Australian Gourmet Traveller - (04)April 2019 (1)

(Comicgek) #1
GOURMET TRAVELLER 141

Trip
notes


  • and drinks to passing pleasure seekers. There is


beer, four versions of homemade cider and, as always
in Austria, schnapps.
The shingled spire of Bürstegg comes into focus
first and then its cluster of thatch-roof buildings.
Hikers, some in lederhosen and hatbands stuck
with flowers, sit on benches outside one house
admiring the cowbell symphony and precipitous
outlooks over the Lechtal Valley. Inside, Franziska
and Norbert Bitschnau greet me in fashionably
cuffed jeans, skivvies and cardigans. Both in their


eighties, they look like a pair of elderly beatniks.
The Bitschnaus have been coming up here for
26 years. They usually arrive around mid-May to
mend fences and then, in early June, they bring their
livestock. This year they have 45 cows with them.
Franziska takes me into the stube, a basic wooden
room with a tiled kachelofen stove and six windows
framing serene valley views. Her 10 grandchildren
all visit over summer, and her nine-year-old grandson
loves nothing more than staring out the windows.
When school friends ask if he gets bored up at Bürstegg


without television or internet, he tells them: “No,
I’m not bored at all. I have six channels.”
Franziska loves her time in the mountains – “every
day, through my heart, I discover new things”– but
there comes a time when she longs to return to the
valley. “My washing machine’s calling me,” she jokes.
My wanderführer and Norbert discuss how they
feel ready for autumn. In spring they feel drawn to the
heavens but now they feel it’s time to return to their
earthly lives in the valley.


Back at Rote Wand, chef Natmessnig is also looking
forward to autumn, when the hunting season is in full
swing. Next week at the Schualhus he’ll launch a game
menu of deer, elk, pigeon and other unlucky creatures.
“We are going to make a deer schnitzel,” he grins.
“It’s mind-blowing!”●


Getting there
Emiratesflies from all major Australian
cities to Dubai with connections to Zurich,
which is much closer to Austria’s Arlberg
region than Vienna. The drive to the
Arlberg takes about two hours, or take
the train from Zurich to Bregenz, the
capital of Vorarlberg state. emirates.com

Stay & eat
Rote WandThis 53-room “gourmet
hotel” lends a chic edge to the sleepy
village of Zug, with a choice of family
apartments and suites in six buildings,
a sophisticated main restaurant and bar,
the 1,500-square-metre Red Spa, and the
Schualhus’s impressive chef’s table run
by Max Natmessnig.Zug 5, Lech
am Arlberg, rotewand.com
Hotel Gasthof PostElegant rooms,
an indoor-outdoor pool with stunning
mountain views, full spa, organised
activities and fine dining are highlights.
And tremendous hosts in Sandra and
Florian Moosbrugger.Dorf 11, Lech am
Arlberg, postlech.com
Hotel TannenhofOwner and host Axel
Bach has created a discreet and indulgent
seven-suite hotel with superior dining by
British chef James Baron, a spa, sauna
and Maserati guest cars. Helicopter
transfers on demand.Nassereinerstrasse
98, St Anton am Arlberg, hoteltannenhof.net
Arlberg HospizThis historic ski in-ski
out hotel has a stellar wine collection,
a legendary restaurant, and 87 rooms
and new, ultra-glamorous apartments
for families and groups.St Christoph 1, St
Christoph am Arlberg, arlberg1800resort.at

See&do
Kulinarik & KunstThe Arlberg’s premier
summer festival brims with cultural and
culinary events from mid-August until
early September.kulinarikkunst.org

For details of Arlberg activities year-
round, as well as hiking itineraries
and routes, seelechzuers.comand
stantonamarlberg.com
For other regional events see
arlberg.net/#events

More
austria.info

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Vienna

Slovenia
Italy

Adriatic
Sea

Austria
Zurich

Lech
St Anton am Arlberg
Switzerland

Germany
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