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Category Archives: Food and Drinks

Overview of Swiss Cuisine

 

First a short introduction to Swiss Cuisine:

As Switzerland is a country in the middle of Europe with four official languages, the dishes and the kind of food we have vary from region to region, and are mostly overshadowed by the neighbouring countries (France, Italy, Germany and Austria). Our food includes a lot of dairy products such as cheese, milk, cream and butter.

How our meals look like:

For breakfast we have a broad selection of bread, which makes the basis of our diet, with some butter or margarine, jam and honey. We also have Birchermüesli (Muesli) or some cereal with milk or yogurt. If there is time, we also like to make some eggs, omelettes or sausages. Sometimes we even make some Rösti. To drink, we have tea or coffee, milk or hot chocolate or some fruit juice. For a hurried breakfast, you can pick up some croissants or buns with coffee or tea to go.

Lunch consists of either a complete hot meal (schnitzel with fries, älplermagronen and rösti with zürcher geschnetzeltes are popular all over Switzerland) or just a sandwich, a salad or a birchermüesli. Dinner depends on what we had for lunch. If lunch was something heavy, we prefer something light like some soup with bread, or bread with some cheese and charcuterie. Others prefer to have a complete warm meal.

Now on to a few popular dishes and food we have in Switzerland:

Rösti:

Rosti by Momo

Rosti by Momo

Rösti is a speciality of the Swiss cuisine consisting mainly of potatoes.
It was originally eaten as a complete breakfast starting in the first half of the 19th century to replace porridge. Nowadays, it is served to accompany dishes such as sausages or zürcher geschnetzeltes.
Preparation changes from region to region. While some use raw grated potatoes, others prefer cooked potatoes and then grate it.
To the basic Rösti, additional ingredients can be added. Most popular would be bacon, onion, cheese or apple.

Recipe:

This is just one out of few recipes and it’s easy to make.

What you need (for 2 people): 1kg waxy potato, 1 egg, some salt and pepper, oil

Preparation:

Peel the raw potatoes and grate them coarsely. Squeeze out the juice with help of a cloth. Mix the grated potatoes with the egg; add some salt and some pepper. Warm some oil in a pan. Add the potato into the pan and press it to a flat round patty. Let it fry until one side is golden brown. Turn the patty with the help of a plate to brown the other side. And that’s it.

Aelplermagronen:

Aelplermagronen by Momo

Aelplermagronen by Momo


Aelplermagronen (alpine herdsman’s macaroni) is a complete typical Swiss Alps dish. It is made of pasta, potato chunks, cheese, cream and roasted onions.

The dish has regional variations: in some areas sliced ham or roasted bacon is added, other areas may remove the potatoes and others like to add small pieces of sausages.

Back in the 1880s, as the construction of the Gotthard tunnel was completed, pasta was brought over to Switzerland by Italian workers. This dish arose because the herdsmen could just throw everything into a bowl, which they always had handy. It was easy to carry, as there were neither trains nor other transport possibilities into the Alps. It quickly got popular in the Alps as it was a meal that can be kept for a longer time. Also it was very satisfying, with the ingredients being not too heavy to carry. Pasta mixed with cheap local potatoes, spiced with some onions, topped with some cheese and cream, summed up to a hearty dish that was easily made. Nowadays, we cook it a bit different and it is served with some separate apple sauce.

Recipe:

What u need (for 2 people):
5 potatoes, 150g pasta, 150g grated cheese, 100g cream, 150g milk, 1-2 onions, Some salt and pepper, parsley, butter

Preparation:

Peel the potatoes, wash them and cut into small cubes. Cook in salt water for about 15 min. Add pasta into the potatoes after about 8 min. Preheat the oven to 180 degree Celsius. Boil up the milk and cream together while adding a bit less than half of the grated cheese and bring it to melt while stirring. Add some salt (I prefer using Aromat which is a Swiss spice instead of salt) and pepper to your like. Pour off water of pasta and potatoes. Rub fat from butter into the baking dish all around. Add potato and pasta and pour cream sauce over it. Add over the rest of the grated cheese. Bake until it gets a golden brown crust. Meanwhile cut onions into rings. Add and warm butter in a pan and add onions, cook till gold brown or to your liking. Take out the baking dish and add the onions, put back in oven if so desired. Serve and add cut parsley on top.

For the Apple sauce:
1kg apples, sugar, apple juice, lemon juice, cinnamon

Peel apples, cut into small pieces and remove seeds part. Add 2 spoons of sugar into a pan. Let it caramelise. Add apples and stir on low heat for about 2 min. Add 250 ml of apple juice and add a lid on top. Cook till apples are completely soft. Mash to a puree. Finish with some cinnamon, lemon juice and sugar.

Raclette:

Raclette by iledefrancecheese

Raclette by iledefrancecheese.com


Raclette is a Swiss national dish prepared with melted cheese.
The special Raclette cheese (semi-skimmed cow’s milk cheese either plain, or cheese added with garlic, pepper or paprika) gets sliced and put in these so called coupelles which then get placed under the Raclette grill to melt.
It is eaten with small hard-boiled or roasted potatoes. The melted cheese is spread over the potatoes or just somewhere on the plate, whichever you prefer. Some like to have sour cream over the potatoes. Mostly we put spices on the cheese before or after it is melted. There is also a special Raclette spice mix that can be found in shops. Other additions can be pepper, paprika, nutmeg, onions, garlic, herbs, whatever one likes.

On the grill, various foods can be grilled, such as meat or vegetables. Also pickled onions and pickled gherkins are a must have. Raclette is usually served with warm tea or white wine.
It is used more as a festive meal which one can eat on for hours and especially on colder days. It’s a favourite on Christmas.

Years ago this was known under the name Bratchäs (roasted cheese) where Swiss herders placed cheese beside a fire until it got very soft so as to scrap it over their bread.

Basler mehlsuppe/Basel flour soup:

Basel flour soup by Momo

Basel flour soup by Momo


As the name implies, it consists mainly of wheat or rye flour. It is traditionally eaten on the Basel carnival. The three day carnival of Basel always starts on a Monday at 4 am, but you would begin to see restaurants already preparing the soup from 3 am.

It is a very easily made dish which was used in earlier times in poor households for breakfast. The ingredients belonged to the cheapest categories. Besides flour, all that was needed was water and milk and some salt or sugar to spice it, sometimes some pieces of bread were added as well. Nowadays it’s made a bit differently. It is served with some grated cheese on top or with some sour cream. And some bread on the side.

Recipe:

What you need (for 2 people):
3 spoons of wheat flour, 25g butter, half an onion, half litre bouillon, grated cheese, oil

Preparation:
Add flour into a pan. Stir on medium heat till it has a nice hazelnut brown. Let it cool down a bit. Add butter or margarine and let it melt while stirring. Besides this, put some oil into another pan and cook the onions to a golden brown color. Add these onions into the flour pan. Add bouillon and let it boil up while stirring. Reduce heat and let it cook for an hour, stirring now and then. Serve and add grated cheese on top.

Riz Casimir:

Riz Casimiri by lillyson.wordpress.com

Riz Casimiri by lillyson.wordpress.com


Perhaps this doesn’t seem to be Swiss dish at first glance, as it’s quite exotic. But it is a Swiss dish and that too since 1952, invented by Mövenpick (Swiss hotel & restaurant chain).

It consists of long grain rice, sliced veal or chicken, curry sauce and fruits such as banana, pineapple and a fruit cocktail mix. Decorated with roasted almond flakes.

Recipe:

What you need (for 2 people):
200g sliced veal or chicken, 5g butter, half a banana, two slices of pineapple, few cherries from glas, 1 peach or instead of all these separately: a fruit cocktail mix, some almond flakes, 100g rice

For the sauce: either buy a completed curry sauce or 15g butter, 1 spoon flour, 200ml milk, water or bouillon, some salt, half spoon of curry, half cup of cream, nutmeg

Preparation:

Cook rice. Cut fruits the way you like the size of the pieces to be, and roast them lightly in some butter. In a different pan melt 15g butter and add 1 spoon flour, cook on low heat while stirring non-stop. Add 200ml of one of these fluids and boil while stirring constantly. Let cook for about 15 minutes. Add curry sauce, some salt, some nutmeg and cream. Meanwhile cook veal or chicken in a seperate pan, add the sauce and the fruits. Add rice in a circle around the outer plate and add sauce with fruits into the middle.

Zürcher geschnetzeltes/Sliced Meat Zurich style:

Zürcher geschnetzeltes by justfoodnow

Zürcher geschnetzeltes by justfoodnow.com


Speciality of canton Zurich, but well known all over Switzerland. And it’s typically served with Rösti. First recipe was seen in a cookbook in 1947.

Recipe:

What you need (for 2 people):
200g sliced veal, 125g champignon (mushrooms), 1 big onion, 25g butter, 400ml white wine (originally with white wine, but can also be left out and replaced with bouillon), 100g cream, lemon juice, parsley, salt and pepper

Preparation:

Wash mushrooms and cut into thin slices. Cut onions. Melt butter in pan and add the sliced veal until it gets a light brown colour. Take out from pan and keep warm. Now add the mushrooms in pan and cook till light brown, add onions till golden yellow colour. Add white wine (if not white wine, add bouillon instead). Reduce heat and add a lid, let cook for about 5 minutes. Whip the cream till semi-stiff. Add veal back into the pot also now add the cream and stir, spice it with salt and pepper to your preferences. Let it cook for 3 more minutes. Serve with Rösti. Mashed potatoes or noodles would also be fine.

Birchermüesli:

Birchermuesli by Momo

Birchermuesli by Momo


A Swiss meal which is popular all over the world. It contains oatmeal and other cereal products, milk or yoghurt, fresh or dried fruits and nuts.

Developed in 1900 by a Swiss physician who got the idea for this while he was served some strange dish in the alps. He created a recipe out of it and called it originally d’spys (translated into: the dish). Today it is called the Birchermüesli (as his name was Dr. M. Bircher-Benner). It started getting popular around the world in the 1960s.

Recipe:

What you need:
This has so many possibilities, so just giving an example.
Oatmeal and other cereal one likes, raisins, milk, yoghurt natural or fruit, sugar, any kind of fruits and berries

Preparation:
Mix cereals and raisins with milk and let it stand for 30 minutes so it gets soft. Add yoghurt and some sugar. Cut the fruits to small pieces and add.

And that’s it! Of course there are a lot more of food specialties in Switzerland. I just picked out a few of the most popular ones. Whereas the most popular dish in Switzerland is the Fondue which has its own article.

 

Written by Momo Ritschard

Fondue

 

This would be the most popular Swiss national dish. Originally, it is a dish of melted cheese from the Western Alps, the french speaking part of Switzerland. Fondue is a french word and it literally means “to melt”, although no one is really sure if this dish is originally from Switzerland or France. But the fact is that it has existed for a very long time. In 1699, it was published for the first time in Canton Zurich as a recipe called: “Cook cheese with wine”. It has been a Swiss national dish since 1875, but it wasn’t that popular yet. It started to get popular in the 1930s when the Swiss Cheese Union started to promote it.

There are now various kind of Fondue:

1. Cheese Fondue

Cheese Fondue

Cheese Fondue. Source: www.chaeller.net

This is the oldest variation of all Fondue. It contains a mix of cheese, white wine, garlic, some spices such as pepper or nutmeg, those fit quite well and mostly with a shot of Kirsch added. Some cornstarch is also added to prevent seperation.

Of course there’s also another variety without alcohol, so instead of white wine and kirsch, some apple juice or a broth containing lemon juice would do.

Essential for the flavour of the Fondue is the cheese mixture used, which varies from region to region.
Worth mentioning is the Appenzeller Fondue which is only made of Appenzeller cheese with cream added. Or the Fribourgeoise Fondue which is made of Vacherin cheese and is mostly eaten with potato instead of bread. Or the Moitié-moitié which is half Gruyere and half Vacherin.

Some people add tomato sauce, but this is rather for the color and not the flavour. Others add lots of different herbs, or a lot more onion than normally. Also curry can be added or instead of white wine, champagne can be used.

The cheese Fondue is mostly eaten with small cut pieces of bread and sometimes with cooked small pieces of potato.

The cheese gets cooked in a pot called caquelon, which is over a spirit lamp on the rechaud. After the cheese is melted, it’s used to keep it warm. Warm enough to keep the cheese smooth and liquid but not too hot to burn it.

Aelplermagronen

Aelplermagronen

Aelplermagronen Source: Swiss Cafe

Aelplermagronen (alpine herdsman’s macaroni) is a typical Swiss Alps dish. It is made out of pasta, potato chunks, cheese, cream and roasted onions.

The dish has regional variations: in some areas sliced ham or roasted bacon gets added and in others they leave away the potato. It was invented in the 1880s by herdsman as pasta got introduced to them through the newly built Gotthard tunnel, which then the Italian workers brought over into the central alps. It quickly got popular in the alps as it was a meal to keep for a longer time. It was very saturating and the ingredients were not too heavy to carry; as at this time everything except milk and cheese they had to transport themselves into the alps (no trains or other transport means were available back then into the alps).

Raclette

Raclette

Raclette

Raclette is a swiss national dish prepared with melted cheese. The special raclette cheese (plain, or cheese made with garlic, pepper or paprika) gets sliced and put in these so called coupelles which then get placed under the raclette grill to melt. Its eaten with small boiled or roasted potatoes. Scraping the melted cheese over the potatoes.
On top of the grill a various stuff can be grilled to it such as meat or vegetables. Also pickled onions and pickled gherkins are a must have. its served with with tea or other warm drinks. Its used more as of a festive meal which u eat on for hours and especially on colder days

Written by: Momo Ritschard

Rösti

Rosti

Rosti

Rösti is a speciality of the swiss cuisine consisting mainly of potatoes. It was originally used to eat as a
complete breakfast starting in the first half of the 19th century to displace porridge. Nowadays it is more
commonly served to accompany dishes such as sausages. Its made out of raw grated potato and gets
pan fried in butter or oil added some salt and pepper in the shape of patties.

To the basic rösti additional ingredients can be added, most popular are bacon, onion, cheese or apple.
Rösti are only eaten by the german speaking part of the country.

Written by: Momo Ritschard