Skip to product information
1 of 1
Miceli & Sensat SICILY

Santa Oliva Organic Extra Virgin Olive Oil

Santa Oliva Organic Extra Virgin Olive Oil

Regular price $80.00
Regular price Sale price $80.00
Sale Ships July 2026
Taxes included. Shipping calculated at checkout.
Quantity

Sicily's Grand Cru. A limited edition Cerasuola.

A micro-plot selection from Miceli & Sensat's estate, single-cultivar Cerasuola hand-harvested at peak green intensity, cold-extracted within hours and bottled unfiltered. Bursting and intense, yet beautifully balanced, only 1670 bottles for the 2025 harvest.

On the palate: arugula, wild greens (misticanza), green tomato and black cabbage on the nose; bitterness and pungency from rocket and celery leaves, a long, structured finish of green pepper. Polyphenols ≥ 812 mg/kg, a mark of a bold, structured oil.

Cerasuola is one of Sicily's most prized native varieties, planted in a special micro-area of the family estate where the terroir amplifies its organoleptic nuances to a level the producers describe as never seen before. The same family, the same refrigerated mill, the same obsession with picking early and pressing within hours, distilled into a true Grand Cru.

Why you'll love it

  • Single-cultivar Cerasuola from a micro-plot, intense, bitter, pungent, beautifully balanced
  • Limited Edition, only 1670 bottles for the 2025 harvest
  • Polyphenols ≥ 812 mg/kg, a mark of a bold, structured oil
  • Cold-extracted at the estate's own refrigerated mill, IGP Sicilia, certified organic, unfiltered

How to enjoy it

  • The reserve finishing oil for grilled red meat, lamb and game
  • A drizzle over a warm bean soup, ribollita or pappa al pomodoro
  • Beautiful with aged pecorino, Sicilian caciocavallo and structured cheeses
  • A few drops over carpaccio, raw fish or a simple bruschetta to let the oil sing

Specifications

Ingredients: 100% organic Cerasuola extra virgin olive oil.

Net contents: 500 ml (16.9 fl oz)

Cultivar: 100% Cerasuola

Edition: Limited, 1670 bottles for the 2025 harvest

Certification: IGP Sicilia, EU Organic

Processing: Cold-extracted, unfiltered

Origin: Sicily, Italy, estate-grown, estate-milled

🫒 Extra Virgin Olive Oil | 🌿 Certified Organic | ✓ Cold Extracted | ✓ No pesticides | ✓ No glyphosate | ✓ IGP Sicilia | ✓ Limited Edition

The list of aromas and flavors associated with this olive oil is broad and not exhaustive. This graphic serves solely as a tasting guide.

0.511.522.533.544.55SANTA OLIVA (LIMITED EDITION)fruitytomatotomato leafgreen grassaromatic herbsartichokegreen almondgreen applegreen pepper (balsamic)bitterspicy
View full details

Frequently Asked Questions

What does cold-extracted mean, and why does it matter?
Cold extraction means the olives are pressed at temperatures below 27°C (80°F). Above that, heat begins destroying the polyphenols, vitamins, and delicate aroma compounds that make a high-quality extra virgin olive oil worth buying. Cold extraction keeps the full nutritional profile and the oil’s real character intact — the fruitiness, the bitterness, the pepper. It’s the difference between an oil that tastes alive and one that’s merely edible.
How should I store extra virgin olive oil?
Keep it in a cool, dark place, ideally 14–20°C (57–68°F). Heat, light, and air are the three enemies of olive oil. Once opened, use it within about 60 days for peak flavor. Don’t refrigerate it — cold causes temporary cloudiness and texture changes without actually helping preservation. This is also why oil left under bright store lights for months slowly goes rancid even when it left the mill in perfect condition: storage is half the story.
What does the polyphenol count on the label mean?
Polyphenols (also called biophenols) are the natural antioxidants found in fresh olives. They give the oil its pleasant peppery bitterness and drive both its nutritional value and its shelf life. EU regulators allow an official health claim only for oils that hold ≥250 mg/kg through to their best-by date, in recognition of their role in protecting blood lipids from oxidative stress. A high polyphenol count is one of the few quality signals you can actually verify rather than take on trust.
“Extra virgin” is on every bottle at the store. What makes a real one different?
The short answer: most of what’s labeled extra virgin on a supermarket shelf isn’t. In three separate investigations over eight years, Italy’s leading independent consumer testing magazine found that roughly half of all bottles labeled extra virgin failed the mandatory sensory panel test — every single time. The chemistry looked right. The taste didn’t. That’s the gap between a label and a guarantee. “Extra virgin” requires both chemical tests and a sensory panel. An oil can pass the chemicals and still develop off-flavors through long storage, heat, and light — exactly what happens when oil sits under store lights for months. A genuine extra virgin comes from a short, traceable path: a named producer, a stated harvest year, cold extraction, and freshness. That’s what we verify.