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Fiction

The savory, rich aroma of the simmering stew filled the air, a tantalizing scent that should have promised comfort. But as Angie stood over the bubbling pot, stirring absently, she knew something was off. The recipe was one she had learned from her grandmother — a dish that had always been perfect, every time, without fail. Yet tonight, despite the familiar ingredients and method, it tasted flat. Empty. The flavors, no matter how carefully she coaxed them, refused to sing.

Angie set the wooden spoon down on the counter with a soft clatter, staring at the broth. She had followed everything to the letter- the beef seared until caramelized, the onions browned until sweet and translucent, the carrots chopped into perfect, even cubes. But as she dipped the spoon again, tasting, her face tightened with frustration. Bland. Lifeless.

The thought crept into her mind again, uninvited, as it had all evening- There’s something missing.

She glanced at the old recipe card, its edges curled and yellowed, her grandmother’s careful handwriting spelling out each step. She had made this dish a thousand times with her grandmother at her side. And now, after her passing, it felt like a way to keep her close. But no matter how many times she had tried since her death, it never tasted the same.

"What is it?" she muttered aloud to herself, running her fingers through her hair. "What am I forgetting?”

She paced around the small kitchen, hands brushing past the collection of spices on the shelf- rosemary, thyme, paprika, cloves. All accounted for. Everything should be right, yet something about the taste was wrong, like a melody that had lost its harmony. Angie's mind, already hazy from a long, exhausting day, began to wander.

Maybe it’s not just the stew, she thought.

Her life had been full of absences lately — her grandmother’s passing last year had left a cavernous void that even the most comforting routines couldn’t fill. The recipe had been their tradition, something special they’d shared just the two of them. And now, alone, Angie felt the weight of it, the silence in her apartment suffocating. Her friends had called and visited after the funeral, but as the months dragged on, they had faded away, returning to their own lives, leaving her with the ache of loss that seemed to grow rather than diminish. The stew, like everything else, had become part of that emptiness.

She sighed, turning off the burner. The missing ingredient wasn't something she could simply add from a jar.

Maybe there was a way to find it, though. Not in the kitchen — but somewhere else.

!!!!

The next morning, Angie woke up with the thought still gnawing at her. As she sat at the small table with a cup of coffee, she scrolled through old photos on her phone- pictures of her grandmother in the garden, hands dusty with soil; the two of them in aprons, laughing over a failed cake. In almost every photo, her grandmother had that same knowing, serene expression, as if she held the secrets of the world in her hands. Angie had always admired that about her — her quiet confidence, her ability to navigate life’s uncertainties without ever seeming lost.

It dawned on Angie then that she had never asked her grandmother why she had loved this recipe so much. Sure, it tasted good, but there had to be more to it than that. Every time her grandmother had prepared it, there had been a sense of ritual, of care, that Angie had only mimicked without fully understanding.

On impulse, she opened her laptop and searched for her grandmother’s hometown, a small village nestled in the hills of Italy. Maybe there was something in the place itself that would give her answers. She had visited once as a child but had never gone back, the family’s focus shifting to life in the U.S. after her grandmother had emigrated. Within minutes, she had booked a flight. The stew could wait.

!!!!

A week later, Angie found herself standing on a cobblestone street in the heart of the village. The air was different here — thicker, warm like a soft embrace. There was a hint of sea salt carried on the breeze, mingling with the scent of sunbaked stone and freshly turned earth. She inhaled deeply, catching a whiff of rosemary and basil, so familiar it sent a pang through her chest. It was as if the village itself exhaled the same comforting aromas her grandmother had once woven into their kitchen back home.

Under her feet, the cobblestones were uneven but worn smooth by generations of footsteps, clicking softly beneath her shoes with each step. The streets seemed to whisper their age, their long history embedded in every crack. As she walked, the sound of her soles echoed faintly, blending with the distant hum of life around her- the low murmur of conversation, a burst of laughter spilling out from an open window, and the lazy whirr of a bicycle gliding by.

She passed by a stone house with peeling shutters, a stray cat lounging in the shade, its fur dusted with the golden warmth of the sun. For a brief moment, she could hear the crisp voice of an old woman hanging laundry, shouting out, "Attenta!" in warning to a child running by. The word triggered a memory — her grandmother calling out to her in the same tone, years ago, as they’d walked through this very village. Angie’s lips curled into a smile.

The market was alive with sound and color. Vendors called out in melodic Italian, their voices rising and falling in rhythms that stirred something deep within her, like a song she had once known but couldn’t quite remember the words to. She could catch phrases here and there — “fresca!”... “buonissimo!” — and though the meaning was faint at first, they seemed to bloom into clarity as her ears adjusted to the music of the language, a language she had half-forgotten but never really lost.

At one stall, a woman was selling bundles of fresh herbs — oregano, sage, thyme — their pungent aroma filling the air. Angie stopped for a moment, letting the scent fill her lungs, as though she was stepping back into her grandmother’s garden, her hands dusty with soil. Another stall offered wheels of cheese, their sharp, creamy fragrance mingling with the earthy scent of truffles. The smell of garlic, frying in olive oil, wafted from a nearby café, making her stomach clench with hunger.

She reached the spice vendor’s stall, her hand brushing against the jars, their glass cool under her fingertips. The vendor smiled warmly, his face lined with years of sun and salt, his eyes crinkling in the same knowing way her grandmother’s had. When she lifted the small jar of spice, the scent hit her like a wave — citrusy, bright, with a deep, grounded note of something ancient, something that made the back of her throat ache with nostalgia. It was a smell she didn’t recognize fully but felt she had always known, buried deep in her memory.

"That’s the secret," the vendor said, his eyes crinkling as he smiled at her. "The spice you’re holding — it’s special. We call it ‘il tocco finale,’ the final touch.”

Angie's heart skipped a beat. "The final touch?”

He nodded. "It’s a blend we’ve used in this village for generations. My grandmother used it. Her grandmother before her. It’s the kind of thing that’s passed down. You can’t make a proper stew without it.”

Her breath caught. Could this be it? Could this unassuming little jar of spice be the missing piece?

She bought it on the spot, a flicker of hope igniting in her chest.

!!!!

Back home, Angie stood in her kitchen, the jar of il tocco finale resting on the counter beside the old recipe card. She had already prepped the ingredients, and now, with the mysterious spice in hand, she felt an odd sense of anticipation.

As the stew began to simmer, she opened the jar and sprinkled in a small amount. The smell was immediate — warm and complex, wrapping around the other ingredients like a whisper of something long forgotten.

She stirred the pot, feeling a strange sense of completion. It was as if the final note in a song had been struck, the last piece of a puzzle fitted into place. And when she tasted it — her heart swelled. The flavor was perfect. Full. Alive. It was the taste she remembered, the one her grandmother had so effortlessly coaxed out of the pot each time.

But as she sat down to eat, Angie realized something. It wasn’t just the spice that had made the difference.

It was the journey.

The missing ingredient hadn’t been something she could add — it had been something she needed to find within herself. A sense of connection, of history, of understanding. The ritual wasn’t just in the cooking, but in the care, the mindfulness, and the love she brought to it. It wasn’t about the stew, not really. It was about remembering where she came from, honoring her grandmother’s memory, and finding a way to heal.

As she savored each bite, Angie knew that from now on, the stew would always taste right. It had taken a trip halfway around the world to find the missing ingredient, but it had been there all along, waiting for her to uncover it.

And with it, she had found a part of herself she hadn’t known was missing.

October 03, 2024 20:33

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