TABLE OF CONTENTS
Best French Bloomy Rind Cheese Types
Saint-Félicien is a soft French cheese originating from the region of Rhône-Alpes. The cheese is made from cow’s milk and has a creamy texture, while its flavor can be described as fruity, sour, nutty, and buttery. During the aging process, it develops a bloomy rind with a strong mushroomy aroma which does not really match the flavors of the cheese.
Due to its fragile nature, this cheese often comes packaged in small terracotta pots. It is recommended to pair it with crusty baguettes, olives, or a glass of red wine.
Often called the heavenly cheese, St. André is a French triple-crème cheese made from cow’s milk. It originated from Coutances in the region of Normandy. Underneath its bloomy edible rind, there is a dense, creamy-textured body with mild and rich aromas and flavors which can best be described as sour, tangy, buttery, and salty.
Because it is enhanced with the addition of heavy cream, its fat content is quite high - typically 75%. It is recommended to pair it with crusty bread, pear slices, or a glass of light and fruity rosé.
Originally known as Excelsior, Délice des Gourmets, or Le Magnum, this triple-cream cheese was first produced in the late 1800s near Forges-les-Eaux, Normandy. In the 1930s, to pay homage to an 18th-century gourmet Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin, the famous French cheesemaker Henri Androuët renamed the cheese to Brillat-Savarin. Available year round throughout Normandy and Burgundy, Brillat-Savarin is a soft, white-crusted cow's milk cheese with at least 75% butterfat, and an edible snowy rind.
It is luscious, creamy, and neutral to faintly sour when fresh, but it can develop pronounced earthy flavors with longer aging. Like any other triple-crème cheese, Brillat-Savarin is best enjoyed with sparkling wines, and for a nice fruity twist, try pairing it with fresh berries.
THE BEST Brillat-Savarin Cheeses
Délice de Bourgogne is a French triple crème cheese originating from the region of Burgundy, hence the name. The cheese is made from cow’s milk and butterfat, and it has a fat content of 75%. Its texture is smooth and creamy, while the flavors are tangy, tart, salty, buttery, and mushroomy.
The rind is white, bloomy, and quite pungent. It is recommended to serve the cheese on its own or pair it with ciders and white wines.
Pair with
Brie de Melun is a soft, flat-formed cheese made from unpasteurized cow's milk in the areas of Aube and Yonne and the Brie region of Île-de-France. This Brie is even smaller than its widely popular cousin Brie de Meaux and it is also stronger and saltier in taste.
Its body is golden yellow and has a white, moldy rind with dispersed reddish strokes. Brie de Melun needs more time to be produced than Brie de Meaux, and it also matures for quite a longer period (4-8 weeks). The flavor of the cheese is fruity, musty and reminiscent of straw.
Pair with
Valençay is a soft cheese with an unusual visual appearance, made from goat's milk in the French regions of Cher, Indre, Indre-et-Loire and Loir-et-Cher. It is shaped like a pyramid with its top cut off, and according to a legend, it used to have a full pyramid shape until Napoleon cut the top off with his sword upon his arrival back home from a failed expedition to Egypt.
The cheese is covered with a natural blue-gray mold coated with a mix of salt and charcoal and its body is smooth and dense in texture while the taste is slightly piquant, mild, nutty and lemony. Pair it with dry white or sparkling wines.
Brie de Meaux is a soft French cheese made from cow's milk. The flat cheese has a delicate rind covered in white mold. It matures in cellars on straw mats in the Île-de-France area near Paris for at least four weeks. This particular variety of Brie is the most famous of all, and in the past, it has been known as the cheese of royalty and well-off people.
It is important to let the Brie reach room temperature before consumption in order to fully appreciate its range of flavors - moldy, mushroomy, nutty, and fruity. The cheese is commonly used in French culinary specialties such as Galettes briardes and Bouchées á la reine au Brie.
Pair with
THE BEST Brie de Meaux Cheeses
Domaine des Trente Arpents
Brie de Meaux Fermier Rothschild
Concours International de Lyon - Gold 2025

Camembert de Normandie, Normandy's most famous and iconic cheese is made from raw cow's milk and weighs an average of 250 grams. The flavor is intense, pungent and similar to that of mushrooms, grass and butter, while the aroma is moldy and cabbage-like.
As one legend says, a farming woman named Marie Harel protected a priest who was on the run and in return, he gave her the recipe for the Camembert we know today. The cheese is ladled into molds by hand, dry-salted, then matured for 30 to 35 days.
Its body is soft and creamy while its exterior is covered with a white, moldy rind.
THE BEST Camembert de Normandie Cheeses
E. Graindorge Fromagerie
Camembert de Normandie AOP E.Graindorge
Concours International de Lyon - Gold 2025

E. Graindorge Fromagerie
Camembert au Lait Cru E.Graindorge
Concours International de Lyon - Gold 2025
Buche de Chevre is a French cheese originating from the Poitou-Charentes region. Made from goat's milk, this soft cheese has a white color, bloomy rind, and a creamy, flaky texture. The flavors are tangy, earthy, and slightly sweet. The cheese is shaped into a log and it must mature for at least 7 days before consumption.
It is recommended to serve Buche de Chevre with crusty baguettes, fruit, or honey. The cheese can also be used in salads and quiches. Pair it with a glass of robust red Bordeaux wine or a glass of crisp white wine from the Loire Valley.
THE BEST Buche de Chevre Cheeses
Neufchâtel is a soft cheese with a white rind made from cow's milk in the humid Bray region in France and it can come in a variety of shapes - round, brick-shaped, square-shaped, or heart-shaped. This cheese is arguable the oldest in France, and it must mature for at least 10 days.
In terms of flavor, it is similar to Camembert, but saltier and more intense, with mushroomy and nutty flavors. The texture is grainy, and the cheese is usually used as a low-fat substitute for cream cheese. Neufchatel goes well with sparkling wines, and it is often consumed spread on a piece of crusty bread.
Pair with
THE BEST Neufchâtel Cheeses
TasteAtlas food rankings are based on the ratings of the TasteAtlas audience, with a series of mechanisms that recognize real users and that ignore bot, nationalist or local patriotic ratings, and give additional value to the ratings of users that the system recognizes as knowledgeable. For the “Top 75 French Bloomy Rind Cheeses” list until February 28, 2025, 2,549 ratings were recorded, of which 2,062 were recognized by the system as legitimate. TasteAtlas Rankings should not be seen as the final global conclusion about food. Their purpose is to promote excellent local foods, instill pride in traditional dishes, and arouse curiosity about dishes you haven’t tried.