Food fight erupts over Pennsylvania ‘Pierogi Festival’ name
Like a pot of pierogies left on the stove too long, a trademark dispute involving the name of the popular Polish delicacy is threatening to boil over.
Four years ago, civic-minded residents of Edwardsville, Pennsylvania, launched a festival tied to the pierogi, the potato-filled dumpling that’s ubiquitous in a region whose coal mines drew waves of Polish immigrants more than a century ago.
The Edwardsville Pierogi Festival has been a rousing success — so much so that it’s caught the attention of a chamber of commerce in suburban Chicago, which runs a highly popular “Pierogi Fest” and says the Pennsylvania upstarts are infringing on its trademark. Lawyers for Pierogi Fest recently sent a letter demanding the Edwardsville organizers either stop using the name or pay a licensing fee.
In Edwardsville, population 4,700, the threats have gone over as well as undercooked kielbasa. The town is located in Luzerne County, the only county in the United States where Polish is the most common ancestry.


