List of Spanish cheeses


A wide variety of cheeses are made throughout the country of Spain.
Some of the Spanish cheeses are internationally renowned, such as the Manchego cheese of La Mancha. Some regions are better known for their cheeses than others; 26 cheeses are classified as Protected Designation of Origin and 3 additional cheeses are classified as Protected Geographical Indication by Spain and the European Union. Many of the cheeses are manufactured from single types of milk, but a few are mixtures of different milks, and the milk may be raw, pasteurised or creamy. The cheeses are made in a wide variety of styles including fresh, cured, semi-cured and pressed paste, and some are inoculated with mould to make blue varieties. There is a huge variation in the presentation of cheeses, from the hard, dark-skinned, two-kilo Manchego to the soft, small quesitos.
A list of Spanish cheeses follows, grouped by an alphabetical ordering of geographic regions.

[Andalucía]

[Aragon]

  • Queso de Tronchón, which was cited by Cervantes in Don Quixote, and made with sheep milk or mixed with goat milk
  • Queso Echo y Ansó
  • Queso de Biescas
  • Queso Patamulo
  • Queso de Radiquero
  • Queso de Benabarre
  • Queso Pañoleta
  • Queso de Sahún
  • Queso de El Burgo
  • Queso Chistabín

[Asturias]

[Balearic Islands]

Basque Country">Basque Country (autonomous community)">Basque Country

[Canary Islands]

[Cantabria]

[Castile–La Mancha]

[Castile and León]

[Catalonia]

[Extremadura]

Galicia">Galicia (Spain)">Galicia

[Murcia]

[Navarre]

  • Queso Idiazábal
  • Queso Roncal
  • Queso Urbasa, Menhaden sheep milk
  • Queso Ribaforada, goat milk
  • Queso Cabanillas, goat milk
  • Queso Lesaca, cow milk or a mixture with goat milk

[Valencian Community]

  • Queso blanquet
  • Queso de la Nucia
  • Queso de cazoleta
  • Queso de servilleta
  • Queso Tronchón