Fondue may more usually be associated with the eighties, but in my case it reminds me of 1991: my first (and last) skiing holiday with my entire family. It’s one of those cases in which I can’t figure out whether I remember the photograph or the experience itself. Either way, I can picture myself, aged 11 (the turquoise headband was particularly fetching), and my two brothers, aged 24 and 26, sitting around a red-and-white-checked tablecloth, rosy-cheeked and hungry after a morning’s skiing in the Swiss Alps. As we dipped into a steaming cauldron of pungent cheese, my Dad threatened us with the bill if we dropped our bread in by accident.
One of my fellow fondue-dippers, a feisty Italian gent, was curious to know how I would review Café Bern. Like many men, he was more interested in quantity than quality (‘but how many stars is it going to get?’) and looked slightly affronted when I said that I was erring towards four stars for our simple mountain meal. ‘What if people come to Amsterdam, visit the restaurant, and want steak or salmon?’ he asked, incredulously. ‘They would hardly be satisfied with fondue!’ Perhaps he is right. And so, dear reader, I implore you to judge a restaurant by its own yardstick, and not that of the Michelin-starred establishment down the road. Café Bern is a fondue restaurant, not a bistro, and for €25 a head, you can’t say fairer than freely-flowing house red, simple salads, retro desserts and as much cheese as you can shake a bread-clad stick at.