What Is Cold Pressed Olive Oil? The Complete Guide
Walk into any specialty food store and you'll see it everywhere: "cold pressed" olive oil. It's on the premium shelves, it commands a higher price, and it's marketed as the gold standard. But what does cold pressed actually mean — and does it really make a difference?
The short answer: yes. Significantly. Here's everything you need to know.
What Does Cold Pressed Mean?
Cold pressing refers to the method used to extract oil from olives without applying heat. In traditional cold pressing, olives are ground into a paste and then pressed mechanically — all at temperatures below 27°C (80°F).
Why does temperature matter? Because heat is the enemy of quality olive oil. When olives are processed at high temperatures:
- Volatile aromatic compounds evaporate — taking flavor with them
- Polyphenols (the powerful antioxidants in olive oil) degrade
- The oil oxidizes faster, reducing shelf life and nutritional value
Cold pressing preserves all of this. The result is an oil that tastes, smells, and performs exactly as nature intended.
Cold Pressed vs. Cold Extracted
Modern olive oil production uses centrifugal extraction rather than traditional stone pressing. When this process is done at low temperatures, it's technically called "cold extracted" — though most producers and regulators use "cold pressed" as a general term for both methods.
Under EU regulations, olive oil labeled "cold pressed" or "cold extracted" must be processed at temperatures below 27°C. This is a legally protected claim — not just marketing language.
Why Most Olive Oils Aren't Truly Cold Pressed
Here's the uncomfortable truth: many olive oils labeled "extra virgin" are processed with heat to increase yield. Heat extraction pulls more oil from the same quantity of olives — which means higher profits per harvest.
The trade-off? Lower polyphenol content, diminished flavor, and faster oxidation. The oil may still technically qualify as extra virgin, but it's a shadow of what a genuine cold pressed oil can be.
What to Look for on the Label
When buying cold pressed olive oil, look for:
- "Cold pressed" or "cold extracted" — legally protected terms in most markets
- Harvest date — not just a best-before date. Freshness matters.
- Single origin — traceable to a specific region or grove
- Polyphenol content — ideally stated in mg/kg. Above 250mg/kg is considered high.
- Early harvest — combined with cold pressing, this is the highest quality tier
Cold Pressed + Early Harvest: The Gold Standard
Cold pressing alone is a significant quality marker. But when combined with early harvest — olives picked before full ripeness, when polyphenol levels peak — the result is exceptional.
Early harvest, cold pressed olive oils offer:
- 2-5x higher polyphenol content than standard oils
- More complex, peppery, grassy flavor profiles
- Greater oxidative stability and longer freshness
- Documented health benefits linked to high oleocanthal and oleacein content
How Olive Reserve Ensures Cold Press Standards
Every producer on the Olive Reserve platform is required to provide cold press certification for each batch. We don't accept producer claims at face value — we verify. Because when you're paying for premium, you deserve to know exactly what you're getting.
Browse our curated selection of verified cold pressed, early harvest olive oils at olivereserve.com.
A Note From Us
The content on this page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional medical, nutritional, or dietary advice. Product characteristics, polyphenol levels, and harvest data may vary by batch.