Fontina Cheese — Cups to Grams

1 cup shredded Italian Fontina DOP = 113 grams — Danish/Swedish = 110g/cup. Exceptional melt, classic fonduta, earthier than Gruyère

Variant
Result
113grams

1 cup Fontina Cheese = 113 grams

Tablespoons15.9
Teaspoons47.1
Ounces3.99

Quick Conversion Table — Fontina Cheese

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼28.3 g3.99 tbsp11.8 tsp
37.7 g5.31 tbsp15.7 tsp
½56.5 g7.96 tbsp23.5 tsp
75.3 g10.6 tbsp31.4 tsp
¾84.8 g11.9 tbsp35.3 tsp
1113 g15.9 tbsp47.1 tsp
169.5 g23.9 tbsp70.6 tsp
2226 g31.8 tbsp94.2 tsp
3339 g47.7 tbsp141.3 tsp
4452 g63.7 tbsp188.3 tsp

Fontina Density and Why DOP vs Nordic Varieties Differ

The 3g/cup density difference between Italian Fontina d'Aosta DOP (113g/cup shredded) and Danish/Swedish Fontina (110g/cup) reflects a real physical difference in moisture content. Italian DOP Fontina is aged a minimum of 80 days, losing significant moisture as the rind develops. The resulting paste is denser, more supple, and less rubbery than Nordic Fontina, which is typically aged 3–6 weeks at most.

When you shred Italian DOP Fontina, the strands are slightly waxier and more cohesive — they pack into a cup more efficiently than the more moisture-laden, springy shreds of Danish Fontina. Both melt beautifully, but the texture before melting is the clearest practical difference: Italian DOP shreds produce a compact cup measurement; Danish shreds are puffier and lighter.

MeasureItalian DOP shredded (g)Cubed (g)Danish/Swedish (g)
1 tablespoon7.1g8.75g6.9g
¼ cup28.25g35g27.5g
½ cup56.5g70g55g
1 cup113g140g110g
8 oz block~2 cups shredded~1.6 cups cubed~2.1 cups shredded

For recipe scaling: a standard 5 oz (142g) wedge of Italian Fontina produces approximately 1.26 cups (142 ÷ 113) shredded. A standard 8 oz (227g) block yields exactly 2.01 cups shredded — almost exactly 2 cups, which is a convenient kitchen reference.

Fontina d'Aosta DOP: Origins, Rind, and Flavor Science

The Aosta Valley (Valle d'Aosta) is the smallest and least populated of Italy's 20 regions — a narrow alpine valley in the northwestern corner of the country, bordered by France, Switzerland, and the Piedmont region. The valley's dairy tradition is defined by the Valdostana cow, a hardy alpine breed that has grazed these slopes for centuries, producing milk with a particularly high fat content (3.8–4.2%) and distinct flavor compounds derived from the mountain flora: wild garlic, mountain herbs, alpine grasses.

Fontina d'Aosta is produced from a single milking (not blended across days), made into wheels of 7–12 kg, and aged on spruce boards in cool grottos or purpose-built aging cellars at 8–12°C. The wheels are turned and rubbed with brine daily during the first weeks of aging, developing the characteristic orange-brown natural rind. The rind itself is edible but assertive — most recipes trim it, though it adds depth to soups and stocks if added to the pot during cooking.

The paste of young (80-day) DOP Fontina is pale ivory to pale yellow, supple and slightly springy. At 4+ months, it becomes more golden and firmer. The flavor profile: butter, earth, mushrooms, faint barnyard notes, and a lingering mild pungency that distinguishes it from the clean, nutty character of Gruyère. The mushroomy note comes from the specific Brevibacterium linens bacteria on the rind during aging — the same bacterium responsible for the aroma of washed-rind cheeses like Limburger and Taleggio, but in a much milder expression on Fontina.

Fonduta Valdostana: The Complete Recipe and Science

Fonduta differs fundamentally from Swiss fondue: no wine, no Kirsch, no starch. It is a pure cheese-and-egg-yolk preparation that relies entirely on the fat structure of the cheese and the emulsifying power of egg yolks. The result is thicker, richer, and less stable than Swiss fondue — fonduta cannot be kept warm on a burner for extended periods without risk of seizing. It is meant to be made and served immediately.

Fonduta Valdostana (serves 4):

IngredientWeight/VolumeCup equivalent
Fontina d'Aosta DOP (thinly sliced)200g~1.77 cups shredded equivalent
Whole milk (for soaking)200ml¾ cup + 1 tablespoon
Unsalted butter40g2.8 tablespoons
Egg yolks (large)2 yolks
White truffle (optional garnish)10–15g per person

Preparation: Remove the rind from Fontina (or use rindless Danish Fontina). Slice or cube thinly. Place in a bowl, cover with milk, and refrigerate for 4–6 hours minimum (overnight produces better results — the soaking begins softening the protein matrix, reducing the total cooking time and risk of seizing).

Cooking in a double boiler (bagnomaria): bring bottom pot to a bare simmer — the water should not touch the upper bowl. Add butter to the upper bowl and let it melt. Add soaked Fontina with all the milk. Stir continuously with a wooden spoon in slow, steady strokes. After 15–20 minutes, the cheese will be fully melted and the texture will be smooth and creamy. Remove from heat, beat egg yolks briefly, then fold them in immediately — the residual heat is sufficient to cook the yolks to a safe temperature (above 65°C) without scrambling them. Serve immediately over polenta, pasta, or roasted vegetables.

Fonduta troubleshooting: If the mixture becomes stringy or lumpy during cooking, reduce the heat and add 1–2 tablespoons additional cold milk, stirring vigorously. Overheating (above 80°C) causes the protein to seize before the egg yolks are added. The double boiler method prevents this by limiting the maximum temperature.

Fontina on Pizza and in Baked Pasta

Fontina is a professional kitchen standard for pizza and baked pasta because it melts evenly and smoothly without releasing excess oil. Its fat content (45% FDM) is high enough to maintain a creamy, unified melt rather than separating into grease and rubber as lower-fat cheeses can. The flavor is mild enough to act as a background cheese while contributing noticeable creaminess.

Pizza Bianca with Fontina: White pizza (no tomato sauce) showcases Fontina's melt and flavor directly. Per 30cm (12-inch) pizza: 120–150g Fontina shredded (approximately 1–1.3 cups), drizzle of olive oil, sliced garlic, fresh thyme or rosemary. Bake at the highest oven temperature possible (250–280°C in a home oven) for 8–10 minutes. Fontina should be golden and bubbling with a few brown spots — not completely charred. Add thinly sliced prosciutto after baking, or shaved truffle for a premium version.

Pasta al Forno with Fontina and Mushrooms: For a 9×13 pan (serves 6): par-cook 400g penne (8 minutes in salted boiling water). Make besciamella with 50g butter + 50g flour + 600ml whole milk. Sauté 300g mixed mushrooms (cremini, porcini) in 2 tablespoons butter until golden. Combine pasta, besciamella, mushrooms, and 200g shredded Fontina (1.77 cups). Transfer to baking dish. Top with 80g additional Fontina (0.7 cups) and 50g Parmigiano. Bake at 190°C for 25 minutes until golden. Rest 5 minutes before serving.

Note on Danish Fontina for pizza: Danish Fontina's higher moisture content means it releases more liquid during baking. For pizza, drain or press shredded Danish Fontina lightly between paper towels before use to reduce sogginess. Italian DOP requires no such treatment — its lower moisture means it melts cleanly.

Common Questions About Fontina Cheese