Butternut squash. February 2019. |
My photos of this butternut squash bottom do not satisfy me.
But not one to be wasteful, I will present them anyway because it is the essence of squash that does satisfy.
The butternut holds its seeds in its uterine space, cradling them in a sinewy net, swaddling them within thick, soft-strong flesh, finally enveloping them with a thin, sturdy shell.
Butternut squash. February 2019. |
The butternut shell deflects crawling and flying marauders, too much cold and too much heat, too much rain and too little rain.
It cracks open to my knife.
I roast this butternut.
I eat its softened shell.
I eat its butterscotch flesh.
I eat its crunchy seeds, salted and shiny with sprayed oil.
All that I leave are strings of sinew and that hard nub which once connected my meal to her green matriarch, rooted in the earth.
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