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In Search of Castles: More Than Just Cheese at Gruyères

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Medieval town of Gruyeres

Most of you know about gruyère, a hard yellow Swiss cheese, whose flavor lingers with an earthy complexity of nuts, cream, salt and mystery. Which came first, though? The cheese or the town after which it is named? In fact, the origins of Gruyères, its inhabitants and its name lie still in mystery. 

I’d read a little about this charming village and castle already. The 1500 inhabitants of the tiny medieval village of Gruyères live atop a hill (801 m above sea level) that commands a magnificent view of the fertile valley of Gruyère and the Préalpe Massifs of Moléson, Dent du Broc, du Chamois and du Bourgoz. Celtic tombs were unearthed at the foot of the hill; and, below the borough of St. Germain, near the rectory of the village, coins and statue fragments prove that the Romans had been there too. According to the historian Henri Naef, the Gruyères family received its title and power from the Carolingian kings.gruyeres cheese 150x150 In Search of Castles: More Than Just Cheese at Gruyères

Reason enough to visit Gruyères, I thought. Excited by our mission — to eat, and drink, and discover history — Jacques and I set out from Aigle on Highway 11 through the Vaudois Alps. 

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La Lecherette ski resort

We didn’t realize as we negotiated the winding snow-covered roads that we were following the narrow corridor of the crane’s migration. It was snowing heavily this day in early January as my ToulouseMobile “skied” through world-famous resort villages like La Lecherette, les Mosses  and Leysin, all covered in knee-deep fresh snow and alive with ski and boarding frenzy. Along this same general route some thirty thousand cranes migrate every fall and spring as part of a longer trek between Scandinavia and North Africa.

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Gruyeres coat of arms

You may well ask: how is this lovely bird connected to our journey to Gruyères? I thought you’d never ask! You see, the crane (“grue” in French) is the town’s heraldic emblem and the coat of arms of Gruyères since 1221. Some relate that Gruerius, the legendary founder of Gruyères, captured a crane and chose it as his heraldic in 436 AD, inspiring the name Gruyères. It is an apt symbol for this enduring and charming place as the crane symbolizes vigilance, long life and eternity. Its heraldic form (rising argent crane on a field of gules) can be found all over the castle grounds, particularly in the stained glass windows and outer lanterns.

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Gruyeres castle watch tower

We descended the alpine pass and emerged from a winter maelstrom into the stillness of the snow-dusted valley of Gruyère. I spotted the hilltop castle and medieval town, rising like a beacon over the pastoral landscape, long before we reached Pringy. The signs led us up the hill and I parked outside the pedestrian-only medieval village (no vehicles allowed in the village!).

Medieval Gruyères:

We entered through Chavonne Gate, which opened onto the wide cobbled main street lined with 15th to 17th Century houses and shops. Jacques and I stood next to the central fountain (dated 1805) in the village’s lower borough, taking stock. The wide street wasn’t crowded. Given that Château de Gruyères is the second most visited fortress in Switzerland (only after the Castle of Chillon on Lake Geneva), I concluded that winter was a good time to visit this village to experience it in its more natural state.  Up the hill toward the castle, St. Germain Gate divides the village into upper and lower boroughs. The gate is actually part of the smaller St. Germain castle, which now houses the HR Giger museum (Giger, who was born in Chur, is best known for his fantastical artwork for the SF movie “Alien”). 

We didn’t make it out of the Lower Borough that day…

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Toulouse warms himself over the raclette

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scraping the melted raclette onto potatoes

My hollow stomach growled; it was already past lunchtime. Jacques pointed to several restaurants that serve food specialties from the Gruyere region: Swiss fondue, raclette and deserts made with double cream cheese. “Or what about Roesti served with veal in a delicious mushroom cream sauce?” Jacques teased me with another signature Swiss meal. I surrendered and we entered l’Hotel de Ville, a rustic eating establishment, where we shared a raclette meal. Raclette is a semi-firm cow’s milk cheese that originated in the alpine region of the Valais. It is traditionally served with potatoes, pickled onions, gherkins and dried meat like jambon cru and viande des Grisons. Kirsch (cherry liqueur), herbal tea or Fendant (local white wine) are traditionally drunk with the meal. I chose a Pinot Gris, which complemented the meal nicely. We scraped the melted cheese off its heated coupelle in a table-top “grill” onto our plates of potatoes and our little stuffed tummies thanked us. The term raclette comes from the French word racler, meaning “to scrape”.

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St. Germain Gate and "Le Chalet"

Feeling rather satisfied with tummies appeased, we proceeded

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raspberries and cream

 on our tour toward the castle, climbing up the road past the antique grain measures and the Calvary. Alas! Yet another distraction conspired against our attempts to get beyond the Lower Borough that day: a sign at the door of Le Chalet de Gruyères that simply said: “framboises et crème” (raspberries and cream). And this was no ordinary cream; it was Gruyère double cream, made from milk of cows that had pastured in the local alps. Jacques cocked one brow and gave me a sliding smile. We hadn’t had desert.

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Toulouse's cafe creme

We entered the cozy traditional café and sat by a window that overlooked St. Germain courtyard. I ordered a café crème with the raspberries and cream that we shared between us. The server, in traditional Swiss folk dress, handed me my café crème along with a chocolate tub of double cream! Bonus! By the time we left the café, dusk had fallen and we decided to return the next day to devote our time to the Upper Borough and the castle.

Castle Gruyères:      

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Town of Gruyeres seen from the castle

We returned the next day and this time we climbed the cobbled road directly through St. Germain Gate, past the H.R. Giger Museum and the Tibetan museum, straight to the castle.

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St. Germain Gate and stronghold

Seen in the winter light and dusted with snow, the castle stood in quiet dress, showing its unequivocal face.  Only a few tourists wandered the premises and I felt like I had the place to myself. From watch tower to spiral staircase and keep, the castle ambience transported me as I walked through eight centuries of architecture, history and culture. The castle and its grounds enthralled: from the 12th century outer ramparts to the 15th century leaded butzenscheibenfenster (crown-glass or bottle glass windows) of richly furnished baroque halls, and 19th century sculptured garden in the outer bailey.

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French garden and ramparts

Highlights of my castle tour included the walk along the 15th century wooden-roofed ramparts of the inner and outer baileys with the jardin à la française, a beautifully sculpted French geometrical-style garden created by the Balland family in the late 19th century at the back of the castle courtyard.

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Outer castle rampart

The vaulted kitchen contained a fireplace big enough to cook an entire ox. Jacques pointed out the 17th century sandstone oven and kindly informed me that in medieval times it was used to bake tarts, galantines, and pies. I think he was still hungry (it wasn’t my fault that he ate slowly and I got the lion’s share of the raspberries and cream… :-3 )

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Salle des Chevaliers

The Salle des Chevaliers (Knights room) was another highlight of the castle interior. Painted in the mid-1800s with richly evocative scenes, the elegant room decorated in 19th century furniture conjured meetings of knights before battle. Paintings on the walls celebrate the colorful character of the counts and townspeople in an interesting mix of historical events and

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Inner Bailey

 legend: one depicts when enemies attempted to seize the town of Gruyères in 1100 AD but were forced back by the townswomen (after the men had all left to join the crusade) — the women tied lighted candles to the horns of their goats to frighten the enemy soldiers; another panel depicts how Count Rudolph III seized the castle of Rue in 1227 to rescue a noblewoman held prisoner there.

Cut to the Cheese:

Desalpe” is a traditional mountain festival in the fall when cows make their way down to the plain after more than four months of grazing in alpine pastures. Armaillis (cowherders of Vaud and Fribourg) dressed in bredzons (traditional workclothes) lead the cows with brightly flowered headdresses and huge 400 lb bells hanging from their necks in a procession toward the valley fields below where a festival of food, drink and song await.desalpe1 150x150 In Search of Castles: More Than Just Cheese at Gruyères

La Maison du Gruyere is a working dairy in Pringy, below the village, where visitors can watch the famous local cheese being made. Besides touring the larger mechanized cheese production, La Maison gives a demonstration of the artesian method of cheese making using a large copper pot over a wood fire. 

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wrapping and pressing gruyere curds

The Gruyères cheese festival occurs every year in the early summer including demonstrations of artisan cheese preparation in the centre of the village, alphorn concerts in the St. Germain courtyard and flag throwing.  

Let the gentle tinkling of cow bells lull you to sleep when you stay at La Ferme du Bourgoz, an authentic farmhouse Bed and Breakfast located at the foot of Gruyères.

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making butter at La Ferme Bourgoz

 Elaine and Jacques Murith provide a cozy working farm and serve an authentic farm breakfast made from local products, including fresh bread, family-made cheese and butter and exquisite jam. The farm is a five minute hike from the town.  

 
Castle Historical Facts:
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The town of Gruyeres at night

Constructed around 1270, the Château de Gruyères was continuously lived in by the counts of Gruyere (nineteen of them) until the mid-16th century. The richly furnished castle, rebuilt after a fire in 1493. The last of the Gruyères counts, Michel, went bankrupt in 1554 and died in exile. The castle then became residence to the bailiffs and then to the prefects sent by Fribourg. In 1849 John Bovy bought the castle from the Fribourg government, which planned to demolish it. His brother-in-law Emile Balland restored the rampart walks and put in running water. John’s  brother, Daniel, an invalid after a bout of rheumatism, went to live at the castle and decided to restore it; he  invited some of the best artists to be his guests, including French landscape artist Corot. The castle was then bought back by the canton of Fribourg in 1938, made into a museum and opened to the public.

Contacts:

Chateau de Gruyeres: tel 026 921 21 02; www.chateau-gruyeres.ch

La Maison du Gruyere: tel 026 921 84 00; www.lamaisondugruyere.ch

La Ferme du Bourgoz: Jacques and Eliane Murith; info@lafermedubourgoz.ch/; tel.+41 (0)26 921 26 23 +41 (0) 26 921 26 23; http://www.lafermedubourgoz.ch/

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Western Switzerland and the Medieval Walled Town of Murten

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Hauptgasse in Murten

As I got off the plane in Zurich Airport, “tardis” in paw, something told me to go west, so I unpacked my sturdy ToulouseMobile and took the Freeway toward Bern and Neuchâtel. I was heading for Romandie, the predominantly French-speaking part of Switzerland, with its rolling hills, great cities and atmospheric medieval towns, small villages and ancient churches. A place whose strong French-Swiss cultural identity embraces the shores of Lake Geneva, on whose banks lie Geneva, Lausanne, Vevey and Montreux.

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Medieval walls of Murten

I stopped short of Neuchatel, at the medieval walled town of Murten (Morat in French). This charming village lies on the eastern shore of the Murten See (Lac de Morat) and is steeped in history. In 1476 the Swiss Confederation thwarted the onslaught of the army of overly ambitious Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy. Was it their impeccable sense of timing? The world-famous watch-making industry of the Swiss originated right here, after all, in western Switzerland.   

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street in Murten

The town was founded by the Zähringer dynasty in the 12th century and is still encircled by walls dating from the 12th to the 15th centuries. Hauptgasse, the main street through the old town, is lined with 16th century arcaded houses with overhanging eaves. The rampart walk, reached from several points along Deutsche Kirchgasse, offers views of the Murtensee, the castle and the old town’s brown-tiled houses. The courtyard of the 13th century castle commands a great view of the lake. The Berntor (Porte de Berne) with its baroque gatehouse and clock dating from 1712 forms an attractive entrance to this charming medieval village.

After driving through the gate, I parked in front of the 14th Century Adler Hotel — which

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flammkuchen on New Year's Eve at the Adler

 had been the guesthouse to various historic figures such as Goethe, Casanova, and the dukes of Savoy, among others — and took a room there. It was New Year’s Eve; so, close to midnight, I descended to the Irish pub below and enjoyed several beers accompanied by several pieces of flammkuchen (a kind of Swiss pizza made with bread dough rolled out very thin in the shape of a rectangle and covered with fromage blanc, thinly sliced onions, and in this case vegetables, mushrooms (forestière) and gratinée with added gruyère cheese. Flammkuchen—or Tarte flambée—is actually an Alsatian dish and cooked in a wood-fire oven.

It wasn’t long before a strange looking black “bear” with a red and white toque approached me. I caught his straying glances at my rather large flammkuchen. His incredulous expression spoke the obvious: you’re going to eat that whole thing???

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Monnier Tea Room arcade

Instead, he asked in a strong French accent, “May I join you?”

I tried not to stare at his toque whose design was the Canadian flag. He introduced himself as Jacques from Granby Québec and informed me that he was hitching rides across Switzerland (in the winter?!?) and was heading to Zermatt to do a little skiing. I thought: another crazy Canadian! And invited him to sit with me. It was, after all, lots to eat and the New Year not quite upon us…

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Monnier Tea Room bustles on New Year's Day

We cheerfully saw-in the New Year and then met the following day for a late lunch. Hardly anything was open, being New Year’s Day. The streets appeared abandoned except for the odd sightseeing tourist and wandering local.

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pastries to dream of...

Smartly deciding to follow a couple of well-dressed locals, Jacques led us to an inviting place beneath the arcade of Hauptgasse:  La Confiserie Monniere, a stylish tea-house in the tradition of a confiserie /patisserie / boulangerie / traiteur. It was open! We entered the bustling place and realized that this was where the town had ended up! We were instantly surrounded by exotic daily-made pastries and breads, fine artisanal chocolates, and

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eye-catching quiches

 gourmet lunch treats—as customers crowded the counters in search of a gastronomic feast. We stood in a swirling aromatic sea of seductive fragrances. As I peered over their diverse chocolates, a friendly server informed me that one of their popular chocolate specialties is the plum praline, dried plums filled with delicious chocolate cream, coated with the finest chocolate and a dusting of unsweetened cocoa. Magical!

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Monnier's elegant Tea Room

Jacques and I took a table in the tea-room in the back and the friendly waitress brought us a lovely gourmet sandwich followed by Black Forest cake and café crème.

I sat back and enjoyed the moment. Jacques had agreed to join me on my trip, since both our destinations were eventually the alpine resort town of Zermatt.

All in all, not a bad way to greet the first day of the New Year, I thought.  Hello, 2012! Hello, café crème! Hello, Swiss pastry! Hello, Magic!

Ce sera un an merveilleux! Bonne Année!

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Romania’s Brâncusi in Paris and New York

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Brancusi's Sleeping Muse

“Ce qui est réel n’est pas l’apparence mais l’idée, l’essence des choses.”—Constantin Brâncusi 

Today Google is celebrating the 135th birthday of Romanian sculptor Constantin Brâncusi (1876-1957) with a doodle that features seven of his sculptures.

Brancusi was born February 19, 1876 in Romania and died March 16, 1957 in Paris, my hometown.Brâncusi is considered one of the founding figures of modern sculpture and one of the most original artists of the twentieth-century. His groundbreaking carvings introduced abstraction and primitivism into sculpture for the first time, and were as important as Picasso’s paintings to the development of modern art.

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Brancusi's sculptures googled

Brâncusi grew up in the village of Hobisa Romania, close to Romania’s Carpathian Mountains, an area rich in a tradition of folk crafts, particularly woodcarving. Geometric patterns of the region are can be seen in his later works.

His parents were poor peasants who earned a meager living through hard labor. As a boy Constantin herded the family’s flock of sheep. He showed talent for carving objects out of wood, and often ran away from home to escape the bullying of his father and older brothers.

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Constantin Brancusi

Brâncusi trained initially as a carpenter and stonemason. When Brâncusi was 18, an industrialist, impressed by Brâncusi’s talent for carving, entered him in the Craiova School of Arts and Crafts (Scoala de meserii), where he pursued his love for woodworking. He graduated with honors in 1898, then enrolled in the Bucharest School of Fine Arts, where he received academic training in sculpture. One of his earliest surviving works, under the guidance of his anatomy teacher, Dimitrie Gerota, is a masterfully rendered écorché (statue of a man with skin removed to reveal the muscles underneath) which was exhibited at the Romanian Athenaeum in 1903. Though just an anatomical study, it foreshadowed the sculptor’s later efforts to reveal essence rather than merely copy outward appearance.

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Toulouse relaxes by the Seine with Notre Dame behind

Eventually Brâncusi traveled to Munich and then settled in Paris in 1904, where the avant-garde community of intellectuals and artists openly welcomed him. He worked for two years in the workshop of Antonin Mercié of the École des Beaux-Arts, and was invited to enter the workshop of Auguste Rodin. Even though he admired the eminent Rodin he left the Rodin studio after only two months, saying, “Nothing can grow under big trees.”

Drawing inspiration from African and oriental art in addition to Rodin’s work, Brâncusi found his own unique voice in the simple form. Reminiscent of the clean poetic strokes of Canadian Group of Seven artist Lawren Harris, Brâncusi was a “purist” who sought to reduce his art to a few basic elements. His art was subtle yet complex, like a deep pool waiting to embrace you. Complexity lay coiled inside each polished piece, poised to reveal the poetry of its deepest intimacy. “Witness the studied serenity and distilled eroticism of Sleeping Muse,” proclaimed Nicola Hodge and Libby Anson in their book World’s Greatest and Most Popular Artists and Their Works. This 1910 bronze (pictured above) can be viewed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York—another one of my favorite places—and maybe one of yours.

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Toulouse enjoys the Met in NYC

A reconstruction of Brâncusi’s studio in Paris is open to the public. The Brâncusi Atelier lies near the Pompidou Centre, in the rue Rambuteau. It’s worth a trip and while you’re at it, check out the Pompidou Centre.

Brâncusi’s sculptures are very fetching; what I mean is they fetch a great deal! In 2002, one of his sculptures named Danaide sold for $18.1 million. It was the highest that a sculpture piece had ever sold for at auction. In May 2005 one of his pieces from Bird in Space broke that record, selling for $27.5 million in a Christie’s auction. Then in February 2009 in the Yves Saint Laurent/Pierre Bergé sale his sculpture Madame L.R. sold for  €29.185 million ($37.2 million), setting a new historical record. Well, don’t look at me. I didn’t buy it…(but I know who did…meow)!

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Brancusi's Le Baiser (The Kiss)

I’m Toulouse LeTrek, the COOL Travel Cat! Meow…

“Munceste ca un sclav, porunceste ca un rege, creeazs ca un zeu.” (work like a slave, command like a king, create like a god)– Constantin Brâncusi 

 

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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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The Zen of Travel: Getting the Best Seat on the Plane

toulouse backpack travel edited 1 237x300 The Zen of Travel: Getting the Best Seat on the Plane

Toulouse on the go!

You’ve all experienced it: cramped legs competing with your stowed luggage, the incessant fight over the armrest, the kid kicking your back seat or the man in front of you reclining into your lap.

Exit rows, aisle or window seats and seats close to the front of the plane area typically considered the best for various reasons that range a gamut from comfort, to convenience and to safety.

Business people often prefer to sit close to the front of the plane so they can rush out ahead of everyone else to get to their all-important meeting on time. If you’re a nervous flyer, you might want to sit over the wing, where less turbulence occurs. If you are long-of-leg and looking for more leg room, an aisle seat gives you a chance to stretch—so long as you don’t trip the flight attendant handing out meals. They don’t like that and your chances of getting a meal go down considerably. The window seat gives you a view for those scenic flights, particularly over the Rockies, and during overnight flights it gives you a place to rest your head, so you don’t have to rely on the shoulder of that pesky passenger you were fighting the arm rest for earlier.

Experienced travelers suggest that “bulkhead seats” offer more legroom. Nina found this to be the case, but didn’t enjoy the somewhat claustrophobic feeling of facing a wall at arm’s length for six hours. Besides, not all bulkhead seats offer lots of room; some are cramped and uncomfortable. It depends on the plane. Which is why Nina and I have tried to familiarize ourselves with the various planes: each has its unique seating arrangement. If you want to know more use google, ask someone in the industry, or email me and I can tell you.

Surviving the Middle Seat

Recently, when we were rerouted at the last minute, Nina and I ended up with a middle seat on an international flight. That’s a long time to be the meat of a sandwich. The middle seat is usually the least desirable seat on the plane, for obvious reasons. Now you have to fight for two armrests!

Seats near the flight attendant stations can be noisy and therefore distracting and keep you from resting. Similarly, seats located near washrooms may fall prey to unsavory smells and high traffic.  Even this scenario can be used to

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Toulouse shares the middle seat with Nina's stuff

 advantage—if you’re a writer and if you’re Nina, that is. On a flight to Denver from New York, Nina took advantage of the long queue of people to interview them about New York City. She made them her guaranteed prey; they had nowhere to go! :-3

Safety First

People keep asking me about where they should sit that would give them the best chance of surviving a plane crash. These are very deep and negative questions that make me think they should consider taking the train instead. Unfortunately, and not surprisingly, there is no clear-cut answer. One answer that I’ve heard often is that the rear of the aircraft is the safest. However other studies indicate that the safest place to sit is in the front of the plane within five rows of an emergency exit.

Ways to Get a Better Seat

Here are ten tips that can help you get a better seat, the one you want.

  1. Buy your tickets early: pre-assignment gets more and more tricky the closer you approach the flight date.
  2. Select your seat when you book your flight: this is an option most airlines and flights offer. Instead of letting them randomly pre-assign a seat, you can select one. Be sure you know the plane and what you want in a seat before picking one.
  3. Checking in online as soon as you can also increases your chance of getting the seat you want. Most airlines let you check in online 24 hours before your flight leaves. You can confirm the seat you’ve already chosen or choose a better one.
  4. Get to the airport early so you don’t lose your seat
  5. Confirm your seat at the gate; this is your last chance to change your seat; sometimes you can change your seat there if the flight isn’t fully or over-booked
  6. Get to know the various planes, and where the best seats are. This way, you will know which seat to book when you buy your ticket. It pays to be savvy!

Okay, I only gave you six; they were condensed into a powerful few. Now go and have fun. I’m Toulouse the COOL Travel Cat.

Toulouse’s Zen of Travel: Life (and travel) is full of choices; make them all impeccable and get the most out of it.

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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