SAINT-MARCELLIN Volume 2 #38

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World Cheese Encyclopaedia - Each Sunday learn all about a new cheese. 

This week Saint-Marcellin from France. 

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Country: France 🇫🇷

Region:  Isère, Rhone-Alpes

Made from:  Cow’s milk

Pasteurised: No

Texture: Soft, creamy, runny

Taste: Creamy, mushroomy, nutty

Certification: IGP (Indication Géographique Protégée)

Aging:  minimum 12 days

Saint-Marcellin is a soft unpasteurised, mold ripened French cheese made from cow's milk.  It is a natural rind cheese. It is named after the small town where it originated,  Saint-Marcellin in the French region of Isère.  The area also has many walnut orchards and is famous for its Grenoble A.O.C. walnuts.

Saint-Marcellin is a small round, mottled wrinkly cheese. It has a very thin rind with a coating of creamy-white down which, depending on the age of the cheese, can have a yellowish hue or sometimes a few blue marks.  It has a cream colored interior with a silky paste.  It usually weighs about 80 grams and has 50% fat content. 

Due to the delicateness of its rind, it is often sold in a small terracotta dish to keep the rind from bursting. The texture of the young cheese varies from firm to very runny and the runniness increases with age. 

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It has a mild, nutty, mushroomy and slightly salty flavour. When ripe, it develops a more yeasty taste. 

History

Saint-Marcelin was made exclusively from goat's milk until the 13th century. It is said to have been « discovered » by Louis XI when he had a hunting accident near Vercors, and had to stay there for some time to recover.  During his convalescence there,  lumberjacks were said to have shared Saint-Marcellin cheese with the king.  He enjoyed it so much that he later included it at his royal table.  During the 18th century Saint-Marcellin started to be made using a mix of cows and goats milk as the breeding of cows increased and that of goats decreased. Finally it became a cows milk cheese as it is today. 

How to Enjoy It

Photo: Domaine des Forges

Photo: Domaine des Forges

Saint-Marcellin is delicious on its own, or on bread or crackers. It can be lightly warmed in the oven for a few minutes to make an even runnier, delicious treat.  On a cheese board it goes very well with apples or grapes. Pair it with a red wine such as an Anjou Villages from the Loire made with Cabernet-Franc or a dry white such as a Mâcon-Villages from Burgundy made from Chardonnay grapes. 

 Sources: Wikipedia, cheese.com, seriouseats.com, fromages-france.com, fromages.com