Swiss cuisine – facts and figures

Swiss cuisine owes its diversity and rich culinary heritage to its varied local traditions.  Each region has produced its own specialities, some of which have now become national dishes. In addition, there are hundreds of types of cheese, meat products, bread and chocolate. Some Swiss-made food products are so popular they can be found in practically every Swiss household

  • There are 400 different Swiss products officially recognised as part of Switzerland's culinary heritage. The most famous include Gruyère cheese, longeole sausage and Basler Läckerli biscuits.
  • No country in the world consumes as much chocolate as Switzerland – over 11kg per person each year.
  • The Swiss also eat a lot of cheese – 23kg per person each year – and have over 700 types to choose from.
  • There is a wide selection of bread, with more than 200 different types. Wholemeal bread is more popular in the German-speaking part of the country, while the French and Italian-speaking regions tend to prefer white bread. The traditional Swiss 'Sunday bread' is a buttery braided loaf.
  • There is also a huge assortment of sausages, cold cuts and dried meat specialities, which vary from region to region. In French-speaking Switzerland, for example, you'll find Geneva's longeole sausage, the saucisson vaudois and Jura's boudin à la crème (blood sausage). Then there's the St Galler Bratwurst (veal sausage) in the east of the country, Bündnerfleisch air-dried beef in the south-east, and liver mortadella from Ticino in the south.
  • Switzerland's national sausage is the cervelat, of which some 160 million are produced annually. It is traditionally grilled on a wooden skewer over an open fire, with a cross cut at both ends. You may even hear the Swiss talking about 'cervelat celebrities', a somewhat disparaging name they give local second-rate stars!
  • Some 250 grape varieties are grown, of which around 40 are indigenous to Switzerland. The leading wine-making region is Valais, where over 50 different grape varieties are grown.
  • Absinthe, otherwise known as the 'green fairy', is a wormwood schnapps distilled from various plants and originally produced as a medical elixir. 
  • Known today all over the world as a breakfast cereal, muesli was first created around 1900 by a Swiss doctor as an 'apple diet food' and served in clinics as a nutritious evening meal. 

There are certain food products found in practically every Swiss kitchen. For example:

  • Aromat powdered seasoning, invented by Knorr in 1952, is a staple on Swiss dining tables. The popular Maggi stock cubes have been around since 1908.
  • Switzerland's favourite bread spreads are Cenovis, a product launched in 1931 and made from brewer's yeast, carrots and onions, and Le Parfait, which dates from 1942.
  • Ovomaltine (known internationally as Ovaltine) was developed in 1865 as a powder made from barley malt, skimmed milk and cocoa, to be mixed with milk as a chocolate beverage.
  • Rivella is a soft drink produced from milk whey and has been on the market since the 1950s.
  • Ricola is a cough drop made from 13 different herbs and has been produced since 1940.