Recipes of Coos River
Recipes from Coos River: Summer on the South Fork
is the title we chose for your cookbook.
A mouthful? Recipes are a funny thing.
They allow a level of precision into a home
where opacity often reins. We can’t separate our tears
underwater in our wakes. Recipes teach us ways
to fill myrtle bowls with more than the bounty
from cold, winter soil amendments and spring rains.
The cookbook author is away.
My need for precision remains. The recipes are before me.
All I want to do is forget—this day, this tray.
Not your laugh, the way you arch your right ear to hear,
nor your often wild-eyed attention to details
deemed time-sensitive or your harried sounds
in the face of duties deemed unending.
Cooking on the fire pit rack takes focus,
especially if a host’s helper is pretending.
I don’t see you at the end of the dinner table.
You would buy the freshest ingredients, prep, cook,
and clean. Now our table is unstable. What happened
in between? The fishing line changed its angle?
The net flowed with the tides and it was let go?
I saw the river current of your life run up a creek
and follow the farewell call of a hummingbird.
I’ve seen enough for one day. I think
I’ll make a myrtle-infused gin and tonic.
It’s a simple recipe. I’ll get it wrong.
You’d say—mistakes are a matter of taste.