© Rogue Creamery

For the first time in the annual event’s history, an American-made cheese won the top spot at the World Cheese Awards.

Rogue River Blue Cheese, produced by Rogue Creamery in Southern Oregon, is an organic, cave-aged blue cheese that is wrapped in pear spirit-soaked Syrah grape leaves.

The Savencia Fromage & Dairy-owned creamery beat out some tough competition: More than 3,800 cheeses from 42 countries and 6 continents were evaluated by a panel of 260 judges in Bergamo, Italy this month.

"This is truly the greatest distinction a cheese can receive. What an extraordinary validation of our commitment to quality, the place that inspires our cheese—Southern Oregon's Rogue Valley—and the excellence of the growing American artisan cheese industry, I am humbled and filled with gratitude," said Rogue Creamery President David Gremmels.

View this post on Instagram A post shared by Rogue Creamery (@roguecreamery) on Oct 18, 2019 at 10:04pm PDT

Cheeses from Italy, Spain, the U.K., and Switzerland placed No. 2, No. 3, No. 4, and No. 5, respectively.

Noticeably absent from the Top 5 was France. France’s best-performing cheese, an Epoisses, ranked No. 8. The soft cheese from Burgundy tied with a Swiss Gruyere.

The French press isn’t taking the loss very well: Ouest-France, one of the country’s largest-circulation newspapers, called it “sacrilege.”

“We try to celebrate cheeses from around the world, especially those made by smaller artisan cheesemakers,” John Farrand, managing director of the Guild of Fine Food, which organises the World Cheese Awards, said to The Telegraph. “Good cheese is made around the world, not just by the French. I know lots of French people who work in cheese who know that fine cheeses are made in many different countries.”

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