Balatro Grove

2025 Harvest

This bottle records the 2025 harvest from Balatro Grove. It reflects a single-season decision to release a Leccino monovarietal when growing conditions allowed for a complete and balanced expression. Balatro does not release a monovarietal every year; the decision is made only when the season supports it.

In 2025, the Leccino monovarietal was allocated to tree guardians and sustaining members. The remaining production from the grove was assembled as a field blend and directed to the Community Reserve, with a small selection reserved for the Founder’s Reserve.

One Tree One Bottle identifies oil that remains tied to its place of origin. Each production corresponds to one grove and one harvest year. The oil is not blended across sites and is not adjusted for uniformity. Variations in cultivar expression, yield, and quantity are retained as part of the record.

This expression belongs to Balatro Grove and the 2025 season.

Seasonal Reflections

Winter and Spring - The coldest December since 2017 reset the vegetative cycle across the groves. Spring rainfall, heavier than records from much of the past half-century, replenished soil moisture in non-irrigated sites while slowing pollination and early fruit set.

Summer - Early heatwaves in June and July stressed the trees and reduced fruit counts, particularly in younger or recently restored areas. Subsequent rain events eased drought pressure but increased exposure to fungal risk and storm activity.

Fall - Day–night temperature variation reached approximately 20 °C (68 °F) during daylight hours and dropped to near 5 °C (41 °F) overnight. These conditions supported phenolic development and preserved aromatic structure. Harvest took place under cool, overcast conditions favourable for controlled extraction.

Balatro Grove

Cultivar Composition

Single-varietal production

100% Leccino


Single-varietal releases are made selectively and only when seasonal conditions support a complete expression. The 2024 and 2025 harvests were seasons where those conditions aligned.

Crafting Excellence:

Olive Fly Management - Following an elevated regional presence in July, monitoring continued throughout the season. Weekly manual sampling of 100 olives per subsection allowed early detection of fly pressure and limited intervention, reducing the need for reactive measures.

Grove Practice - No practices were employed to stimulate growth or increase yield. Tree performance reflected varietal resilience, soil condition, and seasonal climate. Pruned material was returned to the grove floor, where it decomposed in place, returning organic matter to the soil. Growth and production followed the trees’ own capacity rather than external input.

Mill Practices - Harvest occurred between October 8 and October 15. Fruit was milled immediately following harvest. Extractions were carried out in a nitrogen-sealed mill, with temperatures kept below 22 °C (72 °F). All oil underwent double filtration, testing, and storage in stainless steel tanks under nitrogen, with temperature controlled at 17 °C (63 °F) and humidity monitored to maintain stability. Each grove’s oil was stored in separate fusti and tested independently.

Yield - Despite lower fruit counts, yields averaged 13.51%, a significant increase over the previous season. This higher extraction rate helped offset the reduction in fruit volume and supported overall production for the harvest.


  • Groves: Balatro
  • Fruitiness: 6.3/10
  • Bitterness: 4.8/10
  • Pepperiness: 5.5/10
  • Polyphenols: 640 mg/Kg
  • Monounsaturated FA: >75%
  • Free fatty acid content: 0.23
  • Peroxides: 6.9
  • Environmental impact, multi-residual: <0.01

Sensory & Pairing Profile

Aromatics center on green almond and green apple, remaining fresh and restrained. On the palate, bitterness and pungency are moderate and measured, resulting in a balanced, harmonic structure that carries with clarity from entry through finish.

As an ingredient, this oil is well-suited to lighter preparations, including white meats, steamed vegetables, and desserts, where its structure supports without dominating.

One Tree One Bottle Label

All groves carry the same One Tree One Bottle label. The design does not vary by grove or season.

What distinguishes each bottle is the name of the grove and the harvest year. Each grove’s oil is produced, stored, tested, and recorded independently. Yield, quantity, and harvest dates correspond only to that grove and are not combined across sites.

The label records continuity: one grove, one season, one outcome.