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Europe | ||
Only Greeks can make 'feta', EU court says | ||
2005-10-25 | ||
![]() Although feta cheese has been produced all over modern Europe, especially in Germany. Denmark and for more than 20 years by a single producer in Yorkshire, England, the exact history of the cheese is unknown. Some historians claim the cheese came about in Greece, while others say the name was created by Venetian traders.
One of the main arguments Germany and Denmark used in their case against the commission was that since feta is produced so widely and has been for many years, 'feta' as a name has lost its meaning. Unlike other protected names, such as Parma ham, which are tied to specific locations, feta is a type rather than a name, they argued. The European court ruled, however, that it is the grasses grown on certain hills in Greece that milking goats feed upon which gives feta its special characteristics and that these cannot be reproduced elsewhere.
The protection of origin names, which originally began as a way to protect the names of wines and spirits produced in the EU, from Champagne to Porto, has become one of the EU's biggest goals in multilateral trade talks in recent years. As agricultural production in the EU becomes more expensive and production in developing countries like Brazil becomes cheaper, competing on the world market in agriculture and food products become more difficult. One way for the EU to compete, however, is with high quality niche products that are most often tied to a specific region that promotes specific characteristics in the product. Sparkling wine may be produced in California or Australia, but France, and now the EU, claims nothing can be like Champagne. | ||
Posted by:Steve |
#22 The Long Island Ice Tea is next. |
Posted by: Bright Pebbles 2005-10-25 19:54 |
#21 The EU can keep 'Feta' cheese, and we'll keep the 'Internet'. |
Posted by: DMFD 2005-10-25 17:41 |
#20 Youse can have your Feta, but keep yer filthy hands off my Velveeta! |
Posted by: USN, ret. 2005-10-25 15:20 |
#19 "What did he say?" "The Greeks shall inherit the Earth?" "The Greeks? Are you sure? I think he said the Meek." "Oh, the meek, how nice, they never get nothing." "Did he say blessed are the cheesemakers? What's so special about them?" "I think he's blessing the entire dairy industry dear." Little Life of Brian misquoted off the top of my head. Damn the movie was genious. |
Posted by: rjschwarz (no T!) 2005-10-25 13:46 |
#18 Who cares? Once again, people in the cheese-manufacturing business probably care. They are real people and do exist you know. |
Posted by: Aris Katsaris 2005-10-25 13:28 |
#17 So call it "Greek Goat Cheese". Who cares? |
Posted by: mojo 2005-10-25 13:23 |
#16 Aris, are you now able to sleep soundly knowing the Feta Food Fight is over? Not in the cheese-manufacturing business, darlin'. And nationalist mockery reasons aside, why do you think I agree with this verdict? I tend to agree with JFM instead, that the restrictions placed on usage of the name should concern not the place of origin (such nation-based restrictions I consider to go against the very concept of the EU) but rather its nature: Feta can only be goat-cheese for example. |
Posted by: Aris Katsaris 2005-10-25 12:59 |
#15 This is worse than patent law. This is giving some bastard a monopoly on something forever. In this case the bastard is a EU defined region. To top it off this is a trick they are pulling to stop others from selling food anywhere that has normal food type names. Fucking ripoff in progress. |
Posted by: 3dc 2005-10-25 12:15 |
#14 Are you talking about Freedom Fries, carrot top? |
Posted by: Angurong Gromoling6209 2005-10-25 12:15 |
#13 What is the implication for French fries? |
Posted by: Ronald McD 2005-10-25 12:13 |
#12 My mistake about the oil. You are right it is in brine. But the Danish or German feta I have seen came in oil. Probably because cheese floats in brine but not in oil and thus doesn't yellow in contact of air like cow cheese does (goat cheese remains white) |
Posted by: JFM 2005-10-25 11:51 |
#11 If the French pulled off their Champaign/sparkling white wine and the world bought it this was only a matter of time. All this means is they'll change the spelling. It's all in the spin baby. American Pheta is Phat. Greek Feta, is Fat. |
Posted by: rjschwarz (no T!) 2005-10-25 11:49 |
#10 Let me chime into this too (since my mother's from Greece). My uncle used to own a dairy story in the town of Karditsa. He used to make his own feta, but it got too expensive. In the end, he imported it all from Bulgaria, which makes as good, if not better feta than they have in Greece. From what he told me, many dairy stores import their feta too because it's too expensive to produce on their own. By the way, all the Greek specialty stores in North America import their feta not from Greece, but from Bulgaria. |
Posted by: bonanzabucks 2005-10-25 11:39 |
#9 It's gonna happen. Good bye Cheddar et al. And f^@k the country you came in from. |
Posted by: Elmereque Gravirong5743 2005-10-25 11:24 |
#8 Marinated in olive oil? Por favor, the feta I used to buy in the Athina Supermarket in Ano Glyphada came out of a big barrel of brine... the counterman would hoist out a big dripping slab of it, and carve off a kilo or so, and wrap it in plastic-backed blue paper, but the brine always leaked through... |
Posted by: Sgt. Mom 2005-10-25 11:17 |
#7 CyberSarge If you are sold a computer who is supposed to have an Athlon 64 and you open it and you discover a 386 how are you going to react? Or that you are sold cat for hare? Feta is supposed to be a cheese made with <>goat milk and marinated in olive oil. The danish and german things are made with cow milk and marinated in, yuck, seed oil. I can disagree with artificail restrictions telling that to have the name feta it is to be made in such zone and a maile father it is no longer feta because these have no object but lining the pockets of the producers and feeding snobs but I certainly don't find acceptable to be sold cow cheese for feta. |
Posted by: JFM 2005-10-25 11:13 |
#6 Oh the injustice! Will the feta cheese quagmire be a wedge issue for Turkey and Bulgary's anti-accession movements resulting in a crumbled EU or will it remain a solid salty mass unified by a common texture and taste? |
Posted by: FrancoisGump 2005-10-25 10:59 |
#5 With all the problems in the world, I am so glad they resolved this potential war maker. I feel safer. /sarcasm |
Posted by: mmurray821 2005-10-25 10:39 |
#4 Shhh...Aris is out walking the Cheese Line even as we speak. And the Greek dairymen want him on that wall. They need him on that wall. |
Posted by: Seafarious 2005-10-25 10:33 |
#3 With all due respect to Greeks and Greek food, WTF? Of all the pressing problems facing Europe they choose to tackle the titanic issue of cheese nomenclature? I can’t imagine that many Greeks were losing sleep knowing that some French or Spanish dairyman was producing Feta cheese and calling it Feta? Aris, are you now able to sleep soundly knowing the Feta Food Fight is over? |
Posted by: Cyber Sarge 2005-10-25 10:30 |
#2 Cheese it boys. It's the Dairy coppers. |
Posted by: ed 2005-10-25 10:24 |
#1 The WTO better not accept this logic. |
Posted by: 3dc 2005-10-25 10:19 |