"Siena" by Pat Phillips West + Roasted Caprese Tartine

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Summer. Tomatoes. Italy.  Is there anything better? Perhaps not. There's something about the warm tomato season that tends to make me nostalgic. Sometimes for Italy (where I once enjoyed a memorable family vacation), but also for Vermont, where I attended graduate school.

Specifically around the Fourth of July, I remember Montpelier. It's the quintessential American small town. A local coffee shop, a few restaurants, children playing in the street, that sort of thing. One year, I spent part of the afternoon taking a long walk through the neighborhood around campus. People sat on porches drinking tea, neighbors walked their dogs. One street was bustling with a potluck, with friends and family gathered around a long table in someone's backyard. The air was warm but not stuffy. There was a breeze, and the color a bit muted, understated.

roasted Tomato Tartine | Eat This Poem
Roasted Tomato Tartine | Eat This Poem

Last year we flew to Napa for a friend's wedding (heavenly), but this year we stayed home to enjoy our new neighborhood, where friends live a mile away, and we could see the fireworks show in the marina from their rooftop. 

All this is to say that summer, year after year, brings nostalgia with its heat and tomatoes. I'm not the only one who thinks so, either. We're all feeling it. All trying to hang on to the fleeting days, and when it comes to summer memories, this poem hits all the right notes and will have you dreaming of Italy by the end of it. 


Siena

by Pat Phillips West

Papa Joe, the owner, shows me the garden
behind his café.  His wife sits on her heels
dress tucked between her legs tending herbs
and vegetables.  Every so often
she kisses her fingertips, Così bello!  
Papa Joe talks about Insalata Caprese,
a favorite summer salad he insists I try.  
Ripe, deep-red tomatoes, he shakes his head
side to side, never soft, never refrigerated.  
Only young basil 
grown in the earth and sun.  
I inhale oregano and rosemary, feel at home
in this space.  A young man pulls out a chair
at my table on the sidewalk as if I had been waiting
for him.  He tears off a chunk of crusty bread,
holds it out like a gift, fills my glass
with chilled white wine.  Papa Joe stops
to ask, Molto gustoso, si?  With a nod
toward the young man not my salad.  
I refold my napkin, finger a spoon, cross
and uncross my legs.  Food on my lips,
excitement wicking through my fingers,
I can only grin.  Finally, the young man
points, Come, I take you to see the Duomo.  
I look at his scooter, my aunt’s send-off
remark flutters in my ear, There’s more to life
than being safe.  I tuck my skirt
between my legs, climb on,
and press against his back. 


This is most certainly a poem of place. From start to finish, we're transported to a romantic Italian city. With offerings of bread and intoxicated by the scent of rosemary, our speaker is swooning, but still asks a reasonable series of questions Do I go see the Duomo? Do I hop on the back of a scooter?

Do I dare? 

As it turns out, food is the peace offering, the calming force, the reason. The bread and the rosemary, the cooking tips, the young basil, it's enough to learn one of summer's great lessons: "There's more to life than being safe."

Reading this poem is not unlike when you attend someone's wedding. While watching friends pledge their love for each other, you can' help but reflect on your own vows. Although this memory is not my own, I could see it so vividly and imagine myself in the same circumstance, wind blowing in my hair, stomach full with caprese, utterly happy. 

Caprese Tartine | Eat This Poem

ROASTED CAPRESE TARTINE

In the summer, there's nothing better eating tomatoes with as many meals as possible. For these tartines, I chose a medium-sized tomato that fit perfectly on the bread slices. 

Serves 2 for lunch, or 3-4 as an appetizer

1 pound tomatoes 
Salt, pepper, and oil
8 slices bread (like ciabatta)
8 slices mozzarella
Basil

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees. Slice the tomatoes lengthwise into 1/2-inch pieces and place in a roasting pan. Sprinkle with a generous pinch of salt, a few grinds of pepper, and a drizzle of oil. Roast for about 30 minutes, or until shriveled and caramelized.

Turn on the broiler. Slice the bread into 1-inch slices and place on a sheet pan. Layer with the tomatoes, then lay some cheese on top. Broil for about 4 minutes, or until the cheese is golden and the bread begins to char just around the edges. Sprinkle with basil. This is also a good time to pull out your prized bottle of thick balsamic vinegar and add a dash before serving.

What I'm Reading | July 2014

July has come and gone, and that means I've started eating my weight in tomatoes. Hooray! I spent a week in Minneapolis and St. Paul (more on my adventures coming soon, I hope), my puppy turned three (I guess she's technically an adult now), and we celebrated Independence Day on a friend's rooftop overlooking the harbor in Marina del Rey. Also, I'm still getting used to the fact that this view of the vast ocean, after a 10 minute walk, is my backyard.

Here are a few good reads from around the web. 


Julia Child's discarded titles.

Excited to watch how this good food funding platform grows.

I might get an iPad just to use this

The ultimate veggie burger.

The importance of eating together.

Tips to master mobile photography.

The truth behind staged Instagram photos

Becoming an essentialist. Amen. 

Also, 7 reasons we should stop praising excess.

What writers can learn from Goodnight Moon.

Hoping to bake these this weekend. (And finish reading Delancey, too.)

A history of palm trees in Los Angeles.

I made this pie with plums instead of peaches, and it was heavenly. 

Literary City Guides: Boston and Cambridge

The summer after my junior year of high school, we took a family vacation to the east coast, spending almost three weeks on what we affectionally refer to now as "The American History Tour." With stops in Philadelphia, Washington DC, Boston, Cambridge, Charlottesville, and Cape Cod, it was an immersion in American history. Everything from the Liberty Bell to the theatre where Abraham Lincoln was shot, to Plymouth Rock (smaller than I thought it would be, not unlike when you see the Mona Lisa in Paris), was on our agenda. 

Today's city guides brought back fond memories of that trip. And! Not only are today's two cities ultimate literary destinations, they also mark guides 49 and 50! That's right, we have 50 literary city guides! This time last year, we launched with San Francisco, Nashville, and Los Angeles, thanks to my friends Stacy and Shanna. Now, Literary City Guides have spread their wings and I love having a place for contributors to share the best resources in the towns they know best.

To all the contributors we've had over the past year, THANK YOU! The guides work because of your unique voices and experiences, and I'm privileged you've shared them with me on Eat This Poem.

Celebrate with us and stop by Boston and Cambridge!