This is Italy’s most famous blue cheese. It is also considered by cheese-lovers to be among the world’s great blue-veined cheeses. Interestingly, the veins in Gorgonzola are actually blue-green, not blue, due to a different strain of mold used to make it.

Like Roquefort, Gorgonzola has a robust flavor, but it is softer and creamier, and also less salty than Roquefort. Gorgonzola can be made from either cow’s milk or goat’s milk, depending on the cheese maker. Great with light to medium-bodied red wines.

Varieties available:   80 producers in Italy
Types of millk used:   Cow's milk, whole
Appearance:   Usually sold in 13-26lb. drum, sometimes covered by patches of molds.
Texture:   Crumbly
Taste:   Sharp, tangy, smooth
Uses:   Snacks - serve with crackers or fresh fruits and vegetables (apples, melons, celery sticks, green pepper slices)
Dips - mixed with cream cheese or sour ream
Salads - crumbled on top of fresh greens
Salad dressing – mixed with oil and balsamic vinegar for green leafy salad
Cooked foods – melted over grilled steak, or in creamy pasta sauce
Dessert - serve as is, with candied walnuts, or with fresh fruit (apples and pears are best)

Wine Pairing Suggestions:
Frei Bros. Reserve Pinot Nior

Our 2000 Pinot Noir is smooth and medium to full-bodied, with classic aromas and flavors of raspberry and cherry balanced by notes of toasty oak.


 

 

 
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