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One of the most modern industrial pastry plants in Switzerland allowed me to spend a morning with them - with my camera. Feel like making 7000 Napoleons? Follow me in.

Today I'll show you how the pastry most Swiss eat daily is prepared. The brand new pastry-making facility of COOP just outside Lausanne kindly allowed me to spend a morning there with my camera. A captivating experience. In Switzerland we don't have Walmart, Tesco or Marks and Spencer. Our supermarket scene is led by two Swiss giants, Migros and COOP, both cooperatives with non profit goals. COOP has 45,000 employees in Switzerland and, on top of selling groceries, clothes and all the things one expects to find in a supermarket, they also offer traditional food specialties. I am a big fan of their Slow Food section which sells hard-to-find delicacies such as red cows' milk Parmigiano, white polenta flour from Ticino or San Marzano tomatoes. Every evening every one of the 1400-odd COOP shops in Switzerland sends in its orders for the next day electronically. How many rice boxes, how many bottles of Champagne, and how many Napoleons. A custom SAP system works out the quantities the Aclens facility, which serves Western Switzerland, must produce for the next day. Let's see what happens next.

You may point out that these are no match for your grandma's cakes, and I would agree, but we would both miss the point. The fine people in this industrial bakery strive, day in, day out, to bring the best quality fresh pastry the majority of people will be able to afford. Certainly, a thousand layer cake by Pierre Hermé is made from better material, but to spend 100 Euros for a birthday cake? Students and many families, even in Switzerland, live on a budget.

Do you like Japonais pies? Let's see how you can turn out 100 pies in under an hour.

The night crew has baked a number of sponge cakes and cut each in half horizontally.

The cake halves are placed on a conveyor belt to be assembled.
See a 360° Panorama (1.5 Mb full screen) or 2000-pixels equirectangular panorama (plain vanilla JPEG 150Kb ).

Each sponge cake half is placed on the automated cream wheel, the real soul of the pastry.

The lady turns the machine on with a food pedal and off it goes, rotating the cake while pouring the filling on top - always the exact same amount. The cakes are then placed back on the conveyor belt.

Next stop - spreading and weighing. This lady checks the weight to make sure there is no excess of filling (that would just be too filling) and spreads the cream with a large flat knife.

The pies follow the line to a man who dredges their sides in slivered almonds...

...until finally they are stacked up on a tray. Bits of almonds that fell off the pies are collected in a plastic box at the end of the belt. Clean and efficient like a Swiss clock.

If only you could lay down and rest your head on a pillow below the conveyor belt, you would never again have to worry about having enough calories to last the day.

Click on picture for another 2000-pixels equirectangular panorama (JPEG 250Kb)



Cutting a Napoleon Down To Size

In French Napoleons are called mille feuille, or 'thousand layer cake'. Not another example of French hubris but rather a precise mathematical observation. When properly made, the puff pastry used to make Napoleons is folded 10 times in half, yielding 1024 layers in one single thin sheet of puff pastry. As you can see, there are three such sheets per Napoleon, which makes for 3072 wheat-butter layers in one Napoleon. A real treat for geeks to impress their girlfriends with raw brainpower. See how you can turn out 7200 portions in under an hour.

This gentleman is filling the pastry cream into a huge funnel to fill the space between two sheets of puff pastry.

When I arrived, a batch of Napoleons had already been prepared in large 1 meter square trays iced and stacked up, ready for the guillotine.

Cutting a Napoleon down to size is no walk in the park, even with a one-man-portion. Everytime I try, the custard oozes out from all four sides and the Napoleon is empty by the time the blade touches the plate. How in the world can you manage to cut 7200 miniature Napoleon and not spill a drop of custard?

This gentleman carefully places a sheet of Napoleon in a huge and very expensive machine. The Napoleon is immediately painted with various ominous-looking red laser beams. His time is up.

The Napoleon slides into the machine and is immediately cut down by an automated ultrasonic blade. The $25,000 ultrasonic blade vibrates to prevent the cake from breaking. In a couple seconds it recognizes the size of the Napoleon, decides how many pieces to cut and cuts them. Bang, bang, bang, the cake is cut 24 times lengthwise. The blade moves up, waits a second, then turns at a 90 degrees angle and pounces back on the Napoleon like a bird of prey, cutting it crosswise three times.

Its job done, the machine spits the Napoleon in the back with its conveyor belt. The edges, too tiny to make proper portions, fall off in a huge plastic crate below, under the vigilant eyes of the operator.

The scrape Napoleon box fills pretty quick ...

... and our operator soons needs to move it. 'What do you do with it?', I ask. 'I guess we could bring this to a school and the kids would only be too happy to eat as much as they can,', he jokes, his face gleaming thinking of the scene, 'but in fact we sell it to a farmer as pig food', looking more serious now.
Click on the picture for a 2000-pixels panorama (JPEG, 250Kb).

On the other side, a packing detail waits for the Napoleon portions to exit the machine.

Napoleons are packed four to a box.

Here are the four I bought from a COOP shop the next day.

Each Napoleon sheet yields 72 rectangular portions. How many layers does that make? The operator reckons 100 sheets times 72 is 7200 Napoleons. Yes, but how many layers? Three times 72 millions, each portion having three layers of puff pastry of 1024 layers each. The master of Napoleons, for that makes 1024x100x72x3 = 221'184'400 layers.

Fruit Pie

Who would eat fruit pies were it not for the custard?

Our giant conveyor belt now carries fruit pies from the cradle to the gullet.

See the 360° Panorama (1.5 Mb fullscreen)! These guys were manning the fruit-covering detail.

This guy seemed to have great fun spraying liquid jelly on top of the cakes with his pistol. 'You're the man with the jelly gun', I told him. 'That's me', he replied.

This gentleman was dredging the sides of the fruit pies with almonds. As I was taking his picture, he asked me 'For what newspaper is it?' I explained it was for a website in English and he laughed 'So I won't be famous just yet then!'



The Black Forrest Ladies

How many times have I turned up at a birthday party as a kid and seen the dreaded Forêt Noire ('Black Forrest') Pie on the table? I try to forget. But, hey, kids take a few years before they can tell the good pies from the others. And there are some die-hard Black Forrest Pie addicts out there. Let's see how it's made.

A printed production sheet specifies the quantities to be made and when it starts and finishes. Things work like clocks in Switzerland. A friends Italian grandma used to say that 'At least during Mussolini's time, trains got on time'. Well here they always got on time.

This here young lady takes a pile of chocolate sponge cake her colleagues baked during the night shift a couple hours before.

Ah, my heart will always stop for a lady with a gun. She fires away, spraying the inside with kirsch. The pies are then filled with a white cream and alcohol-soaked cherries, then the sides are covered in chocolate flakes.

We called this lady the Black Forest Lady as she was so eager to make these pies. Always harboring a lovely smile, you could tell she just love the product. How many pies do you make a day, I asked. 'On Thursday, about 100 pies.' 'I suppose they are popular for birthdays', I replied. 'But you can eat them on regular days too' she protested with a self-conscious smile.

Click on the panorama and scroll laterally to see the action (150Kb Jpeg, 2000 pixels wide).

Here is the end product bought in a COOP store the next day. This is a very good example of the type of pastry most people eat in Switzerland. Sure, we also have fancy artisan pastry chefs, but their prices put their products out of reach for most people.



Eclairs

As soon as she was over with the pies, the Black Forest Lady started filling cofee éclairs.

Undoubtedly, she is the lady people turn to for the more delicate operations in this factory. One by one, she filled the pâte à choux shells with coffee or chocolate cream, a very filling filling. She then moved the trays in the back of the giant hall, near this corner on a large table

Minutes later, a man was busy icing each éclair one by one.

Completed products are boxed, labelled and laid one by one in gray plastic crates that are moved automatically on a labyrinthine automated tray system of Pentagonal proportions.
Click image to see a 2000-pixels-wide panorama (Jpeg, 150Kb).

Other pies with a longer lifespan are stored overnight in a drive-in fridge.


I saw many others things that day, none of which turned me off apart from gargantuan scale of things. A gentleman was preparing the filling for one local Lake Geneva specialty COOP only makes for this region - tart à la crême, a flat pie filled with caramelized cream. In a giant mixer, he mixes sugar, cream and starch closes a security grate around the giant head, then plays with the dials to set up speed and mixing time. This will certainly not beat your grandma's homebaked cream pie, but here they use only quality products and do this with care and pride. Nothing to be ashamed of and I'm sure that the pies that will come out of this caldron will make many people happy all around Lake Geneva on the next day.

In other parts of the factory, we saw this other lady soaking sponge cakes in rhum. Giant trays held other cakes. Then a copper pot of boiling caramel and a block of icing for the (seven hundred) thousand layers cakes.

A battery of tools fit to feed a battalion and neatly placed on racks.

2000-pixels-panorama of the tools racks (Jpeg, 150Kb).

The washroom where the equipment is scrupulously washed from dusk till dawn and dawn till dusk.

This pastry plant is not opened to the public although you can book tours of the logistics facility in which it is located. I received the warmest welcome at this factory and everybody I met smiled and seemed to be pleased to work there. The batches are relatively small so there is no repetitive task. You do a Japanese Pie for an hour, then move to a thousand-layer-cake, then go ice some choux, all this in a group of people. Nice working conditions and the cleanest factory East of Silicon Valley. To enter the facility you need to wear a white overall with a special hat. If you need to eat, smoke, drink or pee, you have to leave the facilty and come back through the airlock, the only way in. The airlock will open only after you have placed both hands in the holes of machine that sprays them with disinfectant, waits and then releases the door. We don't joke about hygiene here!


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50 Comments

  • #1
  • Comment by trx
Sweatshop!
  • #2
  • Comment by Paul Mckenna
Most impressed.
I briefly worked in a bakery in Holland that was alive with cockroaches.
This place looks outstanding.

Paul
  • #3
  • Comment by parshu
Lovely combination of industry and craft. Allowing you to shoot in such a detailed manner was the strongest affirmation of their hygiene standards. By 2050 some predict India will be the third largest economy in the world. I would rather it turn into 100,000 Switzerlands like this one than become one giant-like US or China.
  • #4
  • Comment by bigdady92
It's a sweatshop of LOVE! Dear god I'd gorge myself for hours like a fat commie in that place.
  • #5
  • Comment by Ben
The lots of people aren't wearing gloves!

The whole factory looks so clean and organised, not mad like Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory...
  • #6
  • Comment by Xavier
Nice work ! I always enjoy to see behind the curtains and have a a lot of respect for industrial food processing. Scale appart, it doesn't seem to be that different from an artisanal bakery.
By the way, a friend of mine just make me discovered your blog and it's a great pleasure to follow it. I like your capacity to enjoy both fine and more rustic (but stylish) food and to share it with us.
  • #7
  • Answered by fx
TRX, from my understanding of the word 'sweat shop', it is hardly appropriate. A proper sweatshop is a cramped, ill-ventilated space where swarms of underpaid illegal immigrants toil 20 hours a day. Really nothing to do with this beautiful, state of the art factory that recalls a silicon chips manufacturing plant. People are happy to work here and their work is interesting and diverse.
  • #8
  • Answered by fx
Paul, I don't think a coackroach would last more than a minute in this place, they probably have a battery of computer-operated laser beams to take them out!
  • #9
  • Answered by fx
Parshu, after having visited your native state of Kerala I can only share the optimistic vision of those who predict India will turn into a modern economy some day. I must say that despite appearances Indians have a very thorough and serious  practice of food hygiene. It just takes different forms and the reasons people give for not sharing cups with strangers when drinking tea on the streets are caste or religion, but the practical effect is to limit contamination. Of course there is more than practical considerations behind religions and customs, but I am constantly amazed to see these Indian men juggle with liquid poured from the air into their mouth with the lips never in contact with the cups!
  • #10
  • Answered by fx
Big Daddy, unfortunately no eating is allowed in the factory. But I am confident you can get your weight in Napoleon scrapings to take home!
  • #11
  • Answered by fx
Ben, people are not wearing gloves because they don't need to. Hand hygiene is guaranteed by a curious machine at the entrance that unlocks the door only after you have placed both hands in for a thourough aspersion of disinfectant. You just cannot enter the facility unless you do that, and every time you go for a break, a fag, a snack or a visit to the loo, you need to exit the premises and go through the machine again on your way back.
  • #12
  • Answered by fx
Xavier, thanks for your visit! As a student you must have had the opportunity to sample the COOP's fine products. I just love this supermarket! Soon I'll post another serie about their baking facility. I think it is quite inevitable that in the world there are fine, home-cooked, slow foods and also regular, more affordable, processed foods. Not everybody can wait 4 hours to do Bolognese sauce the old-fashioned way.
  • #13
  • Comment by JD
"Big Daddy, unfortunately no eating is allowed in the factory. But I am confident you can get your weight in Napoleon scrapings to take home!"
Yes, I know full well  I would scoop handfuls of Napoleon scrapings into my maw like Jabba the F'n Hutt. Is it common to have the Éclair's have chocolate instead of custard filling like they do in the states or is that just something different they made that day?


This was a truly fascinating post, not least because it was actually posted tomorrow (1/5/08) according to the time stamp, or does Lake Geneva have its own time zone?

It's also fun to note how pastries can be lost in translation, or at least altered rather drastically. A Schwarzwaldtårta (Black Forest cake) in my native country Sweden is three layers of hazelnut dacquoise with whipped cream in between, and grated chocolate on top. Not a trace of neither cherries nor Kirschwasser (alas, there is not a trace of Kirschwasser in Sweden at all). A rather bland contraption.
  • #15
  • Answered by fx
JD, there are only two traditional éclairs in France - chocolate and coffee. I recently saw a young Japanese pastry chef who set up shop in Paris and offered Japanese green tea flavored éclairs, but that is very uncommon.
  • #16
  • Answered by fx
Daniel, tomorrow thursday is a festive day in Switzerland and I wanted to publish this article for the first day of May. Instead of waiting until tomorrow before activating it, I let you guys see the world of tomorrow - today!
  • #17
  • Comment by Sebastian
Awesome stuff, François! I especially love the quicktimeless panorama pictures!

For those concerned about all those nude hands, let it be said that actually, your hands are quite clean as far as microorganisms are concerned - especially when they've been properly washed and disinfected. Even in biology laboratories where contaminations and sterile techniques are an issue, gloves are mostly worn to protect your hands from the stuff you're working with (if necessary), and not the other way around. ;)
  • #18
  • Comment by Luci
Francois, you've done it again!  This is such an interesting article and great insight into Swiss culture.  Thank you!
This is really fascinating as always, and I do like the new panoramic photos that you have been taking. When I was a kid in Belize I went on a tour of a sugar factory-the thing I remember best was a big old warehouse, with a 2 story pile of sugar on the concrete floor. You could just see it through a crack in the doors (which were chained shut). Through that crack marched a tiny column of ants. I imagine those were the happiest ants in the world. It smelled like molasses and burnt sugar for a mile around the factory-very Willy Wonka! Seems like a waste to feed all that pastry to the pigs, have they ever thought of selling it cheap with some cool marketing name? The taste is just as good...they just dont have those precision edges!
  • #20
  • Comment by Sean
Pork that have been fed a luxurious diet since piglets are considered to be a luxury food itself in Chinese cuisine. I wonder what napoleon-fed pigs taste like... hmm
  • #21
  • Comment by Paul Mckenna
In the UK you used to be able to buy big plastic bags of broken biscuits.
I would willingly pay for a bag of Napoleon offcuts.

I may have no class but I eat every day of the week.

Paul
  • #22
  • Answered by fx
Sebastian, thanks for your comment! These guys definitely have super clean hands and I don't think germs of any kind find their way into the factory in sufficient quantities to pose any hygiene problem.
  • #23
  • Answered by fx
Luci, thanks for visiting, I think this is one aspect of Swiss culture that is not often seen by tourists!
  • #24
  • Answered by fx
Lyra, your sugar mountain sounds very intriguing, if it still exists I'd love to be an ant there! Some chocolate factories sell the defective products to local students, but financially I don't think it makes much difference since the real product is so cheap anyway, and the factory is not in a city center.
  • #25
  • Answered by fx
Sean, I think these Napoleon-fed pigs would be fit for an Emperor.
  • #26
  • Answered by fx
Paul, the Napoleon is a high wire pastry act where you try to keep the puff pastry crispy even though it is surrounded by thick layer of pastry cream. I think the scrapings turn very fast into a spongy mess and lose all crispiness!
  • #27
  • Comment by Martin
Nice article! I spontaneously fell in love with the Kirsch Gun Lady. My wildest dreams come true (not to think of the jelly gun).
My sister once worked in a factory which produced meals for airplanes. She told me that they were throwing away literally tons of food for no good reasons (except for very strict regulations on exactly when a yoghurt is still eatable and when not). I am glad to hear that they at least leave the unsellable parts to the pigs.
  • #28
  • Comment by don siranni
Fx.,This article prompted me to ask if elsewhere you have a full article on how to make,at home,puff pastry-intended for meat pies?If not,could you plan one someday?Your unique photo/description would be the only way I'll ever make it.thanks don
It's highly impressive to see not only a state of the art facility but also one that adheres so strictly to such a code of hygiene.  What a pleasure.  Great pictures.  This must have been an incredible experience for you.  I'm sure I would have been in awe the whole duration of the visit.
  • #30
  • Comment by cher.128
Bravo and many thank you's for this wonderful pastry excursion. You have gifted us!
Bravo to the many people working in the facility as well!
I live in New Jersey (United States) and if it weren't for my skill in pastry making, I would "never" have wonderful pastry to eat and enjoy.
A blessing indeed to live where there is such pastry bounty!!!
Thank You so much again.
Lovely post. I have never been in a cake factory and now got to peek. Love it. Educational and tasty :)
  • #32
  • Answered by fx
Martin, thanks for visiting and I'll try to get you the Kirsch Gun Lady's phone number!
  • #33
  • Answered by fx
Don, you can see how puff pastry is made in my Kouign Aman article, it takes many hours but not as much work as people usually think. Much better than savory short dough!
  • #34
  • Answered by fx
Gizmar, this was indeed a memorable visit and the people who run and work in this factory can definitely be proud of their job. I'll try to post another article about the baking plant (bread only) - even more impressive I'm told!
  • #35
  • Answered by fx
Cher, do not yearn too much for industrial pastry, it is never as good as you can bake in your oven at home. Even the most humble home-baked cookies will always beat industrial products. But if you don't bake, then of course it's nice to have a substitute!
  • #36
  • Answered by fx
Andreea, thanks for visiting! just love to visit industries and have many plans to make more food industry articles in the future.
  • #37
  • Comment by Malika
Thank you so much for showing us your visit to this amazing factory! Amazing! If I was there myself, I think I would taste everything! Did you try any of the cakes?
  • #38
  • Answered by fx
Malika, thanks for visiting! It is totally forbidden to eat anything in the factory, not even lick your fingers, and I had to buy some of the pastry the next day at the supermarket. They taste just as they look I guess.
  • #39
  • Comment by Gemma
Wow, yummy... those napoleons... I would've take some home at the end of the day myself (are they allowed to do that?) Just wanted to say, I love your blog so much, it enables me to explore the culinary world without spending any money - I really appreciate everything that you've done ... hrmmm.... Maybe you could go into a CHOCOLATE factory next time to see how they are made....awwwhhhh chocolatesss....
OMGoshhhhhh, this is the most technical cooking I ever seen! Hmmm... as precise as the Swiss horology.. :-D Thank you for sharing your adventure with us.

pixen
  • #41
  • Answered by fx
Gemma, thanks and I'll try and get a private tour of a Swiss industrial chocolate factory soon!
  • #42
  • Answered by fx
Pixen, you just can't make 7200 Napoleons without a little organization and at least one large machine!
This is amazing! Now I can cut my Napoleons and they do not shatter-I just sneak them over to the laser guided ultrasonic knife after dark, when no one is looking!

I like that each worker has a variety in a day, and none look stressed. Thank you for such an educational and well photographed story.
  • #44
  • Answered by fx
Ivan, thanks for visiting! I am told the Napoleon is a deformation of 'Neapolitan', its true origin.
  • #45
  • Comment by D Walters
Brilliant display of how things are made in an industrial setting.
Absolutely fascinating!! I worked in the pastry kitchen of a restaurant where everything was made from scratch. Never in these quantities though. Just love your site!!!!
Fantastic! I love COOP and this is so interesting to see. So super clean looking and looks very hands-on!
  • #48
  • Answered by fx
Thanks Brains, I have to go back to shoot their pastry operations, but it starts at 10 at night!
  • #49
  • Comment by Ariadna
Hi there, I don't have anything very insightful to say but I do love very much your website. Buen provecho!
  • FX's answer→ Thanks Ariadna, glad you like my website!




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