I’m grating onions for latkes and the tears are streaming down my face and I know that despite my best efforts tears have been falling into the grated onions, and I’m wondering if tears are kosher, especially goy tears, when I hear my wife give a yelp. Our son runs into the kitchen.
“What is it?” he asks.
She shows us the tip of her right thumb and it’s all red and raw where she grated it along with potato. All three of us peer into the bowl but there’s no sign of blood.
“That’s enough,” I say, wiping tears on my shirtsleeves. “Fry this up and we'll go out for Chinese food later. Hanukkah gelt and fortune cookies for everyone.”
rainy day
cooking up a pot
of Japanese curry
I start to wonder how much
the directions matter
“What is it?” he asks.
She shows us the tip of her right thumb and it’s all red and raw where she grated it along with potato. All three of us peer into the bowl but there’s no sign of blood.
“That’s enough,” I say, wiping tears on my shirtsleeves. “Fry this up and we'll go out for Chinese food later. Hanukkah gelt and fortune cookies for everyone.”
rainy day
cooking up a pot
of Japanese curry
I start to wonder how much
the directions matter
by Bob Lucky
Hangzhou, China
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