One day at work while we both were eating cheese with our lunch, we decided to plan a trip to Gruyère, the town where the cheese hails.
Exploring our options with how to get there, the train was ridicously over-priced and a car rental would not have been necessarily worth it. We turned to option number 3, genevaonline.ch, the Geneva online networking community. Amélie posted a little blub about wanting to go to Gruyère, and about an hour later her phone rang. It was a nice sounding guy, Gregorie, who offered to drive the 3 of us (Jaren, Amélie and Steve) to the cheese capital of Switzerland.
Sunday morning rolled up hard and fast, but with cheese as our dangling carrot we were motivated to get going. Gregorie picked all 3 of us up and we were on our way. After some small talk, we later find out that Gregorie was a former tourguide in Switzerland. He took us on the back roads through Vaud's vineyards, showed us where famous people live (or lived) and talked about Swiss culture and history.
Before we knew it, we were at the Gruyère cheese factory.
In short, it soley depends on when and what the cow eats. The cheese actually has several different flavors and colors.
For example, if Cherry, the cow, ate flowers in the summertime her milk and therefore cheese would taste different than her milk in the winter when she is fed hey.
Left to right: salé (salted), mi-salé (slightly salted), and doux (soft) . Can you see the difference in color (and texture)?
We also caught a special treat: real life cheese making by fire.
2 comments:
Mmmmm...cheeeese...yummy!
Yummy! Yummy! Jess
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