RIND
The Rascal
Saves the zest of everything
Sicilian · Limoncello · Candied Zest
Less than 2% of people share this type
"I'm the one who pockets orange peels at restaurants, makes limoncello in my apartment, and orders the weird cocktail because someone should."
64 taste types. No food knowledge needed.
You want fruit to have edges. Light and fresh, but you need something to hold onto — approachable-with-texture is your whole category. You’re always curious and always pushing the bright side of things until it gives you something real.
RIND is playful in the kitchen and at the table. They pocket orange peels when the waiter isn't looking. Their fridge has eight jars of *"things saved from other dishes."* They're the one who orders the weird cocktail on the menu because *someone should*. RIND finds the edge and rides it — not destructively, just curiously. They're never mean, but they're sharp; their wit cuts close to the bone in a way that makes dinners more fun. At someone else's table, they're the one who makes the host laugh. They'd rather have one bright surprising bite than a meal of comfortable ones. RIND is the Rascal because their sharpness has no cruelty in it — just the mischief of someone who refuses to let a meal be boring.
Six friends, unusual menu. Starts with a homemade limoncello spritz. Whole roasted branzino stuffed with lemon peel. A tart so sharp half the guests gasp. Ends with their handing out tiny jars of candied zest they made that morning — *"for whatever."*
sister bees, angular-fine kin, both principled about what's real.
both textural edge-seekers, both pockets-full-of-surprise at the table.
bright edge meets dark root — both angular-alert characters who make things sharper.
GRAVY — The Feast
RIND wants the bright surprise; GRAVY wants everything coated. Sharp edge vs. generous cover.
Ignacio Mattos at Estela · Jessica Koslow · Alison Roman
Mabel from Only Murders in the Building · April Ludgate from Parks and Rec
The one who makes a meal more fun just by being at the table.