| ▲ | edm0nd 15 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
Is anyone really getting into trouble growing Vidalia onions not in Georgia? Like if I plant some in my yard and start selling them online or at the local farmers market, what is anyone really going to do? Seems kinda weird they have a government granted monopoly on them. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | eightturn 14 hours ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
If you grow them in the Vidalia region (20 counties around Vidalia, GA), you're aok... but if you grow them outside of that area, and call them a Vidalia, you'll get into hot water. The law mainly came into existence cause Texas farmers began growing regular yellow onions and slapping the 'Vidalia' name on it, and customers would get pissed. So all the Vidalia farmers got together and got a Federal law passed that says you can only call an onion a 'Vidalia' if it's grown in our special region down here where we have sandy, loamy soil that contributes to the mild, sweet taste. | |||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | steveklabnik 15 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
It's a brand name, like any other. Usage of it requires fulfilling the brand requirements. It's like how you can't say a burger from Burger King if it's actually from McDonalds, even if it's a very similar hamburger. But even then, this isn't uncommon for food and beverages. You can't call it "whisky" unless you follow certain requirements about the mash bill, barrel, etc. (My dad, before his death, had started growing "Pennsylvania Simply Sweet" onions. Because you can't call them Vidalia.) | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | pverheggen 14 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
It's similar to French wines and cheese. News to me that we have this in the US but it totally makes sense. We have a few of these in the PNW, like Hermiston melons and Walla Walla onions. | |||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | Aurornis 15 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
There are a lot of food and drink items with official legal definitions that include the region of origin. The most famous one is champagne, which can only be called champagne if it comes from a specific region. You can think of the name as being inclusive of the region, not simply descriptive of the variety. So if someone made a sparkling wine in a different region and sold it as champagne then they would be committing fraud. > Like if I plant some in my yard and start selling them online or at the local farmers market, what is anyone really going to do? At your farmer’s market? Probably nothing. But if you came across a particularly grumpy person with time and money to burn on lawyers they would have a case against you. Not actually going to happen at that scale. But if you owned vidaliaonions.com and started selling fraudulent vidalia onions at scale, the farmers would likely get together and pursue legal action to protect their prices. It’s almost like a brand. You can sell LEGO-style bricks but you can’t call them LEGO because they didn’t come from the LEGO company. | |||||||||||||||||
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