Swiss Cows are a Cat’s Best Friend

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Swiss cows in a pasture with Mount Pilatus in background

Think of it: milk, cheese, chocolate, butter, cream…café crème! I was in Toulouse heaven when I toured Zurich and the countryside of Central Switzerland this spring. As the Swiss would say, es war ausgezeichnet! I feasted on the best that cows can offer. That had a lot to do with the Brown Swiss cow. And here’s why…

Brown Swiss is the breed of dairy cattle that produces the second largest quantity of milk in the world. The milk contains on average 4% butterfat and 3.5% protein, which makes it ideal for cheese production. The Brown Swiss is a large cow with long gestation, large furry ears, and a lovely docile temperament. They are also hardy and need little care or feed.

Known as Braunvieh in German, the Brown Swiss originated on the slopes

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Happy Swiss cows in Merlischachen, Lake Lucerne

of the Swiss Alps, which made them resistant to heat, cold and many other common cattle problems. The Brown Swiss, as we know it in the United States today, originated in several cantons I traveled through: Schwyz, Zug, St. Gallen, Glarus, Lucerne, and Zurich of Switzerland. Here’s what the Brown Swiss cow offers so happily and impeccably:

BUTTER: In Switzerland, butter is more of an experience than a condiment. Its fresh and bold taste carries with it the fresh smell of alpine meadows. Swiss butter makes one incredible escargots bourguignon baked with Café de Paris sauce like the six I “inhaled” at the Swiss Chalet in Merlischachen. Swiss butter melts in your mouth with a delicate nuance of the Swiss countryside. It is tasty plain on bread, croissants or butterzopf in the morning for breakfast. As I scarfed down the tenth piece of light rye with herb-tomato butter at the Rossli in Schonenburg, I pulled contemplatively at my whiskers and decided that its exquisite taste is “because the cows are happy”.  Most

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Swiss cows in Seelisberg, Lake Lucerne

Swiss cows graze freely outside in small family farms, benefitting from the fresh air, good food and pleasant pastoral setting. The Swiss are very proud of their cows, after all. Spring festivals abound around the Swiss cow, complete with regalia and huge intricately decorated bells.

CHEESE: Cheese permeates and forms an integral part of Swiss life. As with my compatriots in France, the Swiss consider it both an everyday food item and something ideal for a feast. The Swiss will commonly serve a platter of six or seven different kinds of cheese, along with fresh bread, dried meat or cervelat, and fruit, along with a generous amount of good red

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Very curious Swiss cows

wine.  I partook of many cheese platter picnics, accompanied with wine, and cervelat salad.

Switzerland is home to about 450 varieties of cheese. Ninety-nine percent of Swiss cheese comes from cows milk with the remainder made up of sheep and goat milk. This is considerably different from France, where goat milk cheese is very popular.

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Assorted cheeses in Switzerland

Here are some of the popular Swiss cheeses from extra hard to soft: Sbrinz; Emmentaler; Gruyere/Greyerzer; Berner Alpkaese; Schabziger; Appenzeller; Bundner Bergkaese; Mutschli; Raclette; Tere de Moine; Vacherin Fribourgeois; Tilsiter; Vacherin Mont d’Or; Formaggini; and Gala.

Two great warm-cheese dishes, usually served right about now during the cold winter months. Fondue is cheese melted in a wine-kirsch mixture, into which you dip chunks of bread. (I’ve never encountered other dipping stuff here like apples and so on.) And there is raclette, a big chunk of cheese held close to the fire until it starts to melt, and then the melting cheese is

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Toulouse feasts on an open-faced cheese/tomato sandwich and cafe creme

scooped off with a knife onto a plate, and eaten with bread, boiled potatoes, cornichon pickles, and sometimes some dried beef.

MILK, CREAM & “OH, THAT CAFÉ CRÈME!”: Swiss milk is also unique. People new to Switzerland would describe it as richer tasting, more creamy with a hint of countryside meadow in its aroma. Some need to get accustomed to the vollmilch (whole fat milk), and I’ve heard that they cut it in half with low-fat milk.

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Cafe creme on Lake Lucerne

Think of all the things you drink and eat that use milk. Now you know what I’m getting at. And then there’s café crème. My pure enjoyment of this simple beverage was surely a function of both the Swiss fresh water, fresh air, fresh mountain crème and excellent espresso coffee. Not to mention the awesome setting and view.

My take home message here is this: when you go to Switzerland, keep your diet at home and savor the exquisite palate-thrilling tastes that the Swiss Cow offers, in all aspects of your fine dining experience, from elegant creamy morel sauce over rahmschnitzel to a simple café crème.

I’ll be back to see my friends!

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15 Responses
  1. Cathy P. says:

    I simply loved your description of sumptuous dairy products! There should be more cats like you!

  2. Toulouse LeTrek says:

    Thank you, Cathy… You’re very gracious and kind. Alas, I think I’m one of a kind… meow… ;-3

    Ton ami,
    Toulouse :-3

  3. Karen says:

    Hey Toulouse,

    I know you just follow your nose to the best Swiss treats! I’m sure you really were in “Toulouse Heaven” :)

  4. I just adore cheese, so it was all very mouthwatering!

  5. Donna says:

    What about the chocolate?

  6. Toulouse LeTrek says:

    LOL! Yes, Karen, my nose is very reliable… And you’re right, it was Toulouse Heaven! :-3

    Ton ami,
    Toulouse :-3

  7. Toulouse LeTrek says:

    Jean-Luc, you would have loved Switzerland, then… Even the small corner stores sold gourmet cheese.

    Donna, you brought up one of my favorite things! Swiss chocolate. Did you know that the Swiss actually make a chocolate bar with an absinthe filling? Real absinthe!

    Ton ami,
    Toulouse :-3

  8. SF Girl says:

    YES! That liqueur-filled chocolate is amazing! It’s not for everyone, though…Tastes like anise… I love the combination of anise-flavor liqueur and fine Swiss chocolate.

  9. Toulouse LeTrek says:

    It’s actually not a liqueur, Nina… They call it a “spirit” and it’s derived from the herb Artemisia absinthium, also called grande wormwood.

    Figures you like the stuff: you’re a writer, after all…Did you know that Absinthe originated in Switzerland? In the canton of Neuchâtel. It was very popular as an alcoholic drink in late 19th- and early 20th-century France, particularly among Parisian artists and writers. Owing in part to its association with bohemian culture, absinthe was opposed by social conservatives and prohibitionists.

    Ton ami,
    Toulouse :-3

  10. Russ Cole says:

    Ah, cheese, except for bleu, I love them with fruit AND chocolate…

  11. Toulouse LeTrek says:

    Ah, yes, with chocolate! You have discerning taste, Russ… Chocolate and wine also go very well together, like a Grand Sud Merlot with a Swiss dark…mmmm

    Au plaisir,
    Toulouse LeTrek :-3

  12. SF Girl says:

    Hey, Toulouse… Did you know that your namesake used to drink absinthe?

    Your friend,
    Nina

  13. Toulouse LeTrek says:

    As did many other bohemians and artists… :-3

    Ton ami,
    Toulouse :-3

  14. Jaskamal Singh says:

    Looks great delicious dairy products.
    Wish i could visit Switzerland (alps) once in my lifetime…:)

  15. Toulouse LeTrek says:

    It would be an incredible journey, Jaskamal … The air here is clean and crisp, the cows are happy (I was told that the farmers take pride in taking the best care of their animals) and of course, their milk will reflect the nutritious green pastures of the alps, the clean air and their happy disposition. There’s a reason why Switzerland is renowned for its chocolate! Every part of it is carefully nurtured with healthy ingredients. Hope you make it there some day, Jaskamal.

    Tell them Toulouse sent you! Meow!

    Ton ami,
    Toulouse :-3

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