Authors: Kevin Young
Oh it was a ride on Watneys plunging red barrel
through all the burning ghats of most carnal ambition
and never again will I want such illumination
for three days on end concerning my own mortal coil
but I signed my plate in the end with a licked knife and fork
and green-and-gold spotted, I sang for my pains like the free
before I passed out among all the stars of Cilfynydd.
I'm cooking Thaiâyou bring the beer
.
The same order, although it's been a year
âfriendships based on food are rarely stable.
        We should have left ours at the table
where it began, and went to seed,
that appetite we shared, based less in need
than boredomâalways the cheapest restaurants,
      Thai, Szechwan, taking our chance
with gangs and salmonellaâwhat was hot?
       The five-starred curries? The penciled-out
entrees?âthe first to break a sweat
would leave the tip. I raise the knocker, let
it fall, once, twice, and when the door is opened
        I can't absorb, at first, what's happened
âface loosened a notch, eyes with a gloss
        of a fever left to run its course
too long, letting the unpropped skin collapse
        in a wrinkled heap. Only the lips
I recognizeâdry, cracked, chapped
from licking. He looks as though he's slept
a week in the same clothes.
Come in, kick back
,
        he says, putting my warm six-pack
of Pale & Bitter into the fridge to chill.
       Â
There's no music. I had to sell
the stereo to support my jones
, he jokes,
        meaning the glut of good cookbooks
that cover one whole wall, in stacked milk crates
        six high, nine wide, two deep. He grates
unripe papaya into a bowl,
fires off questionsâ
When did you finish school?
Why not? Still single? Why? That dive
that served the ginger eels, did it survive?
I don't get out much. Shall we go sometime?
        He squeezes the quarters of a lime
into the salad, adds a liberal squirt
        of chili sauce.
I won't be hurt
if you don't want seconds. It's not as hot
       Â
as I would like to make it, but
you always were a bit of a lightweight
.
       Â
Here, it's finished, try a bite
.
He holds a forkful of the crisp
green shreds for me to take. I swallow, gasp,
chokeâpins and needles shoot
through mouth and throat, a heat so absolute
as to seem freezing. I know better
not to wash it down with ice water
âit seems to cool, but only spreads the fireâ
        I can only bite my lip and swear
quietly to myself, so caught
up in our old routineâ
What? This is hot?
You're sweating. Care for another beer?
âit doesn't occur to me that he's sincere
until, my eyes watering, half in rage,
       I open the door and find the fridge
stacked full with little jars of curry paste,
       arranged by color, labels faced
carefully outward, some pushed back
to make room for the beerâno milk, no takeâ
out cartons of gelatinous chow mein,
       no pickles rotting in green brine,
not even a jar of moldy mayonnaise.
        âI see you're eating well these days,
I snap, pressing the beaded glass
of a beer bottle against my neck, face,
temples, anywhere it will hurt
enough to draw the fire out, and divert
attention from the fear that follows
close behind.⦠He stares at me, the hollows
under his eyes more prominent than ever.
       â
I don't eat much these days. The flavor
has gone out of everything, almost
.
        For the first time it's not a boast.
You know those small bird chili podsâthe type
       Â
you wear surgical gloves to chop
,
then soak your knife and cutting board
in vinegar? A month ago I scored
a fresh bagâthey were so ripe
I couldn't cut them warm, I had to keep
them frozen. I forget what I had meant
       Â
to make, that nightâI'd just cleaned
the kitchen, wanted to fool around
with some old recipe I'd lost, and found
jammed up behind a drawerâI had
maybe too much to drink. “Can't be that bad,”
I remember thinking. “What's the fuss
about? It's not as if they're poisonous
⦔
Those peppers, I ate them, rawâa big fistful
       Â
shoved in my mouth, swallowed whole
,
and more, and more. It wasn't hard
.
You hear of people getting their eyes charred
to cinders, staring into an eclipse
â¦
        He speaks so quickly, one of his lips
has cracked, leaks a trickle of blood
along his chin.â¦
I never understood
.
I try to speak, to offer some
small shocked rejoinder, but my mouth is numb
tingling, hurts to moveâ
I called in sick
       Â
next morning, said I'd like to take
time off. She thinks I've hit the bottle
.
The high those peppers give me is more subtleâ
I'm lucid, I remember my full name
,
my parents' birthdays, how to win a game
of chess in seven moves, why which and that
       Â
mean different things. But what we eat
,
why, what it means, it's all been explained
        â
Take this curry, this fine-tuned
balance of humors, coconut liquor thinned
       Â
by broth, sour pulp of tamarind
cut through by salt, set off by fragrant
galangal, ginger, basil, cilantro, mint
,
the warp and woof of texture, aubergines
       Â
that barely hold their shape, snap beans
heaped on jasmine, basmati rice
â
it's a lie, all of itâpretextâartifice
â
ornamentâsugar-coatingâfor
â¦
He stops, expressing heat from every pore
of his full face, unable to give vent
        to any more, and sits, silent,
a whole minute.
You understand?
Of course, I tell him. As he takes my hand
I can't help but notice the strength his grip
      has lost, as he lifts it to his lip,
presses it for a second, the torn flesh
        as soft, as tenuous, as ash,
not in the least harsh or rough,
wreck of a mouth, that couldn't say
enough
.
I prefer red chile over my eggs
and potatoes for breakfast.
Red chile
ristras
decorate my door,
dry on my roof, and hang from eaves.
They lend open-air vegetable stands
historical grandeur, and gently swing
with an air of festive welcome.
I can hear them talking in the wind,
haggard, yellowing, crisp, rasping
tongues of old men, licking the breeze.
But grandmother loves green chile.
When I visit her,
she holds the green chile pepper
in her wrinkled hands.
Ah, voluptuous, masculine,
an air of authority and youth simmers
from its swan-neck stem, tapering to a flowery
collar, fermenting resinous spice.
A well-dressed gentleman at the door
my grandmother takes sensuously in her hand,
rubbing its firm glossed sides,
caressing the oily rubbery serpent,
with mouth-watering fulfillment,
fondling its curves with gentle fingers.
Its bearing magnificent and taut
as flanks of a tiger in mid-leap,
she thrusts her blade into
and cuts it open, with lust
on her hot mouth, sweating over the stove,
bandanna round her forehead,
mysterious passion on her face
as she serves me green chile con carne
between soft warm leaves of corn tortillas,
with beans and riceâher sacrifice
to her little prince.
I slurp from my plate
with last bit of tortilla, my mouth burns
and I hiss and drink a tall glass of cold water.
All over New Mexico, sunburned men and women
drive rickety trucks stuffed with gunny-sacks
of green chile, from Belen, Veguita, Willard, Estancia,
San Antonio y Socorro, from fields
to roadside stands, you see them roasting green chile
in screen-sided homemade barrels, and for a dollar a bag,
we relive this old, beautiful ritual again and again.
One arm hooked around the frayed strap
of a tar-black patent-leather purse,
the other cradling something for dinner:
fresh bunches of spinach from a J-Town
yaoya
,
sides of split Spanish mackerel from Alviso's,
maybe a loaf of Langendorf; she steps
off the hissing bus at Olympic and Fig,
begins the three-block climb up the hill,
passing gangs of schoolboys playing war,
Japs against Japs, Chicanas chalking sidewalks
with the holy double-yoked crosses of hopscotch,
and the Korean grocer's wife out for a stroll
around the neighborhood of Hawaiian apartments
just starting to steam with cooking
and the anger of young couples coming home
from work, yelling at kids, flicking on
TV sets for the Wednesday Night Fights.
If it were May, hydrangeas and jacaranda
flowers in the streetside trees would be
blooming through the smog of late spring.
Wisteria in Masuda's front yard would be
shaking out the long tresses of its purple hair.
Maybe mosquitoes, moths, a few orange butterflies
settling on the lattice of monkey flowers
tangled in chain-link fences by the trash.
But this is October, and Los Angeles
seethes like a billboard under twilight
From used-car lots and the movie houses uptown,
long silver sticks of light probe the sky.
From the Miracle Mile, whole freeways away,
a brilliant fluorescence breaks out
and makes war with the dim squares
of yellow kitchen light winking on
in all the side streets of the Barrio.
She climbs up the two flights of flagstone
stairs to 201-B, the spikes of her high heels
clicking like kitchen knives on a cutting board,
props the groceries against the door,
fishes through memo pads, a compact,
empty packs of chewing gum, and finds her keys.
The moon then, cruising from behind
a screen of eucalyptus across the street,
covers everything, everything
in sight, in a heavy light like yellow onions.
How easily happiness begins by
dicing onions. A lump of sweet butter
slithers and swirls across the floor
of the sauté pan, especially if its
errant path crosses a tiny slick
of olive oil. Then a tumble of onions.
This could mean soup or risotto
or chutney (from the Sanskrit
chatni
, to lick). Slowly the onions
go limp and then nacreous
and then what cookbooks call clear,
though if they were eyes you could see
clearly the cataracts in them.
It's true it can make you weep
to peel them, to unfurl and to tease
from the taut ball first the brittle,
caramel-colored and decrepit
papery outside layer, the least
recent the reticent onion
wrapped around its growing body,
for there's nothing to an onion
but skin, and it's true you can go on
weeping as you go on in, through
the moist middle skins, the sweetest
and thickest, and you can go on
in to the core, to the bud-like,
acrid, fibrous skins densely
clustered there, stalky and incomplete,
and these are the most
pungent, like the nuggets of nightmare
and rage and murmur animal
comfort that infant humans secrete.
This is the best domestic perfume.
You sit down to eat with a rumor
of onions still on your twice-washed
hands and lift to your mouth a hint
of a story about loam and usual
endurance. It's there when you clean up
and rinse the wine glasses and make
a joke, and you leave the minutest
whiff on it on the light switch,
later, when you climb the stairs.
Only to have a grief
equal to all these tears!
There's not a sob in my chest.
Dry-hearted as Peer Gynt
I pare away, no hero,
merely a cook.
Crying was labor, once
when I'd good cause.
Walking, I felt my eyes like wounds
raw in my head,
so postal-clerks, I thought, must stare.
A dog's look, a cat's, burnt to my brainâ
yet all that stayed
stuffed in my lungs like smog.
These old tears in the chopping-bowl.
What is green in me
darkens, muscadine.
If woman is inconstant,
good, I am faithful to
ebb and flow, I fall
in season and now
is a time of ripening.
If her part
is to be true,
a north star,
good, I hold steady
in the black sky