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SWITZERLAND
- DRINK |
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Cafés are open from
breakfast until about midnight/1am
and often sell alcohol; bars
and pubs tend to open their doors
for late-afternoon and evening
business only. Daytime places for
tea and cakes are dubbed tearooms
. Other than pubs, drinking venues
vary according to region. A cosy Bierstube
or Stübli - replete with
wood-beams and Swiss kitsch decor -
is the evening meeting-place of
choice throughout German-speaking
Switzerland, while in Romandie and
Ticino pavement cafés are more
common. Table service is ubiquitous,
except at the English or Irish pubs
gracing most towns. Local beers
vary between regions and are
invariably excellent, costing Sfr3-4
for a third of a litre. A
beer-lemonade shandy is a panaché
. Even the simplest bars and
restaurants have wine , most
affordably as Offene Wein , vin
ouvert , vino aperto , a
handful of house reds and whites
chalked up on a board and sold by
the decilitre (small glass Sfr3-5).
Premier Swiss wines are the Valais
whites (Fendant) and reds (Dôle).
Also look out for local
spirits/liquors ( Schnapps , eau-de-vie
, aquavite ), including
cherry Kirsch , aromatic pear
Williamine , and excellent
Ticinese grappa .
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