounded shape. 

    Scoops tend to come sized by the volume they hold, such as 1-, 2-, and 3-tablespoon (those measurements roughly correspond to 1.5, 1.75 and 2 inches in diameter), and you can find them all the way up to a 1/2 cup or more. Look for stainless steel and, if you use them often, an ergonomic design with a soft grip that’s easier on your hands. 

    For Your Best Health: Coffee and A-fib

    For Your Best Health 

    Coffee and A-Fib

    New research suggests that drinking coffee may help protect against atrial fibrillation, or A-fib, a common heart rhythm disorder that causes the heart to beat too quickly and irregularly, sometimes leading to stroke or heart failure.

    For years, doctors have advised people with A-fib and other heart issues to stay away from caffeine, fearing it could worsen symptoms. But research done at the University of California San Francisco and the University of Adelaide in Australia found just the opposite.

    “Coffee increases physical activity, which is known to reduce atrial fibrillation,” explained Gregory M. Marcus, MD, an electrophysiologist at UCSF Health and the senior author of the study, which was published in JAMA. Dr. Marcus added that “caffeine is also a diuretic, which could potentially reduce blood pressure and in turn lessen A-fib risk. Several other ingredients in coffee also have anti-inflammatory properties that could have positive effects.”

    Rates of A-fib have been climbing in recent years, largely due to aging populations and increasing obesity. More than 10 million adults in the United States have been diagnosed, and experts estimate that as many as one in three people may experience the condition at some point in their lives.

    Coffee and A-Fib

    To explore whether coffee helps or harms, the researchers designed the DECAF (Does Eliminating Coffee Avoid Fibrillation?) study, the first randomized clinical trial to test the relationship between caffeinated (despite the study’s acronym) coffee and A-fib. 

    The trial involved 200 patients who were regular coffee drinkers and had persistent A-fib or a related condition known as atrial flutter along with a history of A-fib. All underwent electrical cardioversion, a procedure that uses a controlled electrical shock to restore normal heart rhythm. Participants were randomly assigned to drink either at least one cup of caffeinated coffee or an espresso shot each day or completely avoid coffee and other caffeinated beverages for six months.

    At the end of the study, the group that drank coffee experienced a 39% lower risk of recurring A-fib episodes. In addition to coffee’s potential anti-inflammatory effects, the researchers proposed that those who drank coffee may have naturally replaced less healthy drinks, such as sugary sodas, with coffee instead.

    “The results were astounding,” said first author Christopher X. Wong, PhD, of UCSF, the University of Adelaide, and the Royal Adelaide Hospital. “Doctors have always recommended that patients with problematic A-fib minimize their coffee intake, but this trial suggests that coffee is not only safe but likely to be protective.”

    Fitness Flash Icon: Walk this Way to Cut Risks to Heart Health 

    Fitness Flash

    Walk this Way to Cut Risks to Heart Health

    New research revealed that walking in uninterrupted longer bouts of 10 to 15 minutes significantly lowers cardiovascular disease risk by up to two-thirds compared to shorter strolls of under 5 minutes. 

    An international team of researchers from the University of Sydney and Universidad Europea found that even people who walk fewer than 8,000 steps daily can see major heart health benefits simply by changing how they walk. Those who took their steps in one or two continuous sessions had lower rates of heart attacks, strokes, and death. Even when covering the same total number of steps, uninterrupted longer walks appear to provide greater benefits for the heart than do scattered short strolls throughout the day. 

    The work, which was published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, explored how walking patterns affect the health of people who are generally inactive. The study involved 33,560 adults between the ages of 40 and 79 who typically walked fewer than 8,000 steps a day and had no history of cardiovascular disease or cancer. Participants wore research-grade wristbands for one week to record both their step counts and how their steps were distributed throughout the day.

    The researchers followed their health outcomes for about eight years and found striking differences in cardiovascular risk between those who walked in shorter versus longer bouts:

    • People who walked continuously for 10 to 15 minutes daily had only a 4% chance of experiencing a cardiovascular event such as a heart attack or stroke compared to a 13% risk among those who walked continuously for just 5 minutes a day.
    • The benefits were greatest for the least-active individuals, particularly those taking 5,000 or fewer steps. Within this group, the risk of developing cardiovascular disease fell from 15% among short walkers to 7% among those who walked up to 15 minutes at a time.
    • Among the most-sedentary participants (5,000 or fewer steps a day), the risk of death dropped from 5% for those walking in 5-minute bouts to under 1% for those taking longer walks.

    Co-lead author Matthew Ahmadi, PhD, deputy director of the Mackenzie Wearables Research Hub and member of the Charles Perkins Centre at the University of Sydney, explained: “For the most inactive people, switching from brief walks here and there to longer continuous walks may come with some health benefits. There is a perception that health professionals have recommended walking 10,000 steps a day is the goal, but this isn’t necessary. Simply adding one or two longer walks per day, each lasting at least 10 to 15 minutes at a comfortable but steady pace, may have significant benefits, especially for people who don’t walk much.”

    Senior author Professor Emmanuel Stamatakis, director of the Mackenzie Wearables Research Hub and physical activity theme leader at the Charles Perkins Centre, added: “We tend to place all the emphasis on the number of steps or the total amount of walking but neglect the crucial role of patterns—for example, how walking is done.”

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  • White chocolate pistachio truffles Fruit and Nut White Chocolate Truffles

    Cranberries and pistachios pair so well in these creamy white chocolate truffles but have fun experimenting with your own combinations—the technique is exactly the same. 

    Ingredients

    • 4 ounces dried cranberries
    • 10 ounces shelled pistachios, divided use
    • 1 pound white chocolate, preferably 35% cacao
    • 1/2 cup heavy cream
    • 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
    • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

    Directions

    Step 1

    Coarsely chop the cranberries and 4 ounces of the pistachios; set aside. Chop the rest of the pistachios more finely and transfer to a shallow bowl; set aside.

    Step 2

    Coarsely chop the chocolate; reserve 2 ounces and place the rest along with the heavy cream in a large microwave-safe glass bowl. Microwave at 30% power for 2 minutes, stir, and repeat until the chocolate is not quite fully melted. Out of the microwave, add the remaining chocolate to the bowl, let sit for 2 minutes, and then stir until smooth.

    Step 3

    Stir in the olive oil and vanilla, then fold in the coarsely chopped cranberries and pistachios. Turn the mixture onto a parchment paper–lined rimmed sheet pan or cookie sheet and gently flatten it with a spatula. Place in the fridge for 20 minutes to firm up for shaping.

    Step 4

    Once chilled, transfer the paper with the chocolate to your countertop and line the sheet pan with a clean piece of parchment. Using a 1-tablespoon scoop, make a truffle ball and drop it into the bowl of chopped pistachios. Roll it in the nuts, then place on the prepared sheet pan. Repeat with the rest of the chocolate.

    Step 5

    Place the pan in the fridge to firm up the truffles, about 20 minutes. If not serving right away, place them in a tin or covered dish and keep in the fridge. Refrigerated, the truffles will stay fresh for up to 2 weeks.

    Yields about 4 dozen truffles

  • Lobster Risotto Olive Oil Hunter News #245

    Lobster Risotto  Recipe, Spotlight on Lobster and Handling Lobster Tails, Music and Your Brain, Poor Sleep Doubles Running Injuries 

    Love to pull out all the stops for the holidays? This lobster risotto is a crowd-pleaser, with simple directions to master the dish. At the time of year when many of us think about improving health, two new studies provide easy-to-adopt lifestyle habits for better living: how music can help avoid cognitive decline and how sleep can help avoid sports injuries. 

    Lobster Risotto 

    Healthy Ingredient Spotlight: Lobster

    Healthy Ingredient Spotlight

    Lobster

    Unlike many other splurges, you can enjoy lobster without any guilt. It does have dietary cholesterol, but the cholesterol in foods isn’t what impacts a person’s cholesterol level—that has more to do with saturated fat consumption, and in that department lobster comes in under many other protein sources. It also has far fewer calories than an equivalent portion of meat. Lobster’s a good source of protein and, while it doesn’t have as much omega-3 fatty acids as a fatty fish like salmon, it has more than other types of shellfish. 

    Quick Kitchen Nugget: Handling Lobster Tails

    Quick Kitchen Nugget

    Handling Lobster Tails

    Most tails are sold frozen. Let them slowly defrost overnight in a bowl in your fridge. As with all shellfish, whether you steam, boil, or grill it, avoid overcooking, which can make the meat rubbery. When the shells go from blue or brown to orangey red, you know they’re done, typically about 1 minute per ounce (e.g., 6 minutes if the tails weigh about 6 ounces). Use a pair of kitchen shears to cut the length of the undersides and release the meat. If you’re making a cold recipe or not using the meat right away, place it in a sealed glass container in the fridge.

    For Your Best Health: Music and Your Brain

    For Your Best Health 

    Music and Your Brain

    Couple listening to music while cooking

    Listening to music after age 70 appears to be linked with a meaningful reduction in dementia risk, according to a research team from Monash University in Melbourne, Australia. The project, led by Monash honors student Emma Jaffa and Professor Joanne Ryan, examined how both listening to music and playing instruments relate to cognitive health in later years. 

    The researchers based their work on information from the ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE) study and the ASPREE Longitudinal Study of Older Persons sub‐study, analyzing data from more than 10,800 older adults.

    People who reported always listening to music demonstrated the strongest cognitive advantages, with a 39% lower incidence of dementia and a 17% lower incidence of cognitive impairment, along with higher overall cognitive scores and better episodic memory (used when recalling everyday events). Those who both listened to and played music on a regular basis had a 33% reduced risk of dementia and a 22% reduced risk of cognitive impairment.

    The outcomes of the research “suggest music activities may be an accessible strategy for maintaining cognitive health in older adults, though causation cannot be established,” Jaffa said.

    Senior author Professor Ryan emphasized the urgency of exploring options to help delay or prevent dementia. “With no cure currently available for dementia, the importance of identifying strategies to help prevent or delay onset of the disease is critical,” she said. “Evidence suggests that brain aging is not just based on age and genetics but can be influenced by one’s own environmental and lifestyle choices. Our study suggests that lifestyle-based interventions, such as listening to and/or playing music can promote cognitive health.” The results were published in the International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry.

    Fitness Flash Icon: Poor Sleep Doubles Running Injuries 

    Fitness Flash

    Poor Sleep Doubles Running Injuries 

    If you’re one of the 620 million people who regularly go for a run, you probably like to get an early start. But if you haven’t slept well the night before, you could be putting yourself at greater risk of injury.

    A survey of 425 recreational runners was conducted by Professor Jan de Jonge, PhD, a work and sports psychologist at Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands and adjunct professor at the University of South Australia, and Toon W. Taris, PhD, of the Department of Social, Health and Organizational Psychology at Utrecht University in the Netherlands. The researchers discovered that participants who reported shorter sleep duration, lower sleep quality, or frequent sleep problems were almost twice as likely to experience an injury compared to those who slept well.

    The results, published in Applied Sciences, provide what Dr. de Jonge calls “compelling evidence that sleep is a critical yet often overlooked component of injury prevention” and not just recovery. “While runners specifically focus on mileage, nutrition, and recovery strategies, sleep tends to fall to the bottom of the list,” he explained. “Our research shows that poor sleepers were 1.78 times more likely to report injuries than those with stable, good-quality sleep, with a 68% likelihood of sustaining an injury over a 12-month period. That’s a strong reminder that how well you rest is just as important as how hard you train.”

    Recreational running remains one of the most popular sports worldwide, yet it carries a substantial risk of injury. Studies estimate that up to 90% of runners will be injured at some point, resulting in millions of dollars lost each year in medical bills and missed work. Dr. de Jonge’s team took a comprehensive approach, examining sleep not only in terms of duration but also quality and disorders. This broader view helped identify how different aspects of sleep contribute to physical vulnerability.

    “Sleep is a vital biological process that allows the body and mind to recover and adapt to the physical and mental demands of training,” said Dr. de Jonge. “When sleep is disrupted or insufficient, the body’s ability to repair tissues, regulate hormones, and maintain focus diminishes, all of which can increase injury risk.”

    The study revealed that runners who struggled with falling asleep woke up frequently during the night or who rarely felt rested were the most prone to injury. In contrast, those who maintained consistent sleep schedules and felt well rested reported significantly fewer injuries. 

    Experts generally recommend seven to nine hours of sleep per night, though athletes often benefit from additional rest, including short naps, to enhance both physical and mental recovery. To improve sleep quality, maintaining consistent bedtimes, limiting screen use before sleep, reducing caffeine and alcohol, and maintaining a quiet, cool bedroom environment are all advised, noted the researchers.

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  • Lobster Risotto Lobster Risotto

    A delicious and festive dish, this can be made quite easily with store-bought lobster broth and a pound of cooked lobster meat. I’m also including directions for making it from scratch, if you prefer, simplified by using only tails. You can get even more flavor from two whole lobsters—after steaming, remove all the claw and tail meat, then use all the shells, legs included, for the stock.

    Ingredients

    For Homemade Lobster Stock:

    • 4 small (4-ounce) or 2 large (8-ounce) lobster tails, defrosted if frozen
    • 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
    • 2 celery stalks, trimmed and diced
    • 2 carrots, peeled and diced
    • 1 large onion, peeled and diced
    • 2 tablespoons tomato paste
    • 1/2 teaspoon sweet paprika, such as Heirloom Sweet Paprika
    • 2 bay leaves

    For the Risotto:

    • 3 or 4 threads saffron
    • 1/2 cup dry vermouth
    • 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil, plus more for drizzling
    • 2 large shallots, minced
    • 1-1/2 cups short grain risotto rice, such as carnaroli, vialone nano, or arborio
    • Reserved homemade lobster stock or 4 cups best-quality store-bought stock
    • Reserved lobster meat or 8 (or more) ounces store-bought lobster meat
    • 3/4 cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano, divided use
    • Freshly ground black pepper to taste
    • 2 tablespoons chopped fresh chives

    Directions

    Step 1

    To make the stock: Steam the lobster tails on a rack over simmering water in a large covered pot until they turn a bright red-orange, about 8 minutes. Use tongs to transfer them to a cutting board, then pour the cooking liquid into a 4-cup heatproof measuring cup; if needed, add enough water to make 4 cups.

    Step 2

    Use kitchen shears to cut through the underside of the shells and remove the tail meat. Slice into 1-inch medallions, place in a dish, and cover; set aside.

    Step 3

    Heat a large skillet or Dutch oven. When hot, add the olive oil, lobster shells, and all the vegetables. Sauté until the vegetables soften, stirring frequently. Add the tomato paste to the center of the pan and cook it until it darkens in color. Carefully whisk in the reserved liquid, plus another 2 cups of water, the paprika, and the bay leaves. 

    Step 4

    Bring to a boil, then simmer for an hour. Strain the broth into a clean saucepan, pressing down on the vegetables to extract all the liquid. You should have 4 cups; if not, add enough water to make that amount.

    Step 5

    To make the risotto: Soften the saffron in the vermouth; set aside. Bring the lobster stock to a low simmer in a medium saucepan. Heat a heavy sauté pan or Dutch oven over medium heat. When hot, add the olive oil and shallots, sautéing them until soft, but don’t let them brown. Add the rice to the pan and stir to thoroughly coat with the oil. Cook until the rice is slightly translucent, about 7 to 10 minutes, stirring often.

    Step 6

    Add the vermouth-saffron mix to the pan and cook until the liquid has nearly evaporated. Ladle 1/2 cup of the hot stock into the rice mixture and stir continuously. When the liquid is almost completely absorbed, stir in another 1/2 cup of hot stock. Repeat until the rice is creamy yet al dente, about 25 minutes (you may not need all the stock). 

    Step 7

    Stir in 1/2 cup of the Parmigiano-Reggiano and the lobster medallions. If the risotto is too thick, stir in any remaining stock or water, 1/4 cup at a time. Season to taste—the risotto might taste salty enough from the cheese but will benefit from a few twists of a pepper grinder. Serve immediately, topping each portion with a drizzle of olive oil and some chives and passing the rest of the cheese on the side.

    Yields 4 servings

  • T. J. Robinson and Nicola Ruggiero Quarter 4—Italian Harvest

    From the Heart of Il Bel Paese Three Beautiful Extra Virgin Olive Oils To Create Magical Meals with Friends and Family

    T.J. Robinson The Olive Oil Hunter
    • Enjoy this dazzling trio, hand-selected by your Olive Oil Hunter, with prized varietals from award-winning family farms.
    • Savor vibrant flavors that reflect bountiful polyphenols, the nutrients responsible for extra virgin olive oil’s many health benefits.
    • Know that they’re certified 100 percent extra virgin olive oil by an independent lab and were rushed to the US by jet for maximum freshness and flavor.

    For millennia, olives have played a part in every aspect of Italian culture, from food to religious observances to medicine. With over 500 olive varieties, the harvest is an especially magical time here. The tourist crowds are mostly gone, the weather is cooler, and the air is perfumed with the green, herbaceous aroma of olio nuovo. But the relaxed pace that a casual visitor might enjoy is a world apart from the intensity with which my Merry Band of Tasters and I move as we hunt for the ultimate extra virgin olive oils for our Club members.

    T. J. Robinson and Duccio Morozzo della Rocca tasting olive oil with Roman Colosseum in background
    The crafting of olive oil predates the Colosseum, the historic backdrop for the grand tasting organized by international olive oil expert Duccio Morozzo della Rocca as soon as I landed in Rome. We narrowed down our choices to the most promising varietals, all from gold-medal-winning farms, and welcomed the opportunities to strengthen relationships—old and new—that you’ll read about in the following profiles.

    “Go South, Young Man”

    We had an inkling of what to expect before we landed in Rome, with advance word that it would be a difficult season for many producers in Central Italy—Tuscany, Umbria, Lazio—because of the vagaries of Mother Nature.

    This was apparent at the grand tasting organized by international olive oil virtuoso Duccio Morozzo della Rocca, yet we were dazzled by the first batch of samples from other regions. We narrowed it down to our leading contenders and headed east to Abruzzo, then south to Puglia (with a fun side trip to Campania), to create the sensational trio.

    T. J. Robinson and Dr. Marino Giorgetti
    In his role as competition panel leader, sensory analysis expert Dr. Marino Giorgetti tastes about 4,000 oils each year! When we met, we formed a mutual admiration society—I expressed my appreciation for everything he has done to deepen the understanding of olive oil’s characteristics, and he graciously acknowledged my decades of work sharing this knowledge through the Club and making exceptional olive oil available to our members.

    A Brush with History

    In Penne, a town known for its historic brick structures (and the fashion house of Brioni), we worked with Claudio Di Mercurio of Frantoio Mercurius to craft an exquisite Dritta, our medium oil. Dritta means reliable—but never staid—and it lived up to its name once again. We deliciously enhanced it with Leccino and Frantoio. I was equally thrilled when Claudio organized a dinner with Dr. Marino Giorgetti, a groundbreaking figure in the world of extra virgin olive oil.

    Dr. Giorgetti’s career started in the early ’80s at the Experimental Institute for Elaiotechnics (the science and technology of olive oil production) in Città Sant’Angelo. He was soon collaborating with Dr. Mario Solinas, the pioneering agronomist who conceptualized the sensory analysis of olive oil. Earlier olive oil assessment had been based purely on chemistry. The organoleptic descriptors used today—including those in our own “Impressions” sections—did not exist. An olive oil could get a pass on paper but completely fail on taste. There weren’t even words to express taste defects that characterize inferior oils. That all changed in 1989, when the International Olive Council adopted the use of sensory analysis, based on the work of Dr. Solinas and his counterparts in five other countries, forever redefining how extra virgin olive oil would be judged.

    Since then, Dr. Giorgetti has traveled the world, teaching olive oil professionals how to be panel tasters—the top judges at competitions—using sensory descriptors. For more than 20 years, he has been panel leader and technical director of the Sol d’Oro International Competition, an organization with the foresight to hold separate events for the Northern and Southern hemispheres so that neither is at a freshness disadvantage, given their opposite harvest seasons. This desire to optimize freshness is the same reason that I, each year, divide my olive oil quests between the globe’s halves.

    T. J. Robinson and Fratelli Ruggiero
    Fratelli Ruggiero’s Nicola Ruggiero, second from left, doesn’t run his groves from behind a desk. Like me, he’s happiest in the field, checking on the olives, watching over the harvest, and enjoying being part of a dedicated team—he’s also pleased to know how much Club members appreciate his olive oils.

    The Adriatic Awaits

    Our hunt continued in Puglia, where we worked with brothers Nicola and Mario of Fratelli Ruggiero to craft our mild oil, an amazing Favolosa with a touch of Don Carlo. These two olives are modern-era cultivars, celebrated for their divine fruitiness and spiciness—mild, yes, but brimming with amazing aromas and fabulous flavors.

    Having reconnected last year with master miller Nicolangelo Marsicani (we originally met over a decade ago!), I was eager to collaborate with him on our exceptional bold selection. I call him the Picasso of olive oil because of his ingenious artistry that went into creating our vibrant and perfectly balanced Coratina.

    Puglia also tempted me with its many culinary treasures, from the freshest seafood in coastal Bari to the heartier dishes in storied inland towns like Altamura and Mariotto. I’m thrilled to share some of these delights with you in the recipe section. As always, they—and your own favorite recipes—will be elevated by the delicious oils in this trio.

    Happy drizzling!

    T. J. Robinson 
    The Olive Oil Hunter®


    This Quarter’s First Selection

    • Producer: Fratelli Ruggiero, Puglia, Italy 2025
    • Olive Varieties: Favolosa, Don Carlo
    • Flavor Profile: Mild
    Fratelli Ruggiero, Bitonto, Puglia, Italy 2024 Fresh Pressed Olive Oil

    After the success of our inaugural Fratelli Ruggiero olive oil last year, I couldn’t wait to reconnect with Nicola and Mario Ruggiero, the fratelli (brothers) creating exquisite liquid gold in Puglia.

    From our very first meeting, I felt that Nicola and I were kindred spirits. Just over 20 years ago, while I was starting this Club to bring unmatched fresh-pressed oils to the US, Nicola sensed a growing desire in his country for artisanal EVOO—food-friendly oils with distinctive flavor profiles to lavish on favorite dishes. That was when he decided to add Favolosa to his groves for its herbaceous personality, “with more perfume of green grass,” as he described. Another cultivar, Don Carlo, with notes of Mediterranean herbs, soon followed.

    Fast forward to this year’s harvest. Don Carlo was so enchanting when we tasted it at the mill that I decided to create another exciting first for the Club: the combination of Favolosa enhanced with Don Carlo. While most beloved olive cultivars are thousands of years old, these two are making history after mere decades. Both were developed naturally in the late 1980s–early 1990s by the late Giuseppe Fontanazza, director of the Institute of Research on Olive Growing of Perugia and a legend in the field of olive culture. He saw the need for olives that would thrive in the face of growing environmental challenges such as drought and disease while, of course, producing stunning oils.

    At dinner with Nicola Ruggiero in the historic town of Altamura, we feasted on frittata with zucchini and mint, zucchini carpaccio with wild arugula, slow-cooked lamb, and pane di Altamura, its namesake crusty bread in a wondrous shade of yellow. “We exert a lot of effort for 12 very tough months,” Nicola told me as we toured the groves. “Sometimes I think, why am I doing all this? But when there is passion, the results are beautiful. It’s also beautiful to have a partner and a friend like you and to know that our oil is so well received by your Club members. I hope they enjoy it in good health.”

    The Favolosa and Don Carlo trees are indeed thriving in the Ruggiero groves, thanks in part to genetics but also to key steps Nicola and Mario have taken. Because of less rain each year, they switched to a more targeted irrigation system that uses water more efficiently. They also insist on top-of-the-line milling equipment. When other producers doubted such big investments, Nicola waved them off, knowing that these decisions would all be reflected in the bottle.

    As happened to many other producers this year, a good number of blossoms in the Ruggiero groves were lost to frost. In this situation, a tree, despite bearing less fruit, will still provide the same amount of energy for the fruit’s development, causing the existing olives to ripen faster than normal—making it easy to miss the magic window, the perfect time to harvest for optimal flavor. But the Ruggiero team knows when and how to harvest. On hand this season was Dr. Andrea Pezzolla, an agronomist born and raised in Puglia and a highly sought-after miller. Talk about a small world—he spends a month in the Southern Hemisphere during its harvest and often works with our Australia-based friend and producer Leandro Ravetti. We so appreciated Andrea’s input as we perfected the final blend.

    My Merry Band of Tasters and I were able to explore more of Puglia on this trip, especially the food! One bite and we knew why Puglia is called the breadbasket of Italy—its locally grown durum wheat gives bread and pasta unique flavor. I’ve translated the most delectable dishes into recipes that you can enjoy, each elevated by this marvelous olive oil.

    T. J. Robinson at Panificio Piscopo
    Lunch at the mill was always a treat with focaccia adorned with fresh tomatoes and onions from Panificio Piscopo, an Old World–style bakery founded in 1900 in the neighboring town of Mariotto.

    Impressions and Recommended Food Pairings

    This exquisite expression of the Favolosa and Don Carlo olive varieties is both vibrant and rare. Inhale the freshness of green grass and tomato leaf along with baby spinach, Belgium endive, arugula, celery, parsley, basil, green banana, apple, and vanilla. On the palate, it’s bright and persistent, evoking fresh walnut, tomato, and celery leaf, with the lingering bitterness and spiciness of arugula and white pepper and pleasing notes of sweet almond on the finish.

    It’s perfect for mild vinaigrettes to drizzle on salads and other greens. It will elevate smoothies, yogurt, eggs, mozzarella, fresh tomatoes, and avocado. It will enhance chicken scarpariello,* turkey, mild fish, and shrimp dishes; pasta sauces; Tuscan braised green beans; root vegetable soups; grains and legumes, especially white beans and lentils; and lingue di gatto and other cookies.

    *See the recipe section below for bolded dishes.


    This Quarter’s Second Selection

    • Producer: Frantoio Mercurius, Abruzzo, Italy 2025
    • Olive Varieties: Dritta, Leccino, Frantoio
    • Flavor Profile: Medium
    Frantoio Mercurius Extra Virgin Olive oil Fresh Pressed Olive Oil Club

    An invaluable tip from olive oil expert Duccio Morozzo della Rocca, a charter member of my Merry Band of Tasters, motivated me in 2018 to check out Claudio Di Mercurio’s farm in Abruzzo. Claudio, Duccio said, was milling exquisite olive oil on his 60-acre farm. Though a novice (Claudio produced his first oil in 2010), his oils were already winning awards. We even had a mutual friend—Giorgio Mori—a manufacturer of high-end olive milling equipment, who helped Claudio outfit his state-of-the-art olive mill.

    Though I’d made many trips to Italy, I’d never visited Abruzzo until then. This stunning region, pinned between the Apennine Mountains and the Adriatic Sea, is known as the greenest region in Italy. (Incredibly, 70 percent of the European continent’s species of wildlife call Abruzzo home.) When we first met, the genial Claudio introduced me to an Abruzzese cultivar—Dritta (rhymes with Rita). I was positively captivated. I couldn’t wait to share this remarkable oil with my Club members. Unbelievably, this is the eighth consecutive year this vigorous, highly dependable olive has met my rigorous standards. Its record is unprecedented. Most olive cultivars alternate yearly between high and low production, allowing the trees to restore their energy.

    There was a bit of “shrinkage” (wink, wink) from the meat board before gifted cook Graziella Di Mercurio served yet another sumptuous feast to my team and me. As you know, gauging an oil’s food-friendliness is a critical step in our selection process. We were especially eager to try Frantoio Mercurius on an Abruzzean specialty: seasoned skewers of cubed lamb—arrostincini—prepared on a trough-like grill called a mangal. The combination was ethereal.

    This year, Claudio and his family welcomed my team and me to their hilltop home near Penne with their usual effusive warmth. It’s always great to affirm our strong bond by catching up in person with each other’s lives.

    Claudio sprang a delightful surprise on me during my recent visit: He thoughtfully invited the esteemed olive oil expert Dr. Marino Giorgetti to join us for dinner one evening. I was thrilled to meet this olive oil pioneer. Read more about Dr. Giorgetti’s significant contributions to the development of standardized sensory criteria for olive oil above.

    Once again, this was a great year for Claudio’s olives—he tends a healthy mix of Dritta and other Italian varietals. No surprise: Abruzzo’s isolation and unique microclimates have favored its olive trees for thousands of years. Its oils were praised by ancient Roman poets like Virgil and Ovid, who, if they could taste the current early harvest of “liquid gold” from Frantoio Mercurius, would faint with joy.

    Also swoon-worthy are the magnificent meals Claudio’s sister Graziella prepares in a rustic stonework kitchen/pantry attached to the house. She pays homage to Abruzzo’s fabulous gastronomic heritage by cooking festive dishes like porchetta (slow-cooked spiced pork roll), stracciatella (a brothy soup with pasta), and my new favorite—tacchino alla Canzanese (boned and braised turkey, served with its natural gelatin). I felt supremely honored when Claudio confided that the family prepares these dishes for Easter, Christmas, and “when T. J. visits.”

    I predict you will enjoy this extraordinary blend on a multitude of winter dishes. See my specific suggestions below.

    A systems engineer by trade, Claudio Di Mercurio added passion to his analytical skills to produce some of the planet’s most exquisite oils. At the farm he’s lived on since he was six, Claudio and his family tend more than 4,000 olive trees, many of them a century old. They are so proud to share with you the blend we created for your winter dining pleasure, featuring the stalwart Dritta, its complexity amplified by a touch each of Frantoio and Leccino.

    Impressions and Recommended Food Pairings 

    Enhanced with Leccino and Frantoio, this Dritta delights. Take in the rich aromas of Tuscan kale and other dark leafy greens, artichoke, rhubarb, hazelnut, dark chocolate, apple, and culinary herbs like thyme, sage, and wild mint. These notes echo on the palate, along with the bitterness of radicchio, the sweetness of vanilla bean, and the spiciness of Szechwan peppercorns.

    Drizzle it on salads with nuts and fruits, steamed artichokes, borlotti and other beans, even chocolate ice cream. It enriches frittatas, minestrone, pallotte cacio e uova* and other simmered tomato sauces; crown roast of lamb, pork, and game; salmon, tiella Barese, and other shellfish dishes; whole roasted carrots and other root vegetables; apple spice muffins and other baked treats, like banana and pumpkin quick breads.

    *See the recipe section below for bolded dishes.


    This Quarter’s Third Selection

    • Producer: Nicolangelo Marsicani, Puglia, Italy 2025
    • Olive Varieties: Coratina
    • Flavor Profile: Bold
    Nicolangelo Marsicani Extra Virgin Olive oil Fresh Pressed Olive Oil Club

    Earlier in this report, I refer to Nicolangelo Marsicani as the Picasso of olive oil, for his bold genius. I also think of him as a poet, heeding Emily Dickinson’s rule to “tell the truth, but tell it slant.” Sometimes he speaks in riddles, like the Sphinx.

    Even the label on the extraordinary EVOO that bears his name is cryptic. When I ask him what the pentagon figure means, he pauses, then intones, “Perfect balance.” To me, the five-cornered shape looks like a constellation, reminding me that the stars must align when I select a superlative EVOO for my Club. Nicolangelo agrees, and we hone in on five critical factors that go into the production of a perfectly balanced olive oil: cultivar, climate/terroir, weather (Mother Nature), grove, and miller.

    Let’s lead with the miller. Asked how he got his start, Nicolangelo quips, “Trapiantato,” “transplanted,” or, colloquially, “born this way.” I chuckle, but it’s accurate—the Marsicani family’s olive mill, in the town of Cilento, in Campania, was registered with the chamber of commerce in 1928. Over time, the farm passed to Nicolangelo. He dismisses his early work in the “traditional old style, with a dusty mill and not taking care of things.” Everything changed when he “discovered tasting,” in the early 2000s. (Read about the science of olive oil tasting in the Pressing Report intro.) “From night to day,” he says; he modernized the mill with state-of-the-art equipment to focus on crafting ultra-premium, high-polyphenol EVOO.

    The Marsicani farm is an elite-level hub for quality-obsessed growers and millers across Italy—talented farmers bring their finest fruit to press, inspired millers come to collaborate, and the cross-pollination of expertise and experimentation forms lasting relationships and elevates the quality of Italian EVOO.

    Left: Esteemed master miller Nicolangelo Marsicani and I talk shop among fruit-laden olive trees. Nicolangelo’s century-old family farm (named Mill of the Year three times by Gambero Rosso) is in Campania, but he travels throughout Italy and the world as a consultant and teacher, sharing his vision and honing his own skills. Right: We celebrate our collaboration at Zi Filomena, an elegant traditional ristorante in Campania, where Nicolangelo has been a regular for decades. Amid savoring our immensely food-friendly Coratina on the array of delectable seasonal dishes, we toast to you!

    Reciprocally, Nicolangelo travels throughout the country, teaching (“learning,” he amends) and consulting at premier olive farms such as Fratelli Ruggiero, where we first collaborated last year. (We’d met more than a decade before, an encounter I recall with fond amusement, as it was clear that he was testing me. Fair enough—as an American in a safari hat, I’m accustomed to proving my bona fides.)

    With the paucity of olives in central Italy this year, Nicolangelo and I convened in Puglia, along with Michele Siniscalchi, a gifted technician who works regularly with the master miller. Our sights were set on a field of gorgeous Coratina, a challenging cultivar that, when handled right, makes an exquisite oil: spicy, robust, mind-blowing. Anticipating the “magic window,” we had to wait a few days as the fruit came off the tree in stages; this enabled us to harvest successive batches of the same crop while the weather cooled a bit.

    In the mill, Nicolangelo and Michele used “white gloves,” as the former puts it, modulating the crushing speed halfway through, slowing down the process to bring softer, rounder “edges” to the flavors. The different micro-batches combine to create a complex, dimensional, ultra-green-grassy-herbal-nutty, big, bold, fantastic oil.

    Left: Behold these gorgeous Coratina olives—although only the dazzling green fruit gets pressed into liquid gold. Early-harvest EVOO, bursting with polyphenols, is also the most flavorful and aromatic. Right: Tasting panel leader Nicolangelo Marsicani and I evaluate the top contenders of the season. As vice-president and head of education of Oleum, an international community of olive oil experts, Nicolangelo leads training workshops to improve olive oil quality worldwide.

    Impressions and Recommended Food Pairings 

    This assertive Coratina is intense and complex on the nose, rich with the aromas of almond, artichoke, green grass, arugula, kiwi, fennel, oregano, rosemary, and black pepper. The intensity continues on the palate, with notes of green almond and wheatgrass; herbs like wild mint, oregano, and sage; the bitterness of chicory and green tea; and the persistent spiciness of black pepper, celery leaves, and watercress.

    Lavish it on fried eggs; salads with kale and other dark greens; focaccia con patate,* crusty breads, and pizza; steak, veal, tuna, and sword-fish; curries and other Asian dishes. It will elevate creamy mushroom ragoût; winter veggies like broccoli and Brussels sprouts; hearty braises, bean soups, roasted potatoes, and roasted radicchio; aged cheeses; and double chocolate bundt cake and other dark chocolate desserts.

    *See the recipe section below for bolded dishes.


    Olive Oil and Health


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    Recipes

  • Double Chocolate Bundt Cake Double Chocolate Bundt Cake

    This rich and tender cake is a crowd pleaser. If you’d like to gild the lily for a triple chocolate cake, instead of the confectioners’ sugar, melt 1/2 cup half-and-half with 6 ounces dark chocolate pieces and drizzle over the top. Note: For an easy release, be thorough when you prep the bundt pan.

    Ingredients

    • 1 tablespoon butter, softened
    • 3/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder, plus 2 tablespoons for the pan
    • 1 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
    • 1/4 cup white or golden whole wheat
    • 1 1/2 cups sugar
    • 1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
    • 1 teaspoon baking powder
    • 1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt
    • 1 cup sour cream
    • 1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil
    • 2 large eggs, beaten
    • 1 cup freshly brewed coffee, cooled to room temperature
    • 2 teaspoons vanilla paste or extract
    • 5 ounces coarsely chopped dark chocolate
    • 3 tablespoons confectioners’ sugar

    Directions

    Step 1

    Preheat the oven to 350°F. Lightly brush the inside of a 12-cup bundt pan with the softened butter, getting into every nook and cranny (the more complex the style, the more thorough you need to be) and all over the center tube. Place the 2 tablespoons of cocoa in a small strainer and tap it around the inside of the pan, sprinkling it evenly over the butter, including the center tube. Invert the pan over your sink and tap it lightly to shake out any excess cocoa; set aside.

    Step 2

    Into a large bowl, sift the flours, cocoa powder, sugar, baking soda, baking powder, and salt through a strainer, then whisk to combine.

    Step 3

    Place the sour cream in a separate bowl and whisk in the olive oil, then the eggs, coffee, and vanilla. Pour it over the flour mixture and whisk to combine. Fold in the chopped chocolate.

    Step 4

    Pour the batter into the bundt pan and gently tap it on the counter to level it and remove any air bubbles.

    Step 5

    Bake for 50 to 60 minutes, until the cake starts to pull away from the sides of the pan and the tip of a sharp knife inserted into the cake comes out clean. Let cool for 20 minutes, cover with a cake plate, and invert. Lift off the pan and let the cake come to room temperature. (If the cake won’t come out, run a small silicone spatula around the inside perimeter of the pan and around the center tube, then invert again.)

    Step 6

    Before serving, place the confectioners’ sugar in a small strainer and tap the edge with two fingers to dust the top of the cake.

    Serves 10

  • Lingue di Gatto Cookies Lingue di Gatto Cookies

    Because of their shape, these cookies are called lingue di gatto, or cat’s tongues. They’re ubiquitous in Italy, enjoyed as a treat with espresso or served as a garnish for gelato and custards (they double as a spoon!). Chilling the piped dough before baking will help the cookies keep their shape, but they do spread out a lot. If you’re a fan of sandwich cookies, spread a layer of melted chocolate on the flat side of a cookie and top with another; let the chocolate harden before serving.

    Ingredients

    • 6 tablespoons unsalted butter, completely softened
    • 1 cup confectioners’ sugar
    • 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
    • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
    • 2 extra-large egg whites
    • 3/4 cup unbleached all-purpose flour
    • 1/4 teaspoon fine sea salt

    Directions

    Step 1

    Line two cookie sheets with parchment paper.

    Step 2

    In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, or in a large bowl with a hand mixer, cream the butter and sugar until smooth. Beat in the olive oil and vanilla, then the egg whites, one at a time. Add the flour and salt and mix just until combined.

    Step 3

    Spoon the batter into a pastry bag fitted with a 1/2-inch round tip. Working with one cookie sheet at a time, pipe out rows of 3-inch lengths, leaving about 2 inches between each cookie. Place in the fridge for 15 to 20 minutes while you preheat the oven to 350˚F.

    Step 4

    Pipe out the rest of the batter on the second cookie sheet; place it in the fridge as you take out the first one.

    Step 5

    Bake the first batch of cookies until the edges turn golden, about 12 minutes, rotating the sheet halfway through. Repeat with the second sheet.

    Step 6

    Allow the cookies to cool for 10 minutes.

    Makes about 30 cookies

For Your Best Health: Managing Depression: Using Scents to Unlock Memories 

For Your Best Health

The MIND Diet for Brain Health: More Benefits of Olive Oil

According to a new study from researchers at the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health and The Robert Butler Columbia Aging Center, a very specific brain-boosting diet has been linked to reduced dementia risk and a slower pace of aging. The study, “Diet, Pace of Biological Aging, and Risk of Dementia in the Framingham Heart Study,” published in the Annals of Neurology, also explains how the diet helps slow down the processes of biological aging.

“Much attention to nutrition in dementia research focuses on the way specific nutrients affect the brain,” said Daniel Belsky, PhD, associate professor of epidemiology and a senior author of the study. “We tested the hypothesis that healthy diet protects against dementia by slowing down the body’s overall pace of biological aging.”

The researchers used data from the second generation of the Framingham Heart Study, the Offspring Cohort. Participants were 60 years of age or older and free of dementia and had available dietary, epigenetic, and follow-up data. Follow-up was done at nine examinations, approximately every 4 to 7 years, which included a physical exam, lifestyle-related questionnaires, blood sampling, and, starting in 1991, neurocognitive testing. Of 1,644 participants included in the analyses, 140 developed dementia. 

To measure the pace of aging, the researchers used an epigenetic clock called DunedinPACE developed by Dr. Belsky and colleagues at Duke University and the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand. The clock measures how fast a person’s body is deteriorating as they grow older, “like a speedometer for the biological processes of aging,” explained Dr. Belsky.

“We have some strong evidence that a healthy diet can protect against dementia,” said Yian Gu, PhD, associate professor of neurological sciences at Columbia University Irving Medical Center and the other senior author of the study, “but the mechanism of this protection is not well understood.” Past research linked both diet and dementia risk to an accelerated pace of biological aging. “Testing the hypothesis that multi-system biological aging is a mechanism of underlying diet-dementia associations was the logical next step,” explained Dr. Belsky.

The research determined that higher adherence to the MIND diet slowed the pace of aging as measured by DunedinPACE and reduced risks for dementia and mortality. Furthermore, slower DunedinPACE accounted for 27% of the diet-dementia association and 57% of the diet-mortality association.

“Our findings suggest that slower pace of aging mediates part of the relationship of healthy diet with reduced dementia risk, and therefore, monitoring pace of aging may inform dementia prevention,” said first author Aline Thomas, PhD, of the Columbia Department of Neurology and Taub Institute for Research on Alzheimer’s Disease and the Aging Brain. “However, a portion of the diet-dementia association remains unexplained, therefore we believe that continued investigation of brain-specific mechanisms in well-designed mediation studies is warranted.”

“We suggest that additional observational studies be conducted to investigate direct associations of nutrients with brain aging, and if our observations are also confirmed in more diverse populations, monitoring biological aging may indeed inform dementia prevention,” noted Dr. Belsky.

Exactly What Is the MIND Diet?

MIND is a hybrid of the Mediterranean and DASH diets, tailored to reflect key findings from nutrition and dementia research. It details serving sizes of specific foods to focus on and which to limit, primarily those high in saturated fat, which is known to negatively affect brain health. 

Foods and portions to eat every day: 1/2 to 1 cup green leafy vegetables, 1/2 cup other vegetables, 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil, and three 1-ounce servings of whole grains. 

Foods and portions to eat over the course of each week: 5 ounces nuts, 2-1/2 cups berries, 1-1/2 cups legumes, two 3-to-5-ounce servings of skinless poultry, and 3-to-5 ounces fish.

Foods to limit to these weekly totals: three or fewer 3-to-5-ounce servings of red and processed meats, 1 ounce whole-fat cheese, 1 fried or fast food, and 4 sweet servings. If desired, no more than 1 teaspoon of butter or stick of margarine a day.

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Olive Oil Hunter #169

Elevated Grilled Cheese Sammies Recipe, Spotlight on Arugula, Avocado and Cast Iron Skillets, and How to Manage Chronic Pain with Exercise

Comfort foods are oh so yummy but often don’t have the best health profile. My version of the classic grilled cheese packs high-nutrient foods that deliver on taste, too. One of them is avocado, a food that’s not only good for you on its own but also seems to encourage healthier eating in general, according to a study I’m sharing. You’ll also read about a healthy therapy to help forestall or ease chronic pain. 

Elevated Grilled Cheese Sammies

  • Gourmet Grilled Cheese Sandwich Elevated Grilled Cheese Sammies

    Even finicky eaters rush to the kitchen when grilled cheese sandwiches are on the menu. With a few ingredient upgrades, this lunch or dinner mainstay tastes even more delicious.

    Ingredients

    • Extra virgin olive oil, as needed
    • 2 ounces Manchego cheese, shredded
    • 1 ripe avocado, cut into thin slices
    • 1 ripe pear, cut into thin slices
    • 1 tablespoon fig jam
    • 1-2 cups arugula
    • 4 thin slices crusty whole wheat bread

    Directions

    Step 1

    Brush one side of each slice of bread with olive oil. Build the sandwiches on two of the slices, layering the ingredients equally in this order: a sprinkling of cheese, avocado slices, pear slices, fig jam, arugula, the rest of the cheese, and the top slice of bread. 

    Step 2

    If using a panini press, brush the outsides of the bread with olive oil and heat the press and grill the sandwiches as directed. If using a griddle, heat over medium heat; when hot, add two tablespoons of olive oil in two separate pools and place a sandwich over each pool. Press down on the sandwiches with a large spatula or an empty cast iron skillet (see “Quick Kitchen Nugget” below). When the bottoms have browned, flip the sandwiches and repeat.

    Makes 2 servings

Healthy Ingredient Spotlight: Amazing Arugula

Healthy Ingredient Spotlight

Amazing Arugula

Arugula, pear and manchego salad

We often talk about sensing the spiciness of arugula when doing our fresh-pressed olive oil tastings—the tender greens are full of zesty flavor. If arugula isn’t already on your shopping list, it’s time to add it. The cool weather of spring and fall is its ideal growing environment. Young, or “baby,” arugula is milder in taste—though still peppery—than more mature or late-season harvests.

Though often found in bagged lettuce mixes, arugula (Eruca vesicaria) is actually a cruciferous vegetable, part of the same family as broccoli, cabbage, and kale—and just as packed with nutrients, including antioxidants. In addition to vitamins A, C, K, and folate and the minerals calcium, iron, potassium, and magnesium, arugula has glucosinolates, natural substances that offer some protection from certain types of cancer, such as cancers of the breast, prostate, colon, and lung (glucosinolates are also responsible for that spicy bitterness). 

Arugula makes a great addition to hot and cold sandwiches, focaccia, and pizzas—just be sure to add it after your pizza is cooked, or the high temperature of the oven will burn it quickly. 

Baby arugula tends to come prerinsed, but when growing your own or buying a bunch from the greengrocer, just before eating submerge the leaves in a large bowl of cool water and agitate them to remove any dirt. Wait two minutes, then scoop out the leaves with a spoon strainer, pat dry, and enjoy. 

Quick Kitchen Nugget: Cast Iron Skillet: A Makeshift Panini Press

Quick Kitchen Nugget

Cast Iron Skillet: A Makeshift Panini Press

The value of a panini press is that it grills both sides of a sandwich at once and compacts the contents for better cheesy goodness. But you can achieve a similar effect by placing a cast-iron skillet on top of your sandwich on a griddle or grill. You’ll still have to flip the sandwich, but the skillet’s weight will compress it as it toasts on each side. If you use this method, don’t brush the top outer piece of bread with oil until you’re ready to flip it, to keep the oil from transferring to the skillet. 

For Your Best Health: An Avocado a Day…

For Your Best Health

An Avocado a Day…

A group of researchers from Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Tufts University, the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California Los Angeles, Loma Linda University, and Penn State University examined how the food-based intervention of eating one nutrient-dense avocado per day could impact overall diet quality. Surprisingly, only 2% of American adults eat avocados on a regular basis, even though they’re high in fiber and healthy fats, among many other nutrients. The study was published in the journal Current Developments in Nutrition  

“Previous observational research suggests avocado consumers have higher diet quality than non-consumers. So, we developed this study to determine if there is a causational link between avocado consumption and overall diet quality,” said Kristina S. Petersen, PhD, associate professor of nutritional sciences at Penn State. 

For the research, 1,008 participants were split into two groups. One group continued their usual diet and limited their avocado intake during the 26-week study, while the other group incorporated one avocado per day into their diet.

Researchers conducted phone interviews with participants before the study began and at a few points throughout to determine what their dietary intake was like in the previous 24 hours and evaluated their diets using the Healthy Eating Index to see how well they adhered to the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, which was used as a measure of overall diet quality.

“We found that the participants who had an avocado per day significantly increased their adherence to dietary guidelines,” Dr. Petersen said. “By improving people’s adherence to dietary guidelines, we can help to reduce their risk of developing chronic conditions and prolong healthy life expectancy.…In our study, we classified avocados as a vegetable and did see an increase in vegetable consumption attributed to the avocado intake, but also participants used the avocados to replace some unhealthier options…as a substitute for some foods higher in refined grains and sodium.”

Dr. Petersen has conducted similar studies investigating the impact of food-based interventions, including the relationship between pistachios and diet quality. She added that more research is needed to determine what other food-based strategies and behavioral strategies could also be used to improve adherence to dietary guidelines.

Fitness Flash: Physical Activity for Chronic Pain Protection

Fitness Flash

Physical Activity for Chronic Pain Protection

Researchers from UiT The Arctic University of Norway, the University Hospital of North Norway (UNN), and the Norwegian Institute of Public Health knew from an earlier study of  more than 10,000 adults that those who were physically active had a higher pain tolerance than those who were sedentary—and the higher the activity level, the higher the pain tolerance. They next wanted to understand how physical activity could affect the chances of experiencing chronic pain years later and whether this is related to how physical activity affects our ability to tolerate pain. So, they embarked on new research involving almost 7,000 people recruited from the large Tromsø survey, the Norwegian database that has collected data on people’s health and lifestyle over decades.

They obtained information about the participants’ exercise habits during their free time and whether they experienced pain that lasted for 3 months or more, including widespread or severe pain. 

“We found that people who were more active in their free time had a lower chance of having various types of chronic pain 7-8 years later. For example, being just a little more active, such as going from light to moderate activity, was associated with a 5% lower risk of reporting some form of chronic pain later,” said doctoral fellow Anders Årnes at UiT and UNN, one of the researchers behind the study. He adds that for severe chronic pain in several places in the body, higher activity was associated with a 16% reduced risk.

Exercise to manage chronic pain

The researchers found that the ability to tolerate pain played a role in this apparent protective effect. “This suggests that physical activity increases our ability to tolerate pain and may be one of the ways in which activity helps to reduce the risk of severe chronic pain,” said Årnes.

When it comes to exercising if you already have chronic pain, the researcher said: “Physical activity is not dangerous in the first place, but people with chronic pain can benefit greatly from having an exercise program adapted to help them balance their effort so that it is not too much or too little. Healthcare professionals experienced in treating chronic pain conditions can often help with this. A rule of thumb is that there should be no worsening that persists over an extended period, but that certain reactions in the time after training can be expected.”

The research, “Does pain tolerance mediate the effect of physical activity on chronic pain in the general population? The Tromsø Study,” was published in the journal Pain.

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