E 260 E249 E250 E252 E330 E407 E410 E412 E414 E415 E621 Earlaine Potatoes Earliblue Blueberries Early Autumn Pumpkins Early Buckskin Pumpkins Early Cheyenne Pie Pumpkins Early Crofton Early Gem Potatoes Early Golden Sweet Apples Early Greening Apples Early Harvest Apples Early Italian Garlic Early Joe Apples Early Red Bird Apples Early Regent Potatoes Early Richmond Cherries Early Rose Potatoes Early Russet Potatoes Early Russian Green Apples Early Season Olive Oil Early Strawberry Apples Early Sugar Loaf Apples Early Sugar Pumpkins Early Summer Pearmain Apples Early Transparent Apples Previous | Next | Olive Sizes© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedWorld olive size grading is calculated by the number of olives per kilo. American size is graded by the number of olives per pound (the number of olives per kilo in the table further below is approximate for American sizes, as the United States Department of Agriculture hasn't set official metric grading.) You may often see olives designated as 160/180, 400/420, etc. That indicates the range of how many per kilo, in that size. You have to figure out from the context whether the writer is using World measurements or American ones. The descriptive terms that you will see below were reputedly drawn up in the 1920s by the California advertising firm "Curtis", which drew on names that were being used to promote movies at the time. The terms for larger olives have a good ring of hype around them -- you'd almost think they were describing a circus. It's a bit odd that the California olive industry continues resolutely to use their own terms and own measurements rather than standardize, especially because this is certainly one field in which the Americans are greatly outnumbered: California produces less than 1/2 of 1 percent of the world's olives, so it would make more sense for them to standardize to the rest of the world. Size descriptions are listed in order from largest to smallest.
Acknowlegements USDA. United States Standards for Grades of Green Olives. 32 FR 11467. September 1967. Also called: Aceitunas -- Tamaño (Spanish)
See Also:Olive SizesOther entries for: Olive ProcessingOlive Sizes Other entries for:OlivesBarnea Olives, Bella di Cerignola Olives, Black Olives, Blond Olives, Brine-Cured Olives, Cracked Olives, Dry-Cured Olives, Feral Olives, Fresh-Water Cured Olives, Greek Olives, Green Olives, Italian Olives, Lye-Cured Olives, Oil-Cured Olives, Oil Olives, Olive Juice, Pendolino Olives, Pidiccuddara Olives, Raw Olives, Spanish Olives, Stuffed Olives, Table Olives Other entries for:PreservesJams, Jelly, Mostarda di Cremona, Pickles |
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