My first artichoke
bloomed on its plate
like a sea plant,
petals steamed open,
green shadow cups,
secret flesh.
I had to watch you
to learn how to eat
how to pull off leaves,
scrape teeth and lips
across tough skin,
reap the meat.
The soft inner flaps
purple-edged, pale
wrapped the deadly choke;
tufted, lethal feathers
hid a waiting heart,
tender, thick.
You whisked it away
sliced back the tendrils
poised to strangle,
presented the naked heart
doused in fresh butter,
unguarded.
I thought you’d saved my life
ushered me through danger
into luscious pleasure,
and every artichoke since
renews the old challenge:
risk or starve.
“Eating Artichokes” was published in the on-line journal Switched-On Gutenberg, 2000.
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Somehow missed this one the first time, but I love it – and the artichokes are ripening in my garden.
Risk or starve
Savor the heart!