has chewed its way into South Florida's culture. Many an abuela has shared family recipes for ropa vieja and bistec empanizado, through generations. ¸Û°ÄÌìϲÊwants a seat at your table to hear stories, memories or recipes .
These are the first lines of Richard Blanco's poem, "Cooking with Mamá in Maine" from his book, .
Two years since trading mangos
for these maples, the white dunes
of the beach for the White Mountains
etched in my living room window,
I ask my mother to teach me how
to make my favorite Cuban dish.
Blanco's poetry is filled with vivid descriptions of the Cuban exile experience, especially the flavors his mother brought to Miami (by way of Spain).
When he left Miami for Maine several years ago, he missed those flavors of Miami, those flavors of Cuba, those flavors of his childhood. In this poem, as Blanco watches his mother prepare his favorite dish, he contemplates his youth, the trajectory of his mother's life, and his own future.
In January, Richard Blanco read his poem, "," at President Obama's inauguration. His memoir, , is due out in November from Beacon Press.