Swiss-ful Thinking

Poste No. 5. Bienvenue en France (Colmar)

Le 6 Septembre, 2023.

This morning, our GPS got us from Zürich to Colmar in an hour and a half. After checking into the Hotel Mercure Unterlinden, out to find lunch. They have an interesting way of serving salad in this town, i.e., by depositing pieces of toasted bread with cheese on top of the lettuce. The local cheeses include cow’s-milk Munster and chèvre. Both, it turned out, were yummy.

Colmar is like Stein-am-Rhein on steroids. Again, the characteristic architecture:

Like Stein-am-Rhein, these are originals. Rick Steves comments, “Historic beauty was usually a poor excuse for being spared the ravages of World War II, [see my previous blog reference to Dresden] but it worked for Colmar. The American and British military were careful not to bomb the half-timbered old burghers’ houses, characteristic tiled roofs, and cobbled lanes of Alsace’s most beautiful city. The town’s distinctly French shutters combined with the ye olde German half-timbering gives Colmar an intriguing ambience.”

Colmar has a beautiful yet not excessively ornate Gothic Cathedral, Eglise des Dominicains:

We also undertook Rick’s (we are on a first-name basis by now) walking tour of Colmar, starting at the old customs house, Place de l’Ancienne Douane. Apparently Colmar got a lot out of being a privileged city, i.e., ruled directly by the Holy Roman Emperor (not one of his venal underlings), with the authority to make its own rules regarding taxes and customs duties, to build fortified walls, and run its internal affairs. This lasted to the 17th Century.

The walking tour directed us to the Bartholdi* statue of General Lazarus von Schwendi.

*(Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi, a famous son of Colmar, is the artist and sculptor who made the Statue of LIberty that stands now in New York harbor.)

As you can see, the General has his arm raised (Statue-of-Liberty-style) and is holding a bunch of local pinot gris grapes. He’s credited with having brought that grape from Hungary to Alsace. You are left with deciding which was more significant: The Statue of Liberty, or the wine grape that makes up 15% of the wine produced in the region. Hmmmmmm………

We also took in the forecourt of the Bartholdi Museum, in which there stands his sculpture Les Grandes Soutiens du Monde (“The Great Pillars of the World”):

The sculpture was cast in 1902 (two years before Bartholdi died). In the work, the world is supported by three figures representing Patriotism, Hard Work and Justice. Justice is the figure on the left, holding her traditional scales. All three figures have a foot stepping forward (progress, the spirit of the Industrial Age) (says Rick).

We also walked along the lovely canal that gives this part of Colmar the sobriquet of “Petite Venise” (“Little Venice”):

I had decided that it was important to purchase a chunk of the local Munster cheese. And Glory be! We came upon a store with a cow in the window and wheels of various Munsters.

The proprietor was a wonderful guy who insisted that we taste samples of all the various variations of Munster.

We settled on two of his offerings (in the foreground above), the basic Munster, and the one with “nettles.” He had the machinery to vacuum-wrap the chunks of cheese, so as to obviate the need for refrigeration, and to keep the aroma away from the cheese-sniffing beagles when we pass U.S. Customs.

Back to the Mercure Hotel to rest before dinner, at the Restaurant Pfeffel. Since we didn’t feel like waiting an hour (the kitchen had just opened), we opted for the. easier-to-prepare tartes flambés, which are the traditional Alsatian version of pizza. Very thin crust, with cheese, cream and other toppings (onions, wild mushrooms, speck [a kind of prosciutto], smoked salmon, whatever).

The dish was apparently invented during the time that Alsace was German, and it was called Flammeküche (“flame cake”?) and was used primarily to test the heat of the oven before the important stuff was to be cooked. In any event, when Alsace became French again, the dish was already an Alsatian tradition. But they couldn’t call it by a German name (sacre bleu, non!). So it became (voila!) tarte flambé. (Stef violated her vegan rules and loved it). It tasted real good So did the bottle of Riesling to wash it down.

Tomorrow, taking a train to Strasbourg for a day trip.

14 responses to “Swiss-ful Thinking”

  1. I am having a few tech problems with phone mostly. i hope you do ge my replies. Also, my air conditioner is going to be replaced soon. Lts of fun in this big city. Keep on sneding your wonderful items; some day I’ll be doing that again !!!!!

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  2. Enjoy your travel posts very much.? I read them in bed even before coffee.?have never been to Colmar & knew little about it. This is fun! The cathedral looks amazing.
    Simple, exquisite architecture.!yay Stef-
    So happy you are not missing the cheese.

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  3. I SECOND THAT! So happy Stef is not missing the cheese 🩷

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    1. Yeah, cheese is what milk wants to be when it grows up!

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  4. There was an Alsatian bistro on the UWS, I think 100TH Street and Broadway, called Picnic with wonderful flatbread pizzas and copious amounts of cheese. The owners moved it up to Kinderhook and called it La Flammerie but unfortunately it closed during the pandemic. Also wonderful cheese and Black Forest chocolate cake.
    Enjoy!

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  5. Love being part of your trip

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  6. I am salivating while looking at your food photos. Food, wine and lovely towns – who could ask for anything more?

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  7. I really hope the food sniffing beagles don’t find your muenster chunk! Nicce legs in the cheese shop, by the way!!

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  8. Charles E. Doubleday Jr Avatar
    Charles E. Doubleday Jr

    These are wonderful pictures. The salad is gorgeous – I WANT IT! Love the half-timber walls. During WW2 I guess Colmar was lucky to have a partial French heritage. I’m a sucker for this wonderful deep blue sky! OMG massive wheels of cheese – I would spend time here. Lovely tartes flambés. I think I can taste it.

    Thanks for these! Charlie

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    1. Hoping we can get the cheese past US Customs. 🤞🤞🤞🤞

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    2. Yeah, we try to go out to lunch and make dinner at home, sort of a form of self-control. I’d like to come home not being 20 lbs overweight.

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  9. Gorgeous stuff for the eyes and soul!
    Love that sculpture by Bartholdi (hard work, etc.) and all the vistas. Mmmm just looking at the food. Great adventures.
    And some drama here (US man in Turkish cave, now freed!!!) …
    Caver is fiancé of former caretakers’ daughter here in the country!

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    1. Justice, hard work and patriotism. Not so sure about the latter, when you look at all the devastation caused by patriotism.

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