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Small land, big taste

By Mike Peters | China Daily | Updated: 2015-07-21 13:23

Small land, big taste

Swiss chefs are creative with sausage: This one is made from lake fish, but after smoking there is no "fishy" taste.[Photo provided to China Daily]

Dense syrups and compotes-and zesty liqueurs-make the most of regional apricots, plums and sweet black cherries that are harvested and preserved for later baking or simply spreading on crusty fresh bread. After munching a kirschtorte (cherry cake made with an indecent amount of almond paste and butter cream), I make sure to collect a bottle of the kirsch to take home. If I am not ambitious enough to make the cake when I get to my Beijing kitchen, the cherry liqueur can simply be added to a glass of sparkling wine for easy enjoyment.

Other sweet treats must be savored on the spot. Apple strudel is easy to find in Swiss cafes, but a more specifically local treat was the Botzi pear, a treasure of the Gruyere region. Gruyere, of course, produces a great cheese-the country, in fact, produces more than 450 different types of cheese, almost all without the holes outsiders tend to associate with "Swiss" cheese. A dairy area that produces great cheese unsurprising also produces fresh cream, and Gruyere's super-thick version is popularly served with the local pear and meringues.

Then, of course, there is chocolate. The Swiss variety has been famous for a couple of centuries, thanks to folks like Henri Nestle, Jean Tobler and Rodolphe Lindt. Their names emblazon shops across the country, indeed the world-but surprisingly half of the chocolate made in Switzerland is eaten there. Lindt-where the founder invented the aeration process that makes chocolate candy melt in your mouth-is a key stop on Zurich's chocolate-themed tours. So is Cafe Sprungli, famous for Swiss sweets since 1836.

And what would a Swiss ski resort be without a fragrant cup of hot chocolate?

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