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AP - Europe moves to limit cheese names in America

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New name suggestions:

Cheddar: sharp/yellow cheese
Parmesan: hard cheese
Mozzarella: soft cheese
American: fake cheese

I'm kidding, of course. Sandwich. Hamburger. Bologna. French fries. Yorkshire pudding. Turkish delight. Worcestershire sauce. California roll. Frankfurter. Java. Key lime pie. Neapolitan ice cream. Mayonnaise. Dijon mustard. Sardines. Brussels sprouts. Cantaloupe. Peaches. Shallots. Tangerines. The list goes on an on and on. Don't set a stupid precedent or these all need to be renamed.

I think that cheese and wine are tiers apart from all of those in the EU.

I mean, look at how you buy wines. It's very much a regional thing. Austrailian, Chilean, French, wherever.
 

mavs

Member
Well, isn't that a fairly strong case as to how damaging an impact it can have on the regional cheese?

Yeah, it's a big problem if you want the very name of your region to sell your product.

But somehow New York survived the loss of their exclusive rights to the New York Strip, I bet if someone has a quality cheese to sell they can manage to sell it without suddenly taking all their similarly named competitors off the market.

Although I don't really know why they would care, if the EU remains a protected market...
 

Five

Banned
I think that cheese and wine are tiers apart from all of those in the EU.

That's really the crux of the argument, isn't it? I believe that's how you feel, but I can also say with confidence that few in America feel that way, at least with regard to cheese. I'm not a consumer of wine, so I'm admittedly poorly equipped to respond from that angle.
 

Amalthea

Banned
Americans can keep their generic cheese crap. As long as I can indulge myself in delicious, delicious real Gruyère I don't care.
 
That's really the crux of the argument, isn't it? I believe that's how you feel, but I can also say with confidence that few in America feel that way, at least with regard to cheese. I'm not a consumer of wine, so I'm admittedly poorly equipped to respond from that angle.

Yeah, I think that disconnect is the real thing here perhaps. Oh well. It ain't up to me to prove anything hah. I'll just be curious to see where (if anywhere) this even goes.
 
Did the Hamburger really originate in Hamburg Germany? If Italy wants Bologna, the meat, back they can have it. gross

Afair(I did my final exam about hamburgers a long time ago) the first ground meat was produced accidently by the tartars. They put their meat under the saddle of their horses and after a long long journey the meat was squashed to "ground meat".
 

cdyhybrid

Member
We should make it so only American TV networks and American-owned movie theaters can show American TV shows and American movies in Europe.
 
As a wine and cheese lover, I still find this utterly stupid and counterproductive.

As a consumer, I'll absolutely look for the geographical origin of these products and it matters to me but I don't give a single fuck what/how other people consume and certainly wouldn't presume to tell another country how they should label their shit. Way to make us all look like backwards, chauvinistic assholes, EU.
 

Krabardaf

Member
There are large regions of the US that use "Coke" to refer to all colas generically.

Of course, we all say "coca" here too, but it doesn't mean it's used as a label by manufacturers. Nobody is going after what people want to call their products, just after names and marketting of particular artisanal food.
 

Nander

Member
New name suggestions:

Cheddar: sharp/yellow cheese
Parmesan: hard cheese
Mozzarella: soft cheese
American: fake cheese

I'm kidding, of course.

I know you're kidding, but here in Europe most manufacturers get around the whole naming problem by calling their products things like "Cheese of Parmesan variety" or "Feta-style cheese".
 

wsippel

Banned
Large food companies that mass produce the cheeses are also fighting the idea. Kraft, closely identified with its grated Parmesan cheese, says the cheese names have long been considered generic in the United States.
That Kraft sawdust is no Parmesan and tastes nothing like Parmesan, so it shouldn't be called Parmesan. It's sold as "Pamesello" in Europe.
 

Dennis

Banned
I am behind this move not 100% but 110%.

The thought of shitty cheese masquerading as our sacred 1000-year old European heirloom cheeses really rustles my jimmies.
 

verbum

Member
2012 World Cheese Contest:

Overall, U.S. cheesemakers dominated the competition, earning gold medals in 55 categories. Switzerland came in second among the countries, with seven golds. Canada had six, Denmark five, the Netherlands four, and Germany and Spain each took two, while Australia and Austria each captured one.

The 2012 World Champion honor went to a Vermeer from the Netherlands, a reduced-fat Gouda-style cheese. A winter kase from Switzerland and an appenzeller from Switzerland took first- and second-runner-up honors, respectively.

The World Championship Cheese Contest was started in 1957 and has always been held in Wisconsin -- in Madison since 2000. It's the oldest international cheese competition and, unlike others, it is a technical competition, judged by experts who look for up to 50 different defects in a cheese and judge in tenths of a point up to 100 points. The Vermeer cheese scored 98.73 in the final round of judging.

http://www.jsonline.com/blogs/lifestyle/141963613.html
 
I certainly do associate parmesan with Italy and Feta with Greece. Maybe people in the USA would feel differently if they actually had consumable food/beverages worthy of protecting.

haha...haha..AHAHAHAHAHA

The idea that, in this age of globalization and manufacturing, that Parmesan cheese should be determined by location and not its process, is laughable. I get if they want to restrict the usage of calling it "Authentic Parmesan" but trying to tie the product to location ain't happening.

There is a precedent so it is not as ridiculous as it sounds.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protected_designation_of_origin
 

Dead Man

Member
Welcome to seeing the downside of international trade agreements that give private companies the ability to challenge national laws.
 

Goodlife

Member
2012 World Cheese Contest:

Overall, U.S. cheesemakers dominated the competition, earning gold medals in 55 categories. Switzerland came in second among the countries, with seven golds. Canada had six, Denmark five, the Netherlands four, and Germany and Spain each took two, while Australia and Austria each captured one.

The 2012 World Champion honor went to a Vermeer from the Netherlands, a reduced-fat Gouda-style cheese. A winter kase from Switzerland and an appenzeller from Switzerland took first- and second-runner-up honors, respectively.

The World Championship Cheese Contest was started in 1957 and has always been held in Wisconsin -- in Madison since 2000. It's the oldest international cheese competition and, unlike others, it is a technical competition, judged by experts who look for up to 50 different defects in a cheese and judge in tenths of a point up to 100 points. The Vermeer cheese scored 98.73 in the final round of judging.

http://www.jsonline.com/blogs/lifestyle/141963613.html


Yeah, no.
 
European here. Honestly, i think this whole thing is just really petty.
I can understand the EU wanting to protect its cultural heritage (read: wanting to make money) but these names have become so commonplace that changing them now would only cause lots of confusion.

This could all be solved by simply putting the word 'authentic' in the names of products that came from Europe, for example.
That way, American parmesan would still be parmesan, while parmesan that's actually from Parma could be distinguished by calling it authentic parmesan, or something to that effect. It's not rocket science.
 
U.S.A trying to turn into China. Cheap knock offs becoming a thing, can't wait till China dwarfs all other markets and then people complain becuz it diffrent.
 

Irminsul

Member
Fascinating to read how people don't understand what trade negotiations are.

You take some, you give some.


Maybe it's the "give" part that's novel for some Americans.
 

wrowa

Member
It's kind of like a trademark infringement. :p

In the eyes of the traditional cheese producers, the specific names of the different types of cheese do not only refer to the way they've been made, but also to its specific local origin. You can produce the same type of cheese anywhere else, but if you are going to give it the "traditional" name of the cheese, the original producers feel like you are breaking their trademark. Like some company would start distributing Oreo fakes (that might taste the same) without having the rights to the name - the difference is that instead of a company a local area holds the copyright.
 

wsippel

Banned
European here. Honestly, i think this whole thing is just really petty.
I can understand the EU wanting to protect its cultural heritage (read: wanting to make money) but these names have become so commonplace that changing them now would only cause lots of confusion.

This could all be solved by simply putting the word 'authentic' in the names of products that came from Europe, for example.
That way, American parmesan would still be parmesan, while parmesan that's actually from Parma could be distinguished by calling it authentic parmesan, or something to that effect. It's not rocket science.
I'm European as well and support this move. It's not like we had these rules forever in the EU, either. A lot of products had to be renamed in the last few years because they didn't live up to the strict regulations.

I believe those rules are good for everybody. Manufacturers will never develop their own identity and create new products if they can just rip off something somebody else established. Nobody in Europe would import "fake" Gouda made in Wisconsin - but they probably would import Wisconsin cheese from Wisconsin (if it's actually good).
 

Rafy

Member
D.O.C. and D.O.P. exist for a reason in Italy. You can't call everything what you want, there are rules. Being half Greek half Italian I fully support it and hope they enforce it!
 
American here.
Not surprised this is happening. Protectionism isn't some novel concept.
We do cheese, beer and wine better than Europe now, so I understand why they're getting nervous.
 

Jedeye Sniv

Banned
Not sure what the situation is internationally but we're not supposed to call sparkling wine "Champagne" unless it actually comes from the region of the same name in France.

This is the point I came to make. The names indicate regionality, they should be specific. Just like Cornish Pasties should come from Cornwall, Melton Mowbray Pork Pies from Melton Mowbray, Cheddar cheese from Cheddar.

In this global world I think it's important.
 

neorej

ERMYGERD!
American here.
Not surprised this is happening. Protectionism isn't some novel concept.
We do cheese, beer and wine better than Europe now, so I understand why they're getting nervous.

larry-david-laughter-o.gif
 

Jasup

Member
lol
I know you mean all the small, cool and hip "out of business in a month or two"-breweries but we also have them here in the EU. hundrets of thousands of them with equaly good beer
And this is the crux of the problem in these comparisons. We usually compare our best to your standard stuff.

It's like comparing American SUV's to Ferrari or Bugatti and concluding that European auto industry is clearly superior. Or generic European edam to specialist artisan cheeses in America and saying America wins the cheese race.
 

andthebeatgoeson

Junior Member
Seems so weird they want to roll these things back when Italian families in America have been using these cheeses to make ams sell their products for decades. I don't believe they have been getting their cheeses from Europe for decades. Glad the EU is throwing their weight around in this important topic. Way to show up late.
 

Liljagare

Member
The american cheese industry are fooling customers by using the names, lived in the US for 10 years, and hate to say this, but the american versions of europes popular cheeses do not come close to the flavours of the real deal.

Most of the cheese in the US, I wouldn't call it cheese.
 

Toxi

Banned
I wish Europe had tried this sooner, before I had the idea of cheddar as a yellow cheese instead of a city I've never seen in the UK drilled into my head.
 

Woz

Member
Europe is always super serious about their food names and national pride. The US should fight it. The names are generic to me, if the product and process is the same why is the name special? Its not a brand. Its about preserving European profits and protecting European farmers at the expense of US farmers. I see no need why the US needs to abide by it.

I'm gonna start to make Kentuky Bourbon here in Italy.
 

Kurtofan

Member
When you buy Parmesan, you should be able to know if it comes from Parma or from Missouri, that seems reasonable. Labels making sure you know what you're buying.
 

Uncle

Member
I know you're kidding, but here in Europe most manufacturers get around the whole naming problem by calling their products things like "Cheese of Parmesan variety" or "Feta-style cheese".

Over here non-greek feta is called some variation of a greek salad cheese. :lol
 

Gannd

Banned
Haha, are you talking about the American Cheese Society awards? You know, where American cheese companies battle it out against a handful of their international completion (from Canada and Mexico).

It's a World event in the same the same way as the World Series is. Or rather, isn't.


No. I'm not. More than 20 countries participated and judges were from 12 countries.
 
I'm gonna start to make Kentuky Bourbon here in Italy.

Considering there actually isn't a single distillery in Bourbon County making whiskey, that's not really that big a deal to me. Go for it. I doubt Evan Williams ever feared competition.

I'd suggest you learn how to spell "Kentucky" though before you get your labels printed.


When you buy Parmesan, you should be able to know if it comes from Parma or from Missouri, that seems reasonable. Labels making sure you know what you're buying.

You already have that.
 

Gannd

Banned
Americans not seeing value in the protection of traditional food? Color me not surprised.


It's protectionism and it's only being done because American cheese makers are better and American cheese makers popularized it. Anyway, it's not going to go anywhere. The EU cannot force anything.
 

mrklaw

MrArseFace
I thought this was already protected? eg Parmesan can only be called that if it is made in that location. The shit you get pre-grated in pots is called 'italian hard cheese' in the UK.

So does the US simply ignore that? So you can buy Parma Ham or Parmesan cheese made wherever the fuck you like?
 

Walshicus

Member
There have been countless lawsuits over this, so...yes? If e.g. a product calls itself Black Forest ham it should be from the region. Simple as that.
So yeah, I'm absolutely in favour of this kind of regional protection. The Wiki has some pretty interesting non-EU equivalents:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protected_Geographical_Status

In the United States there are groups that have some degree of protection for their regional designation. For example, Vidalia onions must be produced within a certain region around Vidalia, Georgia, as defined by the Georgia Department of Agriculture, and "100% Florida orange juice" is certified as being such by that state's Department of Citrus. Some of these marks are protected in the United States under certification mark law, such as the Idaho Potato Commission's "Idaho" and "Grown in Idaho" registered trademarks for potatoes. Tennessee whiskey is straight Bourbon Whiskey produced in the state of Tennessee.[11][12] This definition is legally established under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which states that Tennessee whiskey is "a straight Bourbon Whiskey authorized to be produced only in the State of Tennessee."[12] There also are cases in which a geographical name has been trademarked for a particular product that might not even be manufactured there, such as Philadelphia cream cheese.




I thought this was already protected? eg Parmesan can only be called that if it is made in that location. The shit you get pre-grated in pots is called 'italian hard cheese' in the UK.

So does the US simply ignore that? So you can buy Parma Ham or Parmesan cheese made wherever the fuck you like?
Those regional protections are EU law, so the US is not compelled to observe them. Unless they sign a treaty requiring it (which is what this is about), that is.
 
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