The Melting Pot Traditional Swiss Fondue

Traditional Swiss Fondue like The Melting Pot is a dish that reminds you of one of the most romantic restaurants you can go to. You can recreate this fondue at home.

Homemade Melting Post Traditional Swiss Fondue with vegetables and toasted bread cubes


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Classic Swiss Fondue

If you are fortunate enough to live in an area where you can go to The Melting Pot, I can’t recommend it enough. It is one of those fancy places you go when you want to impress someone, or really treat those that you love.

If you are like many of us, these are hard to get to, and well honestly they may be quite impossible. You can enjoy fondue just like they make it.

You don’t even need a fondue pot. You could use a double boiler or cook the fondue in a small pan over low heat and keep it warm in a mini crockpot.

I personally love my Cuisinart CFO-3SS Electric Fondue Maker, I have made a lot of fondue in this pot.

What I didn’t know is that fondue has its origins as a peasant food of the people of the Alpine Swiss. Fondue is now very well known and made in a wide variety of styles and with many different ingredients.

The traditional version that this recipe uses is made with Emmenthaler and Gruyere cheese.

Ingredients

Here’s a list of what you need:

  • Dry white wine
  • Garlic
  • Emmenthaler Swiss cheese
  • Gruyere cheese
  • Cornstarch
  • Fresh lemon juice
  • Fresh ground black pepper
  • Cherry liqueur (optional)
Melting Pot Swiss Fondue ingredients

Ingredient Notes

You could experiment with any type of cheese that you desire. You can typically find these two types of cheeses in the deli section of your grocery store.

Emmenthaler has a piquant flavor, but it isn’t very sharp. Gruyere has a sweet and slightly salty flavor that becomes more complex with age.

We will use white wine for this fondue.

What Wine is Best for Cheese Fondue

When choosing the type of wine to use, I suggest a dry white wine. You do not want to use something sweet because it is going to change the flavor of this fondue. If you have never had fondue before it has a soft texture that is a little nutty, and savory.

I would suggest using a wine that is drinkable. It doesn’t have to be the best bottle of white wine you will ever consume, but it needs to be ok.

Please, don’t buy the stuff labeled “Cooking Wine”. I am not sure what it is for, but it isn’t drinkable as wine and it shouldn’t be for cooking.

If you need help, most grocery stores and wine shops can help you with suggestions. I wouldn’t pay over 10 dollars a bottle for this recipe. The Trader Joe’s “Two Buck Chuck” would be perfect.

How to Make Swiss Cheese Fondue

Whether it is Swiss Fondue or any other type, there is a basic preparation that you should follow. You always want to begin by heating your liquid, most often this liquid is a form of alcohol.

Add in your aromatics and heat thoroughly. Next, you will add some of the cheese and cook until stir until the cheese has melted.

Finally, you will add the remaining cheese, stirring constantly in a circular motion. The fondue should end up with the consistency of honey.

Here are the steps to make cheese fondue:

  1. In your fondue pot, heat together the wine and garlic.
  2. In a large bowl, combine cheeses and cornstarch.
  3. Add lemon juice to the wine mixture in the fondue pot.
  4. When the garlic becomes fragrant, add a third of the cheese to the fondue pot and stir until the cheese is melted.
  5. Add an additional third of the cheese and stir until it is melted.
  6. Add remaining cheese. Stir until the cheese is melted.
  7. Just before serving, add black pepper and cherry liqueur. Stir to combine.

What to do if Fondue Gets Lumpy

Fondue can become lumpy if it is overheated. You can rescue it. When cheese is heated in the presence of acid you need to be extra careful. Cornstarch helps to buffer this reaction.

What to do? Add a couple of tablespoons of warm alcohol. Stir, and turn down the heat to low.

If the alcohol and the cheese continue to be separate from each other, you can add about 1/2 a teaspoon of cornstarch and stir. This should make the fondue texture much more seamless.

Traditional Swiss cheese fondue with assorted dippers

Love Fondue? Try these favorite fondue recipes!

Favorite Cheesy Appetizers and Dips

Check out more of my easy appetizer recipes and the best copycat recipes for casual dining restaurants here on CopyKat!

Homemade Melting Pot Traditional Swiss Fondue with vegetables and bread cubes.

The Melting Pot Traditional Swiss Fondue

You can recreate the famous flavor of The Melting Pot traditional Swiss Fondue at home. 
5 from 3 votes
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Course: Appetizer
Cuisine: Swiss
Keyword: Alpine Swiss Fondue, Cheese Fondue, The Melting Pot Traditional Swiss Fondue
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 20 minutes
Servings: 4
Calories: 524kcal

Ingredients

  • 4 ounces dry white wine
  • 3 tablespoons chopped garlic
  • ½ pound Emmenthaler Swiss cheese grated
  • ½ pound Gruyere cheese grated
  • 1 tablespoon cornstarch
  • ¼ cup fresh lemon juice
  • 1 ounce cherry liqueur like Kirshwasser (optional)
  • ¼ teaspoon fresh ground black pepper or to taste

Instructions

  • In your fondue pot, heat together dry white wine and garlic.
  • In a large bowl, combine cheeses and sprinkle 2 tablespoons of cornstarch over the cheese and mix together.
  • Add lemon juice to the white wine mixture in the fondue pot.
  • When the garlic becomes fragrant, add ⅓ of the cheese to the fondue pot and stir in cheese. Continue to stir until the cheese has melted.
  • Add an additional ⅓ of the cheese and stir until the cheese has melted.
  • Add the remaining cheese. Stir and blend until the cheese has the texture of honey.
  • Before serving, add freshly ground black pepper and cherry liqueur.
  • Serve with crusty bread, raw broccoli florets, raw baby carrots, apple slices, or anything else you might like to dip in cheese fondue.

Video

Notes

It is important to watch the temperature of your fondue pot. Overheating the mixture may make the cheese clump. Should your cheese start to clump, add a splash of warm wine, and reduce the temperature of the fondue pot.

Nutrition

Calories: 524kcal | Carbohydrates: 12g | Protein: 33g | Fat: 34g | Saturated Fat: 20g | Cholesterol: 114mg | Sodium: 302mg | Potassium: 149mg | Fiber: 0g | Sugar: 4g | Vitamin A: 1010IU | Vitamin C: 7.8mg | Calcium: 1035mg | Iron: 0.6mg

About Stephanie Manley

I recreate your favorite restaurant recipes, so you can prepare these dishes at home. I help you cook dinner, and serve up dishes you know your family will love. You can find most of the ingredients for all of the recipes in your local grocery store.

Stephanie is the author of CopyKat.com's Dining Out in the Home, and CopyKat.com's Dining Out in the Home 2.

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Julie

    5 stars
    Awesome!! I’m making 3 courses of fondue for my birthday and this kicked it off. It’s fantastic! I accidentally used 2T of cornstarch but it still blended well and I just added some extra wine to thin it out. It didn’t clump at all. I didn’t use the cherry liqueur and didn’t notice a difference.

  2. Nancy

    Question, your recipe calls for cherry liqueur or kirshwasser. Cherry Liqueur is sweet and kirschwasser cherry brandy is not sweet, which should you use in the recipe, sweet or unsweet?
    Thank you

  3. Ida

    Hi,
    Can you confirm the quantity for both Emmental and Gruyere cheese is 1/2 lb,
    8 oz? This sounds like a lot for 4 oz of wine. Perhaps you mean 8 oz as in a cup, grated? I’m a little confused.

    Thanks.

  4. Sydney

    I did not do my fondue correctly. My cheese”clumped” even though I added it slowly and stirred constantly. One thing I did was to let the wine boil; the second was that i doubled the recipe. Also, I added Gruyere cheese with the Swiss. I would appreciate any advice you can give me. Thanks, Sydney

  5. Shelley

    My boyfriend and I plan to try this recipe on Christmas Eve. His son used to work at the melting pot so we will see what he thinks too 🙂

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