A culinary dispute over the world's largest raclette event will conclude with a symbolic peace treaty between France and Switzerland, as Saint-Gingolph hosts a cross-border celebration of the iconic cheese dish.

"Raclette or raclonette, the aim remains the same. Itâs all about sharing, friendship and conviviality."
"Peace of the braves"
The culinary battlefield falls silent this Sunday as a historic truce is struck on the Swiss-French border. After months of heated rivalry and social media skirmishes over who commands the title for the world's largest raclette, Saint-Gingolph will host the signing of a symbolic peace treaty. This is not merely a lunch; it is a diplomatic maneuver served with melted cheese. The 'peace of the braves' will see the hatchet buriedâor rather, the raclette scraper sheathedâin a display of cross-border unity that transcends national pride.
Tensions had reached a boiling point following a back-and-forth struggle for dominance, fueled by viral jibes and competitive eating feats. However, the spirit of conviviality has prevailed. The event transforms a bitter rivalry into a celebration of shared heritage, proving that while borders may divide political entities, the love of molten cheese binds them together. As the ink dries on the treaty this Sunday afternoon, the message is clear: the war is over, and the cheese has won.
Make no mistake: Switzerland remains the undisputed heavyweight champion of raclette. While the French city of Saint-Etienne mounted a spirited offensive in March 2024, gathering 2,236 and subsequently 2,522 participants, their efforts were ultimately eclipsed by a staggering Swiss counterattack. In a display of overwhelming culinary force, the Valais region obliterated the French record just a fortnight later in Martigny, mobilizing an army of 4,893 guests and scrapers.
This dramatic surge in participation reasserted Swiss dominance in the global cheese arena. The numbers speak for themselves: the Swiss event nearly doubled the attendance of its French rival, silencing doubters and cementing the Valais region's status as the spiritual and statistical home of raclette. While Sunday's event is about peace, the context is undeniableâSwitzerland enters these negotiations from a position of absolute strength, having decisively crushed the competition on the numbers board.
There is no more fitting theater for this reconciliation than Saint-Gingolph, a village that defies conventional geography by straddling two nations. Locals here don't just visit the neighbors; they live in a single community bisected by a border. The epicenter of Sundayâs festivities is the old stone bridge at Le Moulin, directly overlooking the customs areaâa powerful symbol of connection in a world often defined by barriers.
From 11 am, the bridge will transform into an open-air banquet hall for 600 lucky guests. In a gesture of supreme hospitality, two-thirds of the attendees will be French, welcomed to sample the finest exports of the Swiss Alps. The logistics of the event mirror the village's daily reality, seamlessly blending two administrative zones into one gastronomic experience. It is a vivid reminder that in this corner of the world, the border is not a wall, but a meeting place.
The peace treaty brings together two titans of their respective fields: Eddy Baillifard, the revered 'Pope of Raclette' from Valais, and French comedian Chicandier. Their alliance strikes a balance between culinary seriousness and good-natured humor. Baillifard, the ambassador of Valais raclette, has extended a hand of friendship, declaring that whether it is traditional raclette or the tabletop 'raclonette,' the goal is 'sharing, friendship and conviviality.'
The menu itself is a diplomatic masterpiece. Guests will feast on premium Valais PDO raclette, sourced from the Chablais, Central Valais, and Upper Valais regions, paired perfectly with Savoyard charcuterie from the French side. This fusion of Swiss cheese mastery and French curing tradition symbolizes the best possible outcome of the rivalry: a delicious collaboration that leaves no palate unsatisfied. As cheese fans from both nations raise their forks, they affirm a universal truthâraclette warms the heart, regardless of which side of the river you stand on.