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Walking Trendy Yaletown Vancouver

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Yaletown waterfront

After my cockapoo friend Oli travelled across Canada from the Maritimes to trendy Yaletown in downtown Vancouver on the west coast, I knew I had to find an excuse to go visit. My opportunity came early when my good friend, SF writer Nina Munteanu, flew to Vancouver for Christmas. So, I tagged along and as Nina visited with family and friends in various suburbs, I hung out with Oli in hip Yaletown.

Yaletown got its name in the 19th century when the Canadian Pacific Railroad moved its rail yards and repair facilities from Yale in the Fraser River canyon to the north shore of False Creek—now called Yaletown. Called Vancouver’s little “Soho”, this old industrial part of town experienced a face-lift in the 1980s and emerged as downtown’s trendiest residential neighborhood of urban professionals. The popular seven-block area now provides a landscape of quality restaurants, cafés, boutiques, spas and galleries to local yuppies who live in industrial-retro studio flats and tourists who like to eat great food, experience a health spa or visit an avant-gard art gallery. Old brick warehouses have morphed into lofts and railway loading docks now serve as patio space for martini bars.

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Yaletown with view of Vancouver Library

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The Vancouver Public Library

Oli lives in a high-rise condominium on Homer Street with a view of the avant-garde coliseum-style Vancouver Public Library. He introduced me to his new friend, Slimey (a rather limp and lanky but well-stuffed frog who was soon to become much leaner).

“This is my new friend, Toulouse!” Oli barked between a mouthful of green slime. We greeted one another in the way that stuffed animals do—with a slight nod of respect. Slimey was Oli’s Christmas present and it looked like Oli had already introduced Slimey to the place—in the Oli way; I noticed little fluffy bits of stuffing here and there and it looked like Slimey was developing a sore throat.

That was when I suggested we go for a walk. Oli danced around the apartment, overjoyed to show me his new neighborhood and the sites. He proudly took me down the elevator to the street and we struck left into the heart of Yaletown.

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Toulouse drinks exquisite hot chocolate at Blenz

We strolled past the crowded Blue Water Café & Raw Bar on Hamilton Street, which serves a delicious selection of seafood from raw oysters to bouillabaisse. Oli pointed out Milestones Grill & Bar, George Lounge and Capones, which serves great spicy pizza. We stopped at Blenz Coffee on Helmcken Street, one of Oli’s favorite places. Besides a generally decent coffee, Blenz offers a nice heated patio where we sampled one of the richest hot chocolates in the country.

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Oli introduces me to Slimey

Further down the street, near the corner of Davie Street, I pointed out the Hapa Izakaya to Oli. He stared. “Hapa what?”

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Oysters at the Oyster House in Yaletown

I laughed. “It’s a Japanese bar that serves finger-snacks, something like a tapas bar but with liquor.”  Izakayas are the hottest new style of Japanese eating establishment in North America and sprouting in all the trendy parts of cities in North America. They focus on visiting and socializing; a style that is growing in trendy parts of town.

Oli then led me down Davie Street, past Urban Fare, Yaletown’s gourmet grocery store, to the waterfront: one of his favorite places. And I knew why… I’d never in my life seen so many well-dressed dogs in one place! Yaletown is known for its yuppy canine population. Go check out the gourmet pet stores! 

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Gourmet groceries at Urban Fare

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The cafe walk in Yaletown

Upwardly mobile and preppy in their bright and filigreed walking outfits, these ritsy dogs carry some serious “attitude”. Oli had come a long way from his Maritime roots in Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia. He’s still learning the ropes, I pondered, as a little chiwawa in a red cashmere turtleneck chased Oli in circles. Poor git; he’ll get it eventually. It’s a whole other culture.

After his typical exercise of chasing birds and introducing me to some of his extremely well dressed dog friends, Oli asked me if I wanted to take the little ferry boat across  to the Granville Island market.

I was tempted. Granville Island is a feast for the eyes and the taste buds. But just watching Oli had tired me out. We called it a day and went back to Oli’s flat to drink Fonseca Porto, eat brie and croissants and re-stuff Slimey for another day.

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"Where'd Slimey go?" asks Oli...

I’m Toulouse the cool travel cat.

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Refurbished industrial buildings house shops and bistros

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Letters from Oli: The Maritimes and Quebec

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My friend, Oli

When my friend Oli set out to travel with his human companions across Canada to Vancouver on the west coast, I wanted to share his wonderful letters with you. Oli started his journey from his home in Mahone Bay on the coast of Nova Scotia, where I had met him a while ago. After a dubious start in our relationship, involving a damaged nose, sliced paw, surgery, and a cone, we became great friends. Oli is a cheerful, funny, optimistic soul, who likes to make people happy and holds no grudges: my kind of guy. 

Here’s his first letter to me:

Hi Toulouse! We left my house and are off to the other side of the world! I’m so excited I could pee! Well, I DID pee… :-3 … But my bestest friend Saskia made sure I did it outside! Shahar—Saskia’s bestest friend—has gone ahead of us and will meet us in Montreal. That’s somewhere in Quebec, where everyone speaks

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Village of Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia

 French (like YOU) and where cats are sophisticated, very friendly and chatty (that’s why they’re called “chats”. Millie, our old neighbor’s cat, told me.)  

I got the whole back seat of the car, Toulouse! Luggage and camping supplies filled the back seat, but I got my place to stretch out like a little prince. I’m so spoiled! WOOF! :-3

We stopped at a large lake. Saskia kept saying it was “grand”. Then camped

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Oli explores Grand Lake, NB

at a place called Perth and Over—funny name, I thought. A little like that place that was named after a good laugh! “Saint Louis of Ha Ha!” I guess Saint Louis was a funny guy as well as a saint.

We’d been driving for a long time and my tummy was grumbling for food as we drove along that big river—I forgot the name Saskia called it. “Sent Low-rents”…something like that. But then I saw the coolest thing, Toulouse! I looked up at the blue sky and I saw—arranged row upon row—puffy clouds that looked just like Krispy Creams! Really! They were round with soft smooth bottoms and rough tops that I could imagine were full of candied

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Oli gazes at the moon

 toppings. I pointed and pointed to Saskia, but she thought I was doing the hand-shake trick and laughed. “Oh, Oli! Not now! I’m driving!” But she got the idea. Within minutes she stopped the car at an outlook by the river and gave me some food-treats and water. They weren’t Krispy Creams but they filled my tummy. YAY!

Then we went for a nice walk through the grass and I ran to the river and found some cool sticks to chew and birds to chase. The river was so big, Toulouse! You could look across it and not see the other side even! But it

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Oli camps at Perth-Andover, NB

didn’t scare Saskia. She made sure I got wet fetching sticks in the river and it was fun because I trusted her. I knew she wouldn’t put me in any danger. So I got wet and muddy too. And did you know that the water tasted a little salty? You could add noodles and—presto—soup du jour, as you would say!   

Ok. Talk to you later, dude!

Your pal,

Oli

p.s. Can you tell that Saskia has been correcting my spelling so you can read this letter?

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The Saint Lawrence Estuary

p.p.s. When will you send me those Pampered Pet treats Saskia told me about?

Well, it sure looks like Oli started off with a bang on the first leg of his journey across Canada. Just to clarify a few things for you, Grand Lake is located in central New Brunswick about midway between Fredericton and Moncton, and is that province’s largest freshwater lake. It’s a popular place for recreation, with several beaches and cottages on its shores. Perth-Andover is a village in New Brunswick, divided by the Saint John River. Saint-Louis-du-Ha! Ha! (yes! It really exists!) is a small town in Quebec near the south

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Oli finds the way to the river

shore of the Saint Lawrence River. The Commission de Toponymie asserts that the parish’s name refers to nearby Lake Témiscouata. The “haha” is “an archaic French word for an unexpected obstacle or abruptly ending path.” Well, Oli and Saskia did stop there…Hehe… The village of La Pocatière, where Oli and Saskia camped, is located about a kilometer from the south shore tidal flats of the Saint Lawrence Estuary in Quebec. A Bombardier plant which manufactures subway and railway cars is located there too. They also make those cool “Skidoos” (the cool word for snowmobile).

Anyway, Oli’s next letter will be from somewhere in Ontario… See you then!

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The mighty Saint Lawrence River

I’m Toulouse LeTrek, the COOL Travel Cat!

Photos by Saskia Tait

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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!

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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Traveling in Switzerland: The Riviera of Lake Lucerne

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The boat dock at Vitznau on Lake Lucerne

“Turn here!” I directed Nina, who cheerfully swerved the car into a one-lane road without blinking an eye. I love her for that. We wound our way up and down a switchback lane through sub-alpine meadows past Swiss cows, bells clanging, and quaint Swiss barns and farmhouses. Then wound up at a dead-end right on the shores of Lake Lucerne: Treib.

Nina glanced from me to the quaint ferry/inn/funicular complex and grinned. We’d discovered another gem. She knew better than to question my navigation and map-reading skills; she had absolutely none herself. I didn’t tell her that I was just choosing places to drive out of a tapestry of intuition, smell, logic and just plain random choice. We were on an adventure, after all, and getting lost was a prerequisite. :-3 Just kidding; we were never really lost. I knew where we were: we were in Central Switzerland and we were driving around Lake Lucerne.

After we made our home base at the excellent Schloss Hotel, in the charming village of Merlischachen, we decided to circumnavigate the lake. This would involve driving on small twisting roads and through several tunnels. Lake Lucerne is called the Vierwaldstättersee (“lake of the four forested Cantons”) and is the fourth largest lake in Switzerland at 114 sq. km. Its meandering arms span from Lucerne through steep valleys beneath 1,500 foot-high mountains like Rigi, Pilatus and Oberbuenstock.

We started our drive through Küssnacht, located at the end of a long bay, named–yep–the Küssnachter See. The bay is part of a larger valley that connects the chain of Bernese Alps from Interlacken to Zug. We took the scenic Hwy 2b along the north-east shore of the lake, through some of the oldest communities of Switzerland such as Weggis, Vitznau, Gersau, and Brunnen. This area is commonly known as the “Riviera of Central Switzerland” and provides the second largest tourist destination in the Canton of Lucerne.

The ancient town of Weggis

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View of Lake Lucerne from Mount Rigi

(which means “place of the ferry man” in Celtic) dates as far back as 1332 and lies at the base of Mount Rigi. People there enjoy a very mild climate. Attractions include the aerial tramway to Rigi-Kaltbad, close to Känzeli. From Rigi-Kaltbad you can climb the mountain on the cog railway (Vitznau-Rigi-Bahn) and get some awesome viewing.

The picturesque village of Vitznau, at the foot of Mount Rigi, is a good starting point for excursions around the lake. Historic paddlewheel steamers and saloon motor vessels stop here and take you to places like Lucerne, Pilatus, Stanserhorn, Bürgenstock, Klewenalp and Seelisberg. The Vitznau-Rigi railway also stops here and takes you to the Kulm of Rigi (1798 m) with a truly breathtaking panoramic view across the Alps, that includes thirteen lakes, all the way to Germany and France. Over a hundred kilometers of trails descend the mountain, through flowers-rich meadows (over 1,000 species I was told). From Vitznau you can also take a cableway to Hinterbergen, a hotel-restaurant which commands a wonderful view from its sun terrace. Another cableway takes you to Wissifluh Mountain Restaurant where a lot of trails begin.

The first thing we saw on the waterfront of Vitznau, was the Hotel Rigibahn, a classy big hotel built in 1873 by the railway. In 1930 they designed the striking Bauhaus style Restaurant Rondel as the first dancing hall on Lake Lucerne. It swings out over the lake and still has all its original furniture from 1930. It looked closed and was

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Carston and Toulouse at the Rotschuo

undergoing major renovations—in time for the summer crowd, no doubt—so, sadly Nina and I missed the opportunity to test the quality of its café crème.

We did, however, stop at the restaurant Paradies Hotel Rotschuo, a few miles farther down the road. The hotel-restaurant lay nestled into the craggy shoreline with a breathtaking view of the lake and hotel grounds from the terrace. The restaurant offered elegant dining with classic décor of red and white. Nina and I enjoyed a wonderful tomato basil soup with cream (9.5 FCH) followed by a pork steak with asparagus and Hollandaise sauce and young potatoes (46 FCH). We paired the meal with a hearty German wheat beer, a Hacker-Pschorr Weissebeir, which made Nina very happy. When Nina’s happy so am I… :-3

Thank you, Tony, Stephan and Carston!

Gersau, like Vitznau offers connections to scenic trails and railcar rides up the Rigi-Scheidegg. Today, two cable-cars lead to the area: on the Gersau side, one goes from Gschwänd to Rigi-Burggeist, about 100 metres below the Scheidegg and a second from the Kräbel stop on the Arth-Rigi railway line up to the Rigi-Scheidegg plateau.

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View of Lake Lucerne from Brunnen

At Brunnen, we took Hwy 2 south to Flüelen, at the southern end of the steeply sided Urnersee. The Alpine Reuss River enters the lake at Flüelen. On our way there I had to keep reminding Nina to watch the road as she slowed to a near-snail’s pace to look at the scenery. I couldn’t fault her as I stared at the steep mountains (over 3,000 feet) of the Urner See’s western shore.  Peaks of the Neider Bauen Chulm and Oberbuenstock provided scenic foreground to the snowy Alps of Uri Rotstock and Brunnistock (2,952 m).

Located beneath the scenic snow-capped summits of the Urner and Glaris Alps, the small town of Flüelen became a transshipment point on the trade routes over the Gotthard pass and along the lake. We had one of my top five café crèmes at the Café Seehof (Hotel Hirschen) there. They hadn’t yet opened for supper but kindly served us coffee that made my whiskers curl. :-3

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View of Fluelen from Seelisberg

The next day, we drove in the other direction, in search of the majestic mansion I’d glimpsed from the road to Flüelen. We drove west, through Meggan and Lucerne, then south on the autobahn to Stansstad. From there we took the main road east past the Burgenstock ridge that divides the main body of the lake into two parallel sub-basins. We drove along the southern basin called Buochser See.

Near Beckenreid and with no clear idea, I directed Nina to veer off the main road—well, that’s what she does: veer. We ended up on a narrow country road that twisted its way up pastoral countryside. My nose took us right there. We passed Emmetten, then rounded a corner into Seelisberg and there it was: the splendid mansion I’d seen. Nina took in a breath of astonishment.

Across the street from the mansion, a park with an expansive view of the Urner See beckoned. Nina didn’t need my prompt to park there. Charged with a celebratory glass of rose wine, we entered the park on the edge of the world. A truly breathtaking vista opened before us of Lake Lucerne and the Rütli meadow. Nina grinned as I pointed out the resort town of Brunnen to the north and where we’d driven along the steep eastern shoreline beneath the majestic Fronalstock and the Rophaeen (2078 m) mountains. The Riemenstalden ravine that divided these summits descended to the tiny village of Sisikon. And to the south, at the end of the steep basin on the delta of the Ruess River, I saw the

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Park in Seelisberg

village of Flüelen, where we’d enjoyed that marvelous café crème.

From the park we crossed the road to the mansion and read the sign “Welcome to the International Capital of the Age of Enlightenment”. Known as little Seelisberg, this converted Victorian hotel on the village outskirts is home to the Maharishi Ayur-Veda Health Centre that offers everything from a one-day massage treatment for Fr.300, to a two-week residential cure for Fr.4000. From 1968 to 1992 it served as the global headquarters of the Transcendental Meditation movement headed by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and is currently a school for TM.

A funicular from the northern end of the main street Seelisberg descends the cliff to the quaint old lakeside inn and boat station of Treib below. A short path from the top funicular station, leads to the Rütli meadow, where Confederation was founded, and the start of a pleasant 35 km scenic trail to Platz der Auslandschweizer in Brunnen.   

Which leads me back to Wirtshaus zur Treib, on the shores of Lake Lucerne; run by Irena and Siggy, and where Nina and I shared a delicious Weinerschniztel capped by a “mystery” Treib Café Spécial.

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Ferry arriving at Treib

Happy with our adventure, we entered the inn with thoughts of food and drink. We were treated to a rustic original interior, with thick beamed ceiling, original windows of bottle-bottom glass (called crown glass or Butzenfenster), and decorated with Swiss traditional farming implements and some awesome cow bells. Irena proudly pointed out one huge bell with ornamental girdle that was a gift to her on her fiftieth birthday.

The inn and restaurant Wirtshaus zur Treib was originally built in the late 1400s as a shelter to protect people from the stormy southerly wind, called “Föhn”, around the Lake of Uri.

After devouring several Treib special coffees, Nina asked Irena what was in the drink; Irena coyly refused to divulge the “secret recipe”. She claimed that a chaotic mixture of various schnapps available during the day, collected into a “mystery” bottle—which she showed us, was added to the coffee, then topped with Swiss cream. Nina wasn’t buying it. She tried to sneak a peek after ordering another one but Irena was wise to her and kept her back between Nina and the drinks she was concocting. Way to go, Irena! Keep them guessing!

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Treib special coffees with schnapps!

Photos by Nina Munteanu & others

Contact information:Paradies Hotel Rotschuo

Seestrasse 158, 6442 Gersau
Hans-Werner Danckwardt, your host

Tel. +41 (0)41 828 22 66
Fax +41 (0)41 828 22 70
hotel@rotschuo.ch
www.rotschuo.ch

 

Wirtshaus zur Treib
CH-6377 Seelisberg
Phone: +41 (0)- 041 820 12 61
Fax: +41 (0)- 041 820 12 07

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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Schloss Hotel Swiss Chalet: Royal Dining with Class

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The Swiss Chalet, part of the Schloss Hotel

On Nina’s birthday, I surprised and delighted her by booking a reservation at the fine dining restaurant Swiss Chalet, across the street from its associated Schloss Hotel, where we were staying, in the cozy village of Merlischachen.

What? You didn’t think a cool travel cat like me could make a reservation in Swiss German, let alone pick up the phone? Ye of little faith!…I have paws—and the girl at the front desk likes me: “Bitte, könnte Sie machen einen Vorbehalt für mich und meinen verrückten Freund an Ihrem Restaurant?”

The Swiss Chalet was originally a large farmhouse built in the 17th Century. In the late 1960s Prince Joseph converted it to a restaurant with lodging upstairs, preserving some of the quaint charm of the original interior such as the beamed ceiling and wooden walls, and bottle-bottom windows (like that

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The Swiss Chalet Restaurant

found in the Chillon Castle on Lake Geneva) also called crown-glass or Butzenfenster.

Original family rooms of the farmhouse were transformed into cozy fine-dining stubes (parlors), with an elegant rustic richness that only the Swiss can achieve. Intimate clusters of tables are nestled in what used to be the livingroom in front of the old stove that once serviced the kitchen. The white linen-covered tables were tastefully adorned with vases of single roses, large 12-inch finely crafted pewter plate chargers (decorative underplates with the Prince’s name engraved on them) and candles set in pewter holders.

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Our excellent breakfast spread in the old distillery

The restaurant continues on downstairs, where they used to distill schnapps. This is also where hotel patrons across the street or upstairs or in the Jagdschloss up the hill have breakfast (the buffet and café crème is worthy of a whole other post! :-3)

Prince Joseph met us at the door and took our coats, displaying the noble and humble spirit of a true restaurateur and gracious host. As we took our seats inside the Merlischacher Stübli one of the small rooms or nooks in the old “livingroom” (which includes the Buurestube, and Richterstube) I feasted my eyes on the rich ambience of antiques and original lithographs and old photographs of the Prince’s ancestors.

The restaurant offers a rich and varied menu of main dishes, desserts and delightful hors d’oeuvres such as terrine aux morilles or mousse de canard and Chef Werner Meier’s recommended Escargots à la bourguignonne (Burgundy snails

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Toulouse savoring his escargots in Cafe de Paris

in herb sauce). Of course, Nina ordered the escargots, done with a Café de Paris sauce and served with fresh crusty bread (to sop up the exquisite herb butter sauce, of course!).  The escargots were large and firm with a complex flavor of smoke and nuts. We selected an aromatic 2005 Speri Amarone wine with a vigorous complex character. I took a bite of the escargots then sipped the robust wine and let it play with the Café de Paris sauce on the tongue. My whiskers curled with a frisson of sensual delight. I glanced up at Nina, who grinned in birthday-glee. I smiled. This was heaven. She was totally enjoying her birthday supper. And that was just the beginning…

As we sat back, digesting Chef Meier’s elegant escargots, the waiter surprised us with a tantalizing Toulouse-size bowl of soup to tease our appetites for more. Celebrating the season for asparagus, Chef Meier had prepared a frothy spargelcrème suppe (asparagus soup with cream), garnished with verdant chives. It melted over my little pink tongue like a song of joy. The joy of spring, of course… :-3

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Our shared Chateaubriand

We continued on with the main course of Château Briand à l’argenteuil: double loin cuts from the grill, accompanied by in-season white asparagus in Hollandaise sauce, mixed vegetables and potato-croquettes. Some butchers have mistakenly confused the Chateaubriand with a thick Top Sirloin Steak, which is an altogether different cut. The Chateaubriand steak is a recipe of a particular thick cut from the tenderloin, which, according to Larousse Gastronomique, was created in the 18th Century by personal chef Montmireil, for Vicomte François-René de Chateaubriand, the author and diplomat who served Napoleon as an ambassador and Louis XVIII as Secretary of State.  This dish is typically offered as a serving for two, as there is only enough meat in the center of the average fillet for two portions. That was perfect for us. The term à l’argenteuil is a French expression for a dish accompanied by asparagus as a side garnish. Argenteuil is actually a northwestern suburb of Paris, France, and world renowned for—you guessed it—its asparagus.

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Chef Werner Meier sizzles in the kitchen

The Chateaubriand was genuinely Swiss and exquisite as with most things Swiss. The tenderloin melted like butter and filled my mouth with joy (yes, more joy! :-3). The asparagus, done perfectly, sang in my mouth with earthy elegance. Along with the Holladaise sause, it created a complex marriage of subtle and bold flavors with the rest of the meal. We ate in the silence of rapture, punctuated only by a glance, smile and sigh.

The glass of Amarone wine drained effortlessly. Its intense and spicy bouquet created rich, aromatic notes that lingered wonderfully on the palate, ideal with the dish we were having. This delightful wine requires four years to process. It begins with soft-pressing the grapes after picking in September, a 120 days of drying, then 35 days of maceration, separation of skins and fermentation, followed by 24 months aging in Allier oak tonneaux with further 12 months in a Slavonian oak barrel and final 12 months aging in the bottle.

We might have ordered another bottle of Amarone; I’m not sure, partly because the Prince’s own apfel schnapps, called Merlischacher Quellenwasser erased any memory of the details. At the end of the meal our waiter presented us with this pale-green opaque ambrosia, a slushy-like digéstif served half-frozen in a pre-frosted glass. The drink ran down my throat hot and cold— cooling the tongue and firing the soul. The potent essence of apple refreshed and invigorated while the over-25% alcohol/volume unleashed the spirit; and, unfortunately, Nina’s singing voice along with it. Merlischacher Quellenwasser is the Prince’s signature recipe from his father and it is only sold at the Swiss

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Adrian Huber and Marc Mueller have fun creating cullinary masterpieces

Chalet. The secret to this incredibly tasty and potent drink is that it is pre-frozen and served half liquid-half ice. Ooh La La!

Swiss Chalet’s chef, Werner Meier, has been creating (along with his staff of fifteen cooks) unique culinary creations at the Swiss Chalet since 1982: countrified-gourmet French cuisine à la Suisse. The Prince was himself a chef for many years and still cooks his specialty—beef tenderloin flambé—in front of his customers with the panache, finesse and aplomb of a true royal. He later told us that he had traveled and studied and apprenticed in cooking and the restaurant/hotel business all over the world, including Arabia, Asia, France and Switzerland and had served in various capacities in Buckingham Palace for several years.

Groups may also book the elegant dining hall in Astrid Hall, particularly suited for wedding receptions (it includes “royal” suites upstairs), large business meals and birthday parties. It was renovated in 1980 from an adjoining barn

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Astrid Hall, ideal for large receptions

and dedicated to the Belgian queen who died nearby in a car accident in 1935. The hall seats upwards of 120 guests with a lively piano bar upstairs, a rich medieval style “pub” that reminded me of a classy Harry Potter’s Leaky Cauldron: altogether, the makings for a rip-roaring time—especially if you add the Prince’s apfel schnapps into the fray.

The Swiss Chalet is currently listed in the Michelin Guide and registered with the Chaîne des Rôtisseurs (2008/2009), and the Ordre Mondial des Gourmets Dégustateur for those who have a special knowledge of or interest in wine and spirits. Besides these endorsements of excellent dining, the place is just plain fun. And the Prince rocks! :-3

If you’re planning on making a reservation or want more

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Prince Joseph toasts our health

information, here’s their contact information:

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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