Leaving Solothurn we headed south into the Emmental
valley. The lush green grassland was dotted with pretty villages of Swiss chalets and grazing herds of content and soft-eyed cows. The style of house
was wooden and very ornate, with carvings in the beams and eaves.
The Emmental Valley |
Generally
wide, rather than tall the three or four storey houses were covered by a low
hang hanging and tiled rooves, presumably designed to protect and insulate the
house in snows.
In the late summer sunshine all the houses were colourful with
window boxes and hanging baskets of hot bright geraniums.
Our aire at the pumpkin farm |
We duly set off on
bikes to the nearby bahnhof and forked out for a ‘half pass’ which in time and
over several journeys would pay for itself and gain us discounted travel on
buses, trains and trams. We caught the advertised train to Affoltern, but
somehow ended up on the other side of the valley. Navigating our way to the
village by bus we were surprised to find the railway station closed, apparently
since 2011, although it appeared on the rail timetables.
Stuck on a deserted
platform in hot sunshine we remembered that the dairy was on a hill outside of
the village and struck off up a 5kms climb to find some cheese.
Our arrival at the show diary coincided with the
afternoon cheese-making session at 4pm. Leaning over a gallery we watched from
above as the dairy maid and farmer manoeuvred, by a series of hooks and chains,
a large and heavy bundle of whey wrapped in linens.
They moulded and squeezed
the milky mass into a single mould which was then weighted under a press to
force all of the liquids out.
Once pressed, the newly-formed roundel of cheese
was labelled with the distinctive red and white Emmental livery and wheeled
into the cellar alongside hundreds of other cheeses stacked on trays and
maturing for up to 14 months to meet the strict AOC stipulations.
We sampled and then bought a small slab.
The journey home was by two buses, the mystery train and our bikes. It was a weary way but made enjoyable by the wonderful valley scenes and the knowledge that we had one of the world’s most famous cheeses safely tucked away to tuck into later that evening!