Colavita


Colavita is an Italian company best known for olive oil.
As of 2010, the brothers Enrico and Leonardo Colavita ran the company, with Enrico serving as President and Leonardo as General Manager, and other members of the family serving in management roles, including Leonardo’s son Giovanni, who was President of Colavita USA. Their father started the packaging business in the 1930s; their family, and many other families in the town of Sant'Elia a Pianisi and the wider Province of Campobasso, had grown and pressed olive oil for generations. The company owns a packaging plant in Pomezia, which also packages olive oil under the brands Rachael Ray All-Italian Extra Virgin Olive Oil and Santa Sabina.
Colavita USA was founded by John J Profaci exclusively who, at the time, was a resident of Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. Profaci was introduced to Enrico Colavita in 1978 after Colavita came to the United States. Profaci, who had been in the olive oil business, agreed to go into business with Colavita as the US distributor for the company and subsequently created the extra virgin olive oil category in the United States. The US distribution started slowly, with Profaci offering samples of the oil at a local grocery store, and then starting to sell to Italian restaurants and to specialty stores and within five years, Colavita became a renowned brand in parts of the World. Then in the mid-1980s the New York Times ran a feature on the health benefits of foods with monounsaturated fat like olive oil, and the article included a picture of a bottle of Colavita olive oil. The publicity caused the business to grow quickly.
In 1991 Colavita USA donated $2 million to the Culinary Institute of America in exchange for naming rights to a new building on the campus; the building opened in 2001 after CIA spent $7 million total to complete it.
In 2008 Colavita acquired Colavita USA.