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Schloss Hotel Swiss Chalet: The Vision of a Prince

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The Schloss Hotel in Merlischachen, Switzerland

Nina will tell you that she found this charming luxury 4-star hotel, located on Lake Lucerne. Well, she did drive there, so, I suppose that from an existential point of view you could say that she “found” it; but it was I who discovered it during my extensive and meticulous internet research. And, truth be told, I navigated us to the Schloss Hotel, in the heart of the pastoral village of Merlischachen (otherwise, I might be writing this from Italy!).

The Schloss Hotel complex celebrates Prince Joseph Seeholzer’s vision of luxury living and dining in a castle (schloss is German for castle). In 1969, the prince converted his original 17th Century farmhouse into a restaurant-inn, the Swiss Chalet, a gourmet restaurant with charming guest rooms upstairs. He followed in 1980 with construction of two hotels, the Schloss Hotel and Château Golden Gate. At the same time he converted the barn adjoining the original farmhouse into a large

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Prince Joseph 1st befriends Toulouse

eating and meeting facility, Astrid Hall , with additional bridal suite (e.g., the Storchenzimmer) and a cool bar, the Queen’s Club. In 1991 he built the Jagdschloss Château Golden Gate (hunting castle), up the hill and in 2006 added a 3rd floor to the Schloss Hotel with themed luxury rooms like the Moulin Rouge Suite, Egyptian Suite, Cowbell Suite, and Jaguar Suite (Yes! You sleep in a real 1964 MK 10!), among others.

Nina parked the rental car in the parking lot and we made our way into the lobby of the rustic castle-style Schloss Hotel. The lobby opened into an expansive hall with large beamed ceilings and rustic walls, decorated with portraits of “chivalrous individuals” and medieval weaponry (e.g., Swiss halberds or pole axes, goedendags or spiked clubs, and bills).

Nina proceeded to charm the staff with her signature smile and broken German and we got our key. We made our way to our room on the second floor, past antiques of farming tools, knight’s full trappings, and large wooden doors with small armor shields as door markers.

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Our room in the Schloss Hotel

Our door opened into a spacious and elegantly rustic room that faced the lake. The Swiss Alps rose majestically beyond, drawing the eye into a picture-perfect view. In keeping with the country castle theme, the room was draped in rich burgundy and wood and consisted of a comfortable bed, small “parlor” with desk and table and elegant chairs, wooden-latticed windows and French door that opened to a balcony overlooking the hotel gardens and small beach of Lake Lucerne. The bathroom was designed in a modern practical Euro-style that suited Nina’s taste for urban-travelling comfort.

Guests of the hotel complex get a complimentary buffet breakfast in the Schnapsbrennerei Bränte (the old distillery of the original 17th Century farmhouse, where they used to make schnapps). As with the rest of the converted farmhouse, the Prince preserved the quaint charm of the interior by using the original wooden walls, beamed ceilings and bottle-bottom windows, like that found in Chilon Castle on Lake Geneva. Every morning a full buffet of cereals, yogurts,

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The Swiss Chalet restaurant

boiled eggs, fresh croissants, butterzopf and pastries, along with quality cold meats and cheeses, and fruits and juices was spread out for the taking. Every morning Nina and I ordered café crème and feasted like royalty. En guete!

The restaurant upstairs from the distillery, offers fine dining with a rich and varied menu of delightful hors d’oeuvres, main dishes and desserts and a wine list with over 35 pages to choose from. Jörg Bächler, the residence manager, took us on a tour of the hotel complex and the first place Nina wanted to go was the wine cellar. Jörg obliged—after he showed us the rest of the complex, which included the adjoining Astrid Hall and Queen’s Club: an old barn that had been converted into a reception hall for weddings, and business and other group meals. The building houses several meeting/eating areas like the Küferstube, Bacchus Stübli, Foyer, and Astrid-Hall. Capable of seating 120 guests, the hall provides an elegant and

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The Bacchus Room

rich venue for receptions, followed by rollicking good fun upstairs in the cozy piano bar, the Queen’s Club, open nightly until 2 am. The prince dedicated Astrid Hall to the Queen of Belgium, who had tragically died in 1935 in a car accident a few miles away, near the town of Küssnacht. The walls are lined with old photos and memorabilia, timeless images and intriguing documents of pre-second World War Europe.

Jörg led us through the kitchen on our way to the wine cellar. There, we met Master Chef Werner Meier, who has been (along with his team of fifteen cooks) creating exquisite Swiss-countrified gourmet French cuisine at the Swiss Chalet since 1982. We watched, entranced, as a few of the cooks created a gourmet meal, before descending down the stairs to the wine cellar. At the entrance, inscribed on a large crate for all to see was their motto: “Weintrinker sehen gut aus, sind intelligent, sexy und gesund!” (Drinkers of wine look good, are intelligent, sexy and healthy!). Good motto, I thought, as Nina nodded her approval to me.

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The Swiss Chalet Wine Cellar

Racks full of bottles of red and white wines from all over the world lined the cellar walls. We wandered through the cellar, kept at a high humidity and a cool and constant temperature to ensure that the wines age and store well. As my eyes swept the dark room, I recalled that their wine list runs over thirty-five pages, and includes a wide range of varieties and types from the most popular wine, the Prince’s own Schlossweine (Cuvée du Châtelain), a Merlot Reserva from Chile (at FCH 49.80) to a 1999 Bordeaux Blanc (the Château d’Yquem), le Roi des Sauternes (at FCH 358.50).

Testing the iron barred gates guarding each wine rack, Nina asked if they were meant to keep the wine in or the people out. Jörg winked at me and suggested that if they sent food down the dumbwaiter, Nina could happily live here indefinitely.

To experience the entire complex, Jörg put us up in The 4-star Chateau Golden Gate- Jagdschloss (hunter’s castle),

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The Reception Area of the Jadgschloss-Chateau Golden Gate

situated up the hill from the other two buildings, and overlooking the village, Lake Lucerne and the Swiss Alps in the distance. The hotel celebrates the tradition of European hunting and is decorated with hunting trophies and portraits of hunters in various Swiss hunting garb, along with the signature armor; beams and heavy doors of an old castle. We were greeted at the door by a knight’s full armor then continued into a rustic lobby with hanging candle-lamps, long solid-wood meeting table, fireplace, and bottom-bottle windows (also known as crown glass or Butzenfenster). Our room on the third floor was large, bright and comfortable. Nina opened the sliding door to the Juliette balcony that overlooked the lake. The soothing tinkling of cow bells rose up to greet us as Swiss cows foraged in the villagers’ back yards below. This was definitely Switzerland and, yes, every cow has a bell.

One evening, we went to the rooftop terrace of the Jagtschloss and watched the sun set over Lake Lucerne as we feasted on a picnic supper of Butterzopf, Brie and sprouts, cold Cervelat (Swiss cooked sausage), Kartoffelsalat and a

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Genuine Swiss cows just below our hotel balcony

bottle of Pinot Gris (Malvoisie) from Valais. Nina brought Swiss chocolate for dessert. We ate, sipped wine and listened to the cheerful music of cow bells on the hills behind us as the deepening sky unveiled the blushing secrets of the snow-covered mountains.

The Schloss Hotel and its associated hotel buildings are situated on Luzernerstrasse 204, in the heart of the quiet village of Merlischachen. Amenities of both 4-star buildings include: pet friendly rooms, free wireless internet in rooms and public areas, buffet breakfast, conference rooms, solarium, indoor swimming pool with sauna & gym, and close proximity to a train station. One of the hotel’s most endearing features was the exquisite charm of its location in the tiny farming village of Merlischachen. Every night I fell asleep to the soothing murmur of cow bells. Merlischachen is a short drive from the bustling Luzern with convenient public transit (e.g., a train leaves Merlischachen every hour for Luzern).

You can book a room at the Schloss Hotel, the Swiss Chalet, or The Château Golden Gate (Jagdschloss) up on the hill at:

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Can you see me in the Jag?...Meow!

Luzernerstrasse 204
6402 Merlischachen, Switzerland
Tel. no. +41 (0)41 854 54 54

info@schloss-hotel.ch

http://www.schloss-hotel.ch/Frames/Welcome.htm

Photos by Nina Munteanu & Schloss Hotel

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Traveling in Switzerland: The Merula Bar in Merlischachen, where Brazil meets Switzerland

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A Happy Toulouse sips his Caipirinha on Lake Lucerne

Alexander, my new friend on Facebook, calls it “Caipirinha”. At least that’s how he advertizes this exotic drink at the Merula Bar that he and his wife Maira run on the shore of the Lake Lucerne in the little farming village of Merlischachen.

Located about 5 miles east of Lucerne, this charming village reflects the root of its name, which Alexander tells me loosely translates to “merry little town by the lake”.  That’s only one story; the locals give several stories of how the place got its name. One is that it was named after a brave knight Hermanno de Merlischachen, who apparently lived in a tower on the peninsula where an estate called “Burg” (fortress) still exists today. Alexander told us that the name Merlischachen also derives from the Latin word “merula,” which means blackbird, and from the German word “Schachen,” meaning a small forest on a lake or stream; one of the reasons he called his bar the Merula Bar. Yet another story comes from the local coat of arms which is a green branch of an alder tree, “Erlenzweig,” hung with flowers and fruit on a gold background. It’s reminiscent of “im Erlischachen”, hence Merlischachen. While Nina gravitated to the romance of the knight (after googling him, she found nothing about this mysterious knight), I liked the “forest on a lake with blackbirds” explanation. It is an apt name for this quiet and charming village, where the only sound that stirs as you fall asleep each night is the constant lullaby of cow bells.

We were staying at the Schloss Hotel-Swiss Chalet complex in Merlischachen and during our daily walks in the

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Lake Lucerne from Mount Rigi

village, we visited some of our Merlischachen friends, two Swiss cows grazing in a neighbor’s back yard, just below our suite. Our walk on the Schloss Hotel grounds park led us along Lake Lucerne. Called the Vierwaldstättersee (“lake of the four forested Cantons”) Lake Lucerne is the fourth largest lake in Switzerland with meandering arms that cut through steep valleys and stretch from the city of Lucerne to the mountains of Rigi and Pilatus.

Nina will tell you that she heard the lively music first; but I know that it was my impeccable nose for Croque Monsieur that led us down the park path from the Schloss Hotel to this lively cantina-bar. Other locals had already discovered this little haven on the lake and were basking in the warm sun with a great view of the Swiss Alps.

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The Charming Village of Merlischachen

We ordered two Croque Monsieurs and were thinking about what local beer we hadn’t yet tried when Alexander suggested the Caipirinha. Immediately intrigued, Nina asked him what it was.

Caipirinha is a traditional Portuguese Brazilian drink prepared with Cachaça (pronounced Ka-SHA-sa), lime juice, sugar and ice, Alexander explained. He then proceeded to mesmerize Nina by showing us how this wonderful drink from Brazilian cane sugar brandy is made. First he created a juicy “mash” of fresh limes (both flesh and peels) with Ypioca (Cachaça) using a mortar and pestle. Then he added ice (some people like to use crushed ice but we had chunks of ice) and brown sugar to taste.

Cachaça is the essential ingredient in Caipirinha, the national spirit of Brazil, Alexander told us. It is the spirit of Carnival, “the spirit of a country enjoying life.” Cachaça is a product of sugar cane and has a character somewhat

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Toulouse joins Alexander and Maira Eisenmann at the Merula Bar

similar to, though drier, than white rum (also made with cane sugar). However, while rum is produced from the molasses made from the sugar cane, Cachaça is produced directly from the juice of the cane. Ypióca Cachaça, the largest selling brand in Brazil, is produced only from the first crush. Locals drink Cachaça neat in small shot glasses. Others prefer a mix of Cachaça with lemon, passion fruit, tamarind, sugar and ice in a drink called a batida. Yet others drink it with limes, sugar and ice as a Caipirinha.

We sat on the patio and ate our Croque Monsieurs, feasting our eyes on the view of jeweled lake and snow-covered  mountains. Within moments our exotic taste of Rio came. The potent and colorful “mash” of Caipirinha did an lively Spanish dance in my mouth and awoke my taste buds with a song of tart freshness. My whiskers curled with delight.

Nina laughed at me: “Your cheeks are puffing out again, Toulouse!”

She was one to talk; her cheeks were “puffing out” too… LOL!

Here is the recipe:

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Ypioca Cachaça, the Brazilian ambrosia

Caipirinha is made using 1 lime cut into 4 pieces, 2 1/2 ounces Cachaça, 1 to 2 Tbs. fine cane sugar, and crushed ice. First you crush the pieces of lime with the sugar thoroughly, preferably with a mortar and pestle. Then you add the ice, Cachaça, and stir or shake well in a tumbler. The lime pieces should remain in the glass, adding brilliant color and texture to this playful and zesty drink.

Photos by Nina Munteanu

This site is powered by donations. For your reading pleasure I do not clutter it with advertizing; nor do I charge any of these fine establishments, events or places for my reviews. If you are a patron who enjoys my articles or at the receiving end of one of my reviews you can show your appreciation with a donation (see right top sidebar). 

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Cities of the World: Getting Lost in Altstadt Zurich

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view of Zurich's Limmat River from the QuaiBrucke

I can think of a lot of things worse than getting lost in old town Zurich; after all, practically every corner has a café, bistro, restaurant, konditorei, or old book or art shop—and there are many corners along the winding alleys—called gasses— and cobbled lanes of Altstadt. Nina and I started our walking tour around the old city of Zurich in the pink glow of early evening.

We started from the Alexander Hotel, where we were staying. The hotel is located on Niederdorf Strasse (yes, there is an Oberdorf-Strasse too!), right in the heart of the Rathaus quarter of the Altstadt (Old Town). This district
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The Rathaus in Altstadt Zurich

(Kreis 1) encompasses the area of the entire historical city before 1893 and corresponds generally to the area enclosed by the former city ramparts. We restricted our walking tour to the Rathaus quarter (right or east bank of the Limmat) and the Lindnhof quarter (left or west bank) within the old walls of the medieval city.

The Rathaus quarter is named for the town hall, built in the 1690s and was historically known as “greater town” (mehrere Stadt). Niederdorf Strasse was once the main thoroughfare of Medieval Zurich with craftmen’s houses
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Neiderdorf-Strasse from Hirschenplatz in Altstadt Zurich

stacked high along its narrow cobbled lanes.

The walk along Limmatquai with its shops and cafés gave us a wonderful view of old architecture and bridges as well as several churches, each complete with clock tower along the river. Built in the 19th century, the Limmatquai runs from Central to Bellevue and includes some old guild houses from the 1400s (e.g., Zunfthaus zur Haue the guild house of salt merchants). Across the Limmat we could see the tower of St. Peter`s church (the broad tower with Europe’s largest clock dial at a diameter of 8.70 meters) and south of it the Fraumünster cathedral (pointed light green roof). The Fraumünster was founded in 853 by King Louis. The church and its convent was inhabited by the female members of the aristocracy of southern Germany.
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Toulouse basks in the evening light with Munsterbrucke behind

Swans and other waterfowl kept us company as we strolled south toward Lake Zurich, past the Mühlesteg footbridge, Rudolf-Brun-Brücke, between Mühlegasse and Uraniastrasse, Rathausbrücke  just north of the town hall, the Münsterbrücke between Grossmünster and Fraumünster, and finally  to Quaibrücke, connecting Bellevue and Bürkliplatz—and the last bridge before the Limmat empties into the lake.

From the Quaibrücke you get a great view of Lake Zurich to the south. When the weather is nice, you can even see the Swiss Alps, about 100 km away. Turning to look north up the Limmat, we had a charming view of the Altstadt, with its prominent church towers and bridges and the boat marinas in the foreground.

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Zurich Altstadt from the right bank

We eventually back-tracked to an old staircase that lead to the majestic Grossmünster cathedral with its twin towers and interesting glass-art. Nina did a double take after I pointed the west windows to her: they were made of sliced rock! ). Grossmünster is probably Carolingian in origin and was the mother church of the Reformation in Switzerland under Ulrich Zwingli.

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The Grossmunster Cathedral in Altstadt Zurich

The church was built in the late Roman style and completed in 1280. It consists of a basilica with three naves (the middle nave dates from 1180), a choir and a crypt (both date from 1100). The oldest parts include the crypt and remains of a Romanesque cloister with statuary from the 11th and 12th centuries. The chancel window was created by Augusto Giacometti. In 1781 the original pointed tower tops caught fire after being struck by lightning and were replaced by the present rounded tower tops. We got there just in time to hear the baritone clangs of the church bells.

From there we walked up Kirchgasse to Hirschengraben and down Obere Zäune into a lovely courtyard. We wandered past a cool fountain where Neugasse and Trittligasse meet. In the Middle Ages this area was a popular residential area among the clergy of the Grossmünster and wealthy scholars. We saw several houses with attractive courtyards, gardens and roof terraces.
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Zurich Altstadt on left bank of Limmat

At the bottom of Neugasse my sensitive nose picked up a delectable aroma: chocolate and crème café: I’d found the Café Schober, Confiseur and Konditorei: on Niederdorf, located on the corner of Napfgasse und Münstergasse, across from the Kolonialwaren Geschäft Schwarzenbach, a cool store that sold exotic dried fruits, spices, coffees and other confectionaries. For some chocolate aficionados Zurich means “Sprungli am Bahnhoffstrasse”… and yes, the chocolate at Sprungli is probably the best you can buy in the entire world… But Café Schober had charm and character.

Further down Münstergasse Nina was drawn to a very fine Spanish restaurant, Bodega Espaniola, a Spanish wine tavern that since 1974 has been serving culinary specialties from the Iberian Peninsula. I insisted on the Konditorei and guess who won out… That raspberry chocolate truffle was delicious!… :-3

Well, okay, we never were that lost, because we ended up back on Niederdorf-Strasse, past Rundmarkt and I chose the Johanniter Brasserie,
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Bodega Espanola in Altstadt Zurich

close to our hotel, for a wonderful authentic Swiss meal of pork schnitzel, roesti with mushroom sauce and beer. The Johanniter was initially a brewery after a major fire in 1280 destroyed the stacked houses there; it was then remodeled as a restaurant and butcher shop in 1901. The vaulted ceilings and old brewery equipment give it a wonderful jolly atmosphere.

We did walk some more after but I can’t tell you where we went because we really did get lost! But somehow we found our way back to our beds, sated and happy.
“The Niederdorf” is more than just the street and is generally known to encompass a region of Altstadt that includes Rindermarkt and Neumarkt, Froschaugasse and the area of the medieval Jewish quarter, the
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The Johanniter on Niederdorf-Strasse

Predigerkirche (the former blackfriars’ abbey) at Zähringerplatz (historically the city hospital, now housing the city library) and the Zähringerstrass. The mehrere Stadt between the Niederdorf and the Oberdorf (between Rathaus and Grossmünster) includes the Münstergasse, Obere Zäune, Untere Zäune and the Barfüsserkloster (the former Franciscan abbey) as well as a number of alleys leaving Münstergasse: Marktgasse, Spiegelgasse, Krebsgasse, Ankengasse, Römergasse and Kirchgasse.

When in Zurich next, leave your car behind and take a walk. Getting lost is part of the fun. For more on my philosophy of getting lost, go to my Zen of Travel Page.
 
Photos by Nina Munteanu
 
This site is powered by donations. For your reading pleasure I do not clutter it with advertizing; nor do I charge any of these fine establishments, events or places for my reviews. If you are a patron who enjoys my articles or at the receiving end of one of my reviews you can show your appreciation with a donation (see right top sidebar). 

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Eating and Drinking our Way through Nova Scotia: Lunenburg’s Mariner King Hotel

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Lunenburg waterfront

“Comb your whiskers, Toulouse!” Nina announced, barging in through the door of our apartment in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia. “We’re eating out!”

I glanced up from the newspaper and glimpsed her flushed beaming face. I decided that she’d either been drinking without me or had encountered something—or someone—interesting. I concluded the latter (she just wouldn’t do the former!), plus she was clutching her camera with triumphant glee. She vindicated me with her explanation: “I’ve discovered some cool stuff and the neatest place to eat!”

We’d recently moved to Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, a charming fishing town and an ENESCO designated World Heritage site. Settled by mostly German farmers in the mid 1700s, Lunenburg is home to the schooner Bluenose II and known for its vernacular architecture. Its dominant hillside setting has remained largely unchanged since

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Heritage house with "Lunenburg Bump"

 the 1700s.  A friend of mine described Lunenburg as a “small San Francisco”. While this is a good description, it doesn’t accurately portray the town’s character: its European-style maritime charm; its steep lanes and historic buildings; its cozy cafés where salty characters in woolen hats mingle with world-known avant-garde artists and discuss projects in London, Toronto and New York; and its small eclectic shops with names like The Laughing Whale, Adam & Knickle, EmOcean, Large Marge’s Diner, Jenny Jib, The Tin Fish, The Scuttlebutt, The Black Duck, and Windbag Company.  

After some meticulous grooming, I let Nina put me in her backpack and we left the apartment in search of adventure. We were being joined by two artist friends and had time before meeting them for our supper reservation, so Nina showed me some of Lunenburg, where she’d been taking photographs.

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parlor in the Mariner King Hotel

Many of Lunenburg’s two-story British classical Georgian houses were remodeled in eclectic Victorian Gothic or Italianate styles, with mansard roofs that featured what’s called a “Lunenburg Bump” (usually an overhang or front piece above the central doorway) and flanked by two attractive dormers (see pictures below). What struck

me also was that these elegant homes were painted in bold but tasteful colors. I saw bright red, green, salmon, pink, lavender and, of course, light yellow (worthy of a whole post) forming a cheerful and tasteful tapestry of color.

The Mariner King Historic Inn with its elegant restaurant, the King’s Plate, was no exception.  It was built in a Georgian style by Dr. Charles Bolman in 1830 to mark the coronation of King William IV of England, the “Mariner King”, and the first British Royal to come to Nova Scotia.

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Toulouse gets on top of a Sagittarius vodka

 Six years later the Zwicker family bought it and “Victorianized” it along with the famous Lunenburg “bump” over the entrance. The Reiblings bought the hotel in 2007 and remodeled it as a boutique hotel decorated with tasteful eclectic furnishings and art obtained from all over the world.   

Nina had earlier met Susan Reibling, the owner, who had shown Nina the historic hotel. While there, Nina was offered excellent coffee, which was enough to convince her of their class and fine dining. She uses coffee as a barometer for good cuisine. Not a bad idea… :-3

We met our friends in front of the Inn and still had some time before supper so we lounged in the front parlor

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Toulouse waits for his turn with the morel soup

 where our hostess, Joanna, recommended that Nina order a “Sagittarius”. The Sagittarius is a cocktail of limejuice, dill, cracked pepper, muddled, with a shot of vodka, shaken over ice, strained over ice and topped with tonic. Nina offered me a few sips and I thought it superb. Before I knew it, she was fishing me out of the drink! I’m not sure how I got there, but I was feeling no pain.  :-3

“Doesn’t take much,” Nina’s artist friend Teresa quipped, raising her brow at my aromatic wet fur as Nina pulled me out of the drink. “He doesn’t have much body weight.”

We were called into supper, which consisted of creamy mushroom soup with morels (It was exquisite and rivaled the mushroom cream soup we had in Brio, Detroit, a while

ago). Nina and I shared an entré of Beef Tenderloin Stroganoff with pearl onions and mushrooms. That was

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Toulouse gets first dibs on the main course

 followed by a Bavarian Cream, drizzled with caramel sauce.

While Nina and I fought for the last spoon of desert, Konrad Haumering, the chef from Meunster Germany, joined us. Luckily, Nina decided to behave and removed her spoon from my face. Recognizing me, Konrad invited me to the back for a private tour of the kitchen facility, where I met his assistants and other members of the hotel staff.

I think Nina was miffed that she didn’t get the tour, but then she’s not

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Chef Konrad and Toulouse discuss recipes

the cool travel cat… :-3

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Cities of the World: San Diego & the Sophia Hotel

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Al Fresco dining at the Currant

When Nina and I came to San Diego last year for her educational book show at the Convention Centre, we stayed at the luxurious Sophia Hotel, only blocks away in the Gaslamp Quarter.

So, when we came recently to film an interview in nearby Alpine, there was no question where we would stay while in town. And that’s not just because it’s a “pet-friendly” hotel, either (as if that’s relevant to Toulouse, the Travel Cat. However, I’m not blind to my less fortunate and less eloquent cousins and on their behalf I view this as a wonderful bonus feature of the hotel). This service owes its existence to general manager Andrea Winslow and her love of animals. Thanks, Andrea!

The Sofia Hotel is a recognized member of the National Trust Historical Hotels of America. This Neo Gothic building was originally designed along

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Britney and her dog in pet-friendly Sophia Hotel

 with the stage/bus terminal by architect Wilber Peugh in 1926 with a crenellated roofline and terra cotta and plaster embellishments. It was San Diego’s first hotel with “in-suite” bathrooms and their marketing slogan read, “A Room and a Bath for Two and a Half.” Were they thinking of moi?…Formerly known as the Pickwick Hotel, the Sofia was part of the “Pickwick Stages”, one of three major stage lines in the United States established by Charles Wesley Grise in 1911. It later merged with Greyhound in 1929.

In 1986 the hotel was refurbished into a boutique-hotel by its new owners with the help of talented interior designer

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Toulouse gets "Currant" with Jeremy the bartender

 Anjun Razvi and became the Sofia Hotel.  Interesting design features include tasteful use of fossil fauna and flora, prehistoric-looking plants and lamps that act as storyboards to showcase the history of the hotel. The Sofia Hotel was featured prominently in Dashiell Hammett’s popular mystery novel, The Maltese Falcon.

After checking into our room on the 6th floor, Nina and I decided to have dinner at the hotel’s lounge and “American Brasserie with French influence” called Currant. As we waited to be seated, we ordered specialty cocktails from Jeremy the bartender. I chose “the Currant”, an exquisite mixture of champagne, lychee juice, Chambord, and pomegranate seeds. It’s a delicate drink with an exotic sweetness that reminds me of a tropical island beach. I can’t remember what Nina ordered, but I do remember her glancing covetously at my drink.

The bistro offers al fresco dining and the host seated us within a nicely

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Toulouse savors a Creme Brule with cappucino

 decorated enclosure under an outdoor heater. We were served by Omar, a charming Mexican who may become the next CEO of Disney Studios, given his enthusiastic and creative promotional genius. Speaking of genius, his son Osmar Pete at the tender age of 2-years was bestowed the blue ribbon for artistic achievement at the Women’s Club annual Art Festival. His abstract watercolors sell for up to $1000.

I had the lobster bisque. Hoping for a sip of bisque, Nina blithely shared her canard salad of duck confit, arugula, toasted macadamia nuts, and strawberries with orange-balsamic reduction. It was exquisite, I must say! The duck confit was wonderfully tender and of course rich with flavor. We then shared the duck confit linguine, cooked in extra virgin olive oil with roasted garlic and shallots and parmigiano reggiano. Of course we had wine with the meal but I honestly can’t remember what it was! It doesn’t matter

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Omar the waiter confers with Toulouse on being a celebrity

because it went well with the Vanilla Bean Crème Brûlée. :-3

Amenities of the Sofia Hotel include 211 guestrooms and spacious suites, yoga studio, business centre and fitness centre, as well as spa and treatment room. This is a classy converted hotel with charming service and a very friendly atmosphere. The staff were gracious and helpful and showed lots of humor (I know–Nina is a good barometer for that) from the Concierge to the staff at the front desk and cleaning crew.

The Sofia Hotel is located on West Broadway in San Diego, telephone number 619-234-9200.

Tell them that Toulouse sent you! :-3

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John and Matt man the front desk

Photos by Nina Munteanu

This site is powered by donations. For your reading pleasure I do not clutter it with advertizing; nor do I charge any of these fine establishments, events or places for my reviews. If you are a patron who enjoys my articles or at the receiving end of one of my reviews you can show your appreciation with a donation (see right top sidebar). 

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