I cleaned up the barbecue, stocked the T-Bar, and had a bit of time off. It was a fairly light day of work. When they all returned in the evening, I helped with dinner and hosted the evening program, which was a movie about Adelboden in Swiss-German. It’s tough enough to understand German, much less Swiss-German, much less Adelboden (or any little village) Swiss-German, but I learned quite a bit about the area. I’ll try to bring home a copy of the DVD. I liked the portions about soldiers hanging out in town during the war, all the skiing over time, and how the farmers supplement their incomes by working the ski lifts in the winter. It makes sense, but it’s got to be a tough life.
They went off on the usual hike to Engstligen today, so I heard all kinds of stories about snowstorms, slipping down the hills, and building snowmen this evening. One more guest came today, so I showed her around. I just got back from hosting a Swiss wine & cheese night. We had white, rosé, and red Swiss wines, of which the white was best, plus a whole room full of cheese platters:
- Frühstückskäse, from Adelboden [breakfast cheese]
- Raclette, from Adelboden; creamy and fruity [usually used to make the meal of the same name]
- Appenzeller, from Canton Appenzell [very pungent]
- Gruyère, from Gruyères; nutty and the main ingredient in fondue
- Emmentaler, from the Emme Valley in Canton Bern [This is what much of the world calls “Swiss cheese,” with the holes and all.]
- Alpkäse, from near Adelboden [Alp cheese tastes different depending on the time of year, which farmer made it, which flowers and herbs the cows ate, and any number of variables, but they’re all strong cheeses.]
- Rotschmierkäse, traditionally made in monasteries [red mold washed rind cheese]
- Mutschli, a softer and aromatic mountain cheese
- Hüttenkäse, made locally and with herbs [cottage cheese]
- Sbrinz, from the Berner Oberland; hard and grainy
Plus two foreign cheeses: (They were made in CH, though, so it was okay.)
- Brie, from France
- Gorgonzola, from northern Italy, near Milan
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