
Article 1 
The specification for the protected geographical indication ‘Mirabelles de Lorraine’ is hereby amended in accordance with Annex I to this Regulation.
Article 2 
Annex II to this Regulation contains the Single Document setting out the main points of the specification.
Article 3 
This Regulation shall enter into force on the 20th day following that of its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union.
This Regulation shall be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all Member States.Done at Brussels, 23 April 2010.
For the Commission
The President
José Manuel BARROSO
ANNEX I
The specification for the protected geographical indication ‘Mirabelles de Lorraine’ is amended as follows:
 (1) 

((a)) whole, with stone in;
((b)) whole, with stone removed; and
((c)) in halves, with stone removed.’
 (2) The description of the product is more specific as to the various possible uses of the fruit and the ways in which it may be presented.
 (3) The following paragraph is added: ‘The characteristics of each category of the product must comply with the respective rules in force.’
 (4) 

 ‘Mirabelles de Lorraine’
Characteristics Fruits ≥ 22 mm in diameterCategory I fruits for direct consumptionRules for fruit for processingColour ≥ 4 (see AREFE colour scale in Annex 5)Average sugar content ≥ 16° Brix for fruit for direct consumption and ≥ 15° Brix for fruit for processing (crushing method)
 (1) The sentence ‘For each consignment, the member companies record in a register the holding where the fruit was produced, the quantity, the type of packaging and the end use’ is replaced by ‘For each consignment, the member companies put in place upstream and downstream traceability arrangements whereby origin, quantity, type of packaging and end use can be identified.’
 (2) 

((a)) ‘the declarations of printing and use of aerex crates, banners, labels or vignettes referring to the designation;
((b)) copy of the members' stock accounts for identifying labels, banners and vignettes.’
 (3) 

((a)) ‘After packaging, each package of fruit for direct consumption or pallet of fruit for processing has a unique code linking to information about previous stages of handling (this code may correspond to the number of the production or pallet record).
((b)) On consignment, the date of consignment and name of the customer are entered in the production record.’
 (1) The following is added to make the reference to the types of soil more precise: ‘45 % of fine elements of less than 20 microns (clay plus fine silt).’
 (2) The following part of paragraph 4.4.2 is deleted: ‘the climate probably has an influence on the quality of the product; the link between soil, climate and quality is currently the subject of an AREFE study: 20 orchards have been studied for the past 6 years and the conclusions of the study will be published in three years' time.’
 (3) The references to the provisions of the regional orchard replanting specifications are deleted.
 (4) The reference to the analysis of leaves in the autumn is deleted.
 (5) The reference to minimum planting densities of 150 trees per hectare is deleted.
 (6) The criteria for analysing the degree of ripeness are amended.
 (7) Reference is made to the AREFE scale rather than the Hunter A scale.
 (8) The reference to a sugar to acidity ratio of 4 or more is replaced by the minimum sugar content figure of 15° Brix.
 (9) The following explanations of cumulative temperatures are added: ‘Minimum cumulative temperatures at the F2 stage of 1 750 °C (Annex 6: ripeness guide): From the point at which 50 % of the flowers are open, a cumulative count is kept of each day's average temperature. It has been shown that the Mirabelle 1510 variety is ripe at around 1 850 °C. The early strains are ripe at around 1 750 °C.’
 (10) 

((a)) organoleptic advantages (appearance, consistency, flavour): of all the conservation processes, this cold treatment is the only one that is capable of restoring all the organoleptic qualities of the produce as captured in its fresh state;
((b)) nutritional advantages: deep-freezing in itself has no impact on the nutritional value. The cold stabilises the state of the product;
((c)) microbiological advantages: below – 18 °C, micro-organisms no longer develop. Their proliferation is also prevented by the total absence of water (which quickly turns to ice).’
 (11) The sentence ‘This area corresponds to the stages in which the fruit is produced, stored before packaging and then packaged’ is replaced by ‘For the fresh fruit, all operations (production, sorting, sizing, packaging) are carried out in the geographical area. For the deep-frozen fruit, the following stages take place in the geographical area: production, sorting, sizing, stoning, deep-freezing.’

The section on labelling is brought into line with regulatory developments.

As regards the name and composition of the group:

AIAL is now AMDL.

The name of the president of the association is removed.

The names of the member companies are removed.

Text is added on the purpose and functioning of the association.

More detail is added, on the basis of the association's statute, as regards its functioning and its role in promoting quality.

The class designation is updated in line with Regulation (EC) No 1898/2006.

ANNEX II
SINGLE DOCUMENT  1. 
‘Mirabelles de Lorraine’
 2. 
France
 3.  3.1.  Class 1.6. Fruit and vegetables
 3.2. 
A round fruit, yellow or golden when ripe, with an unattached stone, small (diameter >22 mm), with an average sugar content of 16° Brix for the fruit for direct consumption and 15° Brix for the fruit for processing, colour 4 on the AREFE colour scale, produced from clones of the ‘Mirabelles de Nancy’ and ‘Mirabelles de Metz’ varieties registered in 1961 under nos 91 291 and 91 290 (Rosaceae family, species Prunus Insistitia) in the official catalogue of species.

‘Mirabelles de Lorraine’ are presented fresh or deep-frozen (whole with stone in, or whole or in halves with stone removed).
 3.3. 
—
 3.4. 
—
 3.5. 
For the fresh fruit, all production, sorting, sizing and packaging operations are carried out in the geographical area.

For the deep-frozen fruit, only the production, sorting, sizing, stoning and deep-freezing stages take place in the geographical area.

Specific rules concerning slicing, grating, packaging, etc.

Because of the delicacy of the fruit and the risk of squashing during transport, the fresh fruit is packaged in the geographical area.

Packaging is taken to mean wrapping of individual fruits, placing in pallets and deep-freezing.
 3.6. 
‘Mirabelles de Lorraine’

Name and address of the certifying group

The term ‘PGI’ and/or the Community logo
 4. 
The geographical area of the ‘Mirabelle de Lorraine’ includes all municipalities in the Meuse, Meurthe-et-Moselle, Moselle and Vosges départements.

The protected geographical indication ‘Mirabelles de Lorraine’ may be used only for fruit from orchards in this area.
 5.  5.1. 
The Lorraine region is ideal for growing mirabelles. It is characterised by clay-limestone (magnesium-potassium) soils. The Lorraine mirabelle orchards are planted on soil with 45 % of fine elements of less than 20 microns (clay plus fine silt).
 5.2. 
‘Mirabelles de Lorraine’ are the product of two local varieties, ‘Mirabelles de Nancy’ and ‘Mirabelles de Metz’.

The specificity of ‘Mirabelles de Lorraine’’ is linked to the method of training: for the best possible development of the fruit, the planting density in the orchards may not exceed 400 trees per hectare, the fruit is picked at the best stage of ripeness and within a short period (around six weeks from the beginning of August to mid-September). The aim is to produce a yellow, sweet fruit unlike the green, sour mirabelles found in other regions.
 5.3. 
The link with the geographical origin derives from the product's reputation. This, in turn, is based on the prominence of the ‘Mirabelle de Lorraine’ in local gastronomy and reflected in literature, in particular through historical references from the 16th century.

Also, traditional festivals that are still held today testify to the recognition enjoyed by the product among consumers. Lorraine is responsible for 70 to 80 % of France's production of fresh mirabelles.

The traditional forms of processing, to produce jam, baked goods and canned fruit, account for a significant part of the activity in the sector. The myriad of local recipes calling for mirabelles testifies to their use in these traditional forms, apart from being eaten fresh.

Reference to publication of the specification

http://www.inao.gouv.fr/repository/editeur/pdf/CDC-IGP/CDC-mirabelle-de-Lorraine.pdf
