Our Christmas orders are now closed. You can still buy our Cheese Subscriptions to start in January, as well as book our courses and tasting events. If you want to purchase vouchers you can do so until the 20th December but please note that it can take up to 48 hours for the vouchers to be emailed to you as we process these manually.
We have a full counter of cheese in our shop in Pangbourne so you can still come in and purchase items in store

£3.40 – £20.40Price range: £3.40 through £20.40
Bleu des Causses PDO is a fabulously more-ish blue cheese hailing from the same area as Roquefort PDO. Rich, creamy and totally delicious!
If cheeses had personalities, Bleu des Causses would be the quietly charming cousin of Roquefort PDO, a little mysterious, a bit wise, and always with something interesting to say. It’s a blue cheese with a gentle, rustic character that really lets you taste the story of its origins in every creamy mouthful.
Bleu des Causses comes from the limestone plateaus of southern France, mostly in the Grands Causses region of Occitanie. It’s a place of deep gorges and wide, grassy hills. These same plateaus are where Roquefort PDO is made, but Bleu des Causses has taken its own path among French blue cheeses.
There’s a story that shepherds here, many years ago, found out that cow’s milk could be turned into blue cheese, thanks to the local cave moulds. Roquefort PDO has always been made with sheep’s milk, but in the Causses, farmers began making a blue cheese from cow’s milk that really shows off the mineral-rich grass, the damp cave air, and the long tradition of cheese-making in the region.
By the time France started putting official protections in place in the mid-1900s, Bleu des Causses had already found its own special character.
Bleu des Causses is protected by the Appellation d’Origine Protégée (AOP), which is the European version of France’s AOC system. This isn’t just a fancy label; it means you’re getting the real thing.
To call it Bleu des Causses, producers have to stick to some pretty strict rules. The cheese has to be made in certain parts of the Grands Causses, on those rugged limestone plateaus like Causse du Larzac and Causse de Sauvete. Only cow’s milk from local herds that graze on the region’s grasses and herbs is allowed.
The cheesemakers must also use traditional methods during the make. The cheese is then aged in the region’s naturally humid caves or cellars, where the local moulds (especially Penicillium Roqueforti) work their magic and create those lovely blue veins.
All these rules mean that every wedge of Bleu des Causses really does taste of its home region.
When you cut into Bleu des Causses, you’ll see a creamy, pale centre with gentle blue veins. The blue isn’t as dramatic as in some other cheeses, but it’s still lovely to look at. Its texture is soft, supple, and extra creamy, especially if you let it come up to room temperature. The aroma is earthy and fresh, with hints of damp limestone caves and fresh grass.
And then there’s the flavour! There’s a nice balance of mellow and tangy, with a gentle saltiness, a hint of mushroom, and just enough blue bite to keep things interesting without becoming too much. It’s not as strong as something like gorgonzola piccante, Bleu des Causses is much more easy-going. I often pick up hints of buttercup and sweet hay; they serve as a gentle reminder of the pastures where the cows spend their days.
Jen’s note: If you ever get the chance to visit the Causses, with their big skies, sheep-filled fields, and old caves, I’d say go for it. You’ll get to know this cheese even better, and you might just come home with a wedge or two that really tastes of the place.
Sizes and Prices
Storage Advice
Delivery and Collection
Ingredients (Allergens are listed in capitals)
MILK, starter cultures, rennet, salt, Penicillium Roqueforti
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Normal opening Monday – Saturday 9am – 4pm until:
Sunday 22nd 9am – 4pm
Monday 23rd 9am – 4pm
Christmas Eve 9am – 12pm
Christmas Day Closed
Boxing Day Closed
Friday 27th Closed
Saturday 28th 9am – 4pm
Sunday 29th Closed
Monday 30th 9am – 2pm
Tuesday 31st 9am – 2pm
New Year’s Day Closed
Thursday 2nd January Closed
Friday 3rd 9am – 4pm then open as normal
After Christmas our courier delivery slots start from 8th January.