The area around Klosters in the far-eastern Swiss canton of Graubünden has been a renowned winter-sports resort ever since the British royals and Hollywood celebrities started favoring it in the 1950s (Davos is about 10 kilometers [6 miles] away). However, the area isn’t all glitz and glamour, especially in the more remote corners of the Prättigau region. Since the Walser settled in the valley between 1180 and 1313, life has been marked by the hard work of subsistence agriculture. People used what they could grow, breed, and harvest themselves.
Common in the region, Pizokel is a humble, nutritious entree made from flour, milk, and eggs—a type of fresh pasta not unlike spaetzle. There is no absolute pizokel recipe, because there are as many variants as there are grandmothers in the valley. The dough for pizokel could include potatoes, quark, or . . . even pork liver. This tends to be a versatile dish; the most common variation is baked with bacon, onions, and cheese. This variation, from the cooks at the Hotel Wynegg, one of the most traditional hotels in the region, is light and easy to re-create at home.
The pizokel dough can be made and shaped a day ahead. Grate the dough (yes, with a grater) onto a baking sheet lightly dusted with semolina flour, then refrigerate until ready to use, or freeze for four hours before transferring to a ziptop bag. These will keep frozen for up to two months.
Reprinted with permission from Alpine Cooking, by Meredith Erickson, copyright © 2019. Published by Ten Speed Press, a division of Penguin Random House, LLC.
Photographs copyright © 2019 by Christina Holmes.