Sunday, January 3, 2010

Sundays in My City

Those Clever Swiss

The Swiss come up with really awesome stuff. Army knives, Seilbahns, the HR Giger museum, hills alive with the music of cowbells.

Did you know Switzerland has three languages? I'd love to find out how they sing their national anthem. They speak Italian, French, and German, depending on where they live in their little country. And the German they speak sounds hilarious, even to themselves.

Switzerland is the prettiest place I've ever been, and I've been all over. The photo is Grindelwald. We rode up the Seilbahn in this very spot. I remember it was totally silent here. (That particular Seilbahn was just a chair lift, not an enclosed gondola box.)

Aside: NW Montana is equally lovely. So if you are not planning on going all the way to Europe, go to Montana in summer and drive up the mountains to the sun. Glacier National Park is shared by Canada and the US and it's easier to understand people when they talk.




Raklette

Back to Switzerland. I had a little history lesson first.

Long ago, or maybe even today, the Swiss shepherds took cheese with them in their pockets while they herded their flocks across the hills, and at night they'd build a campfire and lay their cheese on the stones by the fire. As soon as it melted, they'd scrape it off and eat it all gooey and warm. These were the french Swiss, and they called this style of dinner raclette, which means "to scrape off."

It must have tasted really good cuz they didn't want to just do it around the campfire, they devised a way to do it in their homes with an ingenious tabletop appliance.

This whole time I know you're thinking, "Neither Grindelwald nor Glacier are Lytha's cities!"

Well the Swiss shared their secret with the rest of the German speaking world (three other countries call German their offical language, in case you're ever playing that trivia game). The French got into it too, with their love of fancy cheeses. Other countries soon followed.

Raklette was picked up and adopted as a Silvester tradition in Germany. We had it this year for Christmas Eve dinner.

It is so awesome.

The grill goes in the middle of the table and has two levels. The top grill is for lying your pieces of meat or veggies, and the bottom layer is for placing your tiny little tray where you are cooking your own personal layered cheese creation. The rest of the table should be covered with bowls containing various meats and veggies and cheeses and sauces, so the possibilities are endless and you cook your individual creations, one after another. This goes on for a very long time, and it is so much fun.

Something about that cooker, it roasts everything wonderfully. My favorite is sliced peppered steak with onions and corn, and cheese melted on top. Or prawns and mushrooms and tiny potatoes. My mother in law had so many options for us, there was no way we could try everything before being too stuffed to continue. It's an interactive meal (like fondue), and you have people saying, "Pass the aoili" and "Pass the cauliflower" and "Pass the bell peppers" and "Pass that dark cheese there" constantly. We had two raklette cookers for our holiday.

Here we are getting into the task of creating our own little meals. Nora is scraping her little tray's contents onto her plate. Lots of reaching across the table occurs: )





Here I am checking on my creation - prawns with melted cheese on top? Weird!

I'd like to thank those shepherds who came up with this idea. And my mother in law for going to all that trouble for us! Wenn du das hier liest, herzlichen dank eva!


For more Sundays in other cities, go here: Unknown Mami

18 comments:

Leah Fry said...

That's not only food, but a wonderful social event. Mmmm, prawns.

AareneX said...

I am drooling!

White Horse Pilgrim said...

That does look such fun.

I've seen a modern shepherd cook stuff on a metal disc (taken from a farm disc harrow - hope he'd asked the farmer!) over a fire. Shepherds are quite inventive people.

Sonya said...

Dont forget to add your name on the sundays in my city list..everyone will love this post!!

Beautiful photos!!! everyone is into eating stuff that way here too..we havent done it yet but at some point I will buy one. I can see I am seriously missing out:)

Autumn Mist said...

It sounds fabulous. I love a fondue, and this sounds even nicer - sehr lecker!

Sirje said...

LOVE. ::Slobber::

Raclette is amazing, and I've only ever had the plain basic cheese, meat, gherkins, & potatoes version. We have a little 2-person raclette oven so I'll have to branch out and get more stuff. Prawns? Aioli?? Swoon.

Mrs4444 said...

What a terrific post! I loved learning about this fun meal. We love fondue in my house, so I'm sure we'd enjoy this. What is the heat source?

P.S. Your horse is GORGEOUS, and I'm glad you're back together.

lytha said...

Leah, you're so right. I was trying to convey that! (Funny to me is the fact that Germans have so much trouble identifying seafood. Just like I cannot tell you about the specific parts of pork for eating (clueless here!). Seafood is basic to someone (lytha) from the coast, just like pork cuts are a no-brainer for the people here.)

Aarene, I just told my man I want my own raklette device. Must make it here at home!!!!!!!

WHP, You mean he cooked on a piece of farm equipment? A harrow!? That is awesome! So not within health regulations!

Sonya, Thank you, I always forget that! You mean you have not tried Raklette? You, the chefy goddess?!

Autumn Mist, I've only had fondue a couple times, and I was too shy to tell people to hand me things/make way, so I couldn't enjoy myself. Seattle has some very nice fondue restaurants, where you broil your own meat at your table. Fancy and lecker! Wish I'd been braver.

Sirje, I want one! Just asked for one, actually: ) And for this occasion, what I didn't mention, it was my task to bring the Aioli! I had never made aioli in my life, so I read up on it. I made two versions: authentic (french) and the cheater version (with store-bought mayo). People ate up the cheater version right away, and I had to take the authentic right home with me. Uncooked eggs are dangerous, I guess. Now I have learned. Next time I know my lemon juice/garlic balance!

lytha said...

Mrs4s, the heat source is electric; it's a plug in device. The picture I stole is from the T-fal company.

I googled "T-fal raclette" and they are only $53 bucks in America. Lucky you, I bet that's cheaper than here! Thank you for reading, and the nice compliment for Baasha!

Unknown said...

First of all, the pictures are AMAZING! Wow. Isn't our world so lovely? And second of all, I just LOVE that cooker thing! How cool is that? So fun. I love your family all gathered around it. What a wonderful post! It is always so good to visit you!

Joanna Jenkins said...

WOW! What a spread. I'd love to spend Christmas in Switzerland! The food looks great.

Thanks for sharing your city!

Happy new year.

Marla said...

Love your post. I am Swiss and still have family in Guibiasco. Wonderful people. Wonderful culture. But then, I may be a bit prejudiced. :-)

honeypiehorse said...

I was there! And we just had Raclette on Sylvester.

Anonymous said...

Oh wow - I love this idea (I think I'm going to have to keep an eye out for one of these devices)! :)

Sherry Sikstrom said...

looks positively yummy!

Funder said...

Now I'm hungry :( What a wonderful Silvester feast!

I definitely want to haul my horse to Montana or Wyoming one summer and ride the mountains there. Lovely!

Chelsi said...

That thing looks awesome!! YUM!!!

Those mountains look like British Columbia too! Funny about the german thing:)

Claudya Martinez said...

That just sounds like the most fun ever! Making my own cheese concoctions! I'd be in heaven.