Switzerland: Rosa’s Musings: Butterzopf, The History Of A National Sunday Bread

Published by Saturday, October 1, 2011 Permalink 0

by Rosa Mayland

Switzerland (also known as “Confoederatio Helvetica” or “die Schweiz”, “la Suisse”, “Svizzera”, “Svizra”) is a federal republic composed of 26 cantons and 4 different linguistic and cultural areas (German, French, Italian and Romansch). It’s therefore not surprising if its cuisine reflects its rich heritage and highly diverse cultures. It is rather like an island in the middle of Europe, like a tiny kingdom.

Each region and canton has its very own traditional dishes and specialties as well as produce, and they defend and even protect it fiercely, because there are dishes, cheeses, wines, breads, and many more food items that are now protected by AOCs in Switzerland.

Even if this tiny piece of land stuck between Germany, Austria, France, Italy has its own highly diverse culinary identity, one cannot refute that each part of the Swiss Confederation has, to a certain extent, been influenced by its neighbors, and vice versa. For example, a sausage resembling the anise-flavored Geneva sausage called Longeole can also be found in Chablais (Haute-Savoie); a cheese similar to Valais raclette is made in Savoie too; the Swiss German spätzli seem to be of Swabian (German) origin. Then there is polenta or risotto which evoke the Apennine Penninsula, and are often found in Ticino, and, well, the list goes on. As it is the case with every place that is not in total isolation, the borders are quite permeable, so it is pretty understandable that ideas, information, arts and science cross back and forth across the borders.

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Switzerland: Coop’s Pro Montagna Label: 5 Years of Protecting Traditional Swiss Food Products

Published by Friday, September 30, 2011 Permalink 0

Switzerland: Coop’s Pro Montagna Label: 5 Years of Protecting Traditional Swiss Food Products

Please join us on Sunday, October 2nd, at the Expat Expo Geneva, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Palexpo, Hall 7. We’d love to meet our readers and make our contact more personal.

We’ll have booth No. B8 against the well, and one of our most popular authors, Rosa Mayland of the column Rosa’s Musings,will be present.

Click here for all the details.

Hope to see you there!

Jonell Galloway, Editor of The Rambling Epicure

 

 

 

 

 

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It’s apple season: Matefin à la pomme / apple pancakes/pie

Published by Thursday, September 29, 2011 Permalink 0

by Jonell Galloway

O Délices discovered this recipe on blog de Guillemette.

This is a traditional recipe from the Savoy, so it’s not so far from us in Switzerland.

The original name comes from the French mâte faim. Peasants prepared these potato pancakes in the morning before going to work in the fields. It was meant to keep them going until lunchtime.

This version uses apples instead of potatoes, and is perfect for the apple season, which has just started here in Switzerland.

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Our site is currently being migrated, so if you see strange headings and error messages, they are temporary

Published by Monday, September 26, 2011 Permalink 0

Thank you for your patience and understanding.

Jonell Galloway, Editor

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The Rambling Epicure has a baby sister!

Published by Wednesday, September 21, 2011 Permalink 0

The Rambling Epicure has a new baby sister site where you can follow international food news and trends as they happen. It’s rather like a Twitter feed, but with more than 140 characters and photos to liven it up. It’s Jonell’s little blah blah mini-blog.

See you there!

Click here to check it out.

  • Recipe: Roasted Pumpkin Flan, A Recipe from Carmen Gonzalez
  • New York Times: Pop-up Restaurants in London, Up and Coming Chefs Cook in Apartment or Warehouse
  • Recipe: Frita, or Sweet Pepper and Tomato Compote
  • Obese and non-obese have different brain responses to junk food photos, says new study
  • The Atlantic Life on Antibiotic Resistance and the Case for Organic Poultry and Meat
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Food News Daily: September 16, 2011

Published by Friday, September 16, 2011 Permalink 0

Mainstream Anglo Media and Press

Time for Tea in the Kitchen, The Times of India

Insects: the future of food? Would you find it easier to eat insects and arachnids if you knew you already do?, The Guardian

Food for Art: From Time Immemorial, Man Has Always Craved a Good Meal, The Wall Street Journal

A French Feast From a Political Pot, The New York Times

Market Watch: A new tack in farmers market regulation, Los Angeles Times

Coffee’s caffeine fix may be a placebo, AFN Thought For Food

Best of the Anglo Food and Travel Blogs and Sites

Mystical Rock Salt Rocks Restaurant Design, Chow

New French Symbol for Made in France, BK Wine

How to Send Wine Back — Outsmarting Wine, Food Network

Two Kinds of Chef plus bakers, cooks & ninjas, Brave Tart

The Obamas: The new First Foodies, Friends Eat

Long Live the Kouign, Chow

Praline Cake Squares, She Wears Many Hats

Essential Wine Etiquette, Cooking Light

The Unthinking Man’s Case Against Backyard Slaughter, Chow

Food Justice or Junk Food: Will more supermarkets equal more access to healthy food in underserved communities?, Democracy in Action

Exotic Granola: Four New Versions That Don’t Use Oats, Chow

Food Photography

Vienna with coffee, Fotografia

Alternative Press/Sites

5 Things You Didn’t Know about Your Dinner, Rodale

When Healthy Foods Backfire, AOL Healthy Living/Huffington Post

EXPLAINED: Why We Crave The Foods We Crave, Huffington Post

World

Behind the Medieval Walls of Murten, My Kugelhopf

Sorbet aux pêches, miel et romarin…, La Cuillère

Pork Medallions with Prunes, Taste of Beirut

Milky whole grain wheat with orange zest and pumpkin seeds, almonds and coconut chips, Lemon Love Notes

 

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Rosa’s Musings: The Last Of The Summer Days Have Arrived, Indulge In Tomatoes while You Still Can

Published by Wednesday, September 14, 2011 Permalink 0

by Rosa Mayland

Spontaneous Cuisine: Raw Tomato Sauce

 

I don’t know if you have the same uncomfortable feeling as I, but I have the impression this year is flying by, and that we are more than ever racing against time, without being able to get a grip on the present moment or connect with the now. It is insane and quite confusing…

As incredible and shocking as it might seem, September has already arrived and so has autumn (and by the way, just in case you have already got the creeps, we are dangerously approaching Christmas – only 3 1/2 months to go before the ludicrous craze!). Even if you try “lying” to yourself, you cannot do anything other than confirm that the hot season is over and the slow decline of nature is taking its toll. As sad as it might sound, we have no other choice than to bid goodbye to the joys of summer and to the delightful sensation of lightness as well as worry-free days, it is a harbinger for the cold, dark, gloomy days that gently weasel their way into our lives. All those changes are real, visible and can be perceived very clearly.

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A Taste of Switzerland: Absinthe Anyone?

Published by Friday, September 9, 2011 Permalink 0

A Taste of Switzerland: Absinthe Anyone?

by Sonja Holverson

Our thoughts immediately go back to Bohemian culture, to writers and artists of 19th-century France: absinthe, also known as La Fée Verte (literally, “the green fairy”), was created in the canton of Neuchâtel, Switzerland, notably in the Jura Mountains bordering France. Most of the production has traditionally been in small quantities. But absinthe is back after being outlawed for nearly a century.

Absinthe glass and customary spoon

The liquor, high in alcohol content and with a full anise flavor, is made from plants such as anise, fennel, flowers, and leaves of the medicinal plant called Artemisia Absinthium, which we know as wormwood, and which is found in abundance in Switzerland. Other herbs such as lemon balm angelica, dittany, coriander, juniper and nutmeg are sometimes added. The nickname “green fairy” comes from its color, a pale green.

Chemist and absinthe expert T.A. Breaux describes it as “a push-me, pull-you effect of the various herbs; some have a heightening effect while others have a lowering effect.” It as a double impact: a sensation of inebriation along with a heightened state of clarity.

Romanticized by many famous people in the 19th and early 20th centuries, including Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Edgar Degas, Vincent van Gogh, Édouard Manet,  Pablo Picasso, Oscar Wilde, Charles Baudelaire, Paul Verlaine, Ernest Hemingway and the list goes on, absinthe is ever-present in both the stories and works of these creative people.

“L’Absinthe” by Edgar Degas 1876

Practical uses were also found during this period of history and absinthe was given to French troops to prevent fever. Naturally, they acquired a taste for the “green fairy” and when they returned home, they popularized the drink in bars, bistros and cabarets. Absinthe was initially expensive, but when prices declined, the French began drinking it to excess and experienced addictive psychoactive reactions. As a result, opposition movements started scare campaigns that resulted in the ban of absinthe in 1914 in France.

Ironically, Switzerland had already banned it in 1907, although the production went underground and home distillers produced the much sought-after liquor clandestinely in small quantities. In the U.S., it was banned in 1912. By 1915, most European countries followed suit, except Britain, where it was not popular, and both the production and consumption of absinthe were made illegal.

In the mid-1990s, legal practices regarding absinthe were highly ambiguous. Drinking it was legal, but producing it was illegal. Former French President Jacques Chirac drew criticism from his own citizens because he drank absinthe during a state visit to Switzerland in the late 1990s. President Chirac and I had something in common but no one really cared if I drank it… Anyway, it was difficult to come by and you had to have friends who lived in the canton of Neuchâtel to get your hands on it.

With renewal of interest on the part of both producers and consumers, the Swiss Parliament lifted the 97-year ban on the production, sales and consumption of absinthe in 2004. A French absinthe producer, Lucid, was the first absinthe producer to receive certification in France in 2007.

Other European countries followed, and by 2008, there were nearly 200 brands of absinthe available in a dozen countries such as Switzerland, France, Spain and the Czech Republic.

In the U.S., the first legal brand of absinthe was approved in 2007: St. George Absinthe Verte, made in Northern California.

Kubler Swiss Absinthe

While visiting Switzerland, some of you may want to taste this once forbidden elixir. Kubler Absinthe was the first Swiss absinthe to become commercially available and has an excellent reputation for being the highest quality of all international absinthe brands. They use only natural plants in accordance with local traditions, rather than extracts or oils that are used by some other European producers.

Another excellent Swiss brand is Absinthe Studer, made of distilled wormwood, a blend of 8 different secretly selected herbs, pure alcohol and fresh water from their own spring. The original recipe has been preserved and passed down from generation to generation despite the 97 years of legal issues.

But the Studer family is open to innovation and have collaborated with the famous haute couturier chocolatiers, the Beschle family in Basel, producing Studer’s absinthe-filled milk chocolate pralines in the shape of the most famous Swiss Alp, the Matterhorn.

Beschle’s Studer Absinthe, Swiss Collection

The country fair stand “Absintissimo” serving absinthe from the local producers of the region is always a highlight at the Fall Automanales Fair held in Geneva every November.

Absintissimo: Swiss-made “green fairy

So fascinating is the story of absinthe that this elixir is being used as the backdrop for a film currently being produced called “Les Absintheurs” (The Absinthe Drinkers), due out in 2012. The plot is not so much about the drink as about the people in the era when the green fairy was a part of daily life in Paris. The film recounts the life of a talented young woman painter in an art scene dominated by men in 1889 (one year before van Gogh died). It takes places during the Impressionist period in the then-decadent Montmartre neighborhood of Paris.

Enjoy your taste of the once forbidden green fairy while in Switzerland, but if you are obliged go pass through the United States Customs, keep in mind that despite the allowance of local production of absinthe in the U.S., it is prohibited to bring it into the country.

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A version of this article was originally published in Nile Guide.

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Switzerland: Watermelon and Fennel Salad Recipe

Published by Thursday, September 8, 2011 Permalink 0

Switzerland: Watermelon and Fennel Salad Recipe

by Jenn Oliver

Until recently, I didn’t know anyone did anything with a watermelon besides just cut it up and eat it. I mean, it’s already completely sweet, juicy, the pure essence of summer. Why mess with the perfection embodied in this pink fruit? The mere sight of a ripe watermelon evokes memories of childhoods past. For me, it evokes images of weeks at girl scout camp, running around outside, carefree, swimming in the lake, making new friends, riding horses…you get the idea.

But why not play, and see just where the flavor of this fruit can go? Have you ever thought about the flavors of this king of summertime snacks and how they would meld with other foods? I certainly hadn’t until Meeta challenged us Plate to Page alumni to photograph watermelon as a fun photography assignment — two photos — one raw, and one in a dish. Yes, a dish. Who puts watermelon in things? Ha, maybe it was time to change my perspective and open my eyes to other possibilities.

Perspective is a funny thing. Sometimes our first impressions have such a profound effect on us that we forget to look for other possibilities right in front of our noses. I think that’s why I like to go for walks and hikes, because all that time away from everything gives my mind space to think and breathe. And sometimes, I even get to get lost and freak out after sitting at a train station for 30 minutes until I figure out that the train only passes through on weekdays…

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Swiss Supermarket Discoveries Part II: Culture Shock

Published by Wednesday, August 31, 2011 Permalink 0

by Sonja Holverson

 

“Gourmet” bread with sunflower seeds outside and inside, along with nuts

Discovering Swiss grocery stores was eye-opening, at least to my American eyes. On the surface, the supermarkets look very similar, but once you delve in, it’s another whole ‘nother world.

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