In Minnesota, summer is fleeting. It's even shorter, and more precious, in lake country, where roads hug shorelines, unfurling like spools of black and yellow ribbon.
Beyond the charm of downtown Park Rapids, in the even smaller Two Inlets Township, is where cookbook author Amy Thielen lives with her husband, sculptor Aaron Spangler, their son, Hank, and a regal canine named Hilly.
It's a Saturday, an ideal night for a dinner party, according to Thielen. "I wake up on Saturday morning with only a vague idea ... and a blank index card and sit down with a cup of coffee to sketch a menu," she writes in her new cookbook, "Company: The Radically Casual Art of Cooking for Others."
Thielen is now the author of three books. "The New Midwestern Table," published in 2013, won a James Beard Award and has become a standard-bearer for the cuisine of the North. A memoir, "Give a Girl a Knife" (2018), chronicled her time in New York City's professional kitchens, before she and Spangler moved back to Minnesota, where they converted a cabin into a home. And "Company," out this week, is an ode to Minnesota holiday gatherings, like Thanksgiving, deer camp or casual Saturday night settings like this.
The closer we are to our destination, the fewer signs of life there are. Houses give way to cabins, which eventually give way to a bait shop/gas station and the wilderness. The hum of asphalt abruptly switches to the crunch of gravel. As we inch along the thin pass, daisies nod a greeting and there's a tractor stopped on a steep incline into the ditch. In the city it'd count as antique, but up here it's just real old.
The path twists around an outbuilding, and Thielen's front porch comes into view. It's the setting for her recipes and plenty of dinner parties, which has a simpler meaning to Thielen: "You go to someone's house, check out their garden, their pets and their projects, eat all their food, drink their homemade alcohol, and toddle off into the night holding a jar of canned pickles."
Before greetings can be exchanged, we've first got to run this past Hilly, who alerts every new guest with her throaty bark. She is particular about the company she keeps and luckily, we're accepted with a sniff and a full-body shake. Plumes of undercoat float and blow away like a dandelion puff; the hairs linger for days.
We amble inside, hang coats, make the stilted first conversation of friends who haven't seen each other for years.