Pouligny-Saint-Pierre (AOC 1972, AOP) — nicknamed 'the Eiffel Tower' for its tall, elegant full-pyramid shape — is the first Loire goat cheese to receive AOC status and remains the most architecturally distinctive of the French chèvres. Weighing approximately 250g, the cheese is a four-sided pyramid with a narrow pointed top and a broad square base, standing about 12cm tall. This is not affectation: the shape creates a graduated ripening gradient from the thin apex (which dries and matures fastest) to the thick base (which remains creamier longest), giving the cheese buyer multiple textures in a single piece. Made from raw whole goat's milk in the Brenne natural park — a landscape of étangs (ponds) and bocage that provides exceptional pasture diversity — the cheese follows the classic lactic protocol: slow coagulation, hand-ladling, gentle drainage in pyramid moulds for 24-48 hours, and minimum 11 days of affinage. The natural rind develops Geotrichum and Penicillium without ash coating (unlike Valençay and Sainte-Maure), revealing the cheese's ivory-to-straw paste through a thin, wrinkled blue-grey skin. Young Pouligny is fresh, citric, with a mousse-like texture. At 3-4 weeks, it develops the nutty, herbaceous complexity that defines the cheese — the apex becomes crumbly and intense while the base remains supple and creamy. The Brenne terroir imparts a distinctive herbal character — wild thyme, clover, and the slightly mineral quality of the pond-dotted landscape. Pouligny-Saint-Pierre is traditionally served as the finale of a Loire cheese progression: Selles-sur-Cher (lightest), Valençay, Sainte-Maure, then Pouligny (most complex). The canonical pairing is Reuilly blanc — the nearest Sauvignon Blanc AOC, sharing the same limestone terroir.
Full pyramid shape (Eiffel Tower), ~250g, 12cm tall. Raw goat's milk, no ash coating. First Loire chèvre AOC (1972). Graduated ripening: thin apex ages fastest, thick base stays creamier. Brenne natural park terroir. 11-day minimum affinage. Natural Geotrichum/Penicillium rind.
Always cut Pouligny vertically from point to base — this gives each person both the crumbly, intense apex and the creamy base in one slice. The best fermier examples come from producers in the Brenne villages: Tournon-Saint-Martin, Pouligny itself. At 4 weeks, the cheese develops an almost Comté-like nuttiness at the apex. For the complete Loire chèvre education, taste Pouligny alongside Valençay side by side: same region, same milk, same method — the shape alone creates a different cheese.
Confusing with Valençay (Pouligny is a FULL pyramid, not truncated). Cutting horizontally (cut vertically from apex to base so each slice includes all ripening gradients). Serving only young (the pyramid's genius is at 3-4 weeks when the textural gradient is most pronounced). Wrapping tightly (the rind needs airflow). Overlooking the Brenne terroir's importance (it's a protected natural park for a reason).
Fromages de France — Kazuko Masui & Tomoko Yamada; AOC Pouligny-Saint-Pierre Cahier des Charges