I’m in Love with Hello Kitty: Confessions of a Stuffed Cat in Japan

Hello Kitty05 150x150 Im in Love with Hello Kitty: Confessions of a Stuffed Cat in JapanShe swept into my life like a summer storm, her face radiating with an ethereal and innocent beauty. I was struck like lightning. Almost scorched my stuffings and set my little kokoro pitter-pattering.

I’d been scampering up the Sannen-zaka Steps of Kyoto’s Higashiyama District, when I first saw her. She wore a beautiful pink kimono, which set off her guileless face to perfection. It was a very simple face. Eyes like deep onyx and a little button nose.

She said nothing. She just looked at me with those kind eyes and I imagined her smiling at me. In fact that was impossible because she doesn’t have a mouth; but the poets among you will tell us that we smile with more than our mouths.  NewYork Toulouse LibertyIsland close 150x150 Im in Love with Hello Kitty: Confessions of a Stuffed Cat in Japan

I’m a sophisticated cat. I’ve traveled the world. I’ve eaten with a royal prince in Switzerland; motorcycled my way around Cozumel; climbed a Mayan temple and come face to face with a poisonous snake; experienced a tornado in Kentucky; felt the effect of a Caribbean hurricane on a cruise ship; sailed in Nova Scotia; downhill skied the Sudan Couloir on Blackcomb, British Columbia…

I’m not a pushover.

Hello Kitty Sitting 150x150 Im in Love with Hello Kitty: Confessions of a Stuffed Cat in JapanWhat was it about Hello Kitty that so discombobulated me? I think it was the fact that she doesn’t have a mouth … She appeared to me like a dream, reflecting me. Is that not what a perfect friend does? Reflect your own beauty back to you?

When interviewed by Time Magazine about Hello Kitty’s lack of this facial feature, Yuko Yamaguchi (the current official designer) wisely responded, “It’s so that people who look at her can project their own feelings onto her face… Kitty looks happy when people are happy. She looks sad when they are sad. For this psychological reason, we thought she shouldn’t be tied to any emotion—and that’s why she doesn’t have a mouth.”

hello kitty golden temple2 150x150 Im in Love with Hello Kitty: Confessions of a Stuffed Cat in JapanI was truly smitten and realized very soon that while I was in Japan I couldn’t escape her; I began tohello kitty bus tokyo 150x150 Im in Love with Hello Kitty: Confessions of a Stuffed Cat in Japan see her images and other likenesses of her everywhere. On the buses and commuter trains. In little shops and boutiques outside shrines and temples. On posters advertising tourist attractions (like the Golden Temple). On people’s clothing, purses, stationary and magazine covers and newspapers. On cell phone covers. On nori containers. On my friend’s pink watch. Even in the foam of my latte in the morning! Wherever I went and looked, Hello Kitty was there!

hello kitty latte 150x150 Im in Love with Hello Kitty: Confessions of a Stuffed Cat in JapanElisson at “Cheeseaisle” tells us that “Hello Kitty is beloved by the Japanese: To say that she is their answer to Mickey Mouse is to damn her with faint praise.” I borrowed Elisson’s poster here, which shows the typical style of the Hakone region— the area around Mount Fuji—with intricate patterns, wood grains, and Fuji-san in the background.

Hello Kitty officially hales from the suburbs of London, England on November 1st. Her favorite food, I’m told, is Mama’s homemade Apple Pie. She likes to travel, listen to music, read and eat cookies (and her mom’s apple pie, of course!). Another favorite hobby of hers is to make friends. Well, that’s obvious! Purrrrrr….

Hello Kitty is a character by Sanrio, a Japanese company that designs, licenses and makes productshello kitty mount fugi 150x150 Im in Love with Hello Kitty: Confessions of a Stuffed Cat in Japan that focus on the kawaii (cute) segment of current Japanese popular culture. Hello Kitty has now swept into North America and Europe, enchanting young and old alike with her guileless and simple beauty.

I left Japan a short while ago and said goodbye to her. But, she still resides in my little heart (I guess some goodbyes aren’t real goodbyes… She is called “Hello Kitty”, after all, not Goodbye Kitty)… I’ll miss you, meow!

Ton ami,

Toulouse :-3

Experience Japan: the Historic Higashiyama District of Kyoto

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The Ninen-zaka Steps of Kyoto’s historic Higashiyama District

It was a short scamper from the Super Hotel along Shijo Street, through quaint Gion to the main entrance of Yasaka Shrine on Higashiyama Street. Within minutes I was trotting through the shrine grounds and associated Maruyama Park, along the scenic lower slopes of Kyoto’s eastern mountains.

In search of “Old Kyoto”, I left the shrine grounds by the side gate and immediately plunged into a warren of winding narrow lanes and steps, wooden buildings and traditional merchant shops. I was in the heart of the Higashiyama District, strolling toward Kiyomizudera Temple through one of the city’s best-preserved historic districts.

Filled with visions of the old capital city, I negotiated the milling crowd of Ninen-zaka slope. I strolled past quaint tiny shops, cafes and restaurants in traditional design that had been serving pilgrims for centuries.

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Toulouse in Higashiyama

I gazed with huge glassy eyes and felt my nose twitch at the colorful local specialties: Kiyomizu-yaki pottery; pickles from all kinds of things and Wagashi (traditional Japanese sweets): like green tea cake, Sakuramochi (rice cake filled with red bean paste), Hanabiramochi, Karukan (made from rice flour, sugar and Japanese yam), Uiro (Japanese steam cakes), Mitarashi Dango (Japanese dumplings on sticks), Monaka (sweet red bean paste inside a crisp mochi wafer), Yokan (jelly dessert of red bean paste, agar and sugar), and one of my favorites, Warabimochi(a jelly-like confection made from

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Mochi on a stick

bracken starch and dipped in kinako, sweet toasted soybean flour), Kuzumochi (mochi made with starch powder from the root of the kudzu plant), Kusa Mochi (made with powder from Japanese mugword plant leaves), Gohei-mochi on a stick, and another favorite, Yatsuhashi(a specialty of Kyoto, soft mochi with soft read bean paste filling and cinnamon). Foodmeetslifestyle.com says it this way about Yatsuhashi: “If you ever liked pinching raw cookie dough behind your parents’ back, or would even have preferred eating the Christmas cookies raw than baked, eating yatsuhashi will feel like a childhood dream come true.” Thanks to my Japanese friend, Tomonori, I brought back a box of these to Canada!

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Yatsuhashi

Merchants, left and right, called out their wares and offered free samples of many lovely though questionable foods. One happy merchant offered me a free sample of hot soup. Another gave me some Yatsuhashi (mochi with bean curd and cinnamon), which I savored with twitching whiskers. I browsed craft shops, incense stores, had a green tea ice cream and introduced myself to Hello Kitty in a big way (giant smile).

All this happy rambling made me hungry!

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Looking down Ninen-zaka slope, Higashiyama District

Tummy rumbling with thoughts of noodles (the ice cream wasn’t enough; Japan makes you hungry), I spotted a noodle place, obvious by its wooden sign. The Omen is a traditional Japanese noodle restaurant that gives you the chance to design your own meal experience. The friendly waiter provided me with the noodles in a broth to which I could then add any number of ingredients and condiments, most of which I had no idea what they were. I blithely and faithfully added almost everything I saw into the complex noodle mixture, let it steep for a bit, then sipped and slurped a sensual dish of exquisite taste and texture. Highly recommended!

At the foot of the Ninen-zaka Steps, I stopped in at the Café Garakuta, known as the three umbrellas. Its gallery upstairs features artwork about the district.

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sipping a cafe creme at Cafe Garakuta

I sipped an exquisite café crème on their patio and watched an unending stream of tourists and exotic “Geishas” pour down the steps.

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Girls in traditional Japanese dress, Higashiyama District

A while ago some smart merchants (actual maiko houses and studios) introduced the concept of being a geisha for a day. Soon houses and studios opened their doors to tourists everywhere in the district, offering young tourist girls an authentic apprentice geisha (Maiko) experience for 9,000 yen (~$90). The process takes five hours and consists of a full transformation. This includes getting made-up with the white face and red lipstick, red and black accents around the eyes and brows, and the traditional kimono with heavy dangling obi and pocketed sleeves called furi. The geishas all featured the traditional shimada hairstyle with high chignon, decorated by elaborate hair combs and hairpins (kanzashi) and tottered raised wooden clogs, called geta or okobo. Who ever came up with that idea was a real smarty-pants. The young tourist experienced Old Kyoto from the perspective of a real geisha while adorning the district with her exotic beauty.

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Higashiyama happy cats

Coffee finished, I scampered up the Ninen-zaka steps with renewed vigor and strolled along the incline of Sannen-zaka lane. Ninen-zaka” means “slope of two years”, and “Sannen-zaka” means “slope of three years”.?The saying is that you would die within two years if you fell on Ninen-zaka and you would die within three years if you fell down on Sannen-zaka. I wondered if that too had been a clever tourist device to tame potential unruliness; no one hurries on the lanes or stone steps. The kanji characters of Sannen-zaka also mean “slope to pray for a safe delivery”. Young pilgrims have walked this lane for hundreds of years hoping to be blessed with good fortune and love at the Kiyomizudera Temple.

At the Sannen-zaka Steps I met a young student who was celebrating her birthday that day; one of her gifts was to come to Higashiyama and dress up as a Geisha for the day.

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Honoka with Toulouse

Honoka had just come home from Australia and spoke in a lilting Japanese English accent spiced with Australian twang. My little stuffed heart went pitter-patter as she tenderly took me into her hand for a picture. Meow! :-3

The two kilometers between Yasaka Shrine and Kiyomizudera Temple can be walked in half an hour; it took me the better part of an afternoon to fully experience the district.

The shops and restaurants in the area typically open around nine or ten in the morning and close relatively early around five or six in the evening, except during the ten day long Hanatoro in March when thousands of lanterns line the streets of Higashiyama and many of the area’s temples, shrines and businesses offer extended hours.

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Sannen-zaka Steps, Higashiyama District Kyoto

If you enjoy walking like I do, I recommend hiking from the Yasaka Shrine past Chionin and Shorenin Temples to Heian Shrine and Nanzenji and the Philosopher Path to Ginkakuji Temple. If you time it right, you can catch the area during the cherry blossom festival (in mid- to late-March) when the trees riot in explosive bloom and pale pink petals flutter to the ground like confetti at a wedding.

 

 

 

History of Kyoto and the Higashiyama District 

The Higashiyama District represents the culmination of several restorations over Kyoto’s turbulent history, mainly during the Taisho Period between 1912 and 1926.?Kyoto was actually destroyed during in the 1860s, particularly during the Hamaguri rebellion in 1864. The rolling hills of Higashiyama, east of the Higashi-oji-dori River, feature narrow winding roads and lanes that mimic the old capital of feudal times. While the townscape did not in fact originate during feudal times, its architecture was designed in the authentic traditional style using traditional materials.

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Toulouse and new friends at Kiyomizudera Temple

Most Japanese associate Kyoto with these narrow alleys, particularly the view of Yasaka-no-to (Yasaka pagoda) seen from Yasaka-dori.

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Yasaka-dori

The Gion District of Kyoto was originally developed in the Middle Ages, in front of Yasaka Shrine. The district was built to accommodate the needs of travelers and visitors to the shrine. It eventually evolved into one of the most exclusive and well-known geisha districts in Japan.

 

Experiencing Japan: Tsukiji Market in Tokyo

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Buyers inspect tuna at the Tsukiji Tuna Auction

Amidst the pre-dawn bustle of Tsukiji Fish Market, I scampered labyrinthine alleys, dodging carts and turret trucks with the agility of … well, a CAT.

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The Inner Wholesale Market

Located in the heart of Tokyo, Tsukiji Fish Market is the largest wholesale fish and seafood market in the world and one of the largest wholesale food markets of any kind. The size of over 40 football fields, Tsukiji is crammed with stalls selling over 400 kinds of fish and seafood. I saw all kinds of shrimp from all over the world in open plastic sacks in Styrofoam boxes. I passed giant crabs, bright red octopus, swordfish, even whale. I saw live flounder, flying fish, eels, squid, mackerel and tanks of live fugu, a kind of blowfish that is deadly if incorrectly prepared. There were sheets of kelp, octopus roe and piles of shirasu (baby anchovy).

But I had no time to dawdle; I didn’t want to be late for a very special event: the Tuna Fish Auction, where a Bluefin tuna can fetch over $170,000.

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Fujita checks the tuna tail for quality

There was a time when anyone could attend the 5:30 am tuna auction, but now it’s by invitation only. I was the personal guest of oroshi gyosha Hiroki Fujita, who knows my good friend Kumiko from the Beacher Café in Toronto. Fujita is considered somewhat anti-establishment; I think this is because he has his own way of doing things. Fujita was featured in “Jiro Dreams of Sushi”.  If you haven’t seen the film yet, go see it. Jiro refers to Jiro Ono, the master sushi chef or “shokunin” whose restaurant Jiro, in the Ginza area of Tokyo, is renown for its heavenly sushi experience. A course at this 3-star restaurant can cost more than 35,000 yen ($460) and reservations must be made at least a month in advance. Ono is one of Fujita’s clients and relies on Fujita’s choice of tuna for his restaurant. Says Fujita: “only one of the ten [tuna] can be the best and that is what the client wants from me.” There are days when Fujita walks away with no purchase. “I either buy my first choice or I buy nothing.”

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Rows of tuna await auction

The auction happens in a large warehouse in the “inner market” (Jonai Shijo), the licensed wholesale market where most of the fish processing by dealers who operate small stalls also takes place. The market opens most mornings at 3:00 am with the arrival of fish by ship, truck and plane from all over the world. Licensed buyers, including intermediate wholesalers (nakaoroshi gyosha) like Fujita, restaurant agents, food processing companies and large retailers inspect the fish prior to bidding on them.

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Fujita bids on his choice tuna at the auction

After donning safety vests and rubber boots, I followed Fujita inside the large warehouse. Row upon row of up to 300 kg tuna lay on aluminum pallets for viewing by buyers smoking cigarettes and drinking coffee in paper cups. They roamed from fish to fish that were caught from all over the world. I watched as Fujita hunkered down and peered into the belly of one carcass with his flashlight. He picked up the chopped off tail, held it to the light and inspected the orange flesh, feeling it between his fingers and envisioning the perfect tuna, a vision of true kata.

According to Nick Tosches in his 2007 article in Vanity Fair, what someone like Fujita determines by his quick and practiced analysis “is an indication of the tuna’s inner color, its oil content, and the presence, if any, of parasitic disease. A smooth-grained and marbled tail is a prime indication of quality. The richness of the tuna’s lipid content, its fat, can be gauged by how slippery the slice of tail feels between the fingers. Pockmarks reveal parasites. It’s a complex diagnostic method that is mastered only with years of practice. The overall form and color of the tuna are also quickly assessed at the same time. The ideal of these qualities, inner and outer—the word for this ideal is kata—is also a bit of a mystery to outsiders.”

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Sold tuna on cart awaits carving for sale to retailers

At 5:30 the auctioneers began their recursive bellows and buyers crowded around. Buyers made their bids in a flurry of hand flicks and the sale was soon reached; an invoice was rapidly dispatched and stuck on the fish then the crowd moved onto the next fish.

It was all over in half an hour.

The bought fish were then either loaded onto trucks to be shipped to the next destination or on small carts and moved to the many shops inside the market. I followed Fujita to his stall in the market where I watched him cut and prepare his freshly purchased tuna for sale to retail buyers. Cutting and preparation is elaborate. I watched one of Fujita’s men cut frozen tuna with a large band saw and another make the initial lengthy cut of the fresh tuna with a very long knife (called maguro bocho—“tuna cutter”). Fujita then made the final cuts; The subtle cutting art of maguro no kaiwa (“the conversation of the tuna”) was mesmerizing.

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stalls in the wholesale inner market

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Fujita filletting his prize tuna

Each knife is used for different cuts. First the mid-sized knife is used to remove the head, tail and fins. The very long knife is used for the first cut along the spine of the tuna, separating the dorsal and ventral parts, to get the first upper quarter section of the fish. Depending on where the cut is taken on the fish, you get differing levels of fatty content. For instance, Akami (lean tuna) is the dark red meat closer to the centre of the tuna; O-Toro (fatty tuna) is cut from the underside of the fish belly; and Chu-Toro (medium tuna) comes from the fatty parts closer to the dorsal region of the tuna between the akami and otoro layers.

I’m told that the average Bluefin tuna yields 10,000 pieces of sushi.

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Lineup at a market sushi place

And speaking of…a day in Tsukiji is not complete without a sushi breakfast, which was exactly what I had with my new Japanese friends. By 7:30 am, we’d wound our way through the warren of inner market stalls, outside, past stacks of polysterene boxes, and turret trucks and outer alleys and were standing in a very long line in front of the faded doorway curtains of one of the area’s best known sushi market restaurants. We were eventually seated amid a cramped row of people and enjoyed personally made sushi that went for about 700 yen per piece. I ate sea urchin (uni), salmon roe (ikura gukan), fried egg (tamagoyaki), red snapper, yellowtail and eel among other delectable surprises. My favorite was the chu toro(fatty tuna). It was like a sweet aria. Buttery smooth and utterly delightful, it melted in my mouth and sang all the way down my little stuffed body.

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fresh sushi at Tsukiji

By 9 o’clock we wandered through the outer retail market (Jogai Shijo) that bustles with shops and eateries all day. Energetic shopkeepers call out from all sides, eagerly advertising their diversity of goods including fresh vegetables, meats, seafood, seaweed, kitchen produce, sweets and various gadgets. Lke in a scene from Bladerunner, you can find busy Tokyo businessmen and housewives with children any time of the day standing at iconic noodle street bars and sucking back steaming noodles with a helping of beer.

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Shokunin displays a diverse sushi entrée

The Tsukiji market, which has operated since 1924 (when it replaced the former Nihonbashi fish market destroyed in the 1923 earthquake) sits on prime waterfront real estate, next door to the high-rent Ginza district. The market property was apparently sold by the city for a few trillion yen. The fish market is slated to move to Toyosu in Koto Ward by 2015 (construction was delayed due to the need to clean up the contamination by benzene of the new site).

Go see Tsukiji while it’s still there.

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The Outer Market of Tsukiji

I’m the COOL Travel Cat! Itadakimasu…good appetite. And Kampai!

 

 

 

 

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Young students enjoying crab sample at Tsukiji

 

Switzerland Adventures: Castles, Cobbles and Coffee in Sion

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Rue des Châteaux

It was the name originally given to the stronghold captured by King David of the Israelites and where a temple was built on the hill above it. It also means “an imaginary place considered to be perfect and ideal”. In Switzerland, Sion is the capital of the Canton of Valais but otherwise fits the description well. Like the original one, this Sion (pronounced See-ohn) is also overseen by a fortified church, Notre-Dame-de-Valère. In fact, there are two hills with fortified castles that rise above this charming medieval town, nestled in the fertile Rhone Valley and surrounded by vineyards and orchards.

Sion is an attractive town of 27,000 with a long history. Archeological evidence suggests that the site was inhabited during Neolithic times. People came to the otherwise flat valley floor, attracted by the two jutting rocky hills, visible from afar and now adorned with the medieval castles Valère and Tourbillon. “They are an odd sight, which matches the common Swiss notion that the locals (named Sédunois, after the town’s Latin name Sedunum, meaning Place of Castles) are themselves a bit odd, impenetrably taciturn and clannish,” says one Swiss website. Sion enjoys a beautiful climate: dry, mild and consistently clear; its afternoons are bathed in bright sunshine, and I could imagine myself in rural Spain – warm, dry breezes blending the aroma of dusty pine needles with the chittering of thousands of cicadas.

Sion’s wines are outstanding.

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heading down from Chateau de Valere on Rue des Chateaux

Attracted by the two medieval castles that crowned the two hills above the town, I steered my ToulouseMobile from the highway and took the narrow cobbled Rue des Chateaux up a steep incline to a parking lot from which I could scamper to either castle. The late 13th Century Chateau de Tourbillon with its crenulated walls is now in ruins. On the other hill, the Chateau de Valère is a 12th or 13th Century fortified church and houses the world’s oldest playing organ (made in 1390). No, I didn’t play it like Inspector Clouseau’s mad boss, but I did feel rather peckish after that long walk up the hill.

In search of a good food and coffee experience, I drove down the windy cobbled lane that spilled out onto Rue du Grand-Pont, the wide tree-lined and cobbled main street of the old-town. There, across the street from the Hotel de Ville, with its 17th century clock tower, I found what I was looking for: La Croix Fédérale, a restaurant and brasserie with arcade windows in the Valais tradition.  Its sign looked as old as the medieval town itself and invited. As soon as I entered, I knew I had hit the jackpot. The place was filled with locals, lingering over wine and roesti, and discussing philosophy and politics. The smell of fondue permeated. Perfect, I thought. It was a Cool Travel Cat’s paradise.

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Patrons of Croix Federale get friendly with Toulouse

I sat down by the window and nodded to the two gentlemen lingering over a carafe of white wine. They nodded back. I ordered  Roesti d’Alpage and a Salade Bruschetta de Gambas  from the waitress. She gave me a strange look, like she’d never seen a talking French stuffed cat before; but to give her credit, she took my order. To accompany my Valais meal, I chose a local white wine from Sion; a 2010 Hurlevent Petite Arvine.  I found it light yet wonderfully expressive in subtle fruity notes. It was the perfect companion to my savory meal.

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Croix Federale signature roesti

Roesti is a simple farmer’s leftover dish. Essentially, roesti consists of shredded potatoes cooked then baked with cheese and other things, representing a gourmet version of “hashbrowns”. This dish was lovingly baked with mushrooms, cheese, onions, ham and a fried egg on top. The subtle flavors had married wonderfully in the baking dish and I feasted happily with puffy cheeks. The salad was its own feast. Presented in a colorful arrangement of pickled beets, carrots, and greens accompanying the bruschetta and sweet shrimp, it ate itself.  Well, it’s just an expression; I did the eating, of course! Don’t forget that great walk I had!

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Happy patron of Croix Federale on Main Street

Dalia, the manager, later joined me with drinks and we shared stories of travels, good food and animals. I showed her a picture of my whippet friend, Sparky in the USA, and she showed me her two dog companions on her Iphone.

The cafe creme at the bistro was

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Toulouse savors his cafe creme

exceptional. Rich, deeply flavorful without a hint of bitterness, it swam over my little pink tongue like a Robert Browning poem. “God’s in his Heaven/All’s right with the world!” Another winner!

 

Contact Information: La Croix Federale, Pub, Bistro, Brasserie; Grand-Pont 13,1950 Sion, Valais, Suisse; telephone: 027 322 16 95

 

Switzerland Wine Country and the Chateau d’Aigle

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view of castle lane in Aigle

My drive southeast of Lake Geneva, took me on the road between the resort town of Montreux and Martigny, and brought me to the quiet village of Aigle, in the midst of fertile vineyards of the Vaud. Aigle  (pronounced “Egg-la”, which means Eagle in French) is the capital of Chablais. Here, the vines cling to the steep foothills of the Alpes Vaudoises along the narrow valley of the Rhone river and produce some of Switzerland’s best wines. This rustic village with its narrow lanes, stucco painted farmhouses and charming pubs and cafés, is an uncut jewel centrally situated in historic wine country.

Swiss wines are, in fact, exceedingly good; but because they are not exported (the Swiss drink what they produce) it is a well kept secret. The best vineyards are in the cantons of Valais and Vaud, particularly on the sheltered hillsides around Lake Geneva.

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town centre, Aigle

I decided to find out for myself. Aigle, with its castle devoted to wine and wine-making, sounded like a good place to start my wine tour.

The turreted Chateau d’Aigle that overlooks the village is an impressive structure that adds color and romance to a sleepy village of winemakers and farmers. Built at the end of the 12thcentury by the d’Allio family, it was one of a number of castles erected by the ruling Savoys to guard the verdant valleys from the Bernese to the north (see Chateau de Chillon in Montreux).

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Chateau d’Aigle

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Alain Emery stands in front of his vineyard

The castle ultimately fell to the Bernese in 1475 and was burned to the ground. The rulers from the north rebuilt it as a residence for their governors. It remains an impressive example of 15th Century medieval fortified chateau. The Bernese were chased from the Vaud in the revolution of 1798 and from 1805 until 1972 the castle was used by the town of Aigle as its court and jail. In 1976 the prisoners were replaced with wine barrels. And the castle currently houses the Vaudois Wine and Wine Label Museums, whose exhibits demonstrate the old methods of vine-cultivation and wine-making. Directly across from the castle is the Pinte du Paradis, an enchanting restaurant, particularly in the summer when you can sit outside.

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Vineyards in Aigle

I descended the cobbled lane from the castle to the lower village where several shops and cafés called to my growling tummy. The Oenotheque du Chateau d’Aigle, a local wine shop, lets you taste and purchase wines from the 15 vignerons of Aigle. Not far from the Romanesque medieval church with its interesting windvane, I was drawn to the wine cellars of Cave Alain Emerywhere I met Alain Emery (fifth generation winemaker) who introduced me to a fine selection of local wines. I purchased a set of wonderful wines from the region including a Petite Arvine, Pinot Noir and Pinot Gris, Chasselas, Gamay, and Pointe de Rose. Alain Emery pointed behind me to the local hillside. That’s where the wine in my paws came from.

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Taverne du Château in Aigle

Content with my boon and now quite hungry, I crossed to the Taverne du Chateau. Who could refuse a place with a porcelain baker looking like a laughing Buddha in the window. As I entered the café, all of its patrons greeted us. My whiskers spiked and I smiled: how friendly!

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gourmet salad in Taverne du Chateau

I ordered a mixed salad with a Fendant, a Chasselas from Valais. The Chasselas is a light and subtle white wine that married perfectly with my salad whose exquisite dressing delighted and refreshed my palate. I also ordered a ham and pommes frites accompanied by a Petite Arvine—more on this incredible wine in another post.

This town, like the eagle, is a magnificent example of the quiet country charm of the Vaud. Enjoy the wine, the charming history of the area, and the pleasant drive. Aigle is the home of the International Cyclists Union, the world governing body for sports cycling and oversees international competitive cycling events.