Mother is tending the garden leaving no thirsting plant-child parched in her slow moving up the rows. From vines she draws, from thickets, broad-leaf greens and red-gem tomatoes. Fruit of labor and patience, these she’s turnt from the soil, now set over fire to boil.
Mother’s love in tin bowls and cups. No silver platter flattery. Necessity here, and the fragrance steaming burns the lip. It comes too hot but in waiting taste the thick of sauce, salt and nutrient, the savor of warm gifted herbs bitter, medicinal.
“When you finish you meal, wash your bowl.”
Full-fleshed flavor on dancing pallet comes often later, in the tending of ones own gardens, in the turning of soil and the redolence of ones own workings does the meal truly feed you. ah! The reality in us! ah! The loving, thanks-giving back to Earth, Greatest, Grandest Mother. The warmth of food flowing down hands, fingers, into the fruits and the thirsting plant-children.