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            Cheese production has always been the standard way of preserving milk. The more than 200 types of cheeses that exist in Spain today form part of the historical legacy left behind by the many peoples and cultures that have inhabited its territories. For the ancient Romans, cheese was an important addition to the basic diet of cereals and vegetables, and an essential food for farmers and soldiers because it was easy to transport.
The tremendous variety of Spanish cheeses stems from Spain’s 
geographical and climatic diversity. They are made from the milk of 
cows, ewes, and goats, as well as different blends of these, and in most
 cases the milk is obtained from native breeds. Coagulation may be by 
enzymes, lactic acid or mixed, and cheeses may be round or square, of 
different sizes, and with rinds of different colors – often engraved and
 sometimes smoked, rubbed with oil or flavored with spices. Alongside 
large-scale industrial production, there are also small dairies 
producing artisan cheeses that retain their authentic characteristics 
and traditional flavors.
Sheep's milk cheeses from Spain
Sheep
 are the most authentic livestock in Spain. They mostly inhabit the 
Castilian plains in central Spain and the south-west, where there is 
plenty of pasture, especially during winter and spring. The best-known 
native breeds are Churro, Merino, Castellano and Manchego, all of which 
were traditionally reared for their wool, but today are mostly used for 
the production of cheese. Some of the most important Spanish cheeses are
 Manchego Zamorano, Torta de la Serena and Torta del Casar, all of which
 are covered by Protected Denominations of Origin (PDO) status.
In
 the mountains of northern Spain in Basque Country and Navarre, there 
are two other types of ewes’ milk cheeses with PDO guarantees, 
Idiazabal  and Roncal, both made from more unusual native breeds – Latxa
 and Carranzana (PDO Idiazabal) and Latxa and Rasa Aragonesa (PDO 
Roncal).
Northern Spanish cow's milk cheeses 
The
 rainy, mountainous strip along the northern coast of Spain, separated 
from the rest of the peninsula by the Picos de Europa, Montes de Galicia
 and the Pyrenees, is a land of pastures and cultivated grasslands which
 provide fodder for more than 15 native cattle breeds, all of which are 
perfectly adapted to their natural surroundings.
There are many 
remote spots that are difficult to reach, and their geographical 
isolation has led to an extraordinary wealth of different types of 
cheeses. In the Principality of Asturias alone, there are more than 
twenty different varieties. Many of the cows’ milk cheeses in northern 
Spain are protected by PDO status, including Tetilla in Galicia, and 
L’Alt Urgell and La Cerdanya in Catalonia. On the island of Menorca, the
 northernmost of the Balearic Islands, a cows’ milk cheese known as 
Mahón-Menorca is also covered by a PDO.
Butter is another typical
 product in the north of Spain and some butters, like Mantequilla de 
Soria and those made in L’Alt Urgell and La Cerdanya, have PDO status.
Goat cheeses from Spain
Goats
 are able to eat plants and pastures that are inaccessible to other farm
 animals. In Spain, they are mostly reared in the austere landscapes 
along the Mediterranean coast, in the mountains of Andalusia and in 
parts of Extremadura. Different native breeds and crossbreeds are used. 
Two PDO goat's milk cheeses are Ibores, which is made in the Extremadura
 district of the same name using Retinta goat's milk, and Murcia al 
Vino, made from the milk of the Murcian goat and then soaked in red 
wine. 
There are two Canary Islands goat's cheeses with PDO 
protection: Palmero, from the island of La Palma, and Majorero from 
Fuerteventura. They are similar, but Palmero cheeses are usually smoked.
Mixed-milk cheeses from Spain
All
 three types of milk are produced in Spain virtually year round. Flocks 
often include mixed breeds, so cheeses are often made from mixed milk, 
especially in central Spain. Such cheeses, normally cylindrical in 
shape, are those which reach the highest production and consumption 
figures. The most popular of the mixed-milk cheeses is Ibérico, which is
 mild but has a clearly-defined flavor with a touch of acidity from the 
high proportion of cow's milk, slight piquancy from the goat's milk and 
buttery flavors and aromas from the ewe's milk.
In the impressive
 Picos de Europa mountains, which include border areas between the 
regions of Cantabria, Asturias and Castile-León, several blue, 
soft-paste cheeses are produced. This mountainous terrain in the north 
of Spain, close to the Bay of Biscay, is home to natural caves that 
offer exactly the right degree of humidity and cold air for the external
 development of the molds which gradually penetrate the cheese, giving 
it its characteristic blue veining. The best known of such cheeses is 
PDO Cabrales, which is made on the Asturian side of the Picos from raw 
cow's milk to which a little goat's and ewe's milk is added in spring 
and summer. Others include PDO Picón Bejes-Tresviso and PDO Valdeón, 
made respectively on the Cantabrian and León sides of the mountain 
range.
 
            
        
    
    
    
 
            
        
    
    
    
 
            
        
    
    
    
