| Jehanne Dubrow_____
 
 Oenophilia
   Those months away from you, I teach myself
 to cook with wine, admiring the change
 a Beaujolais enjoys inside the pot,
 its sly divestment of alcohol, slowly
 from the heat, like a girl unbuttoning her blouse.
 I’m indiscriminate. All reds will do
 because you’ve never had a taste for white,
 the frigid chardonnay or pinot gris
 so chilled it makes the crystal goblet sweat.
 You’re loyal to the glass of claret light.
 I’m talking warmth and things that need
 to breathe before they’re sipped. I mean
 the old varietals, picked and stomped on,
 a purpled bruise delicious for its pain,
 the grapeskin’s shredded gauze. And so I plan
 a week of meals that are a lesson in
 desiring, like Tristan und Isolde,
 where consummation never comes and booze
 is an excuse for letting loose again,
 again the bottle spilling liquid from
 its open mouth, the green neck sticky there,
 our tongues discovering the metal tannins
 and something close to blood, but sweeter.
     
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