Pélardon (AOC 2000, AOP) is the goat cheese of the Cévennes — a small (60g) disc of raw whole goat's milk cheese from the garrigue-covered hillsides of the Gard, Hérault, Lozère, and Ardèche. The Pélardon is to the Languedoc what the Crottin is to the Loire: the essential chèvre, present at every market, every cheese course, and every Cévenol table. What distinguishes Pélardon is its terroir: the goats graze on garrigue — the aromatic scrubland of the Mediterranean hills, rich in wild thyme, rosemary, lavender, cistus, and oak, producing milk with a distinctive herbal, slightly resinous character that no northern goat cheese possesses. The production follows the classic lactic method: slow coagulation (minimum 18 hours), hand-ladling into small perforated moulds, gravity drainage for 24 hours, and minimum 11 days of affinage. Young Pélardon (11-15 days) has a moist, fine-grained paste, fresh lactic tang, and the first hints of the garrigue herbs in the aroma. At 3 weeks, the rind firms, the paste develops nutty, herbaceous complexity, and the garrigue character becomes pronounced — you can taste the rosemary, the thyme, the sun-baked hillside. At 5-6 weeks, the cheese is dry (sec), crumbly, intensely flavored — a powerful cheese for grating over salads or eating with honey. Pélardon is traditionally served with Cévennes chestnut honey (the dark, bitter, almost medicinal honey that is the region's other iconic product) — the contrast of the tangy, herbal cheese and the dark, bittersweet honey is one of southern France's great flavor combinations. Pair with Pic Saint-Loup rouge or a Coteaux du Languedoc blanc.
Small 60g disc, raw goat's milk from garrigue-grazing goats. Lactic method, 18-hour coagulation, hand-ladled. 11-day minimum affinage. Garrigue terroir: thyme, rosemary, lavender in the milk. Three stages: young (tangy), medium (nutty-herbal), sec (crumbly-intense). Pair with Cévennes chestnut honey. Cévennes AOC (Gard, Hérault, Lozère, Ardèche).
Buy Pélardon at the markets of Anduze, Uzès, or Saint-Jean-du-Gard from fermier producers — the garrigue character is most pronounced in spring and summer when the goats graze on flowering herbs. At 3 weeks, pair with Cévennes chestnut honey on a warm walnut crostini — the warmth of the bread releases the cheese's herbal aromas. For the complete Cévenol experience: Pélardon, chestnut honey, pélardon sec grated over a green salad, and a bottle of Pic Saint-Loup. The sec version, crumbled, is extraordinary over warm Puy lentil salad.
Serving only young (the medium and sec stages are where the garrigue character fully develops). Using generic honey instead of Cévennes chestnut honey (the dark, bitter honey is the specific partner). Refrigerating until service (1 hour at room temperature for full aromatic expression). Confusing with Picodon (different AOC, different region, different character). Wrapping in plastic (wax paper only). Cooking with Pélardon (its herbal character is best uncooked — use for salads and cheese courses).
Fromages du Languedoc — Patrick Rambourg; AOC Pélardon Cahier des Charges