I have a bottle of Laurel Hill unfiltered organic extra virgin olive oil. I think I prefer it a bit over the Filippo Berio filtered EVOO I usually bought in the past, but I should do a taste test some day.
Here's some tips on EVOO from Mark Sisson:
"I recently came across a California unfiltered, cold-pressed extra virgin olive oil at the Santa Monica Trader Joe’s for around $7 a pint. This is far better than the jug of imported Greek oil I used to buy there (luckily, it was sold out, or else I might have gone with it like always). It’s drinkable, straight from the bottle, and it doesn’t coat your mouth in a jarring way. Don’t get me wrong – it’s oil, but it’s lighter and more delicate than most. Plus, it has that herbaceous olive scent that you want in an olive oil. When it goes down, you get that peppery aftertaste on your throat (that’s the antioxidant tocopherol content and a sign that the oil comes from the first harvest).
When choosing an oil, treat it a bit like wine and engage your senses. Smell it – it should smell like olives, very clean and almost like grass and apples. Don’t rely too much on sight – the color of an oil is easily manipulated. Instead, go with the one that really matters: taste. Take a half teaspoon or so into your mouth and swirl it around (again, like wine). First and foremost, it should taste like olives, but there are other flavors in the best oils. Grassiness, apples, even fennel are pretty common in really great olive oil. If it’s metallic-tasting, it’s probably rancid. If it’s light, delicious, and barely coats your mouth (without feeling greasy), it’s probably great stuff. And then my favorite part, the finish. The best oils from the first harvest with the highest antioxidant content will leave a spicy finish on your throat, like mild peppers.
Just experiment. Keep trying them until you find one you like. The different varietals are all unique, so your journey might be a long one."
Read more:
http://www.marksdailyapple.com/is-all-olive-oil-created-equal/#ixzz2Uub1Z8q3Regarding plump women as traditionally appealing, I've seen both male and female Jamaican (in person and via video) and Kitavan people (via video) compliment women by telling them they look fat (and other terms they use to mean fat, or at least thick and curvy - fit, plump, thick, healthy, pretty, juicy, ...).
"Those who have big legs and fat body, like arms too..., they look pretty when they wear grass skirts." - Kitavan woman, Tribal Wives Kitava,
Tribal Wives: KitavaThe Venus of Willendorf
http://www.donsmaps.com/willendorf.html"Thin may be in now, but prehistoric men 15,000 years ago preferred full-figured gals, suggest dozens of flint figurines excavated from a Paleolithic hunting site in Poland. ... Most of the carvings show a slight curve in the breast area. Very exaggerated curves depict the buttocks, while tiny rounded tops served as heads." - Cavemen Preferred Full-Figured Ladies, Jennifer Viegas, Discovery News, March 27, 2007,
http://www.archaeology.ws/2007-4-3.htmFemale figurines from Wilczyce, Poland. 1-8, flint, 9, ivory, 10, bone
Antiquity Publications Ltd, published in Fiedorczuk et al. 2007
Venus of Hohle Fels
"A woman has to have strong legs to make a man happy." - Yesugei Baghatur (father of Temujin / Ghenghis Khan) in Mongol: The Rise of Genghis Khan
"I don't want no woman with no skinny legs" - Joe Tex (black blues musician, Southern USA, Skinny Legs and All song