Gstaad is known for its luxury resorts and pristine mountain scenery, but the real magic lies in the quieter discoveries. The artisanal shops, family-run dairies, and century-old traditions that make this region feel genuinely inhabited rather than simply polished for guests. This is where we send our clients when they ask for authenticity.
At Smiling House Luxury, we believe the most memorable stays are built on access to places and experiences that feel earned, not staged. Gstaad offers exactly that if you know where to look.
LE SAPALET, ROSSINIÈRE: THE HEART OF ARTISANAL DAIRY
Our guests often ask us where to find the real Pays-d’Enhaut. We always point them to Le Sapalet in Rossinière, a fromagerie that is far more than a shop. It is a living testament to the art of Swiss dairy, where every wheel of cheese, every pot of yogurt, and every slice of butter carries the story of the land, the family, and generations of care.

The Henchoz family are pioneers in Swiss dairy. Their journey began with Etivazcheese and evolved in the 1990s toward the rich, velvety world of sheep’s milk.Today, over a thousand sheep graze the pastures surrounding Rossinière, creating a rhythm that mirrors the quiet, disciplined beauty of the mountains themselves.Walking into Le Sapalet is like stepping into a gallery of flavour. Every cheese is thoughtfully displayed, from the robust blue and tomme du Pays-d’Enhaut to delicate fresh cheeses that practically melt on the tongue.

What truly sets Le Sapalet apart is the philosophy. The Henchoz family is involved at every stage, from pasture to plate. There is a reverence for craft, a respect for nature, and an understanding that quality cannot be rushed. It is an ethos that resonates with everything we stand for at Smiling House Luxury:understated elegance, deep connection to place, and authenticity that lingers long after a visit.

MOLKEREI GSTAAD: 3,000 WHEELS OF SHARED LEGACY
While Le Sapalet is intimate and family-run, Molkerei Gstaad tells a different but equally compelling story. What happens when an entire community of farmers decided to work together. Beneath the meadows outside Gstaad lies an underground cheese grotto where up to 3,000 wheels of cheese, produced by 68local cooperative farmers, age slowly in the cool and dark. Each farmer’s production is marked by hand-chiselled wooden signs, often inherited and passed down through generations.
Gstaad Mountain Cheese is infused with Provençal herbs grown just thirty minutes away. The older wheels become Hobelkäse, named after the traditional tool used to shave it into paper-thin slices. The shop in the centre of Gstaad sells the full range alongside butter, cream, yoghurt, handmade breads, preserves, and honey.
They also offer fondue backpacks for around 20 Swiss francs: fondue pot, warmer,plates, napkins, forks, local cheese, crusty bread, and spices. Everything you need for a picnic in the mountains in any season. We often arrange these for guests seeking a more intimate alpine experience.
EARLY BECK: A CENTURY OF GSTAAD MORNINGS

Early Beck has stood on the Promenade since 1910 and remains the centre of gravity for anyone seeking a proper breakfast in Gstaad. It is a bakery,confectionery, chocolate shop, and café rolled into one, known for specialities that belong entirely to this place: Saane Gibeni, Gstaad nut cake, and Pavés de Gstaad.The terrace facing the Promenade is where Gstaad happens. People arrive for coffee and end up sitting for an hour, watching the village move past. It has been in the same family for over a century, and it feels like it. This is the sort of place our guests return to, year after year.
CHARLY’S TEA ROOM: THE MEETING PLACE THAT REFUSES TO CHANGE

Built in 1912, Charly’s is a family-owned institution that remains authentically rustic in a way that newer establishments can only approximate. Reclaimed wood,plank flooring, an easy pace. It is not really about the menu. It is a meeting point:locals and guests who value quality and comfort arriving, ordering, and sitting.The terrace catches the sun year-round. After skating at the nearby rink, the ritual continues here. Hot chocolate, a pastry, a moment to catch your breath. This is the rhythm of alpine life, unhurried and genuine.
CHÂTEAU-D’ŒX: THE MUSÉE DU PAYS-D’ENHAUT AND LE CHALET DAIRY

The Musée du Pays-d’Enhaut is now the Swiss national centre for paper cuttings,or découpage. The craft found its voice through two masters: Johann JakobHauswirth, a wandering labourer who cut delicate silhouettes as payment for meals, and Louis Saugy, whose work was so prized that the Spanish royal family once requested to meet him. The museum holds over 600 examples of découpage alongside reconstructed interiors from centuries of mountain life. A farmhouse kitchen with a bread oven dating to 1665. An alpine cheese dairy. A smithy.Bourgeois dining room. Cow bells. Early skis. It is free, five minutes from the train station, and one of the most undervisited places in the entire region.
Le Chalet dairy, also in Château-d’Œx, allows visitors to watch L’Etivaz AOP being made in copper cauldrons over an open wood fire. This is not a heritage display. It is a working dairy producing one of Switzerland’s most protected cheeses, made only in summer months on high alpine pastures. The process follows methods that have barely changed in two hundred years. We often arrange guided visits for guests interested in understanding where their food comes from.
ROUGEMONT: VILLAGE MARKET AND CAFÉ DU CERF

Rougemont’s main street dates back to the early 1600s, with carved facades,painted chalet fronts, and biblical inscriptions on the oldest houses. Each August the street closes to traffic for the Village Market, when over 100 artisan producers and craftspeople set up along it. Regional cheeses, handmade objects, local wine.The atmosphere is festive and genuine, a glimpse into how the community actually lives.
For eating, Café du Cerf is renowned across the region for fondues and raclettes made with Tomme de Rougemont and L’Etivaz AOP, served with Yvorne from theChablais AOC. The interior is warm and traditional. People have been gathering here for generations and you feel it the moment you sit down.
ROSSINIÈRE: THE GRAND CHALET AND HÔTEL DE COMMUNE
Rossinière, home to Le Sapalet, has two other reasons to linger. The Grand Chalet,built in the 18th century and once the home of the painter Balthus, is one of the most remarkable examples of Swiss wooden architecture in the region. The Hôtelde Commune, named best restaurant by the Pays-d’Enhaut ProduitsAuthentiques brand, serves regional flavours in a building where the community has gathered since the 1700s.
GSTAAD: LUXURY WITH A QUIETER VOICE

The Gstaad Promenade itself has more to offer than the designer names suggest.Marina Anouilh opened her first boutique here, curating collections of clothing and rare objects that she selects personally. ÉPHÉMÈRES by DH, in a nearbySaanen chalet dating to 1850, is a concept store of rotating handcrafted treasures.Gstaad Chocolate Shop makes truffles and pralines from mountain milk in an open atelier, with a café for a hot chocolate and brioche. Cervin Blanc offers bespoke jewellery design, working with clients to create pieces from scratch.These are the places that reflect the true character of Gstaad: quality overvisibility, craft over commerce.

ABOUT SMILING HOUSE LUXURY
Smiling House Luxury curates the finest private properties and luxury accommodations across the world. From alpine chalets in the Swiss mountains beachfront villas on the Mediterranean, from London townhouses to countryside estates, our portfolio spans over ten thousand carefully selected properties in more than one hundred and fifty destinations.
We believe that luxury is not about the size of a property or the number of amenities. It is about the quality of the experience. The thoughtfulness of the creation. The authenticity of the place and the people who inhabit it. Every property we represent has been chosen for its character, its location, and its ability to offer guests something real.
When you book with Smiling House Luxury, you are not simply renting a space.You are gaining access to a curated experience, often with introductions to local artisans, restaurants, and traditions that most visitors never discover. Your stay is personal because we know these places deeply. We have walked their streets. We have sat in their cafés. We have met the people who keep these communities alive.
For more information about Smiling House Luxury properties in Gstaad, Pays-d’Enhaut, or anywhere else in the world, please visit our website or contact our team directly. We are here to help you find not just a place to stay, but a place to belong.












