Murol, Murol du Grand Bérioux, and the Murolait. No AOP but Still Among the Tastiest Cheeses in France.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 
The Murol Cheese
 
The names above are used for this mild, creamy, 22.7% fat yellow cow’s milk cheese made from pasteurized cow’s milk; the cheese is matured for a minimum of five weeks before being sold. 

The cheeses were created in the 1930s by a local cheese maker, Jules Bérioux; his name is still on many of the labels; he just added Grand to his name and made the cheese Murol du Grand Bérioux. Murol is considered a relatively new cheese despite the cheese being created over 70 years ago.  From my experience, the French feel that all cheeses under 200 years old are new.
   

A wedge cut from the Murol cheese.
  
The Murol cheese is easily identified by the hole in its center, while the cheese itself is made in discs of 10- 12 cm ( 4” to 4.7”) in diameter, weighing an average of 450 grams (1 lb). The hole that is cut from the center speeds the affinage, the maturing process; nothing is wasted and so this plug of cheese, the part cut from the center, is sold separately as a cheese called Murolait or Trou de Murol; a small 50-gram cheese. Any difference in the taste of these two cheeses is solely the result of the way they mature.

The Murol village, which gave its name to the cheese, is taken from the area’s historical local Lords, the Murols. They once owned the semi-destroyed castle that still stands near Lac Chambon.   If you are visiting the area, the Lords of Murol’s castle comes to life again every summer with re-enactments of 13th-century life in its courtyards.
   

Murol Castle
 
The cheese is produced in and around the villages of Murol and Chambon sur Lac, in the department of Puy de Dôme in the Auvergne. These two villages are next to the incredibly beautiful Lake Chambon. 

Lake Chambon is an artificial lake constructed as part of the Éguzon hydroelectric dam on the Creuse River. When the dam opened in 1926, it was the largest hydroelectric dam in Europe. The lake is now a major summer water sports center with beaches, yachts, pedalos, and water skiing. Anglers can fish in the lake, which has an area of 312 hectares (1.2 square miles).
   
Lake Chambon
  
Just 5 km (3 miles) away from the lake is the small town of Saint Nectaire so famous for its cow's milk Saint Nectaire  AOP cheese; Saint Nectaire was known as a spa in Roman times.  Then, 60 km (38 miles) away is the town of Riom-ès-Montagnes, the center for the production of Bleu d'Auvergne AOP, the mild, blue cow's milk cheese.  Riom-ès-Montagnes is also a major center for the gentian plant used for homeopathic medicines and France's popular liquor called Suze.

Altogether, in the region of the Auvergne, there are five AOP cow's milk cheeses: Saint Nectaire AOP, Bleu d’Auvergne, Cantal AOPFourme de Ambert AOP, and Salers AOP.  In 1-1-2016, the region of the Auvergne was joined with the region of the Rhône-Alpes and became part of the administrative region of Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes.  Together, they have 15 or 16 AOP cheeses and at least another 40 delicious cheeses without any suffixes.  Among these are cheeses like the Murol which are known and appreciated all over France.  For more about buying cheese in France and taking it home click here.
   
Chambon-sur-Lac by Marc Chagall
 
Chambon-sur-Lac is close to the heart of the Regional Natural Volcano Park of the Auvergne. Close by is the highest dormant volcano in France: the Puy de Sancy, 1,886 meters (1,17 miles) in height. This huge park comprises outstanding landscapes, fauna, and flora and some 80 extinct Volcanoes.
   
An extinct volcano in the park.

The park’s English language website is:

          
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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

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