Chetoui & Chemlali: Tunisian Olive Oil Varieties
Published on July 9, 2026 · 7 min
A buyer who receives an offer for "Tunisian extra virgin olive oil" with no variety named is buying blind. The gap between a northern Chetoui and a Chemlali from Sfax — in taste, polyphenols and oxidative stability — is wider than the gap between two country origins. This article breaks down the four varieties that matter for export — Chetoui, Chemlali, Oueslati, Zarrazi — at the level of detail a blender needs to write a specification. For the wider picture of the origin, start with the Tunisian olive oil guide; here we go down into the variety itself.
Tunisia's varietal map
The Tunisian orchard is not a patchwork: it is dominated by a single variety, with a north and a south that supply the diversity.
- Chemlali: roughly two-thirds of the national orchard and more than 60% of oil output, according to the Tunisian oleicultural literature. It rules the centre and south, around Sfax and the Sahel, dry-farmed at low density.
- Chetoui: the northern variety (Béja, Bizerte, Tunis), on the order of 10% of the country's olive trees. Second by volume, first by character.
- Oueslati: grown in the Kairouan region and the centre, in an intermediate position.
- Zarrazi: found in the south, notably around Zarzis, on arid terroirs.
Other local varieties (Gerboui, Sayali, Zalmati, Chemchali and more) round out the mosaic but stay marginal in export flows. For a buyer, knowing Chetoui and Chemlali covers almost all the bulk on offer, with the other three used to type a specific lot.
Chetoui: the variety that builds structure
Sensory profile
Chetoui yields distinctly green oils: green-olive fruitiness, notes of fresh grass, leaf and artichoke, with clear bitterness and pungency (the peppery catch at the back of the throat). Harvested early, it can be powerful enough to dominate a blend. That is not a fault: bitterness and pungency are positive attributes, markers of a phenol-rich oil, not to be confused with the defects a tasting panel hunts for, which we cover in our article on sensory defects.
Analytical profile
On fatty acids, Chetoui stands out for high oleic acid (often in the 68-72% range) and low palmitic acid (around 9-12%). That signature — plenty of monounsaturated, little saturated — favours keeping quality. On polyphenols, Tunisian studies routinely place Chetoui several times above Chemlali, with levels that frequently exceed 400 mg/kg and climb much higher on early harvests. These compounds carry bitterness, stability and nutritional interest at once — the subject of our article on polyphenols and the health claim.
Stability and shelf life
The direct consequence is high oxidative stability. On the Rancimat test, Chetoui oils show induction times several times longer than Chemlali. In practical terms that means better keeping quality, a longer life on shelf and greater tolerance to logistical hazards. It is the oil to pick when the supply chain is long or when you are targeting a comfortable best-before date.
Uses
Chetoui is a tool for correction and positioning: a few percent are enough to lift a flat blend, reintroduce structure and raise the polyphenol count. As a single variety it serves premium and health positioning, along with robust uses where bitterness is actively wanted.
Chemlali: the soft, consensual base
Sensory profile
Chemlali is the aromatic opposite of Chetoui: softness, ripe fruitiness, notes of almond and sometimes dried fruit, muted bitterness and pungency. It is an approachable profile with no rough edges — actively sought by markets that shy away from bitterness: northern Europe, mass retail, and various export markets outside the Mediterranean basin.
Analytical profile
Its fatty-acid profile is more "fragile": more modest oleic acid (often 55-62%), high palmitic acid (up to 16-20%) and more abundant linoleic acid. The low oleic/linoleic ratio makes it more prone to oxidation. Polyphenols are naturally lower, frequently below 200 mg/kg, which explains both its softness and its lesser robustness.
Stability implications
Fewer monounsaturates, more polyunsaturates and fewer antioxidants: Chemlali on its own has moderate oxidative stability. That is not disqualifying — it is a variable to manage, through harvest freshness, nitrogen protection in storage and, often, blending with a more stable variety.
Uses
Chemlali is the blending base par excellence: abundant, consistent and economically accessible, it rounds out overly aggressive oils and forms the backbone of mass-market private-label lines. It is the variety you bottle at volume when the specification calls for a consensual taste rather than marked character.
Oueslati and Zarrazi: the intermediate profiles
Oueslati (Kairouan, centre) gives balanced oils with medium fruitiness and more restrained aromatics; its polyphenols and aromatic load are generally moderate. It appeals to buyers looking for a single variety of measured character, between Chetoui power and Chemlali softness.
Zarrazi (south, Zarzis area) surprises with very high oleic acid (close to 71%), a stability asset, over a ripe fruitiness typed by the arid terroir. Its tocopherols run lower and its polyphenols moderate, but its fat profile makes it an interesting specialty variety for "southern" typed lots.
Varietal comparison table
| Variety | Main region | Sensory profile | Typical analytical markers | Typical use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chetoui | North | Green fruity, artichoke, grass; marked bitterness and pungency | High oleic (~68-72%), low palmitic (~9-12%), high polyphenols (often > 400 mg/kg), strong stability | Blend structuring, premium, health |
| Chemlali | Sfax, Sahel, centre | Soft, ripe fruity, almond; low bitterness | Moderate oleic (~55-62%), high palmitic (~16-20%), high linoleic, low polyphenols (often < 200 mg/kg), moderate stability | Blending base, mass-market private label |
| Oueslati | Kairouan, centre | Balanced, medium fruity, restrained aromatics | Intermediate profile, moderate polyphenols | Single variety, differentiation |
| Zarrazi | South (Zarzis) | Ripe fruity, arid terroir character | Very high oleic (~71%), lower tocopherols, moderate polyphenols | Specialty lots, oleic-driven shelf life |
One caveat when reading a spec: a "Chetoui" or "Chemlali" label describes the fruit, not the exact numbers. Terroir, altitude, rainfall in a dry-farmed orchard, ripeness at picking and milling temperature all move the figures within the ranges above. Treat the variety as the starting hypothesis and the lot COA as the verdict — the certificate of analysis is where oleic acid, polyphenols and free acidity become contractual, not the varietal name on the offer.
Variety and harvest date: two dials, not one
The variety sets the baseline; the harvest date moves it. The same Chetoui picked in mid-November, on still-green olives, gives an explosive green fruitiness, very bitter, very rich in polyphenols, but at lower yield. That same variety picked in January on black fruit calms down: softer, less phenolic, more generous in oil. The concrete upshot: a November Chetoui and a January Chemlali are two different worlds, and the within-variety gap between early and late can equal the gap between varieties. A buyer who reasons in "variety" without "harvest date" controls only half the profile.
Blending as a design tool
This is where varietal reasoning becomes operational. Rather than accepting whatever lot arrives, a blender builds a target profile:
- Soft profile: Chemlali-dominant, mid-to-late-season harvest. Low bitterness, controlled cost, mass-market target.
- Balanced profile: a base Chemlali lifted with 10-25% Chetoui to raise structure and polyphenols without breaking the roundness.
- Robust profile: Chetoui-dominant, early harvest, for a characterful extra virgin, rich in polyphenols, high in stability, premium or health positioning.
Each target is dialled in by combining varieties and harvest dates, then validated by COA and tasting. A trader working across a network of mills brings a lever a single mill does not have: the ability to select and blend lots from different varieties, regions and harvest dates to hit exactly the intended profile, campaign after campaign.
Choosing the right variety with Virginia
Our network of partner mills covers the Chetoui north and the Chemlali centre-south, which lets us build a lot to a target profile — soft, balanced or robust — with a COA behind each variety. Browse our olive oils by variety and grade, then request samples of current-campaign Chetoui and Chemlali: the comparison on the palate beats any sales pitch.
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