Mindanao Times

Voting ‘Non’

- ISABEL MALSANG AND JOSEPH SCHMID

A BATTLE over the future of camembert came to a head Friday after French producers voted against allowing pasteurize­d versions of the classic rawmilk cheese.

A narrow majority of northern French cheese-makers – 53% -- rejected a plan that would have given industrial producers the right to use the exclusive “Camembert of Normandy” label, even when using modern techniques denounced by purists.

Producers rejected the enlarged AOP (Protected Designatio­n of Origin), Patrick Mercier, president of an associatio­n that had been pushing for the changes said in a statement.

Veronique Richez-Lerouge, a staunch opponent of the plan who heads the “Fromages de Terroirs” associatio­n, hailed Friday’s vote as “very good news for all European AOPs.”

“The principle of quality won out over the increased demands of dairy giants, it’s a victory for taste,” she said.

Agrifood giants like Lactalis, makers of the top-selling President brand, can call their creamy disks camembert.

Crucially, however, they cannot use the tastier “Camembert de Normandie AOP” label.

Supporters said the compromise struck in 2018, which was rejected Friday, would have reversed decades of declining dairy farming in Normandy, where fewer than a dozen producers still make the cheese the traditiona­l way.

AOP producers now make just 5,500 tons of camembert a year, compared to 60,000 tons of pasteurize­d cheese that costs half as much or less.

Mercier, one of just two producers who make rawmilk camembert from their own herd of native Normande cows, had backed the proposed changes, seeing it as a way to increase consumptio­n of the more pungent produce.

It would have also forced dairy giants to adapt more savory practices.

Firstly, they would have had to sharply increase the size of their Normande herds -- the more productive Holsteins currently predominat­e -- and ensure they mainly eat grass instead of packaged feed.

Meanwhile, producers of the cream of the crop, like Mercier, would have had the right to call their cheese “Authentic Camembert of Normandy,” to distinguis­h their artisanal and more costly creations from industrial alternativ­es.

- ‘Quality won out’ But critics cried foul, saying consumers could be confused by the two differing AOPs, the French badge of quality for locally produced delicacies.

France’s AOP dairy board, the CNAOL, came out against the plan last spring, calling it an “unacceptab­le homogeniza­tion” of a cheese whose flavor and texture change with the seasons.

The board’s president Michel Lacoste said using “curd machines” and other techniques would make the cheese taste the same year round, no matter what type of milk was used.

“The whole point of AOP cheese is that is comes from milk that’s alive, from a particular place, and the producer has to adapt to make it,” he said.

Camembert is said to have been created in 1791 when Marie Harel, who lived in the village of Camembert, adapted a recipe for brie she learned from a priest hiding out during the French Revolution.

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