Abstract
Virgin olive oil quality is the result of complex interactions between olive variety, environment and cultivar practice. Evaluation of its quality is based on chemical and sensory analyses (ECC Regulation) that are time-consuming, expensive and destructive of the sample. Spectroscopic techniques present significant advantages in terms of speed and cost of analysis per sample. Italian extra virgin olive oils from Lombardy, Tuscany and Calabria were analysed by conventional analytical and spectroscopic methods. The sample set was composed of 60 single-cultivar (Casaliva, Leccino and Frantoio) extra virgin olive oils (monovarietal extra virgin olive oils) and 59 extra virgin olive oils produced from a mixture of cultivars from each geographical area (industrial extra virgin olive oils). Free acid content, peroxide value and spectrophotometric indices (
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