Jazz Butcher Bath Of Bacon Rar Info
A woman in a feathered hat fainted. A man in a bowling shirt wept.
He took the offering. He put it in his mouth. Jazz Butcher Bath Of Bacon Rar
Pat began to play. It wasn’t a tune. It was a lament. A guttural, squalling thing that sounded like a train derailing into a deli. He called it “Bacon of the Rar.” As he played, he lifted the bacon-laden ladle and, with a theatrical groan, draped the first strip over the bell of his saxophone. The hot fat dripped onto the floor, hissing like a snake. A woman in a feathered hat fainted
Pat stood over a cast-iron cauldron the size of a dwarf planet. Inside, a symphony of pork belly, chorizo crumbles, and smoked lard bubbled in a shallow, amber-hued pool. This was the "Bath." The "Rar"—Pat’s own idiosyncratic spelling of rare —was a lie. Nothing about this was rare. It was a crunchy, salty, umami apocalypse. The recipe, scrawled on a napkin stained with valve oil and pig fat, was legendary: render the fat of five heritage hogs, add the tears of a jazz critic, and simmer until the moon howls. He put it in his mouth
Pat nodded slowly. He reached into the cauldron with his bare hand, pulled out a fistful of the crispy, glistening Rar, and held it out. “Then you have to eat the truth.”
