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for Annetta
In the beginning we shared a vegetarian pizza
in a corner booth at the bistro
above the metro station,
split a carafe of house white wine,
and spoke in hushed tones, laughed,
as the train arrived underground,
came to a rumbling stop,
and then left to the next the station
with a piercing electric hum
that we felt deep down
inside.
We ditched restaurants,
partly out of time, partly out of cost,
and you started cooking for us
in a practical kitchen that was too small
and getting smaller every year.
We got used to the uneven linoleum floor
scuffed by the creaky wooden legs
of our wobbly melamine table, and our high-chair
with squeaky plastic wheels
and removable tray. You fried eggs
and potatoes, boiled noodles -
made pesto, soups and stir-fries,
pureed carrots and peas
in the food processor
that was my anniversary gift.
When the kitchen got bigger,
like the kids did, you graduated
to quiches, asparagus, broccoli and mushroom,
you reached backward to master
your grandmother's sweet and sour meatballs,
your mother's spinach lasagna, and signalling
your culinary wanderlust for a transcendent sphere,
you started baking breads:
braided challahs and multi-grains,
zucchini loaves with walnuts or pecans,
cornbreads with raisins or blueberries,
and olive bread with tomatoes, to dip
in exotic spiced oils,
your ovens wafting heavenly aromas
making a home that transported the soul.
These days we are more settled,
drink filtered coffee from souvenir mugs
collected over decades,
crunch on crisp homemade cinnamon biscottis
sitting across from one another at the island,
I fill in the Times crossword in pencil
(ask you for a 'type of cheese
made with goat's milk'), and we watch
the fruit you lovingly selected
from the grocer's mound mid-week,
oranges, bananas and pears, ripen
in the bowl you thrifted for a song
from the Renaissance store.
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