Valencay — Cups to Grams
1 cup crumbled Valencay = 120g — sliced = 115g, whole pyramid = 220g
1 cup Valencay = 120 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Valencay
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 30 g | 4 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 40 g | 5.33 tbsp | 16 tsp |
| ½ | 60 g | 8 tbsp | 24 tsp |
| ⅔ | 80 g | 10.7 tbsp | 32 tsp |
| ¾ | 90 g | 12 tbsp | 36 tsp |
| 1 | 120 g | 16 tbsp | 48 tsp |
| 1½ | 180 g | 24 tbsp | 72 tsp |
| 2 | 240 g | 32 tbsp | 96 tsp |
| 3 | 360 g | 48 tbsp | 144 tsp |
| 4 | 480 g | 64 tbsp | 192 tsp |
Measuring Valencay: Crumbled, Sliced, and Whole
Valencay is a soft, chalky goat cheese and its density changes significantly depending on preparation form. The paste is moist and tender, trapping different amounts of air depending on whether the cheese is sliced flat or broken into irregular crumbles.
Crumbled (120g/cup): The most common cooking form. Break aged Valencay (at least 3 weeks old) into small irregular pieces with your fingers. The crumbles pack moderately efficiently into a cup — neither very airy like grated hard cheese, nor compact like mozzarella. Use crumbled Valencay on salads, pasta, roasted vegetables, and flatbreads.
Sliced in wedges (115g/cup): Slicing the pyramid into thin triangular wedges produces flat pieces that do not stack well in a measuring cup, leaving significant air gaps. This form is primarily for serving on boards rather than measuring for cooking applications. The slightly lower density versus crumbles is due to the uniform flat slices leaving more empty space.
Whole pyramid (220g): The standard AOC Valencay format is a single 220-gram truncated pyramid. This is the reference weight for purchasing and recipe scaling.
| Measure | Crumbled (g) | Sliced wedges (g) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 teaspoon | 2.5g | 2.4g |
| 1 tablespoon | 7.5g | 7.2g |
| ¼ cup | 30g | 28.75g |
| ½ cup | 60g | 57.5g |
| 1 cup | 120g | 115g |
| 1 whole pyramid | 220g (1.83 cups) | 220g (1.91 cups) |
Valencay AOC: Origin, Shape, and the Napoleon Legend
Valencay (Valençay) is produced in a strictly delimited zone in the Indre department of the Centre-Val de Loire region, centered on the town of Valençay — most famous for the Chateau de Valençay, a Renaissance castle owned by the statesman Talleyrand. The cheese has been produced in the area since at least the early 19th century.
The AOC (Appellation d'Origine Controlee) was granted in 1998, protecting the name and defining the production zone (five cantons in Indre), the breed of goat (Alpine, Saanen, and crosses), and the minimum aging period of 11 days. AOC Valencay must be shaped in the distinctive truncated-pyramid mould and coated in a mixture of vegetable charcoal (cendre vegetale) and fine salt before aging.
The ash coating is not merely decorative. It serves a technical function: the alkaline ash (pH ~9) neutralizes the acidic surface of the fresh cheese paste (pH ~4.4), creating a pH gradient that encourages the growth of beneficial mould species — primarily Penicillium camemberti and Penicillium album — which form the characteristic blue-grey wrinkled rind that develops over 2-4 weeks of aging. This same mechanism is used in other ash-coated French goat cheeses: Selles-sur-Cher, Sainte-Maure de Touraine, and Pouligny-Saint-Pierre are all Loire AOC cheeses using this technique.
Flavor Development During Aging
Valencay's flavor profile transforms significantly across its aging spectrum. Understanding these stages helps match the cheese to the right application and tells you what to expect at different aging points.
Jeune/Frais (11-18 days): The paste is bright white, soft, and slightly springy. Flavor is fresh, lactic, and mildly goaty — similar to a well-made fresh chevre but with a slightly firmer set. The rind is just beginning to form — a faint blue-grey bloom. This stage is best served with mild accompaniments (honey, mild fruit, light white wine) that do not overpower the delicate lactic notes.
Affine (3-5 weeks): The classic market-ready Valencay. The blue-grey rind is fully developed and wrinkled. Just beneath the rind, a 3-5 mm layer of creamier, more complex paste has developed — this is where the most interesting flavor is. The center remains chalky and firmer. Goat notes are more pronounced, with earthy, mineral, and hazelnut character. This stage pairs beautifully with Sancerre Blanc or Pouilly-Fume.
Sec (6-10 weeks): Quite dry throughout, with a firm, crumbly paste. Very sharp and pungent. Best crumbled over strong-flavored dishes. This older form is rarely sold commercially in most markets.
Serving, Cooking, and Pairing Valencay
Valencay's primary role is as a table cheese, but its crumbled form works well in several cooked and assembled applications where the tangy, earthy chevre character is an asset.
Cheese board: Serve one whole pyramid (220g) for 4-6 people alongside fig jam or quince paste, walnut halves, dried apricots, and crusty sourdough or baguette. Remove from refrigerator 45 minutes before serving — Valencay's flavor compounds are fat-soluble and dull significantly when cold. Temperature makes an enormous difference in taste.
Salad: Crumble 60-80g (half to two-thirds cup) over roasted beet salad with toasted walnuts and bitter greens. The classic chevre-and-beet combination works especially well with an aged Valencay whose mineral-earthy character complements the earthy sweetness of roasted beets.
Warm crostini: Slice 6mm rounds from the pyramid and place on toasted baguette. Broil at 220 degrees C for 3-4 minutes until the paste begins to soften and the rind blisters. Drizzle with honey and scatter fresh thyme.
Tart/quiche: Crumble 200g (1.67 cups crumbled) Valencay into a standard 23cm tart shell with 3 eggs, 200ml creme fraiche, 1 tablespoon fresh thyme, black pepper. Bake at 180 degrees C for 28-32 minutes. The goat cheese flavor concentrates as the tart bakes.
Nutritional Profile and Dietary Notes
Valencay is a moderate-fat soft goat cheese with a nutritional profile typical of young Loire chevres. Per 100g: approximately 280 calories, 16g protein, 23g fat (16g saturated), less than 1g carbohydrate, 400-500mg sodium (varies by salting level), 250-300mg calcium. Per 1 cup crumbled (120g): approximately 336 calories, 19g protein, 27.6g fat.
Goat milk cheeses contain slightly different fatty acid profiles than cow-milk cheeses: higher proportions of medium-chain fatty acids (caprylic, capric, lauric) which are more rapidly metabolized. They are also typically lower in alpha-S1 casein — the main casein protein associated with cow-milk intolerance — meaning some (not all) people who are sensitive to cow-milk cheeses tolerate goat-milk cheeses better. Valencay contains live cultures from the natural rind moulds — it is not suitable for immunocompromised individuals. The rind is edible for healthy adults.
- INAO France — Cahier des charges Valençay AOC
- USDA FoodData Central — Cheese, goat, soft type
- Slow Food Foundation — Ark of Taste: Valencay cheese
- Journal of Dairy Science — Surface mould ecology of ash-coated goat cheeses
- FAO — Milk and Dairy Products: Production and Processing