<p>Framed by wooden cabinets, Karin Hofbauer holds a stick of butter to her laptop camera and imparts to the novice bakers gathered virtually in her kitchen the secrets of kneading shortcrust dough.</p>.<p>"It's a simple recipe, I've made it so many times for friends and family, and it's always a success," the 62-year-old Austrian says before filling the baked apple tart with nuts and vanilla custard.</p>.<p>The five Germans and Austrians taking notes have come to the online class because the recipes are simple and straightforward -- and because they're taught by real-life grandmothers like Hofbauer, who will soon be joined by fellow grannies and grandpas from across the world in a scheme run by a Vienna cafe.</p>.<p>Two years ago, Hofbauer retired from an administrative position at a hospital.</p>.<p>Healthy, active and eager to "do something meaningful", she joined about 50 other "grannies" at Vienna's Vollpension cafe, a social enterprise where retirees bolster their often meagre state pensions and bake away the loneliness many senior citizens can feel.</p>.<p>The idea was born almost 10 years ago, over a too-dry slice of cake at a Vienna cafe.</p>.<p>"Nobody makes better cakes than grandma," Vollpension's co-founder Moriz Piffl-Percevic tells AFP, recalling how wistful the dry sponge made him for the comforting indulgence of his grandma's cakes.</p>.<p>Following a "Granny Wanted" classified in a local paper and some trials as pop-up cafes at festivals, the intergenerational team opened the first "Vollpension" -- a German term referring to both full retirement and accommodation with full board.</p>.<p>At the social enterprise's two cafes, coffee is served in old mugs with flower prints and cross-stitches of border collies grace the walls.</p>.<p>The clientele, many of them hipsters, are often joined by the elderly part-time hosts -- unless, of course, a pandemic forces them to shut.</p>.<p>When Austria's first virus lockdown hit, patrons donated 140,000 euros ($170,000) to maintain the extra income that many of the staff depend on -- especially single women who, after years as homemakers, receive relatively small state pensions.</p>.<p>That, however, is just one benefit of the social enterprise.</p>.<p>"Older people want to feel needed, that is something incredibly essential to ageing, and that's something that Vollpension provides," says Franz Kolland, a professor at the University of Vienna who focuses on social aspects of old age.</p>.<p>As people grow older, "they face two decades of retirement during which they are mobile. They want to do something -- they just have to be approached," Kolland says, lauding Vollpension as a "role model".</p>.<p>Piffl-Percevic says he is touched when friends and family report how much their grandma's wellbeing improved after joining Vollpension.</p>.<p>"Suddenly they don't feel their hip aching anymore, or they've stopped drinking a little too much," he says.</p>.<p>To "keep our grannies going" during the pandemic, Piffl-Percevic and his colleagues began looking for alternatives beyond takeaway cake.</p>.<p>Taking the grandmas' and grandpas' baking skills online was the next logical step.</p>.<p>An army of volunteers helped create a baking studio similar to those of TV chefs, and filmed on-demand baking classes ranging from Christmas cookies to vegan cakes, while Hofbauer and others are hosting live baking classes in their own kitchens.</p>.<p>After overcoming the familiar pitfalls of Zoom meetings, Hofbauer is passing on her knowledge from decades of baking -- including on the best apple peeler: "It doesn't have to be something expensive -- I think mine cost three euros," she says, laughing.</p>.<p>When the most recent Vollpension cafe opened -- just before the pandemic -- more than 300 eager seniors applied within 24 hours.</p>.<p>The baking courses' success with hundreds of participants is now prompting Vollpension to go global.</p>.<p>In several languages, Vollpension is this week calling on grandmas and grandpas from all over the world to join them.</p>.<p>"Vollpension was founded to give people like us a place where they find meaning, and can lead a life worth living even in old age," one granny says in Italian in a video promoting the call for applications.</p>.<p>People from all over the world can learn to bake with "original family recipes from the region, and straight from grandma's kitchen," another one says in Spanish.</p>.<p>"It's about local and national recipes -- mango with sticky rice being taught by a Thai grandma, and panna cotta by a Sicilian," Piffl-Percevic says.</p>.<p>Hofbauer, who says she has had participants tune in from Boston and Crete, is already looking forward to see the baking classes go global.</p>.<p>"I found new friends, new acquaintances, and if we're going international, it's going to be even more fun," she says, the scent of warm apple tart now filling her 80s-style kitchen. "The more the merrier."</p>
<p>Framed by wooden cabinets, Karin Hofbauer holds a stick of butter to her laptop camera and imparts to the novice bakers gathered virtually in her kitchen the secrets of kneading shortcrust dough.</p>.<p>"It's a simple recipe, I've made it so many times for friends and family, and it's always a success," the 62-year-old Austrian says before filling the baked apple tart with nuts and vanilla custard.</p>.<p>The five Germans and Austrians taking notes have come to the online class because the recipes are simple and straightforward -- and because they're taught by real-life grandmothers like Hofbauer, who will soon be joined by fellow grannies and grandpas from across the world in a scheme run by a Vienna cafe.</p>.<p>Two years ago, Hofbauer retired from an administrative position at a hospital.</p>.<p>Healthy, active and eager to "do something meaningful", she joined about 50 other "grannies" at Vienna's Vollpension cafe, a social enterprise where retirees bolster their often meagre state pensions and bake away the loneliness many senior citizens can feel.</p>.<p>The idea was born almost 10 years ago, over a too-dry slice of cake at a Vienna cafe.</p>.<p>"Nobody makes better cakes than grandma," Vollpension's co-founder Moriz Piffl-Percevic tells AFP, recalling how wistful the dry sponge made him for the comforting indulgence of his grandma's cakes.</p>.<p>Following a "Granny Wanted" classified in a local paper and some trials as pop-up cafes at festivals, the intergenerational team opened the first "Vollpension" -- a German term referring to both full retirement and accommodation with full board.</p>.<p>At the social enterprise's two cafes, coffee is served in old mugs with flower prints and cross-stitches of border collies grace the walls.</p>.<p>The clientele, many of them hipsters, are often joined by the elderly part-time hosts -- unless, of course, a pandemic forces them to shut.</p>.<p>When Austria's first virus lockdown hit, patrons donated 140,000 euros ($170,000) to maintain the extra income that many of the staff depend on -- especially single women who, after years as homemakers, receive relatively small state pensions.</p>.<p>That, however, is just one benefit of the social enterprise.</p>.<p>"Older people want to feel needed, that is something incredibly essential to ageing, and that's something that Vollpension provides," says Franz Kolland, a professor at the University of Vienna who focuses on social aspects of old age.</p>.<p>As people grow older, "they face two decades of retirement during which they are mobile. They want to do something -- they just have to be approached," Kolland says, lauding Vollpension as a "role model".</p>.<p>Piffl-Percevic says he is touched when friends and family report how much their grandma's wellbeing improved after joining Vollpension.</p>.<p>"Suddenly they don't feel their hip aching anymore, or they've stopped drinking a little too much," he says.</p>.<p>To "keep our grannies going" during the pandemic, Piffl-Percevic and his colleagues began looking for alternatives beyond takeaway cake.</p>.<p>Taking the grandmas' and grandpas' baking skills online was the next logical step.</p>.<p>An army of volunteers helped create a baking studio similar to those of TV chefs, and filmed on-demand baking classes ranging from Christmas cookies to vegan cakes, while Hofbauer and others are hosting live baking classes in their own kitchens.</p>.<p>After overcoming the familiar pitfalls of Zoom meetings, Hofbauer is passing on her knowledge from decades of baking -- including on the best apple peeler: "It doesn't have to be something expensive -- I think mine cost three euros," she says, laughing.</p>.<p>When the most recent Vollpension cafe opened -- just before the pandemic -- more than 300 eager seniors applied within 24 hours.</p>.<p>The baking courses' success with hundreds of participants is now prompting Vollpension to go global.</p>.<p>In several languages, Vollpension is this week calling on grandmas and grandpas from all over the world to join them.</p>.<p>"Vollpension was founded to give people like us a place where they find meaning, and can lead a life worth living even in old age," one granny says in Italian in a video promoting the call for applications.</p>.<p>People from all over the world can learn to bake with "original family recipes from the region, and straight from grandma's kitchen," another one says in Spanish.</p>.<p>"It's about local and national recipes -- mango with sticky rice being taught by a Thai grandma, and panna cotta by a Sicilian," Piffl-Percevic says.</p>.<p>Hofbauer, who says she has had participants tune in from Boston and Crete, is already looking forward to see the baking classes go global.</p>.<p>"I found new friends, new acquaintances, and if we're going international, it's going to be even more fun," she says, the scent of warm apple tart now filling her 80s-style kitchen. "The more the merrier."</p>