Jazz Butcher Bath Of Bacon Rar ✓

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.”

Pat didn’t stop playing. His solo turned vicious, angry. Jazz Butcher Bath Of Bacon Rar

The neon sign above The Velvet Swine flickered, casting the alley in a sickly pink glow. Inside, the air was thick with three things: cigarette smoke, the wail of a broken soprano sax, and the distinct, artery-clogging perfume of frying pork. Pat nodded slowly

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. His solo turned vicious, angry

This was the domain of "Jazz Butcher" Pat Rizzo. To call Pat a musician was like calling a heart attack a slight palpitation. He played saxophone like a man trying to wrestle a greased pig. His other passion, the one that paid the rent on this dive, was meat. Specifically, the Bath of Bacon Rar .

“I want you to close this place down.”