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Salon Suisse des Goûts & Terroirs 2016

salon-suisse-de-gouts-et-terroirs
Sausages from Vaud, Swiss Bakery Trophy entries and cheese made with truffles

With over 300 food exhibitors under one roof, the 17th annual Salon Suisse des Goûts & Terroirs is a Swiss food paradise. After trying to go each year for the last four years, I finally made it to this huge food festival on Sunday. I spent the day sampling various culinary specialties from the seven Swiss cantons featured at this event: Fribourg, Genève, Jura, Neuchâtel, Valais, Vaud and Ticino.

The Salon Suisse des Goûts & Terroirs also hosts two national competitions in 2016: the 7th Swiss Bakery Trophy and the 1st Trophée national de la Fée verte, an absinthe cocktail competition. In addition, this event selects a culinary region from Switzerland as its hôte d’honneur (guest of honor). For this year, it’s Neuchâtel Vins et Terroir, which offered an incredibly unique experience to sample some of its produits du terroir during a truly blind taste test.

Neuchâtel’s Dégustation in the Dark

When I stopped at the main stand for Neuchâtel, I noticed they had a contest which required you to identify five food products from the region. Never one to turn down the opportunity for a free prize, I grabbed a form and continued upstairs. I couldn’t have predicted what happened next!

At the top of the stairs, I was greeted by a handful of participants and two women who explained the rules of the dégustation, or tasting. We had to take off our watches, if they had any glow-in-the-dark features, and put our phones on mute. Then we formed a single-file line, with one of our hands touching the shoulder of the person in front of us. Black curtains hung in front of a doorway. Our hostess led us into a pitch-black room, without any light whatsoever. She had us stop and find a high tabletop in front of us with our hands. On the table, we then felt our way around to discover a tray with five culinary specialties from Neuchâtel. In complete darkness, using our sense of touch, smell and taste, we had to guess at what we were eating.

Boulangerie Pâtisserie Confiserie Achini from Le Locle showing off its Taillaule neuchâteloise, a culinary specialty of Neuchâtel. Photo courtesy of Salon suisse des Goûts et Terroirs.

The test really forced you to identify the foods based solely on the strength of your palate, as well as your knowledge of products from Neuchâtel. I think I could name about 3 to 4 out of the 5 samples. For example, a small piece of Taillaule neuchâteloise, a yeasted bread studded with raisins; a creamy dessert with the flavor of absinthe; and a thin slice of saucisson neuchâtelois, a popular pork sausage. The food was lovely, but I kept accidentally bumping into people and grabbed someone else’s samples by mistake! I’m a bit clumsy, so I would have preferred the same test done with just a blindfold, instead of the dark-as-night room, but maybe I’m the only one that felt that way.

Discovering Swiss Foods and Producers

Longeole IGP with lentils, tarte au citron and beer from Fribourg

Regional Swiss Food Products

Events like the Salon Suisse des Goûts & Terroirs, allow me to discover both new and traditional Swiss food products. Here were some highlights:

The scene inside Espace Gruyère at the Salon Suisse des Goûts et Terroirs 2016.

Along with the hundreds of food exhibitors and the two national competitions, the Salon Suisse des Goûts & Terroirs also had a demonstration kitchen that featured prominent chefs. It also had a children’s area with hands-on displays and workshops. Overall, you almost have too much to do in only one day. There are so many local producers to visit and talk to, interesting regional restaurants with local dishes to try, presentations and workshops to attend and more. I consider this to be the premier food event for Suisse Romande.

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