Provolone del Monaco DOP is the great aged cheese of the Sorrentine Peninsula—a semi-hard, stretched-curd (pasta filata) cheese produced from the raw milk of Agerolese cattle, an ancient breed native to the Lattari mountains above the Amalfi Coast. The name 'del Monaco' (of the monk) is believed to derive from the cloaks worn by the cheesemakers who transported their wheels across the Bay of Naples to sell at market, or from the monks who refined the technique in medieval monasteries. The production follows traditional pasta filata methods: raw milk is curdled, the curd is cut, acidified, and stretched in hot water, then formed into large pear or sausage shapes, bound with raffia, and hung to age in natural caves or controlled cellars for a minimum of six months (often 12-18 months for the best examples). The aging transforms the cheese from mild and elastic to firm, granular, and intensely flavoured, with spicy, sharp notes that can approach the pungency of aged provolone piccante from the North but with a distinctly Campanian character—more complex, with floral and herbaceous notes reflecting the mountain pastures where the Agerolese cattle graze on wild herbs and grasses. The DOP designation, granted in 2010, strictly controls the breed of cattle, the geographic zone of production (the Lattari mountains and Sorrentine Peninsula), and the aging conditions. Provolone del Monaco is used in Campanian cooking as a table cheese, grated over pasta, melted in casseroles, and as an ingredient in savory pastries. The rind, while edible, is better used to flavour soups and broths. The cheese represents a fading artisanal tradition—the Agerolese cattle number only a few thousand—making each wheel a document of endangered culinary heritage.
Made from raw Agerolese cattle milk. Pasta filata technique with hand-stretching. Minimum 6 months aging. DOP-protected production zone on the Lattari mountains. Serve at room temperature for full flavour expression.
Pair with chestnut honey and walnuts for a classic Campanian cheese course. The older the cheese, the more crystalline and granular the texture becomes. Melts beautifully into risotto or over roasted vegetables. Seek out producers in Agerola and Tramonti for the most authentic examples.
Confusing with industrial provolone from Northern Italy. Serving too cold. Over-grating (it's pungent—a little goes far). Discarding the rind (useful for flavouring broths).
Slow Food Foundation; Katie Parla, Food of the Italian South