Boiling bones in water from the spring,
she’ d throw in onions,
garlic, carrots with their tops,
peelings she had left from other meals
and brew a broth
where we could swim like fish
up rivers of aroma.
She’d chop up cabbages
and other roots and throw them in
along with beans she’d dried
and let them simmer in the kettle
half the day,
stirring now and then
and sipping from a spoon,
her eyes closed,
searching for the taste she dreamed about.
We’d watch her add a pinch of this or that,
smack her lips and nod.
I still can see her pounding dough
from wheat she hammered into flour,
her rough hands turning mounds,
lifting up and slamming them onto the table top,
her strong arms pushing down
until at last, she had round loaves
sitting by the fire.
She’d cover them
and we could see them rise to twice their size
before she’d bang them down
and let them grow again.
Then just before the soup was done,
she’d place the loaves
into a cave of stones
she built inside the fireplace
and from the embers there,
the smell of bread would mingle with the soup
and hypnotize.
She was a Sorcerer
whose alchemy could take the elements:
fire, water, air and earth and fill the wind
with magic that would nourish us.
No matter what,
each day she made us soup and bread
and fed our lives with tastes
and what would give our blood and bones
the strength to grow and work.
No king or queen
or warrior did more than she to save the world.
And as I push this stone,
I still can hear her hum as she cut vegetables.
I still can see her sit and dip her crust
into her soup and smile at us.