what to do with olives from tree
You’ve basically got three big options for what to do with olives from a tree : cure them to eat as table olives, press them for oil (usually via a community press), or share/donate them if you have more than you can handle.
Quick Scoop
- You can’t eat fresh olives straight off the tree; they are extremely bitter and must be cured first.
- Easy at-home route: soak in water for 10–14 days (changing water daily), then store in a salty brine with herbs, garlic, and citrus.
- If you have a big harvest, look for local “olives to oil” or community pressing programs to turn your olives into oil.
- Extra or unwanted olives can often be donated to community preserving groups or swaps instead of going to waste.
Option 1 – Cure Them to Eat
Fresh olives need their bitterness leached out, then they’re stored in salt or brine with flavorings.
Simple water‑then‑brine method
- Sort and wash
- Pick your olives, discard shriveled, damaged, or wormy fruit, and rinse well in cool water.
- Water soaking (remove bitterness)
- Put olives in a bowl or bucket and cover completely with fresh cold water.
* Change the water every day for 10–14 days; this gradually pulls out bitterness.
* A bit of sliminess on the olives or an oily feel on the bowl is normal; just rinse and continue.
- Brining (preserve and finish curing)
- Make a brine at about 10% salt (roughly 100 g non‑iodized rock/sea salt per liter of water).
* Pack olives in clean jars, cover completely with cooled brine, then seal.
* Leave them somewhere cool and dark for a few weeks to a couple of months until the bitterness has mellowed and the flavor is pleasantly salty and fruity.
- Flavoring and serving
- Once they taste good, you can drain some, pat them dry, and marinate in olive oil with: garlic, lemon slices, herbs (rosemary, thyme, oregano), or chili.
* You can also warm them gently in flavored oil before serving for an extra-rich snack.
Salt or “dry” curing (especially for ripe black olives)
- Slice or crack the olives, pack them in salt (alternating layers of salt and olives) and turn the container regularly.
- When they’re wrinkled and no longer very bitter, brush off the salt and store them in olive oil; they keep very well and have a strong, intense flavor.
Option 2 – Turn Them into Oil
If you have a larger harvest, your olives might be suitable for pressing into oil.
- Some cities run seasonal “olives to oil” festivals or community press events where you drop off your olives and pick up the oil a few weeks later.
- This usually happens in late autumn when olives are at the right stage, and they often take mixed lots from many backyard trees.
Option 3 – Share, Donate, or Get Creative
If you’re overwhelmed by how many olives your tree produces:
- Donate to community programs that collect backyard olives, cure them in bulk, and sell or distribute the jars to support local projects.
- Trade or gift buckets of olives to neighbors, food‑preserving friends, or local gardening / homesteading groups; many people love experimenting with home‑cured olives.
- Use olive leaves (separate from the fruit) for herbal infusions; some home preservers also experiment with them as a traditional remedy.
Tiny reality check
- Don’t eat uncured olives; they’re not poisonous in normal quantities, but the bitterness is intense and unpleasant.
- Always use clean containers, enough salt, and cool storage conditions; if olives smell off, go moldy on the surface, or develop odd colors or textures, discard them rather than risk it.
Bottom note: Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.