das mit den Desserts bekommen wir noch hin ;) Apfelstrudel: der auf dem Foto sieht auch nicht gut aus und bei meinen Eltern/Großeltern isst man den auch nicht mit Vanillesoße sondern pur 🤣 und es gehörn zwar schon genug Äpfel rein, aber nicht so viele. ein guter Apfelstrudel ist dünn und fein und mit Staubzucker :) und so einen Apfelkuchen wie du ihn aus Polen zeigst gibt es bei uns auch - heißt glaub ich auch Apfelkuchen Probier mal Bananenschnitten, Raffaelloschnitten, Himbeerschnitten, Kardinalschnitten (haha ich bin offenbar Schnittenfan) - ist aber alles ziemlich süß ... und Marmorkuchen!
I'm a cloud engineer moving to Vienna from Sydney Australia possibly mid January with a job offer, I watched all your Videos and I must say your videos are really helpful and informative, thank you! Hope we can catch up sometime next year! :)
expect souvenirs shops in Vienna and outside seeling t shirts saying these is not Australia no Kanguroo in Austria lol i have Sydney on my buckedt list hooping go there for my 40 birthday only downside im scared of spiders.
LOL, just watched an american tourist channel who praised austrian desserts because they're not too sweet...so it might depend on the perspective! but yes, even many Austrians will agree that Sachertorte is overrated, Kardinalschnitte is imho better, it has various consistencies in the layers and also not too dry (but still very sweet)
I agree, it definitely depends on your preferences. Also famous food is not necessarily what regular people eat at home. My Austrian friend makes amazing cakes and they are nothing like what I was talking about. Still, as a desserts lover, I was a bit disappointed.
I feel like only tourists eat Sacher Torte anyway... The best Austrian chocolate cake imo is called "Mohr im Hemd", bad name, but very nice desert. It´s a hot chocolate/nut cake (technically pudding, but it tastes like cake), served with hot chocolate sauce and whipped cream. If done right, it´s not too sweet, very chocolaty and juicy, definitely worth a try, if you see it on a menu. It´s sometimes named something less offensive nowadays, like "Schokokuchen mit Schlagobers".
I may be a bit late but anyway, regarding the desserts you really have to know where to get them (or know some austrian Omi who will make them for you...). Sachertorte can be really moist and well balanced but the original tastes like Schuhsohle, its disgusting and overpriced, go to Aida. Apfelstrudel is also very hit and miss, i dont like a lot of the restaurant options but try to make it at home, its easy and much better. Good Krapfen are also quite hard to find (although i love anything deep fried so i also like the mid tier options), Felber is alright but again, there is hardly anything easier to make than Krapfen so just try it. I would also add Kaiserschmarren to the list, at most restaurants its boring and tastes a lot like eggs, you can literally make pancake dough and put a lot of it into a pan, make it like a pancake but really thick, then just rip it apart and voila, enjoy with Apfelmus. I would say that for any famous sweet dish you really have to know where to get it because the well known cafes and restaurants are either overpriced or not that good. LG
Yeah, you are for sure right, the execution matters, but I don’t find most of them very appealing so that might be a problem as well. For example I don’t like desserts that are too sweet and for me most of them are too sweet. That said I love cakes that my Austrian friend makes. ☺️
Worked in vienna for a little over 10 years over 10 years ago. (am from the south of austria myself) The parking thing hasn't changed it seems. Back then i found an affordable underground parking lot that was spacious by luck for the first two years, but i had to walk there for 5 minutes each time i wanted to use my car. After moving, i had an underground parking space right below the house my (small) apartment was in. (But as you said, the entrance was pretty narrow and the walls showed that not everyone was as carefull as me driving in and out.) The deserts part surprised me a bit. I mean yes, the Sacher Torte from Sacher is pretty dry and too sweet for me too. (needsa fair amount of unsweetened whipped cream to compliment it.) But Krapfen? The only gripe i have is that most have too much jam in them for my taste. I prefer Strauben (same dough, but rectangular and wihtout any jam) or Krapfen with vanilla or chocolade filling. Maybe what the viennese call Topfengolatschen is more your case. (In the rest of austria its more likely to find it as Topfentascherl) They can be made out of "puffpastry" (flaky pastry?) or a yeast dough. And have a filling made of something the translater tells me is called Twaróg in polish. (so it's a bit sweet and a tiny bit sour) And the way you described you would want a krapfen to be makes me think you could like a "Germteig Topfengolatsche". (if you are lucky they haven't already put sugar on it.)
Please remember that Poland was very behind the West and has been rapidly catching up over the last 30 years, which is why a large part of the infrastructure in major cities is new and therefore modern. I think that's why some things in Vienna seem so dated to me. 🤔 My main problem with Krapfen is that we have exactly the same thing in Poland, but it tastes better, mainly due to the fatter dough and greater variety. Overall it is a huge thing in Poland. 🍩 Topfengolatschen looks good, I think I even tried it. We have the same thing in Poland too. 😅 I know it's very controversial, because Austrians are very proud of their bakeries and confectioneries, and they are good, but... unfortunately I still think that both bread and pastries are better in Poland (not every single one, but overall). That said, I am not obsess with Poland... i think. 😅 I would consider French pastries as the best. I also really, really love cornetti & tiramisu (Itally) and knafeh (Arab). Those are one of the best desserts ever for me.
@@TomaszJakubKusienicki The "newer" infrastructure isn't always what makes a difference: The apartment building i lived in with the garage underneath it, was less than 5 years old by that time. (so built at the turn of the century). And still they were too stupid to get the entrance a little wider. And a few years back i had to attend a few meetings in the IZD tower building, and their underground garage entrance and parking spots made it really unfunny with the company VW Bus. (left and right 1.5cm to the metal poles at the entrance, and we all had to climb out at the same side as the spots were too narrow to open the doors both sides. One of our biggest problems in austria is that parking spots are still roughly the same since the late 70's but cars got so much bigger. And in cities like vienna, it often seems they purposefully try to annoy car owners with parking. Vienna is also the only place in austria where you need(ed?) a parking ticket for the 10 minutes you can park for free in the blue parking zones everywhere in austria. Anywhere else you could use the 10 minutes to aquire a parking ticket at a shop, or at a ticket machine, but in vienna you had to have (no idea if that's still the case) those "Gratis-Parkschein" (free parking ticket) for getting a real parking ticket...🤦♂ -> the slogan of vienna for a time was "Wien ist anders" (vienna is different). Which often is undeniable...😁
@@nirfz In Vienna you have to be lucky to even find a parking spot on the street. 😅 But yeah, I have those paper parking tickets in my car, but I mostly use the Handyparken app. Maybe it is something new, but works quite well. I generally prefer to use public transport or a bike if I'm traveling alone. I mainly use my car with my family or on weekends. I hear a lot about Vienna being different. I think it will be difficult for me to see it myself without properly learning the language and immersing myself in the culture.
@@TomaszJakubKusienicki Inside vienna public transport makes sense. (used the U-Bahn for my way to and from work back then) About the last point, yes i guess so.
Vienna is great in general, but nowhere is perfect. A few drawbacks in my opinion: 1) It is indeed very behind when it comes to IT, particularly cashless payments. Many cafés, bars and restaurants, hairdressers etc. still insist on cash only payments. 2)Austria is very bureaucratic, everything requires paperwork. 3) Vienna is the only place I’ve ever lived where people can live in the center of a capital city and still expect the peace and quiet of a country village. People will call the police if there is a peep out of your apartment after 10pm, without coming to warn you first. 4)Every protest in Austria seems to happen at the weekend in the first district of Vienna, which is pretty annoying for those of us who live here. Apart from that, it’s pretty wonderful.
Hi, thank you for the comment. I think you are right although it always varies a little based on where you live exactly and what you like to do. My neighbors are very friendly and I can pay with card in almost all places I go to. I can’t argue with the bureaucracy tho, it is very true. 😅
@@TomaszJakubKusienicki Sure, living in Innere Stadt isn’t exactly the same as Hernals (although maybe with the U5 being built there will be some convergence). What I will say is that the cost of living there is very reasonable compared with most European capitals. Rent controls be praised!
Registration of a car was a complete mess for us.... Though, the primary reason was that no one seemed to be able to tell me what to do. Contacted insurance, they told me to register the car with the manufacturer. Did that and contacted insurance company again and they told me they need me to check with a car mechanic... Didn't help that ÖAMTC did a mistake during the check so I had to go back again... Felt like a headless chicken running around. 😂 Though, now when I know all the steps it is pretty straight forward. 😅
There are quite a few steps. I think it is good to check with other expads first as locals usually do not know all the rules. 😛 That is why I made this video as well: th-cam.com/video/up7UTmiqDKA/w-d-xo.html ☺
@@Golgafrincham yes, I know what you mean. I found the list of steps looking at polish groups and it worked well for me, but I can see how it can be hard to find.
Hi Tomasz. Good video. Thinking of moving to Vienna myself. Im wondering - what is your level of speaking german? Is it needed in IT jobs in Vienna? I have basic A2 level in german but I am aware the Austrian german is quite diffrent from the German-german.. ;)
Hi, I personally work in English so it is definitely possible, however there are some offers that require German. I prefer working for modern, international companies, so in those kind of places it is less common to expect people to speak good German.
But keep in mind that when choosing international companies, you will have a hard time learning german (unless you have good self-discipline). Many people get stuck in this loophole and live in austria for 10+ years without learning the language. Don't be surprised to face some resentment from the locals then :)
das mit dem essen scheint eine Sache zusein die von der Art wie man aufgewachsen ist! endlich in Rente hab ich mich aufgemacht CZ und polen und das Baltikum zu besichtigen. die cz Küche hat die Wiener Küche stark geprägt ,auch die topfengolatsche, die wiener Sachertorte ist einfach nicht meines!(touristenfutter).doch Brot und Gebäck ist in CZ+Polen für mich eine Katastrophe , Mehlspeisen nicht schlecht aber etwas langweilig. dafür liebe ich die (kleineren Städte) auch die Menschen und das man abseits der Zentren noch sehr den "ostblock" sieht! im Mai geht's nach osterode...darauf freu ich mich schon!
Ich vergleiche die besten Brote und Backwaren, die ich in jedem Land gefunden habe. Ich verspreche Ihnen, dass es in Polen viele tolle Bäckereien und Konditoreien gibt. ☺ ...aber ich denke, du hast recht. Das mit dem essen scheint eine Sache zu sein die von der Art wie man aufgewachsen ist.
No having a car doesn’t work for everyone, especially if you have a kid/kids and you want to explore all that Vienna/Austria has to offer. When I travel alone I usually go by bike and I would like to see more bike lanes in my neighborhood so I can do it with my family more often.
i have been in Vienna 2 times and Salzburg and moonlake last week love it specially food w schnitzel and sacher torte favorite also love austrians and also architecture landscape im swiss.of nudity i did not see noting wanting to try out a nude beach lol is it mixed also girls women or i may only see real wieners you get it wiener sausage lol.
@@TomaszJakubKusienicki Lol they whent out trend lol more mature i woud be only interessed if thery are girls or women from 20 till 40 max im 38 but most people think im 30 32 max by the way i have polish past from part of my granpa
und bezüglich parken: es soll auch nicht einfach sein zu parken. Wien möchte immer weiter weg von den Autos, Wjen möchte eine grüne Öffi-, Fußgänger- und Radfahrerstadt werden. Das wird sich also in Zukunft auch nicht verbessern (und ich persönlich finde das auch gut so)....
nice video... a couple of things many foreigners who move to austria are not aware of...simply because they only know vienna * sacher torte...the better, is at demel, where the origional recipee was created but then "taken"... however the best sacher torte is from personal family recipees... my mother's sacher was always in demand and asked for in all the countries we lived in. *apfel strudel is overated but there are amazing apple cakes and other austrian cakes from other regions in austria ~ vienna is not all of austria *please note that 99% of topless or nude people at public swimming places are older people who are still living in a 1970's time warp... its not cool anymore nor fashionable nobody cares to human jelly bits wobblying on a sunny beach day...😂
Thank you for sharing. ❤️ I will definitely keep tasting deserts, I am sure there are some I will love. My friend and neighbor who is Austrian has shared a few cakes with me some time ago and they were all delicious. 😋 We have been also slowly exploring Austria, we are already in love of Traunsee and we had 2 amazing vacations in Kärnten. ☺️ We still have a lot to learn.
I moved from Upper Austria to Vienna and it's baffling to me how much advertisement the Sachertorte gets in Vienna. Absolutely overrated and one of the least interesting cakes you can get in Austria.
You should NOT drive in Vienna but use the public transport system. This is a city conscious of the environment. Cars are the main producers of toxic CO2 in the atmosphere. If you want your children to be able to breathe normally in 50 years' time, you will drive your car for visits to Poland, but not in town.
I love how your points are random without being too generic and with an angle of importance. Very cool 🙂
Thank you, I am glad you found it interesting. I learn new things about Vienna all the time, I am sure that video will need an update at some point. 😄
Another great video.
Thanks ☺I am glad you like it!
das mit den Desserts bekommen wir noch hin ;) Apfelstrudel: der auf dem Foto sieht auch nicht gut aus und bei meinen Eltern/Großeltern isst man den auch nicht mit Vanillesoße sondern pur 🤣 und es gehörn zwar schon genug Äpfel rein, aber nicht so viele. ein guter Apfelstrudel ist dünn und fein und mit Staubzucker :) und so einen Apfelkuchen wie du ihn aus Polen zeigst gibt es bei uns auch - heißt glaub ich auch Apfelkuchen
Probier mal Bananenschnitten, Raffaelloschnitten, Himbeerschnitten, Kardinalschnitten (haha ich bin offenbar Schnittenfan) - ist aber alles ziemlich süß ... und Marmorkuchen!
I'm a cloud engineer moving to Vienna from Sydney Australia possibly mid January with a job offer, I watched all your Videos and I must say your videos are really helpful and informative, thank you!
Hope we can catch up sometime next year! :)
Hi, I am glad you find them useful, I hope you will love it here as I do. 😊
Europe is broken. Many people here would be happy to live in Australia.
expect souvenirs shops in Vienna and outside seeling t shirts saying these is not Australia no Kanguroo in Austria lol i have Sydney on my buckedt list hooping go there for my 40 birthday only downside im scared of spiders.
LOL, just watched an american tourist channel who praised austrian desserts because they're not too sweet...so it might depend on the perspective! but yes, even many Austrians will agree that Sachertorte is overrated, Kardinalschnitte is imho better, it has various consistencies in the layers and also not too dry (but still very sweet)
I agree, it definitely depends on your preferences. Also famous food is not necessarily what regular people eat at home. My Austrian friend makes amazing cakes and they are nothing like what I was talking about. Still, as a desserts lover, I was a bit disappointed.
Interesting video...
Thank you 😊
I feel like only tourists eat Sacher Torte anyway...
The best Austrian chocolate cake imo is called "Mohr im Hemd", bad name, but very nice desert. It´s a hot chocolate/nut cake (technically pudding, but it tastes like cake), served with hot chocolate sauce and whipped cream. If done right, it´s not too sweet, very chocolaty and juicy, definitely worth a try, if you see it on a menu. It´s sometimes named something less offensive nowadays, like "Schokokuchen mit Schlagobers".
Hi, thanks, I will try this. Looks good, reminds me of the lava cake.
I may be a bit late but anyway, regarding the desserts you really have to know where to get them (or know some austrian Omi who will make them for you...). Sachertorte can be really moist and well balanced but the original tastes like Schuhsohle, its disgusting and overpriced, go to Aida. Apfelstrudel is also very hit and miss, i dont like a lot of the restaurant options but try to make it at home, its easy and much better. Good Krapfen are also quite hard to find (although i love anything deep fried so i also like the mid tier options), Felber is alright but again, there is hardly anything easier to make than Krapfen so just try it. I would also add Kaiserschmarren to the list, at most restaurants its boring and tastes a lot like eggs, you can literally make pancake dough and put a lot of it into a pan, make it like a pancake but really thick, then just rip it apart and voila, enjoy with Apfelmus.
I would say that for any famous sweet dish you really have to know where to get it because the well known cafes and restaurants are either overpriced or not that good.
LG
Yeah, you are for sure right, the execution matters, but I don’t find most of them very appealing so that might be a problem as well. For example I don’t like desserts that are too sweet and for me most of them are too sweet. That said I love cakes that my Austrian friend makes. ☺️
Worked in vienna for a little over 10 years over 10 years ago. (am from the south of austria myself)
The parking thing hasn't changed it seems.
Back then i found an affordable underground parking lot that was spacious by luck for the first two years, but i had to walk there for 5 minutes each time i wanted to use my car.
After moving, i had an underground parking space right below the house my (small) apartment was in. (But as you said, the entrance was pretty narrow and the walls showed that not everyone was as carefull as me driving in and out.)
The deserts part surprised me a bit. I mean yes, the Sacher Torte from Sacher is pretty dry and too sweet for me too. (needsa fair amount of unsweetened whipped cream to compliment it.)
But Krapfen? The only gripe i have is that most have too much jam in them for my taste. I prefer Strauben (same dough, but rectangular and wihtout any jam) or Krapfen with vanilla or chocolade filling.
Maybe what the viennese call Topfengolatschen is more your case. (In the rest of austria its more likely to find it as Topfentascherl) They can be made out of "puffpastry" (flaky pastry?) or a yeast dough. And have a filling made of something the translater tells me is called Twaróg in polish. (so it's a bit sweet and a tiny bit sour)
And the way you described you would want a krapfen to be makes me think you could like a "Germteig Topfengolatsche". (if you are lucky they haven't already put sugar on it.)
Please remember that Poland was very behind the West and has been rapidly catching up over the last 30 years, which is why a large part of the infrastructure in major cities is new and therefore modern. I think that's why some things in Vienna seem so dated to me. 🤔
My main problem with Krapfen is that we have exactly the same thing in Poland, but it tastes better, mainly due to the fatter dough and greater variety. Overall it is a huge thing in Poland. 🍩
Topfengolatschen looks good, I think I even tried it. We have the same thing in Poland too. 😅
I know it's very controversial, because Austrians are very proud of their bakeries and confectioneries, and they are good, but... unfortunately I still think that both bread and pastries are better in Poland (not every single one, but overall).
That said, I am not obsess with Poland... i think. 😅 I would consider French pastries as the best. I also really, really love cornetti & tiramisu (Itally) and knafeh (Arab). Those are one of the best desserts ever for me.
@@TomaszJakubKusienicki The "newer" infrastructure isn't always what makes a difference: The apartment building i lived in with the garage underneath it, was less than 5 years old by that time. (so built at the turn of the century). And still they were too stupid to get the entrance a little wider.
And a few years back i had to attend a few meetings in the IZD tower building, and their underground garage entrance and parking spots made it really unfunny with the company VW Bus. (left and right 1.5cm to the metal poles at the entrance, and we all had to climb out at the same side as the spots were too narrow to open the doors both sides.
One of our biggest problems in austria is that parking spots are still roughly the same since the late 70's but cars got so much bigger.
And in cities like vienna, it often seems they purposefully try to annoy car owners with parking.
Vienna is also the only place in austria where you need(ed?) a parking ticket for the 10 minutes you can park for free in the blue parking zones everywhere in austria.
Anywhere else you could use the 10 minutes to aquire a parking ticket at a shop, or at a ticket machine, but in vienna you had to have (no idea if that's still the case) those "Gratis-Parkschein" (free parking ticket) for getting a real parking ticket...🤦♂
-> the slogan of vienna for a time was "Wien ist anders" (vienna is different). Which often is undeniable...😁
@@nirfz In Vienna you have to be lucky to even find a parking spot on the street. 😅
But yeah, I have those paper parking tickets in my car, but I mostly use the Handyparken app. Maybe it is something new, but works quite well.
I generally prefer to use public transport or a bike if I'm traveling alone. I mainly use my car with my family or on weekends.
I hear a lot about Vienna being different. I think it will be difficult for me to see it myself without properly learning the language and immersing myself in the culture.
@@TomaszJakubKusienicki Inside vienna public transport makes sense. (used the U-Bahn for my way to and from work back then)
About the last point, yes i guess so.
Vienna is great in general, but nowhere is perfect. A few drawbacks in my opinion:
1) It is indeed very behind when it comes to IT, particularly cashless payments. Many cafés, bars and restaurants, hairdressers etc. still insist on cash only payments.
2)Austria is very bureaucratic, everything requires paperwork.
3) Vienna is the only place I’ve ever lived where people can live in the center of a capital city and still expect the peace and quiet of a country village. People will call the police if there is a peep out of your apartment after 10pm, without coming to warn you first.
4)Every protest in Austria seems to happen at the weekend in the first district of Vienna, which is pretty annoying for those of us who live here.
Apart from that, it’s pretty wonderful.
Hi, thank you for the comment. I think you are right although it always varies a little based on where you live exactly and what you like to do. My neighbors are very friendly and I can pay with card in almost all places I go to. I can’t argue with the bureaucracy tho, it is very true. 😅
@@TomaszJakubKusienicki Sure, living in Innere Stadt isn’t exactly the same as Hernals (although maybe with the U5 being built there will be some convergence).
What I will say is that the cost of living there is very reasonable compared with most European capitals. Rent controls be praised!
@@TheLastAngryMan01 True that. 😊
Registration of a car was a complete mess for us.... Though, the primary reason was that no one seemed to be able to tell me what to do.
Contacted insurance, they told me to register the car with the manufacturer. Did that and contacted insurance company again and they told me they need me to check with a car mechanic... Didn't help that ÖAMTC did a mistake during the check so I had to go back again... Felt like a headless chicken running around. 😂
Though, now when I know all the steps it is pretty straight forward. 😅
There are quite a few steps. I think it is good to check with other expads first as locals usually do not know all the rules. 😛 That is why I made this video as well: th-cam.com/video/up7UTmiqDKA/w-d-xo.html ☺
@@TomaszJakubKusienicki The thing is that not even the insurance agent seemed to know... at least they weren't able to tell me when I asked about it.
@@Golgafrincham yes, I know what you mean.
I found the list of steps looking at polish groups and it worked well for me, but I can see how it can be hard to find.
Hi Tomasz. Good video. Thinking of moving to Vienna myself. Im wondering - what is your level of speaking german? Is it needed in IT jobs in Vienna? I have basic A2 level in german but I am aware the Austrian german is quite diffrent from the German-german.. ;)
Hi, I personally work in English so it is definitely possible, however there are some offers that require German. I prefer working for modern, international companies, so in those kind of places it is less common to expect people to speak good German.
But keep in mind that when choosing international companies, you will have a hard time learning german (unless you have good self-discipline). Many people get stuck in this loophole and live in austria for 10+ years without learning the language. Don't be surprised to face some resentment from the locals then :)
das mit dem essen scheint eine Sache zusein die von der Art wie man aufgewachsen ist! endlich in Rente hab ich mich aufgemacht CZ und polen und das Baltikum zu besichtigen. die cz Küche hat die Wiener Küche stark geprägt ,auch die topfengolatsche, die wiener Sachertorte ist einfach nicht meines!(touristenfutter).doch Brot und Gebäck ist in CZ+Polen für mich eine Katastrophe , Mehlspeisen nicht schlecht aber etwas langweilig. dafür liebe ich die (kleineren Städte) auch die Menschen und das man abseits der Zentren noch sehr den "ostblock" sieht! im Mai geht's nach osterode...darauf freu ich mich schon!
Ich vergleiche die besten Brote und Backwaren, die ich in jedem Land gefunden habe. Ich verspreche Ihnen, dass es in Polen viele tolle Bäckereien und Konditoreien gibt. ☺
...aber ich denke, du hast recht. Das mit dem essen scheint eine Sache zu sein die von der Art wie man aufgewachsen ist.
Bro. Just dont drive a car in vienna... public transport is great. We dont want car traffic!!!
No having a car doesn’t work for everyone, especially if you have a kid/kids and you want to explore all that Vienna/Austria has to offer. When I travel alone I usually go by bike and I would like to see more bike lanes in my neighborhood so I can do it with my family more often.
i have been in Vienna 2 times and Salzburg and moonlake last week love it specially food w schnitzel and sacher torte favorite also love austrians and also architecture landscape im swiss.of nudity i did not see noting wanting to try out a nude beach lol is it mixed also girls women or i may only see real wieners you get it wiener sausage lol.
As far as I know nude beaches are not considered very cool anymore so I would expect to see mostly more mature people of all genders.
@@TomaszJakubKusienicki Lol they whent out trend lol more mature i woud be only interessed if thery are girls or women from 20 till 40 max im 38 but most people think im 30 32 max by the way i have polish past from part of my granpa
und bezüglich parken: es soll auch nicht einfach sein zu parken. Wien möchte immer weiter weg von den Autos, Wjen möchte eine grüne Öffi-, Fußgänger- und Radfahrerstadt werden. Das wird sich also in Zukunft auch nicht verbessern (und ich persönlich finde das auch gut so)....
Hmmm 🤔 die öffentlichen Verkehrsmittel in Wien sind gut, aber nicht perfekt. Ich denke, dass alle Transportmittel noch gut funktionieren sollten.
nice video...
a couple of things many foreigners who move to austria are not aware of...simply because they only know vienna
* sacher torte...the better, is at demel, where the origional recipee was created but then "taken"...
however the best sacher torte is from personal family recipees...
my mother's sacher was always in demand and asked for in all the countries we lived in.
*apfel strudel is overated but there are amazing apple cakes and other austrian cakes from other regions in austria ~ vienna is not all of austria
*please note that 99% of topless or nude people at public swimming places are older people who are still living in a 1970's time warp...
its not cool anymore nor fashionable
nobody cares to human jelly bits wobblying on a sunny beach day...😂
Thank you for sharing. ❤️
I will definitely keep tasting deserts, I am sure there are some I will love. My friend and neighbor who is Austrian has shared a few cakes with me some time ago and they were all delicious. 😋
We have been also slowly exploring Austria, we are already in love of Traunsee and we had 2 amazing vacations in Kärnten. ☺️ We still have a lot to learn.
@@TomaszJakubKusienicki
Kärnten is tops👍🏻💖
I moved from Upper Austria to Vienna and it's baffling to me how much advertisement the Sachertorte gets in Vienna. Absolutely overrated and one of the least interesting cakes you can get in Austria.
I am happy that it is not only me who thinks that. 😅
You should NOT drive in Vienna but use the public transport system. This is a city conscious of the environment. Cars are the main producers of toxic CO2 in the atmosphere. If you want your children to be able to breathe normally in 50 years' time, you will drive your car for visits to Poland, but not in town.
I drive electric in the city, never petrol.