Read Kitchens of the Great Midwest Online
Authors: J. Ryan Stradal
She didn’t remember putting her hand on her heart, but it was there. “Oh. When would that be?”
“He’s gonna renovate it first, so maybe late September.”
“What about when you need to interview people, or fact check, or do research?”
Robbe shrugged. “I don’t need to do any of that. It’s a memoir. However I remember things is the truth. That’s what’s so great about it.”
“How long will you be gone for?”
“I don’t know. If I like the place, maybe years. I’ll rent this place out and live on the proceeds.”
“Oh my God.” She was still processing all this, and didn’t know what to say. “Everyone will really miss you.”
Robbe winked at her. “Then we might as well party.”
• • •
At that moment, there was a knock on the door, and Elodie opened it to find Eva standing there in a plain white sleeveless blouse and tan skirt, holding a wooden bowl and a canvas bag. She had a smile of relief.
“Wow, I’m glad I remembered the house,” she said.
• • •
Octavia helped Eva carry her stuff into the kitchen, where Octavia’s summer heirloom tomato casserole was keeping warm in the oven. Eva sniffed the air and smiled.
“Smells delicious,” she said.
“I know, doesn’t it?” Octavia said. “I based it off a recipe from
Petite Noisette
. I made a lot of my own tweaks, though.”
Eva looked blankly back at Octavia at the mention of the hottest new underground food blog in the relevant world. Octavia loved that Eva hadn’t heard of it.
“Oh nice,” Eva said. “What kind of tomatoes did you use?”
“Early Girl,” Octavia said. “They’re my favorite early growth heirloom.”
“Early Girl isn’t an heirloom. It’s an intentional F1 hybrid.”
“No, it’s an heirloom.”
“No, it’s owned by Monsanto. They’re fine tomatoes, but if you want an early growth
heirloom,
I like Moskvich. They’re exactly the same size, same globe, same indeterminate vine, everything. Heirloom Johnny Lao has them right now at the St. Paul Farmers’ Market. They grow up here in zone 4b just fine, you just have to plant them in warm soil. And I’d start the seeds indoors in bisected eggshells.”
Octavia had quit listening after “Monsanto,” and Eva finally noticed this.
“Sorry,” Eva said. “I’m rambling.”
“Well, you sure know your tomatoes,” Octavia said. “I used to grow San Marzanos myself because they were the best for paste.”
“I used to grow them too, as a teenager down in Iowa,” Eva said. “And I quit for probably the same reason. Aren’t there much better paste tomatoes now? You got Jersey Giant. Opalka. Amish Paste. Isn’t it a huge relief that the reign of the San Marzano is finally over?”
“Let’s go see what everyone is doing,” Octavia said, leaving the kitchen.
• • •
Robbe didn’t have chairs for his dining room table, he had two long benches, so there was no head of the table, just people sitting across from each other, like in a school cafeteria. At this dinner, Octavia sat across from Robbe, Eva sat across from Elodie, and Adam Snelling, a pearl-snap-plaid-shirt-wearing guy who was kinda cute, but too quiet, and Sarah Vang, who wore loud colors and had an obvious knockoff designer handbag, sat across from each other. Because they were now seven, Lacey sat at the end, facing no one, her swaddled child flung across her chest.
Eva insisted on preparing the Caesar salad at the table, which seemed to Octavia like an ostentatious demand for someone at their first Sunday Night Dinner Party, but Robbe confirmed that this was the way the first Caesar salad in history was prepared, so Octavia let it slide.
Eva rubbed the sides of the wooden bowl with bisected cloves of Porcelain garlic and prepared the dressing, a mixture of Koroneiki olive oil, warm coddled free-range brown egg yolks, Worcestershire sauce, freshly ground Madagascar black peppercorns, one freshly diced Porcelain clove, and a bit of Meyer lemon juice. She placed single whole romaine leaves on everyone’s plates and drizzled the dressing over them, topping each with four homemade sourdough bread croutons.
“Wait,” said Sarah Vang, who until this point had watched in awe. She was tiny and had cute clunky hipster princess glasses but canceled out her demure appearance with her loud, squeaky voice. “Where’s the anchovies and the cheese?”
Robbe leaned forward over the table. “Caesar Cardini’s original Caesar salad didn’t have cheese or anchovies,” he said.
“Obviously, Eva knew that already,” Octavia said. She saw Eva smile to herself briefly.
“Well, I know it’s not everyone’s favorite version of the Caesar,” Eva said, “but yeah, it goes back to the 1920s.” Octavia saw that Eva looked at the floor as everyone took their first bites.
“Oh my God,” Elodie said. “This is insane.”
“Damn,” said Sarah, licking her fork.
“Wow,” said Robbe, his jaws full of romaine and croutons, his lips shiny with thick Koroneiki oil. “It’s official. She’s coming to every dinner.”
Everyone else concurred. Eva smiled and thanked them softly.
Remembering Eva’s snotty tomato lecture and previous sharp talk about Mitch Diego, Octavia wasn’t buying the humble act. Inevitably, one day Eva would overreach and expose her inexperience and vulnerability in devastating fashion, and Octavia would decide then whether to swoop in and rescue her, but until then, she was forced into the exhausting task of helping her village correctly raise this arrogant child.
“It’s a real nice salad course,” Octavia said, at last. “I imagine it’s easy to make a great salad with such expensive ingredients, though.”
Robbe looked from Octavia to Eva. “Those aren’t expensive ingredients. I would know. Did you see her make it? It’s freshness, proportions, timing, am I right?”
Eva shrugged and nodded.
“I almost forgot the wine,” said Elodie, rising, and returned from the kitchen with an open bottle of Vermentino. “Don’t finish your salads yet!”
For most of the table, it was too late.
• • •
Although Sarah Vang valiantly initiated a heated argument about the quality of food trucks, offering as her sole evidence the popularity of a single gourmet food truck in Los Angeles, the conversation kept looping back to Eva’s ridiculous salad. With each course that came out that night, somebody made some reference to why the dish wasn’t prepared at the table or where were the Madagascar peppercorns. Octavia’s famous summer heirloom tomato casserole barely even got a mention.
By the time Lacey Dietsch’s unappealing Jell-O salad came out, which looked like congealed aquarium water with the dead goldfish shredded on the surface, no one was hungry for anything except more
chatter about that stupidly basic Caesar. Then something happened that made Octavia want to cut herself; on her way to the bathroom, she glanced into the kitchen and saw Robbe kissing Eva on the cheek. It was on the cheek, but it was a kiss, and Robbe had his eyes closed, and Eva did too.
Eva did not deserve this. Robbe had had a dining room full of attractive, smart, tipsy women—women close to his age, who had accomplished something with their lives—at his place for the last three months, and
this
smart-ass tomato girl is who he chooses? Worse, now Eva would be driving home tonight imagining herself cooking meals in Robbe’s kitchen, making pie from the apples in his backyard, lounging with a cocktail on his white midcentury modern sofa, making love in his four-poster bed, the feel of his smooth lips lingering on her face until the moment her eyes closed on the memory.
Yes, Octavia could obviously see what Eva saw in Robbe. Aside from the money and the superficial aspects, he was quite literally a gateway to a more sophisticated, adult world. Were people Eva’s age having dinner parties like this one? Hardly. The Sunday Night Dinner Party was, except for poor Lacey Dietsch, a carefully curated assemblage of experts who were at the top of their respective games. Not even Maureen O’Brien was ever invited, and not because she was petty and unattractive—it was because she didn’t do any one thing well enough. Eva must’ve understood what a privilege it was to receive Robbe’s invitation. And now that she’d also been handpicked from among more worthy adversaries for the affection of the most desirable bachelor Octavia could ever dream up, well, that girl must be melting like sugar on his tongue.
What Robbe got out of it was harder for Octavia to figure, and it would be a while before she realized that he hadn’t chosen Octavia or Elodie or Sarah because to choose an equal would be a sign of maturity, and this boy did not want to grow up, at least not yet. Octavia hoped Eva would be his last roll in the hay before he finally realized that these young girls had nothing to offer but ignorance and demands.
Octavia, who had grown up in Minnetonka around people with both money and taste, who had degrees in English and sociology from Notre Dame, whose dad was a corporate lawyer and stepmother was a model turned pharmaceutical sales rep, was meant to marry a man like Robbe Kramer. She didn’t even want a better life than the one she grew up with; she didn’t need to be wealthier, just comfortable, with a husband like Robbe who valued the same lifestyle. She would be happy, she knew, being his plus-one to political fund-raisers and charming the less intelligent wives of his prospective business partners. She’d even learned to play golf, knew how to make twenty-seven cocktails, and could watch a Minnesota Vikings game and understand it without asking questions. She knew how to be around rich men, and it was heartbreaking to see Robbe waste himself, for now, on some wide-eyed, guileless little no-name kid.
“Think I’m going to call it a night, you guys,” Octavia said.
She badly needed to decompress after that dinner. When she went home, she did something she’d never done before; she took a few hits off her housemate’s bowl. That April, Octavia wanted to move somewhere closer to her job in Uptown, so she rented the second floor of a house from a divorced twenty-nine-year-old woman named Andrea who worked for a theater company and smoked up while watching HBO. From the first-floor kitchen, which they shared, Octavia glanced into the living room and saw that Andrea had left her weed and pipe on the coffee table, for the first time since they’d lived together.
It was clearly meant to be. It was like her housemate knew.
• • •
The following week ended up being just about the worst five-day stretch of Octavia’s adult life to that point. There was a random drug test at the children’s educational nonprofit where she worked, which she failed, because she’d done drugs for the first time in years just thirty-six hours before, and was immediately put on administrative leave without pay,
which pretty much meant that she was fired. As a result, her dad cut her off financially, saying he wouldn’t give her another check until she checked into Hazelden and tackled the drug addiction he claimed he’d always suspected she had.
“You fucking bastard,” she said to her dad on the phone, and hung up, tears in her eyes.
To his credit, he’d left her alone after that, but now with no job and no money from home, Octavia Kincade was financially screwed.
• • •
She was still in enough of a foul mood that when the e-mail came around asking for everyone’s menu contributions for the following Sunday’s dinner, Octavia waited for Eva to respond, which she did, with “Sweet Corn Succotash.” Octavia pressed delete on that e-mail.
Octavia believed that morality was a learned social construct, as was responsibility, humility, and even generosity. Humans were born evil, as little sociopaths intent purely on slaking their own impulsive desires, and many never learned to be good, or evolved traits like empathy or compassion, instead remaining selfish, destructive small children for life. Eva Thorvald, that unrepentant, arrogant crowd-pleaser, was the most devious of all the small children Octavia knew and, ergo, would only be corrected into a life of humility through being broken.
• • •
Octavia arrived at Robbe’s house at the exact same time she always did, a green ceramic bowl under her arm, and walked in, without knocking, as usual.
“Oh, hey,” Robbe said, entering from the kitchen. “You’re early.”
“What’s that in the bowl?” Eva asked, following him. She had beaten Octavia here somehow.
“Sweet corn succotash,” Octavia said.
“Ha, that’s funny. I made that too.”
Robbe looked annoyed. “Didn’t you see the e-mail?”
Octavia shook her head. “I never got the e-mail.”
“Well, if you don’t get it, you need to text me or call me,” Robbe said. “Now we’re gonna have a shitload of succotash.”
“I may just dump mine in the trash right now,” Eva said. “After your awesome tomato hot dish last time.”
Octavia didn’t recall Eva praising her heirloom tomato dish last week; in any case, it was much too late for her to put on a show of false humility. “I’d hate to see you do that,” Octavia said. “After witnessing your magic Caesar.”
“I have an idea,” Eva said. “Let’s put each of them in bowls of Robbe’s so we can’t tell who made which one, how’s that?”
“Whatever floats your boat,” Octavia said, though secretly she liked the idea.
• • •
The problem was, you could tell one from the other at a hundred feet; one had diced organic red pepper (Octavia’s) while the other had French-cut Blue Lake string beans (Eva’s). The corn in Eva’s was also whiter.
“Why did you do yours with green beans?” Octavia asked Eva in the kitchen as their succotash was being transferred, for no good reason now as Octavia saw it, to their more anonymous new homes.
“I often use okra. But green beans are in season locally.”
“What kind of sweet corn did you use?”
“I think it’s Northern Xtra Sweet bicolor.”
“Oh, nice.” Octavia smiled. In her research over the last two weeks, she’d learned that Northern Xtra Sweet was an extremely common variety of corn; you could get it anywhere. “Where’d you get it?”
“Oh, I drove to Mr. Xiong’s farm down in Dakota County this afternoon and got some right off the stalk.”
“Just today? Before you got here? How’d you pull that off?”
“It wasn’t a long drive. What kind of corn is in yours?”