The name Racletter originated from the Swiss practice of
heating this cheese and then scraping off (racler)
the melted part.
The term "Raclette" can refers to both a type
of cheese and to a Swiss dish made with this type of cheese .
In French, the word for the cheese is masculine,
le raclette, whereas the word for the dish is feminine, la raclette.
I called it "à la mode Morbier" because Morbier cheese is a layered cheese.
When cheesemakers ended a day with leftover curd
that was not enough for an entire cheese wheel,
they would press the leftover curd into a mold,
and spread ash over it to protect it overnight.
The following morning, the cheese would be topped up with morning milk.
Thus creating a layered cheese with an interface layer of ash.