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The dishwasher has a fondue setting

Zug, Switzerland - I visited the office today to pack up my things in preparation for our impending departure from Switzerland. While I was there, I noticed a curious icon on the office's dishwasher. Further investigation revealed that the icon was for a fondue/raclette wash function. The icon is pictured below. The manufacturer, V-Zug Ltd. (subsidiary of Metall Zug Group, a Swiss industrial holding company), describes the fondue/raclette function this way: "The typical Swiss programme for the Swiss market from the Swiss manufacturer! Caquelons and raclette pans are cleaned to perfection without having to soak first. The programme can also be used as a 'super-intensive' run thanks to its active soaking phase. Pre-rinsing of burned-on soufflé or gratin dishes is a thing of the past." V-Zug apparently makes this feature available on several of its Adora models of dishwasher.  Upon discovering this, I of course rushed home to investigate my own apartment'...

So much hiking!

Zürich, Switzerland - We've spent much of the fall hiking and taking in the colorful foliage. For some of these trips we've ventured out on our own - just Hannah and me - while on others, good friends joined us.   Lech Lech is among the more posh ski towns in the alps. Wikipedia describes Lech this way: "Catering to wealthier clientele, particularly to the international jet set and foreign royalty, the municipality is an internationally known winter sports resort on the mountain range Arlberg. The Dutch royal family and Russian oligarchs regularly ski there." We visited in the fall shoulder season between the peak summer and winter periods. Many of the restaurants and hotels were closed ahead of the winter rush. When you're plebs like us, this is how you afford and gain admittance to such an exclusive place. Needless to say, we did not rub shoulders with royals or oligarchs. We visited Lech with our good friends Ben and Laura where we celebrated their recent enga...

Belgium: Ghent, Bruges, and (briefly) Brussels

Zurich, Switzerland - Several weeks ago I regaled you with our trip to the Netherlands. Here, I will share some details from the second half of that trip, in which we visited Belgium. Ghent Our first stop in Belgium was Ghent, a major European city in the middle ages and during the early renaissance. It was for a time the second largest European city North of the alps (after Paris), as we were reminded countless times by various informational plaques and various audio guides at historical sites.  Owing to its prosperity, Ghent built some wonderful gothic and Medieval architecture. The city's well preserved Graslei and Korenlei are fine examples. This was the quay and the heart of the Medieval city, home to merchants, guild halls, and storage depots. Today it's a popular tourist destination and home to many cafes with terrace's along the water. Speaking of cafes, during its Medieval heyday, the city seems to have built gothic cathedrals in much the same way that we build Sta...