Sunday, April 26, 2026

Crisscross


 

Our kitchen became hers when

she moved in with us

after Grandpa died.

 

She taught me classic

peanut butter cookies—

how to crisscross the tops with sugared fork.

 

I watched knee-side as she made

cream pies, one after the other,

laying a blanket of raw pie crust in a tin,

 

poked with fork, baked, let cool,

and scooped full with mounds of creamy goodness

in rich dollops filling up the shell.

 

She shaved chocolate,

sprinkled toasted coconut,

layered thick meringue.

 

I wish I could look

into that kitchen window,

peering in from the backyard,

 

and see her strong capable hands,

her quick movements,

my eyes wide and hopeful,

 

youthful innocence and joy

sticking to my fingers

like sugar and cream.

 

Oh, for a quick taste

of memory—

like the window to a long-forgotten dream.

 

 

© 2026 Jennifer Wagner

 

Poetic Bloomings: Windows

dVerse oln #407 

 

image above created by me using copilot

 

10 comments:

  1. What a wonderful memory and well told in this poem. "like the window to a long-forgotten dream" - my favorite line. I always enjoy when you write about her.

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  2. The child in wonder lick her lips here.

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  3. Hello Jennifer, this is lovely poem about the taste of memory.

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  4. Those crisscross peanut-butter cookies are still one of my favorites. A wonderful window to another time.

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  5. A beautiful tender poem. Takes me back to my grandmother's kitchen (sigh).

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  6. I wish for such memories but alas neither my grandmother or mother were much into cooking... maybe I need to build it myself from scratch.

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  7. I love this poem, Jennifer, which resonates with me and reminds me of my own grandmother. Baking together is a special experience that stays with you. I especially love:
    ‘…see her strong capable hands,
    her quick movements,
    my eyes wide and hopeful,
    youthful innocence and joy
    sticking to my fingers
    like sugar and cream’.
    I could do with a quick taste of memory.

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  8. Such a beautiful, sugary memory put into a poem.

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Thank you for your thoughts!