Harvest begins with tarps, slender rakes, and jokes about stubborn branches. Picked quickly and kept cool, fruit avoids bruising that flattens aroma. Early lots taste vivid and sharp, later pickings round toward softness. Families track each bin, noting grove exposure, wind, and birdsong as if variables in chemistry.
Traditional granite mills crush gently, but modern hammer crushers and decanters protect aroma with speed and cleanliness. Malaxers knead paste under nitrogen to limit oxidation. Centrifuges separate oil from water and pomace, yielding luminous green threads that smell of artichoke, tomato leaf, wild chicory, and coastal rain.
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