Mozzarella di Bufala Campana DOP is one of Italy's most important DOP products -- the fresh buffalo-milk cheese produced in the specific zone covering parts of the Campania, Lazio, Puglia, and Molise regions, with the primary production concentrated in the Caserta province and the Salerno province (specifically the Paestum plain, where the largest buffalo herds are raised). The fundamental freshness problem: genuine Mozzarella di Bufala Campana DOP is a product designed to be consumed within 24-48 hours of production at maximum quality; it degrades rapidly when refrigerated (the cold stops the lactic fermentation and the specific texture-and-flavour development that happens in the first 6-12 hours after production). What this means for visitors: the mozzarella sold in a Roman supermarket two days after production and refrigerated for transport is a legally correct DOP product but a completely different eating experience from the mozzarella eaten at room temperature at the producer 6 hours after it was made. The latter has a specific cream-and-lactic freshness, a milky interior moisture, and a surface texture that the refrigerated version cannot replicate. Campania guide
Plan my Italy trip →DOP zone: Caserta, Salerno, Benevento, Napoli (Campania) + parts of Lazio, Puglia, Molise | Milk: 100% buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) | Production: 45,000+ tons/year | Peak freshness: 0-24 hours post-production at room temperature | Producer direct: Caseificio Vannulo (Paestum), Barlotti (Capua), multiple others | Price at producer: EUR 8-14/250g
Mozzarella di Bufala Campana DOP production follows the specific Consorzio di Tutela disciplinare: the buffalo milk (from the DOP zone's certified herds) is coagulated with natural whey cultures and calf rennet; the curd is cut and left to develop acid (the pasta filata acidification phase, which takes 5-8 hours and is the critical quality step); the matured curd is stretched in hot water (90-95 degrees) and hand-formed into the characteristic ball shape; the formed mozzarella is placed in brine for 30-60 minutes; and then packed in its liquid (the liquid should be the whey from the production, not water -- the Consorzio rules require the mozzarella to be packed in whey brine, not plain water, which gives the product the specific lactic flavour of its storage liquid). The freshness degradation timeline: at 0-6 hours (room temperature), the mozzarella is at peak texture -- the surface is slightly sticky, the interior creamy and moist, the flavour intensely lactic with the specific buffalo milk sweetness. At 6-24 hours, the texture begins to firm; the flavour remains excellent but the interior moisture reduces. At 24-72 hours (refrigerated), the mozzarella develops a slightly rubbery surface; the interior moisture redistributes; the flavour becomes more acidic and less fresh. At 72+ hours, the product remains safe to eat but is categorically different from the fresh experience. The DOP rules allow sale up to 2 weeks after production for the refrigerated version -- legally compliant but experientially different.
Tenuta Vannulo (Capaccio Paestum, 4 km from the temples): the most celebrated organic buffalo farm and dairy in the Paestum zone; all products (mozzarella, yogurt, gelato, ricotta) are made from the farm's own organic buffalo herd. The Vannulo dairy shop and cafe (open daily 8am-2pm, seasonal; queue by 9am in summer; the gelato al bufala is specifically extraordinary) is the best direct-purchase mozzarella experience in the DOP zone. The Caserta area producers: the Caserta province has the highest density of buffalo mozzarella caseifici (dairies); the towns of Aversa, Santa Maria Capua Vetere, and Capua have multiple producer shops where the morning production (typically ready from 8-10am) can be purchased and eaten immediately. How to eat fresh mozzarella: at room temperature (never refrigerated before eating); with the whey liquid drained but a few tablespoons reserved; with a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil; with tomato (the classic caprese, where the tomato quality matters as much as the mozzarella); or alone. Salt is added by the eater, not by the producer (the brine gives sufficient salinity). The correct wine: any light, fresh white (Fiano di Avellino, Falanghina, Greco di Tufo -- all the specific Campanian whites are designed around the local fresh cheese culture). Paestum guide
Mozzarella di Bufala Campana DOP is Italy's most important fresh cheese DOP -- a stretched-curd (pasta filata) buffalo milk cheese produced in a specific zone covering parts of Campania, Lazio, Puglia, and Molise. The primary production is in Caserta and Salerno provinces. Made from 100% buffalo milk; the DOP rules specify the milk origin, production method, and packing in whey brine. Peak quality at 0-24 hours post-production at room temperature; degrades significantly when refrigerated for more than 24-48 hours.
Fresh mozzarella di bufala (0-24 hours, room temperature) has: a slightly sticky surface, creamy-moist interior, intensely lactic and sweet flavour from the buffalo milk and the recent whey fermentation. Refrigerated mozzarella (24-72+ hours, chilled): firmer surface, reduced interior moisture, more acidic and less sweet flavour as the lactic fermentation continues slowly in the cold and the proteins firm up. The supermarket version, often 3-7 days old and refrigerated throughout, is legally the same product but experientially different. The advice: eat mozzarella di bufala within 2 hours of purchase, at room temperature, not chilled.
Best direct mozzarella di bufala experiences: Tenuta Vannulo (Capaccio Paestum -- organic buffalo farm, mozzarella sold from 8am, the mozzarella gelato is the specific reason to arrive by 9am before it sells out); the Caserta province dairies (Aversa, Capua, Santa Maria Capua Vetere -- morning production from 8-10am, sold directly at the caseificio; the most concentrated buffalo mozzarella production zone in the world); and the Agro Pontino dairies in Lazio (Priverno, Latina province -- the Lazio DOP zone produces excellent mozzarella that is less internationally known than the Campanian version).
Mozzarella di Bufala Campana DOP uses 100% buffalo milk (from the water buffalo, Bubalus bubalis). Fior di latte (cow milk mozzarella) is the cow milk alternative. The specific differences: buffalo milk has higher fat content (7-8% versus 3.5-4% for cow milk) and higher protein content, giving the buffalo mozzarella a richer, creamier texture and a more intensely lactic and slightly sweeter flavour. The buffalo milk also has the specific fatty acid composition that gives the mozzarella its characteristic slight musky sweetness that cow milk cannot replicate. Price at producer: buffalo mozzarella EUR 8-14/250g; fior di latte EUR 4-8/250g.
Mozzarella di bufala direct from Vannulo + Paestum Greek temples + Naples street food + Amalfi Coast -- the complete Campanian food circuit.
Plan my Campania trip →The Mozzarella di Bufala Campana DOP zone covers specific communes in four Italian regions: in Campania -- all communes of Caserta province, most of Salerno province (including the Paestum plain, the most active production area), some Napoli province communes, and some Benevento province communes; in Lazio -- specific communes in Latina, Frosinone, and Roma provinces; in Puglia -- specific communes in Foggia province (the Gargano area); and in Molise -- specific communes in Isernia province. The geographic heart of the production is in the Caserta and Salerno provinces, where the majority of the approximately 250 registered DOP caseifici operate. The Consorzio di Tutela della Mozzarella di Bufala Campana DOP (consorziomozzarelladibufala.it) maintains the official register and the certification controls.
The water buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) herds in the Campanian DOP zone typically graze in the flat wetland areas of the Caserta and Salerno provinces -- the specific topography (the coastal lowlands, the river flood plains, the areas around the Volturno, Sele, and Garigliano rivers) is where the buffalo herds have been maintained since their introduction to Italy (variously attributed to the Lombards in the 6th century AD or to the Arab administrators of Sicily in the 9th century). The buffalo are semi-wild in the traditional management -- they graze on the wetland grass and reed vegetation; they are not housed as intensively as dairy cattle; the milk yield per animal is lower than a dairy cow (approximately 5-7 litres per day versus 20-30 for a dairy cow) but the fat content is double, which is why the mozzarella yield per litre of milk is higher for buffalo than for cow. The organic buffalo farming certification (as at Tenuta Vannulo) requires additional space and natural feed standards beyond the DOP minimum requirements.
Italian fresh cheeses comparable to mozzarella: fior di latte (the cow milk version of the stretched-curd pasta filata cheese, made by the same process with cow milk -- lower fat, cleaner flavour, less intensely lactic than buffalo; the standard pizza and Caprese cheese in northern and central Italy); burrata (from Puglia -- a fior di latte shell filled with stracciatella, the shredded curd mixed with cream; the specific contrast of the firm outer shell and the cream-flowing interior when cut is the burrata experience; the Andria and Bari province producers make the reference burrata); scamorza (the dried version of the same pasta filata curd -- smoked or plain, the scamorza is drier and more aged than fresh mozzarella, used in cooking where moisture content matters); and caciocavallo (the aged pasta filata cheese, hung by the neck in pairs to dry -- the name means 'cheese on horseback' from the drying method; the aged version develops a sharp, tangy character suitable for grating).
Tenuta Vannulo (Capaccio Paestum, Via G. Galilei, 4 km from the Paestum temples) is the most celebrated organic buffalo mozzarella producer in the Campanian DOP zone -- the farm maintains a herd of approximately 600 Murrah water buffalo (a South Asian breed selected for high milk fat content) on certified organic pasture, with a dairy and farm shop on the premises. The specific Vannulo experience: the mozzarella is made fresh each morning from the previous evening and morning milk; the shop opens at 8am; by 10-11am on peak summer days, the freshest mozzarella (the 'mozzarella del mattino') has sold out. The gelato al latte di bufala (buffalo milk ice cream) -- specifically the gelato made from the farm's own certified organic buffalo milk -- is available from approximately 9am and is considered the finest artisan gelato in the Paestum area. The farm shop also sells buffalo milk yogurt (approximately EUR 2.50/250g, the richest yogurt in Italian dairy production), buffalo milk ricotta, and the provola di bufala (the slightly smoked aged version of the buffalo pasta filata tradition). Arriving at Tenuta Vannulo by 9am on a summer visit to Paestum combines the freshest mozzarella with the 9am temple opening for the most efficient Paestum morning circuit.
Burrata (from the Puglia province of Bari, specifically the Andria area) is made from the same pasta filata technique as mozzarella -- a cow milk (fior di latte) shell formed in the identical stretching process, then filled with stracciatella (the shredded curd combined with heavy cream before the shell closes). The result: a smooth, ball-shaped exterior identical to mozzarella, but when cut, the interior flows out as a cream-and-curd mixture. The burrata experience requires: cutting it at the table (not pre-cut); serving at room temperature (not refrigerated); pairing with a drizzle of olive oil and cherry tomatoes or with black truffle shavings (the cream interior carries aromatics exceptionally). Burrata DOP does not exist (it is not a DOP product) but the Andria producers' consortium maintains quality standards. Fresh burrata has an even shorter quality window than mozzarella -- 24 hours maximum at peak quality. The burrata-mozzarella comparison: burrata is richer and creamier (more calories, more fat, more decadent); fresh mozzarella di bufala is more intensely lactic and less rich. Both are best consumed within hours of production.