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Saturday, November 28, 2020

Iconic Vienna hotel turns to drive-in cake as COVID-19 pandemic bites - CNA

VIENNA: The COVID-19 pandemic may have forced many of Vienna's luxury hotels to close indefinitely as global travel restrictions keep away the many millions of tourists who usually visit the Austrian capital every year.

But the city's iconic Hotel Sacher is determined not to let fans of its world-famous chocolate cake go hungry.

The hotel's concierge, Uwe Kotzendorfer, is selling Sacher torte, as the rich delicacy is known, at a drive-in stand just across the road from Vienna's prestigious State Opera house.

"I do a bit of everything now," said Kotzendorfer, standing next to a small two-wheeled cart stacked high with cakes, as he handed an imperial red bag containing one of them to a customer driving past in his BMW.

"I thought it was a fantastic idea," said another customer, Claudia Bednar.

"Because we can no longer travel, I am going to send one to my aunt in Germany for her 65th wedding anniversary," she explained before paying for the cake, which typically costs between €50 and €60 (US$60 to US$71), with her credit card.

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The vast majority of the Sacher's staff are now on government-subsidised furlough.

And the rooms and dining halls in its six Neoclassical buildings - decorated with autographed images of previous guests such as Britain's Prince Charles, Franco-German film star Romy Schneider and American opera singer Jessye Norman - are deserted.

Nevertheless, the hotel insists on displaying fresh flower arrangements in honour of the five business travellers currently staying there.

For those parts of the hotel not currently occupied, the management is taking the opportunity to carry out some much-needed maintenance, and Kotzendorfer often guides workmen around the deserted swathes of the building.

The hotel has survived a number of existential crises in the past and during the global economic
The hotel has survived a number of existential crises in the past, and even went bankrupt during the global economic crisis in 1934. (Photo: AFP/Alex Halada)

PAST CRISES

According to owner and managing director Matthias Winkler, the Sacher is the last five-star hotel in Vienna that is still in family hands.

It has survived a number of existential crises in the past, and even went bankrupt during the global economic crisis in 1934.

"We've gone through many trials since the creation of the brand, and our family is still planning for the long term", said Winkler, who took over the hotel from his mother-in-law in 2015.

The current coronavirus-induced economic downturn is also taking a heavy toll.

International travellers typically account for more than 90 per cent of the hotel's annual 23,000 overnight stays, with rooms costing anything between €400 and €2,300 (US$480 to US$2,700) per night in the low season.

However, with the virus lockdowns, that source of income has now been all but wiped out.

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Sacher's cakes, which are shipped and sold across the world, are helping to keep the brand alive.

Although competition in the upscale hotel industry can be ruthless, and international brands have larger financial resources, Winkler believes that being family-run is turning out to be an advantage during the pandemic.

"Here, decisions are made at a family meeting, without taking orders from abroad," he said.

Vienna's Hotel Sacher is determined not to let fans of its world-famous chocolate cake go
Vienna's Hotel Sacher is determined not to let fans of its world-famous chocolate cake go hungry. (Photo: AFP/Alex Halada)

IMPERIAL CAKE

The Hotel Sacher and the Sacher torte have a long history.

A young pastry chef named Franz Sacher came up with the recipe in 1832, hoping it would become all the rage at the Habsburg's imperial court.

The ingredients were whipped cream, a lot of cocoa, jam to add moisture and a rich layer of chocolate frosting.

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Sacher's son, Eduard, opened the hotel in Vienna's first district 44 years later, but it was really only after Eduard's death in 1892 that the hotel enjoyed its glamorous heyday under the management of Eduard's widow, Anna Sacher.

As one of the first women to be allowed to own and run a business, the visionary matriarch become well known for her wit.

The city's high society normally gathers for a dinner in the Sacher before the famous Opera Ball - but this year's event has fallen victim to the pandemic.

"A part of the history of Austria rests in our hands," said the hotel's deputy director, Doris Schwarz.

"More than ever, it is a question of being up to the task," she said, standing underneath an imposing portrait of Anna Sacher, who has a big cigar in her hand and two bulldogs at her feet.

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