GENERATIONS
APRIL 14, 2021 | D3
Pancakes and the pandemic Saved by the meatloaf special BY AMY RODELIUS as told to Rand Middleton
Steve and Amy Rodelius have owned and operated Frieda’s Restaurant in downtown Willmar since 1994. As it was for managers and employees of restaurants and bars everywhere, the shadow of COVID-19 cast a gloom and strain throughout 2020 and into 2021. The little eatery sits on a one-block oneway stretch of Benson Avenue as it spins off the U.S. Highway 12 bypass on the west edge of downtown. With its bar-stool counter snug to the grill — a throwback to the 50s — the Willmar landmark serves food and comfort in equal portions. For many, it is a warm kitchen away from home. Speaking beside a sizzling grill that turns out flapjacks and bacon in the morning and cheeseburgers and fries at lunchtime, Amy recounted the challenging 12 months to Rand Middleton on March 17, the anniversary of the first COVID lockdown. *********************************** n Wednesday, March 18, 2020, we were closed. There was no indoor dining. It felt like the governor just tossed us into the air and no one knew what to do. We were supposed to shut down but we didn’t know what to do. We let a few people come in on Wednesday, and then on Thursday, the state department called and said, “Shut it down.” After 26 years of serving people inside our restaurant, we were told we couldn’t do it that way anymore. We didn’t know what to do. This was all we knew. We closed the restaurant on Thursday. Then on Friday we took the day off because we didn’t know anything
O
more. Saturday morning, we got up and I looked at Steve and said, ‘I’m going to work. Either we can serve one person a to-go breakfast, or 10 or 20, but we gotta do what we gotta do.’ So then we went downtown. I made a post on Facebook stating that we would be open for to-go orders. That’s what we did and people were very receptive. When people came in to get their orders they social-distanced while waiting. We had to lay off our six employees. The rest of March, April and May, Steve and I kept going to work keeping a positive attitude. It kept getting more and more busy so we had Jerry come back. Rand Middleton photo During COVID, breakfast was usually The first week of dining on Benson Avenue ended Saturday, June 6, with a late quiet but noon hours were crazy busy. breakfast crowd as traffic whizzed by on the downtown bypass. We’d get here and the phone would start ringing by 9 a.m. We wrote the to-go orders down as they came in and then lined them up on the grill hood. People began calling right away because they wanted to make sure they got the noon special. One of our customers, an older gentleman in his 80s came flying around the corner and got pulled over. The cop asked: ‘Why are you in such a hurry?’ And he said, “I’ve got to get to Frieda’s before all the noon specials are gone.’ So they let him go without a ticket. On June 1 the city closed the road out front and set out picnic tables so we could serve customers outside. That went really, really well. The first day of outdoor dining our oldest daughter Sarah came home from Champlin and helped serve to make sure we made it Rand Middleton photo through a really busy day. A year removed from the first shutdown, waitresses scurried to deliver orders around 10 a.m. March 20 as Steve Rodelius worked the grill and toasters. PANCAKES: Page D5
Looking for CARE-FREE LIVING?
Jane Vikse Real Estate has a track record of Connecting Buyers and Sellers.
Give our Family a call to help you with your next move! JANE VIKSE
BROKER/OWNER 320.979.0632 JVIKSE@TDS.NET
JALANNY RUPP
BROKER 320-894-4512 JARUPP.RE@GMAIL.COM
JASMINE VIKSE
REALTOR® 320-894-3862 JVIKSE@HOTMAIL.COM
JENNA VIKSE
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT 941-400-6343 JENNAVIKSE21@GMAIL.COM