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Horcher (restaurant)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Horcher
The Horcher logo in Madrid
Map
Restaurant information
Established1904; 120 years ago (1904)
Food typeGerman cuisine
Dress codeBusiness smart
Street address6 Calle de Alfonso XII
CityMadrid, 28014
CountrySpain
Other informationNearest station:
Banco de España
WebsiteOfficial website

Horcher is a restaurant in Madrid, Spain. It moved to Madrid in 1943 having originally opened in Berlin, Germany, in 1904. It was a popular restaurant with the elite of Nazi Germany.[1]

History

In Berlin

During World War I Horcher served game meat from the Black Forest, food that was exempt from wartime rationing restrictions.[1]

In 1934 Hermann Göring, Heinrich Himmler, and other senior Nazis dined on crab at a celebratory meal at Horcher's following the Night of the Long Knives.[1] Edward, Duke of Windsor, and Wallis, Duchess of Windsor dined at Horcher's on the first night of their tour of Germany in 1937. They were joined by the Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop for dinner. The night was attended by Albert Speer (with whom the Windsors discussed classical music) and Joseph and Magda Goebbels.[2][3]

British double agent Duško Popov was told by his German case officer Johnny Jebsen that there were hidden microphones in the flower vases at Horcher's during a 1941 meal.[4]

Horcher's closed in Berlin following Joseph Goebbels's Total War speech during World War II.[1] Goebbels announced the closure of restaurants in the speech, saying that "It may be that an occasional person thinks that, even during war, his stomach is the most important thing. We cannot pay him any heed".[1] Horcher's was the favourite restaurant of Hermann Göring, who dined there free of charge. Göring would entertain guests there and frequently hired Horcher's as caterers for his events.[1] The historian Nicholas O'Shaughnessy has interpreted the closure of Horcher's by Goebbels as part of power struggles between Goebbels and Göring.[5] During lunch at Horcher's in December 1939 the German diplomat Hasso von Etzdorf told Prince Otto von Bismarck and Raoul Wallenberg of Adolf Hitler's plans to invade Denmark and Norway.[6]

The staff of Horcher's were exempt from conscription during World War II.[7] The first act of Carl Zuckmayer's 1946 play The Devil's General is set at Horcher's.[8]

Horcher opened a branch in London in March 1938. In her diary Blood and Banquets, Bella Fromm wrote that "Even before 1933, [Horcher's] was largely patronized by the Nazi leaders"[9]

In Madrid

Göring assisted with the moving of the restaurant to Madrid. The escape of senior Nazis from Europe in the aftermath of the war dubbed the Ratlines", was planned at Horcher's, often by Charles Lescat.[1][10] Horcher is believed to have transferred 250,000 Swiss francs to Nazi German diplomats in Lisbon and then subsequently converted the Swiss notes into Spanish pesetas to facilitate the opening of his restaurant in Madrid.[10] A letter drop was established at Horcher's for German spies in Madrid.[11] The Counterintelligence Corps of the United States Army described Otto Horcher as having moved to Madrid to "establish a centre of German subversive and espionage activities...the restaurant, after the war, became the collecting and distributing point for Germans who fled to Spain".[11] Otto Skorzeny dined at Horcher's in Madrid with Hjalmar Schacht after the war.[11]

In his 1979 memoir, My Stomach Goes Traveling, the actor Walter Slezak wrote that Horcher's was "The best restaurant in Madrid...There food is regarded as a religion".[12] Notable patrons of Horcer's have included Salvador Dalí, Ernest Hemingway and Sophia Loren.[1]

In 2003 Fodor's guide to Madrid wrote of Horcher's that "Once Madrid's best restaurant, this classic at the edge of the Retiro is now widely considered little more than an overpriced reminder of its former glory".[13]

As of 2019 Horcher's was owned by a member of the fourth generation of the Horcher family, Elisabeth Horcher.[1] The historian Giles MacDonogh said of Horcher's that "There is no other restaurant in the history of the twentieth — or indeed any — century...that has relocated from one European capital to another without losing a jot of its social exclusivity".[1] In a 2018 interview with El Confidencial, Elisabeth Horcher referred to her grandparents as "survivors" who had "...had to live through a very convulsive time. They had to leave their country...My grandparents were not supporters of the regime".[1] Elisabeth Horcher's historical novel her family's story, Los Horcher, was published in 2018.[14]

In a 2019 article in The Washington Post the novelist Diana Spechler described Horcher's "revisionist history-chic decor" and an "open-arms policy [that] is as charming as it is discomfiting. Though restaurateurs aren't obligated to police their customers' decency, egalitarian treatment becomes ethically murky against politically perilous backdrops".

Cuisine

The novelist Diana Spechler ate at Horcher's with a companion for a 2019 article in The Washington Post. Their meal began with vichyssoise, followed by kartoffelpuffer with 'fermented herring in cream sauce', deep-fried crab and stroganoff, with baumkuchen was served for desert, praised by the waiter as the "star" of Horcher.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Diana Spechler (17 December 2019). "For 115 years, one restaurant has fed the elite in Berlin and now Madrid. Nazis included". The Washington Post. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  2. ^ Morton 2018, p. 252.
  3. ^ Petropoulos 2006, p. 208.
  4. ^ Larry Loftis (9 February 2021). The Princess Spy: The True Story of World War II Spy Aline Griffith, Countess of Romanones. Simon and Schuster. p. 80. ISBN 978-1-982143-86-2.
  5. ^ Nicholas J. O'Shaughnessy (2016). Selling Hitler: Propaganda and the Nazi Brand. Oxford University Press. p. 217. ISBN 978-1-84904-352-6.
  6. ^ Klemens Von Klemperer (1992). German Resistance Against Hitler: The Search for Allies Abroad, 1938-1945. Oxford University Press. p. 215. ISBN 978-0-19-821940-8.
  7. ^ Roger Moorhouse (31 October 2011). Berlin at War: Life and Death in Hitler's Capital, 1939-45. Random House. p. 98. ISBN 978-1-4464-9921-4.
  8. ^ Steven Lehrer (2002). Hitler Sites: A City-by-city Guidebook (Austria, Germany, France, United States). McFarland. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-7864-1045-3.
  9. ^ Bella Fromm (1992). Blood and Banquets: A Berlin Diary, 1930-38. Simon & Schuster. p. 268. ISBN 978-0-671-75139-5.
  10. ^ a b Uki Goñi (2002). The Real Odessa: How Perón Brought the Nazi War Criminals to Argentina. Granta. p. 74. ISBN 978-1-86207-403-3.
  11. ^ a b c Martin A. Lee (2000). The Beast Reawakens. Taylor & Francis. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-415-92546-4.
  12. ^ Walter Slezak (1979). My Stomach Goes Traveling. Doubleday. p. 221. ISBN 978-0-385-11302-1.
  13. ^ Fodor's Travel Publications, Inc. Staff (February 2003). Fodor's Pocket Madrid. Fodor's Travel Publications. p. 45. ISBN 978-1-4000-1102-5.
  14. ^ Elisabeth Horcher (2 October 2018). Los Horcher: Ficción y realidad, historia y gastronomía se mezclan en un recorrido apasionante por la Europa del siglo XX a través de una saga familiar. La Esfera de los Libros. ISBN 978-84-9164-438-5.
  • Morton, A. (2018). Wallis in Love: The Untold True Passion of the Duchess of Windsor (electronic ed.). New York: Hachette. ISBN 978-1-78243-723-9.
  • Petropoulos, J. (2006). Royals and the Reich: The Princes von Hessen in Nazi Germany. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19979-607-6.
  • Falkman, Carl: Spill inte på Göring! – gastronomisk gesällvandring i trettiotalets Europa. Wiken, 1981. ISBN 9170240310. Libris

External links

This page was last edited on 5 February 2023, at 17:44
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