Persian Rice
By Doug Tanoury
For dinner she makes a large
Platter of Persian rice that is
An artist’s pallet, where grains
Of white and yellow mass and mingle
With dried red fruits like a multitude
Of Muslim pilgrims converging in Mecca.
In the kitchen she talks to me
As she is busy at the stove,
Tipping a pan and scooping. She repeats
The recipe over the contents as it were
A secret incantation and I catch only…
Cinnamon, cumin and cardamom.
I speak them rapidly back to her
In almost a half-whisper,
With the earnestness of a supplicant
Reciting a prayer, and I tell her
There is poetry in Persian Rice;
It is alive with alliterative spice.
It sits steaming on the table between us,
Bejeweled with pomegranate seeds,
Rose petal and bits of oranges.
In the first bite, I taste a secret pinch of saffron,
An unseen dash of sumac and all the flavors
Of my grandmother’s pantry.
Doug Tanoury has published over 20 chapbooks of poetry, including St. Mary’s Art Cloister, Tolstoy’s Ghost and Detroit Poems. He currently lives in Detroit, MI.