CHIAVALON · ISTRIA, CROATIA
Croatian Extra Virgin
Olive Oils
All extra virgin, cold-pressed, and early harvest. While most "extra virgin" olive oils are diluted, mislabeled, or chemically altered, ours are the real thing — simple, honest, and exceptional.
100% Extra Virgin
Cold-Pressed & Early Harvest
High Polyphenol
International Award Winner
Istria, the heart-shaped peninsula in northwestern Croatia, has quietly become one of the most respected olive oil regions in the world — not because of quantity, but because of relentless focus on quality. The rocky Istrian soil, Mediterranean microclimate, and proximity to the Adriatic create conditions where indigenous olive varieties develop intensely complex flavor profiles you simply can't replicate elsewhere.
The Chiavalon estate sits in the heart of this region near Vodnjan, where olives have been cultivated for centuries. Their approach is straightforward: harvest early, press cold within hours, compromise on nothing.
Istria is ranked among the world's top olive oil regions by international competitions — yet produces only a fraction of the volume of Spain, Italy, or Greece. What you get is rare by nature.
Why haven't I heard much about Croatian olive oil?
Croatia produces only around 4,000–5,000 tons of olive oil annually — compared to Spain's 1.5 million tons. Most is consumed locally or sold in premium European markets. Small-scale producers like Chiavalon prioritize quality over volume, which means very little reaches international shelves.
That scarcity is precisely why we exist. Drusk Trading Company brings these oils directly from the producer to the US market, so you can access what top European restaurants and food critics have known about for years.
What makes Chiavalon stand apart from other premium olive oils?
Chiavalon combines three things that rarely coexist: indigenous Croatian olive varieties, an early green harvest, and same-day cold pressing. The result is an oil with exceptional polyphenol levels, a signature peppery finish, and a vivid green color that signals genuine freshness.
They've won recognition at the world's top olive oil competitions — not occasionally, but consistently — which is the clearest proof that what's in the bottle backs up everything on the label.
<4hrs
from harvest to press
Is Chiavalon made from indigenous Croatian olives?
Yes — and this is one of the most important distinctions. Chiavalon takes pride in sourcing exclusively from olive varieties native to Istria and the Vodnjan area. These aren't imported Spanish or Italian cultivars; they are varieties that have grown in this soil for centuries, each contributing its own character to the final blend.
Buža — The backbone of the Chiavalon blend. Robust, grassy, with a long peppery finish.
Bianchera (Istrian Bjelica) — Lends delicate floral notes and a smooth body.
Carbonazza (Crnica) — Adds depth and a distinctive bitter complexity.
Moražola — Contributes aromatic herbal qualities unique to Istrian oils.
Rožinjola (Rosulja) — A heritage variety that rounds out the flavor profile with subtle sweetness.
How do I use Croatian olive oil?
These are finishing oils, not cooking oils. Heat destroys the very compounds — polyphenols, volatile aromatics — that make them worth buying at this level. Use them raw to get everything the bottle promises.
Save them for the last step: drizzle over grilled fish, fresh bread, salads, or pasta just before serving. Their peppery kick and grassy bitterness are features, not flaws — they're signs of genuinely fresh, high-quality oil.
Best Use
Bread Dipping
Pour over a plate with good salt. The oil's pepper and grassy notes shine with nothing competing.
Best Use
Finishing Drizzle
Over grilled fish, pasta, or roasted vegetables the moment they come off the heat.
Best Use
Cheese & Charcuterie
Pairs beautifully with Croatian sheep's milk cheese, aged pecorino, or soft burrata.
Best Use
Salad Dressing Base
With lemon and salt — no recipe needed. The oil carries the flavor on its own.
When is the harvest season in Croatia?
Istrian olive harvest begins as early as beginning of October, when olives are still young and polyphenol levels are at their peak. This is significantly earlier than most Mediterranean producers, who wait until olives ripen fully to maximize yield.
Chiavalon deliberately sacrifices quantity for quality — young olives produce less oil per kilo, but the resulting oil is fresher, more intense, and dramatically higher in beneficial compounds. It's a choice most mass producers won't make.
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