Provolone


Provolone is an Italian cheese. It is an aged pasta filata cheese originating in Casilli near Vesuvius, where it is still produced in pear, sausage, or cone shapes long. Provolone-type cheeses are also produced in other countries. The most important provolone production region today is Northwestern Italy and the city of Cremona. Provolone, provola, and provoleta are versions of the same basic cheese. Some versions of provolone are smoked.

History and varieties

The term provolone appeared around the end of the 19th century, when it started to be manufactured in the southern regions of Italy and assumed its current large size. The smaller sized variant is called provola and comes in plain and smoked varieties.
Modern provolone is a full-fat cow's milk cheese with a smooth skin, produced mainly in the Po River Valley regions of Lombardy and Veneto. It is produced in different shapes: like a very large sausage which may be up to in diameter and long, in a truncated bottle shape, and in a large pear shape with the characteristic round knob for hanging. The typical weight is.
Provolone is a semi-hard cheese with taste varying greatly from provolone piccante, aged for a minimum of four months and with a very sharp taste, to provolone dolce with a very mild taste. In provolone piccante, the distinctive piquant taste is produced with lipase derived from goat. The dolce version uses calf's lipase instead.
Both provolone valpadana and provolone del Monaco have received the DOP seal from the European Union, meaning no country other than Italy may legally produce a cheese called that.
In Brazil, Argentina, Bolivia and Uruguay, small discs of locally produced pulled-curd provolone of in diameter and in height are sometimes grilled until partially melted and eaten as a starter, often seasoned with herbs. The cheese when served this way is often called provoleta in Spanish.