Everyone in Embach knows Gerhard...or they think they do. Gerhard is the man in the yellow van who brings the post; brings news good and bad. But when he steps out of his van at home, what then?
When Gerhard asked if we would like to see where he makes his schnaps,
we weren’t expecting anything out of the ordinary as he isn’t the only schnapsbrenner in Embach. Distilling
schnaps in Austria isn’t illegal, but there are restrictions. The fruit should
be self-grown and not purchased and not more than 100 litres of alcohol per
year may be produced. So it is a cottage
industry with each making his own specialities of varying quality.
At Gerhard’s home, where he lives with his wife Regina and daughter Judith
at the end of the village, we walked in the snow from the house down to a
former farm building and went inside…it was almost a shock!
There, taller than a man, gleaming in the corner, looking like some
historic vehicle for exploring the depths of the ocean, was Gerhard’s pride and
joy: his still. Through thick glass
portholes one can see the process inside, lit up like something out of a Jules
Verne adventure, outside there are dials, gauges, valves, outlets, pipes and
tubes and an air-lock door worthy of a space ship.
“This is the Mercedes of stills”, says Gerhard proudly. It is clearly,
for him, more than a hobby, it is a passion as is the schnaps he produces.
Rather than go for quantity, he aims for quality. His bottles have the fruity
nose of a good wine rather than the chemical sharpness of product where,
through an extra run, the last drops are extracted from the fermented mash.
Gerhard makes schnaps from peaches, apricots, plums, pears and rowan
berries – the premium product, from fruit grown at 1000m in the orchard
adjacent to his home.
The glowing copper still stands in a cosy room, the walls of ancient brick,
a wood fire burning in the stove, music quietly playing and a corner bench-seat
and round table as found in almost every home, where Austrians love to meet and
socialise. This is pure gemütlichkeit the
Austrian word which encompasses cosiness, comfort and style. Here visitors can
sit comfortably and watch the production of traditional Austrian good cheer,
made with passion from home-grown fruit.
Prost!
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