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Topic: The Waffle House Index


THE WAFFLE KING

The Waffle King had it all – a job he loved, a good salary, a nice car, and a house with enough room for a family.  One thing he lacked was a better nickname.  Albert would have preferred something with a bit more dash; after all, he worked in the exciting Breakfast Unit at Paulson, Paulson & Love, the most successful small brokerage firm on Wall Street.

Ridiculed by jealous competitors as the Waffle House, Albert’s group bought and sold breakfast futures around the world.  There was the Toast Exchange in France, the Egg Market in London, the Bacon Auction in Iowa, and the granddaddy of them all, the Waffle Index in Belgium, his true love.

Albert was a natural, but he also worked hard, eating at diners whenever he could, talking with waitresses, seeing what people ate.  “I was the first to know that chocolate chip pancakes were passé,” he had proudly told a waitress at Bacon Heaven.  “I noticed a kid at a Breakfast Barn order pancakes topped with ice cream, berries and sprinkles instead.”  She had just smiled.  Waitresses liked Albert, and not only for the big tips.

Albert’s clients had sold their chocolate chip futures and bought sprinkles at the lowest price in years.  They had all made a killing.

But the markets had been quiet for weeks and he was getting bored.  When he caught himself building forts with his pencils, Albert knew he had to get out of the office.  “Time for a field trip,” he thought.  “Product research,” he called it.  “Playtime,” said his assistant, who booked him a quick trip to the Nebraska State Fair.

It was true, Albert loved the fairs, with their exciting rides, fascinating exhibits, cultural oddities, and interesting people.  He preferred them to going out with “the gang” for expensive drinks after work and playing credit card roulette.  Somehow, he always lost.  But what he truly loved was fair food, the innovative heart of American cooking.  Where else could you find deep fried butter, fried pigs’ ears, or fried beer?

Three days later, Albert was back at his desk, feeling rejuvenated and confident about the state of waffles in America.  “Forget maple syrup,” he advised his clients, “buy the exotics!”  He had seen the future at the Midway.  People had been eating double-fried BBQ pulled pork waffle sandwiches and chocolate-dipped, deep-fried waffles on a stick, recipes which would have appalled the purists but were destined for the Waffle Hall of Fame.

As successful as the trip had been, Albert still felt something was missing from his life.  “It’s lonely at the top,” he thought.  He knew that certain sacrifices had to be made when you were the Waffle King, but a Waffle Queen would have been nice, and not the mail order kind, no matter what Devon said he should try.

Devon was the top broker in the whole firm, and he was always giving Albert friendly advice.  “Dress for success,” “buy a hotter car,” and “ditch those glasses for contacts” were some of his suggestions.  It was Devon who had first called him the Waffle King.

But his devotion to his job left Albert little time for romance, so he bought a cat and named her “Waffles.”  Devon shook his head when Albert told him, then promptly told the others.

The other brokers were always going out to new, expensive restaurants for lunch.  He preferred to work through lunch, or if he was hungry, he went to Cindy’s Luncheonette around the corner.  It was small with only a few customers, but the food was good.  He had discovered it on one of his research safaris, as he called them.

Cindy served breakfast all day.  Her French toast was decent, but her waffles had been a little soggy until he suggested that she turn up the heat on the waffle iron and add some corn meal for a little extra crunch and flavor.

“Where did you learn that?” she had asked him.

“From my mother,” he had said.  “She taught me a lot about cooking.”

None of the other brokers knew anything about cooking, but Albert thought it was important when selling breakfast commodities.  Besides, he liked working in the kitchen when he had the time and he was good at it.  He had recipes from as far back as his great-grandmother, and he had made most of them, although he had yet to try possum fritters.

After his improvements, Cindy started calling her waffles “the Albert Special,” and she would always come out of the kitchen when she saw him and talk for a few minutes.  Albert liked her smile.

One day, he took Devon to Cindy’s for lunch to try the Albert Special.  “Diners aren’t my thing,” he had said, “and who eats meat loaf in Manhattan?”  He had spent a lot of time joking with Cindy.  “The cook’s hot,” he had said, but Albert hadn’t liked his pun.

The next time he stopped by for lunch, Cindy had asked about “your friend with the sparkling eyes,” and Devon had asked Albert for the luncheonette’s phone number even though it was online.  Shortly afterward, while waiting for a cab after work, he had seen Cindy and Devon walking down the street together holding hands.  Devon had waved and smiled, but Albert had pretended not to notice.

Albert thought it was past time to go on a safari and find someplace different for lunch.  “Variety is the spice of life,” he had told himself, “and that applies to work as well.  I need a new friend.”

Albert had worked extra hard after that and he had received a nice bonus.  “Don’t burn out,” the partners had said.  “Take some time off.”  But where would he go and what would he do?  Besides, who would take care of Waffles the cat?

One day, Albert was in the file room when he heard Devon’s voice.  “I never stick with one babe very long,” he said.  “’Use ‘em then lose ‘em,’ that’s what I say.  Take that cook I’m seeing -- time to place a new order.”  His audience laughed loudly.

Albert got his file and left.

The breakfast markets were starting to settle down after the election.  With more time for lunch, he thought it was finally time to try the Albert Special again.  Unfortunately, the restaurant was closed with a big “For Rent” sign in the window.  “Too bad,” he thought.  “I miss her waffles.”

Albert also had more time in the evening.  Although Waffles was a great cat, her conversational skills were weak, so he decided to take a cooking class at the Culinary Academy: “Intermediate Breakfast.”  If nothing else, he could sharpen his kitchen skills.

There were about eight other people in the class, a nice mix of men and women of various ages.  Each week brought a new topic and a new chef.  Some things Albert knew, some things he learned for the first time.  “Try thick pieces of challah bread soaked in a heavy custard mix,” the French toast chef advised.  Albert wondered if he would learn anything in the waffle unit next week.

The surprise was in the chef.  “Tonight, I was going to show you how I make the Albert Special,” said Cindy.  “But since Albert is actually here, perhaps he could show you himself?”

Albert didn’t like getting up in front of people and he had never cooked with anyone watching before, but one thing he knew was waffles.  When Cindy smiled at him, he walked to the front and told them everything he knew, which was a lot.  Everyone’s waffles were perfect, and at the end the class applauded, even Cindy, who clapped the longest.

“Thank you,” Cindy said as Albert cleaned his work space.

“I was surprised to see you,” said Albert.  “What happened to your restaurant?”

“It never attracted many customers,” said Cindy.  “The ones I had were loyal, but it just wasn’t enough.  Now I do catering.  It’s going OK, but weddings are hell.”

“What about Devon?” asked Albert, still charged with the adrenaline from his demonstration.

“I dumped him after two weeks,” she said.  Albert could see her blush.  “He was all hands.”

They stood around awkwardly, neither one leaving and both unsure about staying.

“As long as we’re in a kitchen,” said Cindy, “why not have some coffee and just talk?”

Cindy made great coffee, so they sat and had a cup, and then another.  The conversation got easier, and they found they had a lot in common.  Both loved fair food and a good roller coaster.  Their laughter became more natural and frequent.

"I've missed seeing you," Albert said.  "And I don't want to let another Devon get in the way again."

“One Devon is more than enough,” Cindy replied with a smile.

Summoning the daring that had made him the Waffle King, Albert asked Cindy the second-most important question of his life.  “Would you like to go to Coney Island and ride the Cyclone?  We could eat fried pickle dogs and have funnel cake for dessert.”

Cindy gave him her second-most important answer.  “Only if we can see the Mermaid Parade!”

Back at work, Albert surprised the partners – he took Saturday off.  And then Sunday, too.  How long this new behavior would last, no one knew and no one cared.  The Waffle King was clearly at the top of his game.

*     *     *     *     *     *

Thank you once again, [livejournal.com profile] halfshellvenus, for your perceptive comments, and otherwise beta reading this.
 

Date: 2017-07-26 02:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bleodswean.livejournal.com
Aw, this is such a sweet romance! Something about breakfast foods that just seems to be about LOVE! Breakfast-oriented diners are interesting, we have several here in town, they open early and close before lunch and the lines are long! So much waffle-goodness here and I'm a French Toast girl, so that's a shift for me! ;)

Date: 2017-07-26 02:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rayaso.livejournal.com
I'm glad you enjoyed it. Waffles, French toast, pancakes . . . it's all good. Teenson is a quantity eater, so as much as humanly possible is his current breakfast mode, and it's impressive. Taco Bell once made a waffle taco, which sounds strangely appealing, and probably says something awful about me, Taco Bell, and America.

Date: 2017-07-27 01:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] i-17bingo.livejournal.com
I like the life and times of the Waffle King. I admire how into his work he is. I'm not that dedicated to anything. And it's wonderful that he found someone--specifically someone who was also in the breakfast biz.

Date: 2017-07-27 01:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rayaso.livejournal.com
Albert is basically a nice guy, out of step with the sharks of brokerage firms, especially guys like Devon, who presents himself as Albert's "friend," but isn't. Breakfast is not a bad place to start for romance. A relationship founded on carbohydrates is as good a place to start as any, especially if you both like deep-fried fair food. Thanks for reading!

Date: 2017-07-27 03:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] penpusher.livejournal.com
So cute! Such a savory tale and nice working in some tasty details like the waffle index being in Belgium, Coney Island and the Mermaid Parade and Culinary School. Challah back!

Date: 2017-07-27 04:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rayaso.livejournal.com
I have read that challah bread makes great French toast, but I haven't tried it yet. I found the Mermaid Parade by looking up weird things to do at Coney Island. I'm glad you found the story savory!

Date: 2017-07-27 04:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] penpusher.livejournal.com
Having shot the Mermaid Parade a couple of times, it's definitely worthy of a mention! And there are a number of eateries here that serve French Toast made with Challah - it's a very filling breakfast!

Date: 2017-07-27 10:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marlawentmad.livejournal.com

This is such a feel-good story. I like this character a lot.

Date: 2017-07-27 10:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rayaso.livejournal.com
Thank you! Albert is basically a nice guy who, in the end, gets the girl. Not bad for the Waffle King.

Date: 2017-07-27 11:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] halfshellvenus.livejournal.com
I liked the sweet tone to this, along with the unusual details like the idea of a Breakfast Unit at a brokerage house, Albert's envisioning his research trips as safaris, the cat having limited conversational skills.

When he caught himself building forts with his pencils
Hahahaha-- there are days at work when I can really understand the temptation to do that.

I'm glad Albert and Cindy are off to have adventures together, and I had to go look up the Mermaid Parade after you mentioned it. :)

Date: 2017-07-28 01:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rayaso.livejournal.com
I'm glad you enjoyed it. The Mermaid Parade looks like a lot of fun. Between his safaris and trips to state fairs, Albert actually managed to have a lot of fun. Being the Waffle King has its perks.

Date: 2017-07-28 03:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beeker121.livejournal.com
Albert is a sweet, straightforward guy, and I'm glad he's found romance with someone who appreciates him. I envy him visiting Midwest state fairs as part of his job, I haven't been to one in years and miss it. The detail in this is fun and makes sense; please tell me someone, somewhere has actually made fried beer. I'm certain someone with a deep fryer set up late in the day has attempted it, but I want that to be a thing.

Date: 2017-07-28 04:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rayaso.livejournal.com
I'm glad you liked Albert. He was meant to be a good, decent, if somewhat shy/awkward guy. Yes! When googling "weird fair food," I found deep fried beer, fried butter, and fried pigs' ears. I made up double-fried BBQ pulled pork waffle sandwiches and chocolate-dipped, deep-fried waffles on a stick, but if Taco Bell can sell waffle tacos, I'm sure that somewhere, someone is selling these as well, although probably not at Waffle House.

Date: 2017-07-28 09:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] flipflop-diva.livejournal.com
What a sweet story! I love their little romance revolving around waffles. And I'm glad Devon didn't get in the way (and heh. She dumped him but of course he couldn't let his friends know that). Also, I would not eat a bbq pulled pork waffle but I would eat a chocolate-dipped, deep-fried one!

Date: 2017-07-28 10:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rayaso.livejournal.com
Devon was a jerk, so he didn't get the girl, but just got in the way a little bit. I made up both of those "recipes." My only requirements were a waffle and frying. The world of real Fair Food is far more bizarre than anything I could beat.

Date: 2017-07-28 11:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] murielle.livejournal.com
Lovely! I'm so glad Albert and Cindy got together at the end. They were made for each other. Oh, and I loved Waffles the cat, though Albert needs to work on his conversational skills. Maybe not. You know what it's like with cats, once they start talking to you they never stop. :-)

Bravo! Once again you nailed it!

Date: 2017-07-28 11:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rayaso.livejournal.com
Thank you! A breakfast cook does make a good match for a breakfast eater. Talkative cats can be strange. We had one that would meow softly with every step, like she was talking to herself. At least we always knew where she was!

Date: 2017-07-28 11:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] messygorgeous.livejournal.com
Aww! I'm so glad the Waffle King found his queen! Brunch is my favorite meal of the day. If you can't bond over comfort food, I'm not sure what hope their is for you!

Date: 2017-07-29 12:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rayaso.livejournal.com
The Waffle King deserved a Waffle Queen. I agree with you about food. I love brunch, but really, any meal is good!

Date: 2017-07-29 01:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alycewilson.livejournal.com
Very sweet. I love the "second best" question ending.

Date: 2017-07-29 01:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rayaso.livejournal.com
Thank you! I thought, the most important question (and answer) is marriage, but you don't get to that without asking someone out (and agreeing to go), so that makes it the second most important question. The rest is details.

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