Thank goodness we figured out how to press olives into oil, because eating them raw is not a pleasant option.
A 1944 artist’s rendering suggests how ancient Greeks may have harvested olives for oil.
Illustration by H.M. Herget, National Geographic Creative
A luscious-looking olive, ripe off the sun-warmed tree, is horrible.
The substance that renders it essentially inedible is oleuropein, a phenolic compound bitter enough to shrivel your teeth. The bitterness is a protective mechanism for olives, useful for fending off invasive microorganisms and seed-crunching mammals. In the wild, olives are dispersed by birds, who avoid the bitterness issue by swallowing them whole. Read more.