Mustard Poem
I wrote this to help kick off our last Wild Goose Creative, Too Many Cooks! event which was completely mustard centric. It was quite the evening: fun, frivolity and copius amounts of mustard!
Mustard Poem
by Ryan Hoke
I still remember the sandwich.
Turkey on rye with lettuce, tomato, and sprouts.
Ladies and Gentlemen please hold on to your krauts,
because The Sandwich wasn’t the interesting part.
Meat and bread aside, I was intent on the thin 1/8 inch line
resting just below the tectonic surface of the marble rye.
I lifted the crust and examined the layers
like a sandwich archaeologist
looking for clues about a past civilization:
tiny, round, seed shaped men doused in vinegar and spice,
everything nice, set to anthropologically entice
my palette.
I bit down and felt the creak of the lettuce
and then heat and pain coursed through
my sinus cavities like river rain
over dry creek beds.
And then it was gone.
Evaporated.
Up and gone like a great glass elevator
breaking through the blinding atmosphere
into the round mellowness of space.
From there it was over. I was hooked.
I think I off handedly mentioned it to a friend.
Not a casual acquaintance. But a closer more intimate association.
You don’t just mention these things to your librarian
or your accountant.
You need a level of off handed understanding
where mundane revelations
are made casually
like the accumulation of pocket lint.
My bank teller would not due,
no I needed a condiment confidant
who would hear and affirm my new love
like an understanding priest.
“I think I like mustard” I said.
“Cool” He replied.
Innocent beginnings but more was to come.
Specialty food devotee, Mustard Aficionado,
brave with condiment bravado.
That’s what it was. I was that guy. I now had a thing.
Some people have wine.
and wax poetic about vintage and varietal.
Some have chocolate in mind, some sea salt brine
Rare cheese, Chinese teas
maple syrup fresh from the trees.
Some single malt. It’s not their fault.
They just have a thing.
That’s what it was. I was that guy. I now had a thing.
A casual enthusiast, a weekend mustard warrior,
seeing the world through yellow tinted lenses,
I tended towards the exotic. French’s yellow squeeze bottle,
drying, dying at the back of the fridge on the left
didn’t live up to expectations,
wouldn’t come close to fulfilling my desires,
couldn’t do the job,
just didn’t cut the…the…
you get the idea.
In the end my taste buds held caucuses
recommending their favorite candidates.
Taste bud rhetoric can be intense
and my proletariat palate rose up and over threw
my callous bourgeois inhibitions.
My menus read like a tour of nations
supporting my all consuming inhalation of
mustard lucky charms
each pretentiously delicious.
Lime infused, palm branch mustard
with tomatoes sun dried to perfection
during a solar eclipse.
Moroccan horseradish mustard
with tarragon and fresh zested mango.
Wild flower and honey mustard
made from pollen harvested from
rare bees from the wilds of Czechoslovakia
fed a steady diet of coca cola and brown sugar.
And the gifts. Oh the gifts.
Friends on vacation perusing the shelves
of local merchants
looking for non perishable,
souvenir comestibles to bestow on me.
Now I like mustard but…I only eat so many sandwiches,
dip so many pretzels,
eat so many spoonfuls out of the jar for breakfast.
I was only one man.
One man in the fight his life for refrigerator space.
as I wedged a bottle of chipotle endive mustard
in beside the butter.
and met her stone ground silence.
That night in the trivial pursuit
of refrigerator real estate
I was forced to choose between a hand ground,
balsamic glazed, caper infused, wasabi encrusted,
Dijon, aged in ice wine barrels for 37 days
and a delicate, lilac and lavender laced
licorice infusion
shaken on a 80 degree angle,
in a wind tunnel by Bavarian monks for a fortnight.
Later as I crafted a sandwich, a thin lettuce and turkey affair
nestled between two slices of pumpernickel,
I gently applied that 1/8 inch of whole grain glory
just below the surface of the bread.
I bit down and felt the familiar sweet heat
and then felt it evaporate
up and gone
like a great glass elevator
breaking through
into the round mellowness
3 Comments:
Never in my life have I heard someone speak so eloquently about... mustard.
Dear Ryan,
This is ridiculous, extravagant and indubitably sensational.
Love,
Brian
Man, I love this poem.
Post a Comment
<< Home