Monday, June 08, 2015

The Saturday poem: Bostin Fittle

by Liz Berry - Saturday 11 October 2014  The Guardian

Liz Berry
Liz Berry PR
At Nanny's I ate brains for tea,
mashed with hard-boiled egg,
or trotters, groaty pudding,
faggots minced with kidney and suet.


Right bostin fittle, Nanny said.
She knew hunger, knew how
to press a blade sure and firm
on the pig's fat ribs, clack the neck


of the cockerel. An apprentice,
I studied her careful craft:
the sweet heart hidden in the rotten
cabbage, chitterlings plaited


like a rope of hair.
Elbow deep in rabbit, floury
chunks of lard, I touched
my lips to the hide of the past:


salty, dark, unexpected
as the rook she'd baked
for her bride-feast, that flew,
crawing from her hands to his tongue.


bostin fittle great food

From Black Country by Liz Berry (Chatto, £10). 

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