And then I noticed the cabbage. To be honest I had all but forgotten them. Slow, unimpressive, I have longed for those leafy sprouts to mature but had largely given up. They seemed to be stalled and waning. And then there they were -- four of useable size with several more lagging behind. Cabbages are curious growths. A member of the brassica family, the plant begins with a thin taproot and eventually begins to leaf. And leaf. In fact, the head that is its offspring is literally the compaction of layer after layer of leaves and time, resulting in a versatile mass of culinary possibilities.
Which makes me think of memories and experiences and learnings along the way -- the slow and often unnoticed leafing and compaction of life-leaves that result in a similarly useful density.
I suppose not everybody affirms the usefulness of sauerkraut, but while I rather think a brat is naked without it, there is more to a cabbage than that. And who knows what gloriously pungent concoctions might come from all these learnings and practices and disappointments and triumphs? One head at a time.
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