While most of us go to great lengths to prevent maggots in our food, Casu Marzu, a traditional Sardinian cheese, features them in all their live, wriggling glory (or should that be gory?)

How it’s Made

The cheese is steeped in history and has been made by Sardinians for hundreds of years. Sans maggots, it’s similar to pecorino: an Italian cheese made from sheep’s milk. The main difference is that after it’s made, a hole is cut in the top and the cheese is placed outdoors where cheese flies (Piophila casei) can find it and use it as a cheap hotel room for trysts and baby making.

Why would you want flies to lay eggs in your cheese? Well, the eggs hatch to become maggots and these larval flies eat the cheese, leaving behind excretions of pre-digested fats, proteins, and sugars. Basically, the larvae are fermenting the cheese to an extreme degree. While cheeses that are aged in ways we’re more familiar and comfortable with tend to lose moisture while developing flavor, casu marzu becomes very soft as it develops flavor.

Hazards of Dining

Aside from the sheer cringe factor of eating live worms (Sardinians believe that the cheese is unsafe to eat when the maggots have died) eating casu marzu can be logistically challenging. The maggots in the cheese get upset when the cheese is disturbed and can actually jump around. And when I write jump, I don’t mean inch around a little, I mean launch themselves for distances of up to 6 inches! To prevent their meal from literally hopping off the plate, diners will hold a hand above the cheese spread bread slice as they raise it to their mouth. Personally, if I were to try it I’d go with some stylish onion goggles.

Not Alone

While casu marzu is the most well known “maggot cheese” it’s not the only one. Other cheese known for containing live insect larvae include:

Casgiu merzu in Corsica, France

in Corsica, France Marcetto in Abruzzo, Italy

in Abruzzo, Italy Casu du quagghiu in Calabria, Italy

Cacie’ Punt in Molise, Italy

Can I Try It?

You can’t buy casu marzu in the US (the legality of the cheese is a matter of contention in the EU, which means it can’t be exported for purchase here). It used to be that if you were dying to try a cheese created by living critters, you could get a hunk of Mimolette, but as of October 2013 the US FDA started banning the import of Mimolette from France due to the tiny mites that live on its rind. Until the FDA relaxes its standard of 6 mites per square inch, you’ll just have to enjoy less lively cheeses.

Photo credit: hospitalitymarketplace

Amy Scheuerman Amy Scheuerman—culture's former web director—spent eight years in North Carolina where she developed a love of barbecue and biscuits before moving up north to get a degree in nutrition. She now works at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.