The Aubrac plateau — a high volcanic tableland (1,000-1,400m) spanning the borders of Aveyron, Cantal, and Lozère — is one of France's most distinctive culinary terroirs, defined by three interconnected elements: the Aubrac cattle breed, the aligot tradition, and the buron pastoral system. The Aubrac cow, with its distinctive fawn coat and dark-rimmed eyes (yeux de biche), is a dual-purpose mountain breed that has grazed these volcanic pastures for over a thousand years. The breed was nearly extinct by the 1970s (replaced by more productive dairy and beef breeds) but was saved by a conservation movement driven partly by cuisine: the Aubrac's milk, produced from a diet of wild mountain herbs, gentian, and volcanic-soil grasses, has a unique character — lower in yield but higher in fat and protein than industrial breeds, with aromatic compounds from the mountain flora. This milk produces the tomme fraîche d'Aubrac — the elastic, squeaky fresh curd that is the essential ingredient for aligot. The burons (stone-and-thatch cheese huts dotting the plateau) were the summer homes of the buronniers — cowherds who spent May to October making cheese in these high-altitude shelters. The buronnier's daily meal was aligot: tomme fraîche beaten into mashed potatoes with garlic and cream, creating the elastic, stretchy preparation that has become the Aubrac's most famous dish. The transhumance — the annual movement of cattle to and from the high pastures — is celebrated with festivals in May (montée) and October (descente) that are both agricultural events and culinary celebrations, with aligot served to thousands from enormous copper cauldrons. Michel Bras, the three-Michelin-star chef from Laguiole at the plateau's edge, built his revolutionary cuisine on Aubrac terroir: his signature gargouillou (a garden of 30-50 herbs, flowers, and vegetables from the plateau) and his coulant au chocolat (the molten-centered chocolate cake he invented in 1981) both emerged from deep engagement with this landscape.
Aubrac cattle: dual-purpose mountain breed, fawn coat, distinctive milk from volcanic pastures. Tomme fraîche d'Aubrac: essential for aligot. Burons: high-altitude cheese huts, buronnier's lifestyle. Transhumance festivals: May (montée) and October (descente). Michel Bras: revolutionary cuisine from Aubrac terroir. Breed conservation driven partly by culinary tradition.
Visit the Aubrac during the transhumance (last weekend of May) — the montée sees flower-crowned cattle driven through Laguiole, with aligot cooked in 500-litre copper cauldrons by the Coopérative Jeune Montagne. The best tomme fraîche is bought directly from the remaining working burons — taste the difference between buron-made and cooperative-made. Michel Bras's restaurant in Laguiole (now run by his son Sébastien) remains the ultimate expression of Aubrac terroir in fine dining. The Laguiole knife — the Aubrac's other famous product — is the traditional companion to the cheese course.
Confusing Aubrac (the plateau/breed/culture) with a single product (it's an integrated pastoral system). Thinking aligot can be made with any cheese (tomme fraîche d'Aubrac has specific elastic properties). Dismissing burons as quaint relics (they represent a living cheese tradition). Overlooking the breed conservation story (the Aubrac cow was nearly lost). Visiting only in winter (the plateau's culinary identity is a summer phenomenon — the estive).
L'Aubrac — Michel Bras; Terroirs du Massif Central; Les Burons d'Aubrac