eatchicago wrote: I'm not saying they're necessarily better or worse, but they ain't Vidalia. Call them what they are. Educate the public about the different options.
David Hammond wrote:eatchicago wrote: I'm not saying they're necessarily better or worse, but they ain't Vidalia. Call them what they are. Educate the public about the different options.
What surprises me is that the people of Vidalia don't come after these "other onions." More then likely, they don't have the name registered or otherwise protected.
eatchicago wrote:David Hammond wrote:eatchicago wrote: I'm not saying they're necessarily better or worse, but they ain't Vidalia. Call them what they are. Educate the public about the different options.
What surprises me is that the people of Vidalia don't come after these "other onions." More then likely, they don't have the name registered or otherwise protected.
I don't think the problem is with the farmers of the "other onions". They are putting the proper stickers/labels on their merchandise. The problem exists with the markets when they're writing their signs with magic markers to put above the bins. I don't think there are enough people in Vidalia to chase after all these places.
Best,
Michael
JeffB wrote:Interestingly, the hog no longer has to be peanut-fed, according to Wikpedia. So a peanut-fed country ham from nearby Ivor, VA is not a Smithfield, while perhaps a lesser ham from Smithfield is.
David Hammond wrote:At least with these widely recognized and accepted deceptive practices, there is no presumption that we’re too stupid not to realize that we’re being deceived.
Antonius wrote:Without the injected liquid, what would the 'third of a pound' of ham actually have weighed?
LAZ wrote:David Hammond wrote:At least with these widely recognized and accepted deceptive practices, there is no presumption that we’re too stupid not to realize that we’re being deceived.
"Best food in town!"
gleam wrote:But I don't think "Prime Rib" is a problem. Just like it's fine to say "Prime Cuts of Meat" at a butcher. Calling Prime Rib Prime Rib if it's choice meat is like calling Domino's pizza. It's not really pizza, but everyone knows what you mean.
Jesper wrote:By the way, why is this thread under non-food chat--aren't we talking about food?
gleam wrote:But I don't think "Prime Rib" is a problem. Just like it's fine to say "Prime Cuts of Meat" at a butcher. Calling Prime Rib Prime Rib if it's choice meat is like calling Domino's pizza. It's not really pizza, but everyone knows what you mean.
Kman wrote:gleam wrote:But I don't think "Prime Rib" is a problem. Just like it's fine to say "Prime Cuts of Meat" at a butcher. Calling Prime Rib Prime Rib if it's choice meat is like calling Domino's pizza. It's not really pizza, but everyone knows what you mean.
Agreed. Just like when I order a Porterhouse I don't expect to be served the domicile of someone that carries luggage for the railroad.
mrbarolo wrote:So many of these instances involve not merely a clean deception, but a slippery slope or technologically elasticated truth stretched ever closer to a breaking point that is harder and harder to identify.
mrbarolo wrote:At what point, in this world of partially prepared or processed foods and individual ingredients is something "home made?"
Working backwards, if the diner opens a can of soup and heats it for you, then it's not home made. If they boil a chicken for stock and add fresh vegetables and seasoning it is. But if they use a soup base to which they add real, fresh vegetables that they saute and season themselves?
LAZ wrote:mrbarolo wrote:At what point, in this world of partially prepared or processed foods and individual ingredients is something "home made?"
Working backwards, if the diner opens a can of soup and heats it for you, then it's not home made. If they boil a chicken for stock and add fresh vegetables and seasoning it is. But if they use a soup base to which they add real, fresh vegetables that they saute and season themselves?
By my standards, nothing made in a restaurant is "homemade." Homemade means made from scratch by someone in his or her own home.