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International jury reveals the ‘best’ Swiss cheese

Intense two-day deliberations are over with an expert panel crowning one cheese among hundreds of candidates as Switzerland’s finest.

International jury reveals the 'best' Swiss cheese
A Gruyere cheese wheel is checked during maturing operation in a giant cellar. Photo by FABRICE COFFRINI / AFP

Let’s face it: there is no such thing as bad Swiss cheese, just as there isn’t bad Swiss chocolate.

Even if you are not fond of one variety, someone else will swear by it. So, the process of selecting the ‘best’ cheese is a matter of pitting one excellent cheese against another.

On Thursday and Friday, cheese connoisseurs did just that.

Gathered in the Valais community of Val de Bagnes for The Swiss Cheese Championships, the jury had the painstaking task of tasting more than 1,000 cheeses in 32 categories — including hard, semi-soft, rindless, and others — and rating each one on terms of its taste, appearance, aroma, and texture (and no, the size of holes was not among the criteria).

In addition to Swiss jurors, the panel also included cheese experts from the USA, Canada, New Zealand, Great Britain, France, Germany, Austria, Italy and even Japan.

The competition was tense, but by the end of the day, the jury finally revealed its ruling.

And the big cheese is….

… a Gruyère, which is recognisable by its solid yellow colour and taste that ranges from sharp to mild.

Now, if you live in Switzerland and know a thing or two about cheeses, you also know that this particular one comes from its namesake region in the canton of Fribourg. It is manufactured entirely from the milk of cows that graze the local pastures.

Cows graze in the mountain pasture in Gruyères, Photo by FABRICE COFFRINI / AFP

There is also a Gruyère manufactured in France — which the Swiss look down upon — and even one from America, that the Swiss say is “not really cheese”.

A US court ruled in January 2022 that ‘Gruyere cheese’ does not have to come from the Gruyères region — or even from Switzerland, for that matter — in order to bear the name. 

READ MORE: Why are Swiss angry with Americans about Gruyere cheese?

Within Switzerland’s Gruyère region itself, there is a number of small manufacturers who produce these cheeses to the traditional, ancestral recipe in village dairies.

The one that was crowned on Friday as ‘the best” is from a dairy-cheese factory in the village of Montbovon.

 
READ MORE: Ten varieties of cheese you should be able to identify if you live in Switzerland

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FOOD AND DRINK

McDonalds to open seven new restaurants in Switzerland this year

The American fast food giant McDonald's plans to open seven new locations in Switzerland before the end of 2024.

McDonalds to open seven new restaurants in Switzerland this year

With the first McDonalds in the country opening in Geneva in 1976, the company currently has 180 franchises nationwide. 

While the company has not revealed the exact locations of all the new restaurants, local reporting suggests that there will be a new branch in Küssnacht in Schwyz and in Zug.

The company is also currently actively seeking locations and taking franchise inquiries in regards to the expansion plans. 

In 2023, the company opened five new restaurants at Altenrhein in the canton of St Gallen, Gland in Vaud, Sihlcity in Zurich, and Riddes and Visp in Valais.

One restaurant has already opened in 2024, at Aarberg in the canton of Bern. 

The current expansion is part of the brand’s plan to have 200 locations throughout the country over the medium term.

Each of the country’s outlets now can allow ordering through the restaurant’s app and payment. A further 117 offer delivery through services such as Uber Eats.

McDonald’s announced in the press release that 88 percent of their total food spend now comes from local suppliers within Switzerland

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