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SWITZERLAND FOOD....

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Generally speaking, basic food items include a huge selection of bread (white, ... including beans, carrots, cauliflower, potatoes, spinach etc. Sausages and meat ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SWITZERLAND FOOD....


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SWITZERLAND FOOD....
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BY MEGAN MARTHA
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BASIC FOOD ITEMS....
  • Food, ingredients and the way to prepare it
    varies greatly all over the country. Generally
    speaking, basic food items include a huge
    selection of bread (white, whole wheat etc.),
    dairy products such as milk, yogurt, butter and -
    of course - a great variety of the world famous
    Swiss cheese. Also important are vegetables
    including beans, carrots, cauliflower, potatoes,
    spinach etc. Sausages and meat - mainly veal,
    beef, pork, chicken or turkey - are served in
    many different ways grilled, cooked, sliced or
    cut. Side dishes include French fries, rice,
    potatoes and different types of pasta. Fruits are
    available from all over the world, locally grown
    fruits include apples, pears, grapes and
    different types of berries, such as black
    berries, blueberries, raspberries, red currants
    and strawberries. Finally, there are a lot of
    sweets, including the second type of food that
    Switzerland is world famous for Swiss chocolate.

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WHAT PEOPLE EAT AND DRINK....
  • In Switzerland, breakfast typically includes
    bread, butter or margarine, marmalade or honey,
    maybe some cheese or cereals, plus milk, cold or
    hot chocolate, tea or coffee.Lunch may be as
    simple as a sandwich or a birchermüesli or it
    could be a complete meal.Depending on what
    people had for lunch, dinner can be a full main
    course or just some bread, cheese, maybe some
    dried meat or any other light meal.Drinks range
    from plain water, over different types of soft
    drinks including most internationally well known
    brands plus some local products, to a great
    variety of beers and wines. Hot drinks include
    many different flavors of tea and coffee.

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GOING OUT TO EAT....
  • There are many different places to go out to eat
    in Switzerland. It starts with fast food, such as
    burger, fish and chips etc., continues with self
    service restaurants and what people in the U.S.
    use to call a family restaurant where you get all
    the regular menus and ends with spectacular (and
    very expensive) restaurants, where to eat is
    supposed to be an "experience".

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CONTINUED....
  • Food is quite expensive in Switzerland, at least
    compared to most European countries and
    especially compared to the U.S. If you go to a
    fast food place, you may easily spend up to
    CHF 10 for a burger, a soft drink and a coffee.
    In a family restaurant, a menu will cost
    somewhere between CHF 15 and 50, self service
    restaurants are somewhat less expensive. At a
    more fancy restaurant, one can spend as much as
    CHF 1000 just for a bottle of wine ...

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CONTINUED....
  • Common menus include a great variety of pasta,
    potatoes prepared in many different ways,
    vegetables, meat (veal, beef, pork, chicken and
    even horse), fish (mainly fresh water fish), but
    also sea food. Vegetarian menus have become more
    popular during the last few years, most
    restaurants provide at least one vegetarian menu
    as a main course. In addition, salad is very
    popular as well. The most important part of
    course is desert. This includes cheese, but even
    more important any flavor of cakes or cookies

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DECORATED TABLES....
  • Swiss people do not only love good food, they
    also appreciate a beautiful decorated table, like
    the table shown on the left, decorated for a
    Christmas dinner.

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HISTORY OF SWITZERLAND...
  • .

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CONTINUED...
  • Originally inhabited by the Helvetians, or
    Helvetic Celts, the territory comprising modern
    Switzerland was conquered by Julius Caesar during
    the Gallic wars and made part of the Roman
    Empire. It remained a Roman province until the
    4th century AD. Under Roman influence, the
    population reached a high level of civilization
    and enjoyed a flourishing commerce. Important
    cities, such as Geneva, Basel, and Zurich, were
    linked by military roads that also served as
    trade arteries between Rome and the northern
    tribes.

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CONTINUED...
  • After the decline of the Roman Empire,
    Switzerland was invaded by Germanic tribes from
    the north and west. Some tribes, such as the
    Alemanni in central and northeastern Switzerland,
    and the Burgundians, who ruled western
    Switzerland, settled there. In 800, the country
    became part of Charlemagne's empire. It later
    passed under the dominion of the German emperors
    in the form of small ecclesiastic and temporal
    holdings subject to imperial sovereignty

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CONTINUED...
  • In 1291, representatives of the three forest
    cantons of Uri, Schwyz, and Unterwalden signed
    the Eternal Alliance. This united them in the
    struggle against "foreign" rule by the Hapsburgs,
    who then held the German imperial throne. At the
    battle of Morgarten in 1315, the Swiss defeated
    the Hapsburg army and secured quasi-independence
    within the German Empire as the Swiss
    Confederation

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CONTINUED...
  • Under the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648, European
    countries recognized Switzerland's independence
    from the Holy Roman Empire and its neutrality. In
    1798, armies of the French Revolution conquered
    Switzerland. The Treaty of Vienna and the Second
    Peace of Paris in 1815 re-established Swiss
    independence, and the powers participating in the
    Congress of Vienna agreed to recognize Swiss
    permanent neutrality.

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CONTINUED...
  • Switzerland adopted a federal constitution in
    1848, modeled in part on the U.S. Constitution.
    The Swiss amended their Constitution extensively
    in 1874, establishing federal responsibility for
    defense, trade, and legal matters. Since then,
    continued political, economic, and social
    improvement has characterized Swiss history. The
    Swiss did not participate in either world war.

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THE END....
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