Denominación de origen (Mexico)

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The United Mexican States have 18 Designations of Origin (DO, Denominación de Origen in Spanish), granted by the Mexican Institute of Industrial Property (IMPI), which also issues declarations to protect the product, register the brand and authorize its use. However, these names are not created by the IMPI, but rather "exist because of factual situations; that is, they are first used, famous and recognized by the public that consumes them, and later, they are protected through the corresponding declaration".[1]

Tequila, the first Mexican denomination of origin.

The first denomination of origin declared in Mexico was tequila in 1974 (DO enjoyed by 181 municipalities distributed between Jalisco, Michoacán, Tamaulipas, Nayarit and Guanajuato), while the last was the Pluma coffee in 2020 (30 municipalities in Oaxaca).[2]

List

More information Image, Product ...
Image Product Year Place
Food
Veracruz coffee [es] 2000[3] 82 municipalities in Veracruz
Chiapas coffee [es] 2003[4] 77 municipalities in Chiapas
Ataúlfo mango 2003[5] 13 municipalities in Soconusco region, Chiapas
Papantla vanilla [es] 2009[6] 19 municipalities in Veracruz
19 municipalities in Puebla
(total of 38)
Yucatan habanero chilli pepper [es] 2008[7] All the municipalities that make up the State of Yucatán (106)
Morelos Rice [es] 2012[8] 22 municipalities in Morelos
Grijalva cocoa [es] 2016[9] 11 municipalities in Tabasco
Yahualica chilli pepper [es] 2000[10] 9 municipalities in Jalisco
2 municipalities in Zacatecas
Drinks
Bacanora 1969[11] 35 municipalities in Sonora
Tequila 1969[12] 125 municipalities in Jalisco
30 municipalities in Michoacán
11 municipalities in Tamaulipas
8 municipalities in Nayarit
7 municipalities in Guanajuato
(total of 181)
Mezcal 1994[13]
2001[14]

2003[14]
2012[14]
2015[15]
2018[16][17][18]

Aguascalientes (7 municipalities), Durango (39 m.), Guanajuato (2 m.), Guerrero (81 m.), State of México (15 m.), Michoacán (29 m.), Morelos (23 m.), Oaxaca (570 m.), Puebla (116 m.), San Luis Potosí (58 m.), Tamaulipas (11 m.), Zacatecas (58 m.)
(total of 1009)
Sotol 2002[19] All the municipalities that make up Chihuahua (67), Coahuila (38) and Durango (39)
Charanda 2003[20] 16 municipalities in Michoacán
Raicilla 2019[21] 16 municipalities in Jalisco
1 municipality in Nayarit
Artesanías
Olinalá lacquerware 1994[22] Olinalá, Guerrero
Talavera pottery 1997[23] 5 municipalities in Puebla
Chiapan amber 2000[24]
2003[25]
7 municipalities in Chiapas
Close

References

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