Alpine inspired Food for Rainy Days

Raclette is a delicious and fun way to dine! It is both a type of Swiss cow’s milk cheese and a dish. It is perfect for gathering friends and family together and sitting around a table cooking together.

The term raclette derives from the French word racler meaning to scrape. The cheese is heated on the raclette and once melted it is scraped off and eaten. Traditionally, the cheese is accompanied by baby potatoes, gherkins, pickled onions, chunks of bread and dried meats. Delicious!

Raclette was mentioned in medieval writings and was often eaten by peasants in the Swiss and French Alps. Originally the cheese was melted on warm stones laid around a fire. The traditional dish dates back as far as 700 years.

The modern way of serving raclette involves an electric table-top grill with small wedge shaped pans, known as coupelles, to heat slices of raclette cheese in. Some raclettes come with eight coupelles allowing a good number of people to join in. The grill is surmounted by a hot plate upon which you can cook strips of beef, prawns and vegetables to accompany your coupelle of melting cheese, green salad and pommes frites!

L’Arolay at La Fornet and Le Coin Savoyarde in Val d’Isere specialise in raclette. For a home version raclettes can also be bought in stores.

Bon appetit!

Penny, Le Chardon Mountain Lodges

http://lechardonvaldisere.com/

Spring Cleaning Scotland’s Skiing

The CairnGorm, Nevis Range and Glenshee ski resorts in Scotland are hosting their fifth annual The Big Spring Clean this Saturday 16 June 2012.

The aim of the event is to clear the litter discarded on and off the slopes during the winter ski season by skiers picnicking, smoking or commonly dropping items from chairlifts. Organised by the Ski Club of Great Britain, volunteers scour the resorts removing the litter and the more volunteers the merrier! Rubbish including cigarette butts, chocolate wrappers, banana skins, plastic bottles and clothing appear across the mountains in the springtime once the snow has melted.

Elsewhere, officials in Val Thorens have estimated that a staggering 30,000 cigarette butts are dropped carelessly under each chair lift during the season.

This littering problem pollutes the rivers, streams and the ground which subsequently endangers wildlife and plants. Toxins from the cigarette butts act as an insecticide that is poisonous. Dioxins from plastic containers damage the reproduction on fish and mammals. Therefore the importance of eliminating this litter is great.

Commonly dropped items can take years to decompose:

Glass bottle: 4000 years
Plastic bottle: 100 to 1000 years
Aluminum can: 100 to 500 years
Packaging paper: 100 to 450 years
Paper from lift pass: 100 to 450 years
Cigarette butt: 2 to 15 years
Bubble/chewing gum: 2 to 5 years
Fruit peel: 6 months
(Information courtesy of Mountain Riders)

Similar clean up events also take place in resorts across Europe. Mountain Riders organises litter collections throughout the summer months across 75 resorts in the Alps involving the local communities.

In Scotland, volunteers are meeting on Saturday at 10.00am at the base of one of the three ski areas and will be provided with gloves and litter bags. With every bag filled volunteers are rewarded with free tea and cakes!

In 2011′s event, 44 sacks of rubbish were collected by volunteers of all ages. That’s a lot of rubbish, cups of tea and cake! As well as the usual litter, the volunteers also found rather oddly a bed mattress and apparantly a ‘message in a balloon’!

To volunteer, contact the Ski Club of Great Britain at http://www.skiclub.co.uk/

Penny, Le Chardon Mountain Lodges
http://www.lechardonvaldisere.com/

L’Occitane at Le Chardon

Every bathroom at Le Chardon Mountain Lodges is filled with the luxurious L’Occitane toiletries. Le Chardon has favoured L’Occitane for years for our guests and the French brand perfectly reflects the nature and beauty of Le Chardon.

Founded in 1976 L’Occitane en Provence is a French beauty company renowned worldwide for its luxurious products for body, face and home using natural, botanical and organic ingredients such as lavender, cherry blossom and orange blossom. It began with the creation of products which were sold in local markets and now the products are sold in L’Occitane’s boutiques globally.

Our guests can indulge in the beautiful ranges of bath and beauty products to pamper themselves during their stay. Ultra rich shea butter enriched shampoo, verbena citrus conditioner (this fresh and zingy potion wakes you up in the morning!), shea butter and coconut shower cream, shea butter hand and foot cream and verbena citrus soap are provided in every room. There are also bath tub fizzer treats with mint oil to bubble away ski aches which feel a bit like a champagne bath!

Penny, Le Chardon Mountain Lodges

http://www.lechardonvaldisere.com/