
The dumplings
When Gustav Mahler (1860-1911) took up his conducting appointment in the city of Olmütz, located in the Moravian region of the Czech lands, everybody thought he was a rather odd duck. According to contemporary reports, “At the inn where the singers met in the evening, he invited ridicule by drinking water instead of wine or beer. Refusing meat, he asked for spinach and apples, and loudly declared his allegiance to Richard Wagner’s vegetarian principles, throwing in a plea for woolen underwear for good measure. The citizens of this little town were agreed that he was a very queer specimen. Mahler spurned the food they offered him, and went hungry for the sake of his convictions.” Mahler’s convictions were based on an article Richard Wagner published in the Bayreuther Blätter in 1880. Wagner essentially followed the writings of Arthur Schopenhauer, who famously stated, “The assumption that animals are without rights and the illusion that our treatment of them has no moral significance is a positively outrageous example of Western crudity and barbarity. Universal compassion is the only guarantee of morality.”


Gustav Mahler
Ingredients:
2.2 lbs. potatoes
8.75 oz. flour
One egg
Pinch of salt
3.15 oz. butter
3.5 oz. bread crumbs
13 oz. apricots
Preparation: Place the potatoes, cut and peeled, through a mill once, then work them into the flour, egg and salt on a cutting board while they are still warm to make a smooth paste.
With a rolling pin, or by hand, knead the paste, flatten it and cut into fine slices, carefully enclosing an apricot in each slice. Then let the Knödel cook for five to 10 minutes in a saucepan of boiling salt water. Drain. During this time, melt the butter in a frying pan and brown the breadcrumbs over a low flame. Then roll the Knödel in bread crumbs and sprinkle with sugar before serving.
When all is said and done, pour yourself a glass of Eiswein — a type of dessert wine produced from grapes that have been frozen while still on the vine — and together with Mahler’s dumplings enjoy the bittersweet irony of the hunter’s funeral.