ohioana1


Special Features Home

Ohio Legacy Series

Ohio Connections

Ohio Women of Note

Profiles of Ohio Women

Ohio Literary Map

Educational Resources

Authors Radio Series

Ohio Literary Resources


 

 



Ohio Connections Literary Exhibit

Return to Ohio Connections home page

The Revenge of Cleveland, A Menu Against Nouvelle Cuisine
By Ray McNiece

At a restaurant a la arboretum
in a trendy alley back of Harvard Square,
I sit down to a platter
of minimalist philosophy
and wait for more.
When none comes I realize
this IS the entrée, and it hits me, this will cost:
Three slivers of salmon looking for the life of them
like play-dough cut-outs, a spot of goose liver paté
nudged under a scrap of spinach grown probably
in a petri dish, a dash of tortellinis, that disgrace to pasta,
an upscale garnish of designer legumes, and,
existentially enough, a single olive
sans pimento—the whole dish could be
a display of new wave jewelry.

Enough of this “less is more.”
More is more, and I want some.
Let’s start with dumpling soup, the aroma buoyed
by globules of chicken fat, the hundred suns
that never shine on gray Cleveland.
Bring on the perogies, and put a tub of cheese-whiz
made from artificial imitation processed cheese-food
at one elbow, and at the other a mound of sauerkraut
steaming like the Cuyahoga stirred by a scow
of a spring morning. Egg noodles too, rolled and cut
and ladled by my heavy Slovenian great aunts.
Pumpernickel smeared with lard.
Give me a bellyful of kielbasa-inspired indigestion
any day, a pile that makes you spout
“Lay on MacDuffski, and let no mouth cry,’Hold,
Enough!’ To top it off, a roll of petica and
a quivering dollop of pick jelly salad
straight from the Stuckey’s off the western pike
all frothed with non-dairy whip.

Enough of this light weight stuff
that lets you off to play squash or the stocks.
I want a heap of carbohydrates
so you can’t move the rest of the afternoon
chowed down in a bar
with the Browns game blaring.
A meal as profound and murky
as an immigrant cathedral,
as bland and fulfilling as a busload of Slovenians
coming home from Polka Varieties
dreaming of Sunday dinner.

 


Copyright 2005-2008, Ohioana Library Association, all rights reserved.
Ohioana Library—274 East First Avenue—Suite 300—Columbus OH
Phone (614)466-3831—Fax (614)728-6974