Berliner Boersenzeitung - Mozart chocolate row leaves bitter taste in Austria

EUR -
AED 4.273189
AFN 80.860495
ALL 97.494646
AMD 446.171547
ANG 2.082281
AOA 1066.862145
ARS 1510.728616
AUD 1.792479
AWG 2.095913
AZN 1.970111
BAM 1.946267
BBD 2.34989
BDT 141.407367
BGN 1.9549
BHD 0.438619
BIF 3437.924948
BMD 1.163426
BND 1.490698
BOB 8.041611
BRL 6.314615
BSD 1.1638
BTN 101.851119
BWP 15.553815
BYN 3.866959
BYR 22803.157018
BZD 2.337849
CAD 1.607343
CDF 3362.302929
CHF 0.940845
CLF 0.028646
CLP 1123.765154
CNY 8.353693
CNH 8.355909
COP 4716.530538
CRC 588.517361
CUC 1.163426
CUP 30.830799
CVE 110.700462
CZK 24.493656
DJF 206.764058
DKK 7.463848
DOP 71.775667
DZD 151.136109
EGP 56.231845
ERN 17.451396
ETB 163.343913
FJD 2.628704
FKP 0.857237
GBP 0.860062
GEL 3.135409
GGP 0.857237
GHS 12.390585
GIP 0.857237
GMD 84.344252
GNF 10092.724449
GTQ 8.927273
GYD 243.485283
HKD 9.114038
HNL 30.656613
HRK 7.533305
HTG 152.403507
HUF 395.123177
IDR 18824.413317
ILS 3.940118
IMP 0.857237
INR 101.98869
IQD 1524.088556
IRR 49009.336405
ISK 143.183072
JEP 0.857237
JMD 186.227831
JOD 0.824874
JPY 172.092286
KES 150.740071
KGS 101.658801
KHR 4661.849906
KMF 491.605895
KPW 1047.065273
KRW 1617.276332
KWD 0.355706
KYD 0.96985
KZT 626.461506
LAK 25130.01013
LBP 104184.831793
LKR 350.314114
LRD 234.439186
LSL 20.488169
LTL 3.435295
LVL 0.703745
LYD 6.311624
MAD 10.468484
MDL 19.406942
MGA 5165.612749
MKD 61.240038
MMK 2442.347549
MNT 4175.35443
MOP 9.402047
MRU 46.467189
MUR 52.807731
MVR 17.931329
MWK 2020.297341
MXN 21.913787
MYR 4.900934
MZN 74.412938
NAD 20.488001
NGN 1783.69534
NIO 42.756179
NOK 11.903353
NPR 162.961791
NZD 1.967657
OMR 0.447338
PAB 1.1638
PEN 4.144707
PGK 4.826478
PHP 66.378185
PKR 328.376808
PLN 4.262184
PYG 8717.301465
QAR 4.235456
RON 5.06137
RSD 117.163959
RUB 92.78365
RWF 1679.98769
SAR 4.365462
SBD 9.567755
SCR 17.260062
SDG 698.63203
SEK 11.170452
SGD 1.494736
SHP 0.91427
SLE 26.991029
SLL 24396.467082
SOS 664.898051
SRD 43.675223
STD 24080.577085
STN 24.897324
SVC 10.182947
SYP 15125.986318
SZL 20.487707
THB 37.787506
TJS 10.841006
TMT 4.083627
TND 3.355612
TOP 2.724863
TRY 47.481996
TTD 7.899308
TWD 34.960377
TZS 3048.177357
UAH 48.286118
UGX 4140.718196
USD 1.163426
UYU 46.572681
UZS 14644.630398
VES 156.263345
VND 30557.39383
VUV 138.920186
WST 3.092556
XAF 652.759694
XAG 0.030618
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.144218
XCG 2.097526
XDR 0.817118
XOF 651.519152
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.542302
ZAR 20.501038
ZMK 10472.243638
ZMW 26.797741
ZWL 374.622819
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    73.08

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.2500

    14.95

    +1.67%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    23.09

    -0.35%

  • CMSD

    -0.0530

    23.657

    -0.22%

  • RIO

    -1.0500

    62.52

    -1.68%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    11.64

    -0.09%

  • NGG

    1.0300

    71.56

    +1.44%

  • GSK

    0.1000

    39.23

    +0.25%

  • RELX

    -0.0800

    47.69

    -0.17%

  • BCC

    -1.5300

    86.62

    -1.77%

  • SCS

    -0.1600

    16.2

    -0.99%

  • BTI

    0.3100

    57.42

    +0.54%

  • BCE

    0.2600

    25.37

    +1.02%

  • BP

    0.3300

    34.64

    +0.95%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.41

    +0.07%

  • AZN

    0.5300

    78.47

    +0.68%

Mozart chocolate row leaves bitter taste in Austria
Mozart chocolate row leaves bitter taste in Austria / Photo: JOE KLAMAR - AFP

Mozart chocolate row leaves bitter taste in Austria

At a small high-end confectionery in Vienna, chefs put the finishing touches to one of Austria's signature souvenirs: Mozart chocolate balls filled with marzipan, pistachio, and rich almond and hazelnut nougat.

Text size:

Family-owned Leschanz still painstakingly makes the Mozartkugel chocolates by hand before putting them in their signature wrapping, featuring a portrait of Austria's 18th-century composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

But Leschanz is in the minority these days, and with the number of brands rising, the chocolate balls beloved by tourists and locals alike are often no longer even produced in Austria.

US food giant Mondelez, which owns one of the most recognisable brands, moved its production from the Austrian city of Salzburg -- Mozart's birthplace -- to Eastern Europe last month, reigniting a heated and long-running marketing debate.

"It's a shame, because Mozart balls are an Austrian product," head confectioner and owner Wolfgang Leschanz, 75, told AFP.

At his firm, 10 time-honoured steps are required to make one single Mozartkugel and about 20,000 of the delicacies are freshly made to order each year.

- Only one 'original' -

Invented by confectioner Paul Fuerst in Salzburg in 1890, the Mozartkugel became popular in Europe after winning a gold medal at a Paris food fair in 1905.

Fuerst's great-great-grandson Martin now owns the business, which produces around 3.5 million handmade balls annually, still in Salzburg and still using the traditional recipe.

Fuerst chocolates can now be ordered online for delivery across the European Union.

But with rising popularity have come imitators and an array of knockoffs, different fillings, wrappings, names -- and also competing claims and legal disputes.

The Fuerst family had to fight for years for recognition of their "Original Salzburger Mozartkugel" wrapped in silver foil with blue print -- including in the courts -- because their progenitor made the mistake of not protecting his creation in the first place.

Mozart chocolates do not have protected designation of origin status, a European protection for food-related products from certain geographical areas, such as champagne and parmesan cheese.

Even German heavyweight Reber, which produces 500,000 balls daily just across the border from Salzburg, is allowed to call its Mozart balls "authentic", even if it cannot use the term "original".

Contacted by AFP, Mondelez International, formerly known as Kraft Foods, declined to reveal where within its "European network" it began manufacturing the newly launched "Authentic Mirabell Mozartkugeln" in April.

For decades, the group's chocolates had been made at a plant in Salzburg -- but the facility closed last year after teetering on the brink of bankruptcy for years.

Citing high cocoa prices and rising costs for energy, Mondelez said its Mirabell brand was "a real gem" but the weight of the products had to be reduced slightly "to remain competitive".

Mondelez's Mozart balls currently sell for about $0.50 apiece, while one of Leschanz's handmade confections costs more than seven times that amount.

The Pro-Ge trade union, representing more than 60 workers laid off when the Salzburg plant closed, criticised Mondelez's "lack of transparency" about its new production site.

"The supply chain of an egg can be traced better than that," it said.

- 'Flagship product' -

Viennese chocolatier Heindl also voiced concern about Austria's emblematic confection being produced "somewhere in Eastern Europe".

"The Mozartkugel is a flagship product of Austria, just like the Sachertorte chocolate cake or the apple strudel or the poppy seed strudel," managing director Andreas Heindl, 63, told AFP.

"When someone comes to Austria, they want to take Austrian products home with them, especially when it's Mozartkugeln," said Heindl, whose father founded the firm.

He said he could not imagine moving production abroad to save money, even with cocoa prices tripling hitting businesses hard.

Leschanz likened Mozart balls produced outside Austria to a "souvenir cup emblazoned with Mozart's portrait" that is bought in haste only for the purchaser to discover it says "Made in China" on the bottom.

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)