Crete accounts for roughly 30% of all Greek olive oil production and exports more extra virgin olive oil per capita than any other region in Europe. The island has approximately 30 million olive trees — more than three times the human population — and many of them are ancient: some individual trees in western Crete have been producing olives continuously for over 2,000 years. This is not agricultural history. It is living history that you can taste.

Why Cretan Olive Oil Is Different
The quality difference between Cretan extra virgin olive oil and most supermarket EVOO comes down to three factors: variety, age, and pressing method. The dominant Cretan olive variety — Koroneiki — is a small, intensely flavoured fruit that produces oil with a distinctively peppery finish, high polyphenol content, and superior oxidative stability. It keeps better, tastes better, and is measurably better for your health than most commercial varieties.
Cretan EVOO has a polyphenol content of 200–800 mg/kg, compared to 50–150 mg/kg for most supermarket olive oils. Polyphenols are the antioxidant compounds linked to the cardiovascular benefits of the Mediterranean diet. When researchers study why Cretans live longer, the olive oil is always part of the answer.
How to Taste Olive Oil Like an Expert
Professional olive oil tasting uses a small blue glass (the colour prevents the oil’s appearance from influencing your judgement). Warm the glass in your palm for 30 seconds, then smell — a good Cretan EVOO should smell of fresh-cut grass, green tomato, or artichoke. Sip a small amount and spread it across your tongue. The flavour evolves: fruitiness first, then bitterness, then a peppery catch at the back of the throat. That pepper is oleocanthal, an anti-inflammatory compound that is the same molecule as ibuprofen. The stronger the pepper, the more of it there is.
| Tasting Note | What It Means | Quality Indicator |
|---|---|---|
| Fresh-cut grass / artichoke aroma | Harvested young (green olives) | Positive — high polyphenols |
| Fruity, apple or almond notes | Riper harvest, milder oil | Positive — balanced flavour |
| Peppery finish (catches in throat) | High oleocanthal content | Excellent — maximum health benefit |
| Flat, greasy, no bitterness | Old oil, poor variety, or refined | Negative — avoid |
| Waxy or rancid smell | Oxidised or improperly stored | Negative — defective |
The Olive Oil Harvest in Crete
The Cretan olive harvest runs from late October through January, with the peak in November and December. Early-harvest oil (pressed from green, unripe olives in October and November) is more bitter and peppery, with the highest polyphenol content. Late-harvest oil (January, from fully ripe black olives) is milder and fruitier. Neither is better — they serve different culinary purposes.
Witnessing the harvest is one of the most authentic experiences available in Crete: families working together, ancient trees shaken by hand or with vibrating poles, olives collected on nets spread across the ground. 105 Olives can arrange private harvest visits during the season (October–January).

Where to Buy the Best Cretan Olive Oil
The worst place to buy Cretan olive oil is a tourist shop on the harbourfront. The best places are cooperatives, estate shops, and market stalls where the producer is present and can tell you exactly where and when the oil was pressed.
| Where to Buy | What to Expect | Price Range | Tip |
|---|---|---|---|
| Estate tasting rooms | Single-estate oil, full traceability | €15–35 / 500ml | Buy directly after tasting |
| Agricultural cooperatives | Blended local EVOO, consistent quality | €8–15 / 500ml | Ask about the harvest year |
| Municipal markets (laiki) | Local producers selling direct | €6–12 / litre | Bring your own container — many sell by weight |
| Airport / tourist shops | Often rebottled or blended | €12–25 / 500ml | Avoid if provenance is unclear |
What to Look for on the Label
A genuine Cretan extra virgin olive oil label should state: the harvest year (fresh oil is best), the variety (Koroneiki is the benchmark), the pressing method (cold-pressed or first cold extraction), the PDO designation if applicable (Sitia, Kolymvari, or Viannos are Crete’s three protected designations of origin), and the acidity level (below 0.5% for premium EVOO, below 0.8% for standard EVOO). Any oil that omits most of this information and sells for under €7 per 500ml is almost certainly not what it claims to be.
Private Olive Oil Tour with 105 Olives
105 Olives arranges private olive oil tours that include estate visits, guided tastings with a producer or agronomist, and the opportunity to purchase directly at source. Tours can be combined with a Cretan cooking class, wine tasting, or village walk for a full culinary day. Contact us to arrange a private olive oil experience in Crete.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I bring Cretan olive oil back in my luggage?
Yes. Olive oil is not subject to agricultural import restrictions within the EU, and passengers from outside the EU can typically bring back a reasonable quantity for personal use. Tins and sealed bottles are safer than glass in checked luggage; carry-on allows liquids up to 100ml (airport rules), so pack larger bottles in hold baggage.
What is the difference between EVOO and regular olive oil?
Extra virgin olive oil is the unrefined, first-pressed product with acidity below 0.8% and no chemical treatment. Regular “olive oil” or “pure olive oil” is typically refined (chemically treated to remove defects) and blended with a small amount of EVOO. The flavour, nutritional value, and culinary properties are substantially different.
How should I store olive oil at home?
Away from heat and light. A cool, dark cupboard is ideal. Never store olive oil next to the hob or in a glass bottle on a sunlit windowsill — both degrade the oil rapidly. Use within 18 months of the harvest date. Refrigeration is unnecessary and causes temporary cloudiness (harmless, but visually off-putting).
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