Italy has 487 registered cheeses. Each one is a compressed history of a specific landscape, climate, animal breed, and human tradition. Parmigiano Reggiano is made the same way it was in 1254 โ by the same families, in the same copper vats, aged in the same warehouses. Mozzarella di bufala exists because water buffalo arrived in Campania 1,000 years ago and nobody knows exactly how. Pecorino Romano fed Roman legions on campaign (salt + sheep milk + portability = military ration). Every Italian cheese answers a question that a specific region asked centuries ago: "How do we preserve milk in THIS climate, from THESE animals, with THESE traditions?" Rome food guide โ
1. Parmigiano Reggiano (Emilia-Romagna). The king. Minimum 12 months aging (24-36 months = extraordinary, 48+ months = transcendent). Made from raw cow's milk in only 5 provinces (Parma, Reggio Emilia, Modena, Bologna left of Reno, Mantova right of Po). Buy directly from a caseificio (dairy โ โฌ12-18/kg at source vs โฌ25-40 exported). Never buy pre-grated. Caseificio visits: book near Bologna or Parma.
2. Mozzarella di Bufala Campana DOP (Campania). Made from water buffalo milk, pulled and shaped by hand, eaten within 24-48 hours. The "real" mozzarella (cow's milk mozzarella is fior di latte โ good, but different). Best: at a caseificio in Battipaglia or Caserta โ made that morning, eaten warm, dripping milk. The supermarket version 3 days later is a different product. 3. Pecorino Romano DOP (Lazio/Sardinia). Hard sheep's milk cheese, salty, sharp. THE cheese for carbonara, cacio e pepe, amatriciana. โฌ10-15/kg at Testaccio market. 4. Gorgonzola DOP (Lombardy/Piedmont). Blue cheese, two types: dolce (creamy, mild, sweet) and piccante (crumbly, intense, sharp). Dolce with honey + walnuts = the aperitivo cheese plate closer.
5. Burrata (Puglia). Mozzarella shell filled with stracciatella (shredded mozzarella + cream). Cut it open and the cream oozes out. Eat with tomatoes, olive oil, salt. Invented in Andria (1920s) as a way to use leftover mozzarella scraps. Now the most Instagrammed cheese in Italy. 6. Taleggio DOP (Lombardy). Washed-rind, soft, stinky on the outside, buttery on the inside. The cheese that converts people who think they don't like stinky cheese. 7. Pecorino Toscano DOP (Tuscany). Gentler, sweeter, younger than Romano. Eaten with honey, pears, and walnuts. 8. Provolone del Monaco DOP (Campania). Semi-hard, smoked, tangy. Named "del Monaco" because the monks who made it wore hooded cloaks. 9. Fontina DOP (Valle d'Aosta). Alpine cow's milk, semi-soft, nutty. THE cheese for fonduta (Piedmontese fondue). 10. Ricotta (everywhere). Not technically cheese (it's whey re-cooked โ ri-cotta). Fresh, creamy, used in cannoli, ravioli, cakes. Sicilian ricotta = the best (sheep's milk, sweeter).
Rome โ Testaccio Market: Pecorino Romano from the source. Bologna/Parma: Parmigiano factory tours. Campania: Buffalo mozzarella caseifici. Puglia: Fresh burrata at any masseria. Piedmont: Gorgonzola + Castelmagno in the Langhe.