-menos Protocolo Y Mas Patatas- - Jose Miguel F... Apr 2026

Would you like a poem, a monologue, or a flash fiction piece in a different tone (e.g., absurdist, political, or tender)?

“Eat,” he said. “Talk. Or don’t. The potatoes won’t care about your titles.”

José Miguel walked out, uncorked a bottle of rough red with his teeth, and poured it into mismatched cups. -Menos protocolo y mas patatas- - Jose Miguel F...

Here’s a short creative piece inspired by the quote : Title: The Unspoken Rebellion

But José Miguel F. proved that dignity doesn’t live in a seating chart. It lives in a hot potato, shared without pretense. Would you like a poem, a monologue, or

That night, no act was signed. No photo op was staged.

And for the first time in years, the people in that room laughed. They tore bread. They dripped sauce on their ties. They solved a water rights dispute between sentences like “pass the salt” and “remember when…” Or don’t

José Miguel F. wasn’t a politician, a poet, or a pundit. He was the third-generation owner of a bar de tapas in a dusty corner of León, where the wine came in clay cups and the menu was written in chalk that smudged if you breathed too hard.

The night of the summit, the officials arrived in pressed suits. The table was bare wood. No name cards. No wine glasses with stems. Just a single, giant clay cazuela in the center, overflowing with patatas a la importancia —golden, garlicky, crumbling at the touch of a spoon.

They thought he was joking.

One evening, the mayor’s office called. They wanted to host a “gastronomic diplomacy summit” in his establishment. White tablecloths. Name cards. A seven-course tasting menu with foam and texturas . José Miguel listened, wiped his hands on his apron, and said, “ Menos protocolo y más patatas. ”

Would you like a poem, a monologue, or a flash fiction piece in a different tone (e.g., absurdist, political, or tender)?

“Eat,” he said. “Talk. Or don’t. The potatoes won’t care about your titles.”

José Miguel walked out, uncorked a bottle of rough red with his teeth, and poured it into mismatched cups.

Here’s a short creative piece inspired by the quote : Title: The Unspoken Rebellion

But José Miguel F. proved that dignity doesn’t live in a seating chart. It lives in a hot potato, shared without pretense.

That night, no act was signed. No photo op was staged.

And for the first time in years, the people in that room laughed. They tore bread. They dripped sauce on their ties. They solved a water rights dispute between sentences like “pass the salt” and “remember when…”

José Miguel F. wasn’t a politician, a poet, or a pundit. He was the third-generation owner of a bar de tapas in a dusty corner of León, where the wine came in clay cups and the menu was written in chalk that smudged if you breathed too hard.

The night of the summit, the officials arrived in pressed suits. The table was bare wood. No name cards. No wine glasses with stems. Just a single, giant clay cazuela in the center, overflowing with patatas a la importancia —golden, garlicky, crumbling at the touch of a spoon.

They thought he was joking.

One evening, the mayor’s office called. They wanted to host a “gastronomic diplomacy summit” in his establishment. White tablecloths. Name cards. A seven-course tasting menu with foam and texturas . José Miguel listened, wiped his hands on his apron, and said, “ Menos protocolo y más patatas. ”