(This post published on September 23, 2024)
Wednesday February 5, 2014 -- We spent the morning at the Glarner Feingebäck Factory in the Sernf Valley near Glarus,
which is a bakery (employs 30 people) that makes specialty pastries on request,
and is one of only a few, if not the only bakery in Switzerland that bakes
kosher products. The history and explanation of the works and the tour as well
were very interesting, and of course we got to have coffee and cookies too! (Tours were offered for free at a variety of industries in this region, to promote knowledge of the history of industry in Canton Glarus. We could also have had a tour of a weaving factory, for example, but this was the tour available on Wednesday, Urs' day off).
After the tour we took the bus to the end of the Sernf Valley to a town called Elm, but it was very cold and windy with low clouds,
and not a single restaurant open. So we just had our picnic lunch at the old
train station while waiting for the bus. (Wednesday was "rest day").
In Elm there is a very special hole in the mountain called
the Martin's Loch (Martin's hole), a 15m diameter hole through which the sun
shines for a couple of minutes directly on the church tower, on only 4 days
each year (March and September). After that the sun disappears again and rises
15 minutes later above the mountains.
Here is a time-lapse video someone took of the sun shining through the Martin's Hole: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27yGfqGPpm4
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An ugly day for an outing, but we are going to get a free tour of the Glarner Feingebäck bakery in Engi in the Sernf Valley, so worth a trip anyway. |
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First we all were ushered into the meeting room for coffee and cookies and an introductory explanation of the history of the bakery and its operations. |
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We all had to put on special hair nets and coats to prevent contamination. |
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Production area |
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This is where the handmade chocolates get made. |
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The chocolates are all made by hand. A large variety of chocolate slabs are produced like this. There is a real science to how this is done, especially temperature and consistency. |
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Yumm, we all got to try the dark chocolate and hazelnut chunks. |
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These pastries are called Beignets, and it is all done by hand! |
VIDEO:
The production of the beignets, all done by hand.
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Packing the beignets (or that is what they called them) |
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Then we moved on to the production of the popular "Birnenbrot", a pastry with a filling of dried pears. |
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Birnenbrot, ready to be packaged |
VIDEO:
Packaging of the Birnenbrot
After the tour of the Bakery, we got on a bus (in front of the building) and took a ride up valley to the town of Elm, where we had hoped to look around at the pretty houses for a bit, but it was so icy cold, and visibility was poor, so we just sat in the waiting room in the former train station there (there was a train line in this valley from 1905 to 1969) and ate our lunch, while waiting for the next bus to take us back out of the valley.