Cheeses from Cow’s Milk

Soft to Aged Cow’s Milk Cheeses for Boards and Cooking

Cow’s milk cheeses selected for structure, balance, and versatility, from soft-ripened wheels to long-aged Alpine and grating styles used daily in serious kitchens.

565 Products
565 Products
Gruyere AOP Cheese
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Gruyere AOP Cheese

Quebec 7 Year Vintage Cheddar Cheese
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5 Year Vintage Cheddar Cheese

Saint Nectaire AOP Cheese

Livardois

Saint Nectaire AOP Cheese

Saint Andre Cheese

St. Antoine

Saint Andre Cheese

Langres AOP Cheese

Chalancey

Langres AOC Cheese

Extra Sharp Cheddar Cheese
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Cabot Creamery

Sharp Cheddar Cheese

Gourmino Le Gruyere AOP Swiss Cheese
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Gourmino Le Gruyere AOP Swiss Cheese

Gruyere Cheese - 6 Months
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Gruyere Cheese - 6 Months

Munster d'Alsace Cheese

J. Haxaire

Munster DOP d'Alsace Cheese

Willoughby Cheese

Jasper Hill Farms

Willoughby Cheese

Deer Creek Vat 17 World Cheddar Cheese
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Deer Creek Vat 17 World Cheddar Cheese

Imported Italian Fontal Cheese
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Imported Italian Fontal Cheese

What Is Cow’s Milk Cheese

Cow’s milk cheese refers to any cheese made from cow’s milk, which makes it the most widely produced and widely consumed milk type in the world. Because cow’s milk carries natural sweetness and balanced fat, it adapts well to different methods of aging and handling, producing cheeses that can be soft and bloomy, semi-firm and sliceable, or hard and granular depending on how they are made and matured.

Compared to goat’s milk cheese, which tends to be more tangy, and sheep’s milk cheese, which is often richer and more concentrated, cow’s milk cheese usually sits in the middle, offering structure without sharpness and creaminess without excess weight. That balance explains why so many foundational cheeses used in cooking and entertaining are made from cow’s milk.

This category brings together those styles in one place, whether you are searching for mild cow’s milk cheese, aged cow’s milk cheese, or cheeses that melt evenly in the pan.

Range Within the Category

Within cow’s milk cheese, technique shapes identity more than milk source alone. A soft-ripened wheel will yield under light pressure and spread slightly as it warms. A semi-firm cheese will bend without cracking and hold a clean edge when sliced. A long-aged Alpine cheese will resist the knife briefly, then break into firm shards with visible crystals along the fault lines.

Blue-veined styles made from cow’s milk show marbling that remains contained rather than bleeding into the paste. Washed rind cheeses develop deeper aroma while maintaining structure beneath the surface. Hard grating cheeses age into dense wheels that fracture into shards rather than cut smoothly, and you can explore dedicated styles in our cheeses for grating collection.

Staying within cow’s milk still allows for contrast in texture, intensity, and finish, which makes this category practical when you want variety without unpredictability.

How Cow’s Milk Cheese Performs in the Kitchen

When heated gently, many cow’s milk cheeses soften into a cohesive layer rather than separating, which is why they appear so often in gratins, baked pastas, soups, and sandwiches. A semi-firm slice will melt evenly across bread, while a properly aged cheese will grate into dry flakes that disperse without clumping.

In a hot pan, the difference between careful aging and rushed production becomes obvious. A balanced cow’s milk cheese will brown with control, releasing fat gradually rather than pooling. When shaved over warm vegetables or stirred into pasta, it will dissolve in stages, carrying depth without dulling the dish.

Because cow’s milk supports extended aging without sharp bitterness, many of the most reliable melting and grating cheeses fall within this category, including styles often used for Swiss and fondue cheeses.

On a Cheese Board

Cow’s milk cheeses provide structure on a board because they carry weight without excess. A soft-ripened wedge yields gradually, a semi-firm slice holds its line, and an aged shard fractures cleanly along natural breaks. Those physical differences create contrast without forcing intensity.

Served with simple bread, restrained charcuterie, or lightly briny elements from olives and antipasti, these cheeses anchor the spread without dominating it. Starting with a foundation such as cheese board kits makes building that structure easier without limiting range.

The board does not need to be crowded when the cheese is properly aged and balanced.

Selection and Sourcing

Not all cow’s milk cheeses are equal, even within the same style. Texture, salt balance, and aging discipline determine whether a cheese tastes complete or unfinished, and those differences become obvious once the wheel is opened. A well-made cow’s milk cheese shows even development from rind to center, slices without tearing, and softens under heat without separating.

We select cheeses from producers who maintain consistent milk quality and aging control year after year, because reliability in the aging room translates directly to performance on the table. Variety matters, but standards matter more.

Once opened, storing wedges in breathable cheese storage bags helps preserve both texture and flavor between servings.

Entertaining and Gifting

Cow’s milk cheeses adapt easily to different settings. They can be served plainly, melted into a dish, or shaved over warm food without requiring adjustment. Their familiarity lowers hesitation, while their range allows you to tailor texture and age to suit the occasion.

For gifting, that flexibility matters. A well-aged cow’s milk cheese can move from board to kitchen without complication, offering depth and structure without demanding explanation.

Cow’s Milk Cheese: Frequently Asked Questions

Cow’s milk cheeses include soft-ripened styles, Alpine cheeses, blue-veined cheeses, washed rind cheeses, and aged grating cheeses.

Cow’s milk tends to be sweeter and more rounded, though aging and technique can increase intensity.

Many cow’s milk cheeses soften evenly and brown predictably when heated gently.

Yes. Its range of textures allows you to build contrast while staying within a balanced flavor profile.

Wrap properly and refrigerate between servings so texture and flavor remain stable.