salt cured olive - Glossary Search
Top 67 glossary terms found
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
⋅
 |
 |
 |
Term Name |
 |
 |
The fruit from the olive tree that is small and round with a pit or stone surrounded by the flesh. Olives vary in color from bright green to brownish red and black, depending on maturity and ripeness when the fruit was picked.
An olive that may be referred to as a dry-cured olive and is most likely a black olive. It is cured by storing it in salt for a period of one to several months, during which time the flesh of the fruit becomes wrinkled.
A small oval olive from Italy that has a wrinkled black flesh if they are salt cured or a smoother dark violet flesh if brine cured.
An almond shaped olive that has a medium green smooth appearance, which changes to a reddish-black when it is allowed to ripen.
A large Greek olive that can be dark brown, light brown or red in color. It is an oblong shaped olive that is often slit, salt brine-cured, and packed with vinegar and olive oil providing a fruity flavor, similar to a Kalamata olive.
Common in the Mediterranean this variety is the most widely grown olive in Greece. Round to oblong in shape, the meat of this olive is firm, fine textured and fruity flavored.
A curing process that involves the soaking, washing, or injecting of food with a solution that is used to pickle or preserve foods.
A small oval olive from Italy that has a wrinkled black flesh if they are dry-cured or a smoother dark violet flesh if brine or salt-cured.
A large oval shaped olive grown in Spain and other countries such as the U.S., that is green in color with a rougher and meatier texture.
A large, pale green colored Greek olive that is oval in shape and usually harvested when it is young.
A small oval olive from Italy that has a wrinkled black flesh if they are dry-cured or a smoother dark violet flesh if brine or salt-cured.
Generally a green olive that has been soaked in lye, then rinsed in water, and placed in a salt brine to process the olive.
A term used in the U.S. to describe a medium size olive that is native to Spain but grown in California.
A medium size, almond shaped Greek olive that ranges from black to purple in color. It is a brine-cured, stone cracked olive that is slit, packed in vinegar, and cured to produce a rich, somewhat sour to fruity flavor.
An olive, traditionally from France, that has been cured in light brine, and marinated in herbes de Provence, which are selected herbs from Provence, France.
Generally a black olive that has been salt-cured by storing it in salt from one to several months, resulting in a wrinkled flesh.
An olive that has been soaked in a brine typically consisting of water, salt, vinegar, and other ingredients that provide a moist shiny flesh to the product.
A large sized Greek olive that can be dark brown, light brown or red in color. It is an oblong shaped olive that is slit, salt brine-cured, packed with vinegar and olive oil providing a fruity flavor, similar to a Kalamata olive.
A small to medium size olive, produced in Spain and California, that is greenish brown in color and oval shaped.
An olive that has been soaked in oil for several months as a curing process and may have been flavored with a variety of herbs and spices.
Top 67 glossary terms found