Barbara Krasner is a four-time Pushcart Prize nominee for poetry…
to you sits in the upper right corner
of each place setting of gold-trimmed
fine china and gold-rimmed tablecloth.
You have been stewing for hours, the flavors
of your chicken parts
melting in your American pot. You know
you’re a good batch when the meat
falls off the bone and beads of fat
glisten and bob like buoys on a sea of tomato sauce.
I know the onion and the ever-faithful
matzoh meal are in there somewhere,
spiced by the Jewish trifecta
ancestors. My aunt wrote out the recipe
her mother likely dictated to her,
probably taught to her by her mother
when chickens came from the yard
and the tomatoes came from
someone’s field or garden.
Chicken fricassee, you are humble
yet noble. You are steeped in tradition,
layered in generations. You
are the taste of the past.
Barbara Krasner is a four-time Pushcart Prize nominee for poetry and short fiction. She holds an MFA from the Vermont College of Fine Arts. Her work has appeared in Ordinary People: Holocaust Remembrance Day 2023 , Paterson Literary Review , Cimarron Review , Mason Street, Poetica, and other literary journals. She is the author of the biographical novel in verse, Ethel's Song: Ethel Rosenberg's Life in Poems (Calkins Creek, 2022), the forthcoming historical novel in verse, Facing the Enemy: How a Nazi Youth Camp in America Tested a Friendship (Calkins Creek, 2023), and two poetry chapbooks, Pounding Cobblestone (Kelsay Books, 2018), and Chicken Fat (Finishing Line Press, 2017).