Mâconnais cheese
Maconnais is a small cheese produced in the French region of Burgundy.[1] It is made from either goat's milk[2] or a combination of goat's and cow's milk.[1] Maconnais gained AOC certification in 2005.[1]
A typical Maconnais is a small truncated cone approximately 4-5 cm wide and 3-4 cm thick, weighing 50-65 g.[3][4][2]
References
- ^ a b c Harbutt, Juliet. The World Cheese Book, Penguin, 2009, p. 67. ISBN 0-7566-6218-4
- ^ a b Doane, Charles Francis, and Huron Willis Lawson, Varieties of Cheese: Descriptions and Analyses, U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Bureau of Animal Industry, 1911, p. 36.
- ^ "Mâconnais". Fromages de France. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
- ^ "Mons Cheesemongers".
External links
- Media related to Mâconnais (cheese) at Wikimedia Commons
- v
- t
- e
- Abondance
- Banon
- Beaufort
- Bleu d'Auvergne
- Bleu de Gex
- Bleu des Causses
- Bleu du Vercors-Sassenage
- Brie de Meaux
- Brie de Melun
- Brocciu
- Camembert
- Cantal
- Chabichou
- Chaource
- Chevrotin
- Comté
- Coulommiers
- Crottin de Chavignol
- Époisses
- Fourme d'Ambert
- Fourme de Montbrison
- Laguiole
- Langres
- Livarot
- Maroilles
- Mont d’Or
- Morbier
- Munster
- Mâconnais
- Neufchâtel
- Ossau-Iraty
- Picodon
- Pont-l'Évêque
- Pouligny-Saint-Pierre
- Pélardon
- Reblochon
- Rigotte de Condrieu
- Rocamadour
- Roquefort
- Saint-Nectaire
- Sainte-Maure de Touraine
- Salers
- Valençay
- Abbaye de Tamié
- Baguette laonnaise
- Bleu de Bresse
- Brie
- Brillat-Savarin
- Cabécou
- Cancoillotte
- Carré de l'Est
- Chaumes
- Clochette
- Délice d'Argental
- Délice de Bourgogne
- Édel de Cléron
- Etorki
- Explorateur
- Faisselle
- Fromage blanc
- Fromager d'Affinois
- Gaperon
- Metton
- Mimolette
- Mont des Cats
- Mottin charentais
- Olivet cendré
- Port Salut
- Raclette
- Rochebaron
- Sarasson
- Saint Agur Blue
- Saint-Félicien
- Saint-Marcellin
- Saint-Paulin
- Tomme de Savoie
- Vacherin Mont d'Or
- Vieux-Boulogne
This French cheese-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e