I appreciate your fervour, and I too want Australia and the EU to grow closer and to have a strong foundation of middle powers and free democracies.
Just a short idea about “you can call it parmesan made in northern Italy”. You might want to look up, where the city of Parma is located, from which the cheese gets its name.
I don’t think our countries’ relationship should break on this rock. But just my perspective: I think it’s a battle of culture vs. capitalsm. To the people of Parma, the Parmigiano cheese means quite a lot. If I found out, there was a big cheese maker in my area, I honestly would rather he represented my region in the name, than some Italian region to get a bit more profit.
beeng@discuss.tchncs.de 17 hours ago
Beer, wine, cheese, etc all come from the ingredients and one of those ingredients is usually the water… Which you cannot get the same taste and profile no matter how much you try, unless you’re in the region where it comes from.
Ship it if you want to use it in your cheese
Zagorath@aussie.zone 13 hours ago
If they think their ingredients are so much superior than the same product made elsewhere, they should be fine with calling it “parmesan from Parma”. As it is, in places that respect this form of intellectual property, they’re essentially given a state-backed artificial monopoly that props them up more than their product can earn on its own merits.
beeng@discuss.tchncs.de 7 hours ago
TFW Parma, Feta, Champagne are all places 😆
Zagorath@aussie.zone 1 hour ago
Whisky is a fantastic example of exactly what I’m talking about. Nobody has a regional claim preventing you making whisky whereger you want. Scotch whisky uses Scotch as an adjective telling you it’s the type of whisky made in Scotland.
If the town of Parma didn’t want people calling their cheese parmesan, they shouldn’t have named it using their town name as the noun for the whole style of cheese.