Milk: pasteurized or raw cow's, goat's and sheep's milk
Country: Italy
Region: Piedmont
Family: Blue
Kind: semi-hard
Fat: 34.2 g/100g
Calcium: 4768 mg/100g
Rind: washed
Texture: crumbly, dense and grainy
Color: ivory
Flavor: sharp, spicy, strong
Aroma: strong
Alternative Spellings: Castelmagno prodotto della montagna, Castelmagno di alpeggio, Castelmagno PDO
Description: Castelmagno is a PDO (DOP) awarded Italian semi-hard, semi-fat blue cheese prepared within the administrative region of the communes of Castelmagno, Pradleves and Monterosso Grana in the province of Cuneo, Piedmont. Castelmagno is an ancient cheese with origins dating back to 1277, more or less at the same time as Gorgonzola. It is named after a Roman soldier who, despite being persecuted, kept on preaching gospels and gave its name to the famous sanctuary town of Castelmagno in Grana Valley. The cylindrical-shaped cheese is made from cow's milk with a small addition of sheep and/or goat's milk. The milk utilized must come from communes protected by PDO designation to guarantee the product's authenticity. The ageing takes two to five months to get the characteristic traditional flavor. It is a dense cheese with no open holes tending towards a grainier, crumbly texture. The pate color leans from ivory white towards ochre-yellow with the presence of bluish-green veins of penicillium moulds. Covering the pate is a thin reddish-yellow rind, which turns wrinkly, and brownish-ochre as the cheese matures. The subtle taste of Castelmagno gets stronger, spicier and sharper as it ages. Barolo, Reciota della Valpolicella, Chianti pair well with this cheese. It is appreciated as a table cheese and used to prepare typical Italian dishes such as gnocchi.