[Sca-cooks] Fantasy foods

Lisa silvina at allegiance.tv
Wed Sep 13 11:13:25 PDT 2006


I do know that the Dragonlance published 2 books that each have a section
that is cookbooks called Leaves of the Inn of the Last Home 1 and 2.  Most
of the recipes are doable with substitutions for certain types of meats,
(most of the time the books give substitution recommendations) but I'd
definitely avoid the Gully Dwarf Stew.

Elizabeta

----- Original Message -----
From: "Karin Burgess" <avrealtor at prodigy.net>
To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>
Sent: Wednesday, September 13, 2006 11:49 AM
Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Fantasy foods


> There isd a Tolkien inspired cookbook out here, can't remember thename off
the top of my head
>
>   -Muiriath
>
> Michael Gunter <countgunthar at hotmail.com> wrote:
>   >Anne McCaffrey edited two cookbooks full of contributions from fellow
> >genre writers. COOKING OUT OF THIS WORLD and SERVE IT FORTH. Many
> >parts are edible.
>
> I always had a problem with the Dragonriders series in that they seemed
> to have no diet other than bread, fruit, cheese and sausages.
>
> >THE INCOMPLEAT ENCHANTER by L. Sprague deCamp and Fletcher Pratt had our
> >hero visiting the world of Norse Saga, where the all-meaty diet gave him
> >the pip. He asked for vegetable to eat and was mocked roundly with the
> >monicker "Turnip Harold." So it seems like these writers agreed with
> >you about the standard Fantasy Fiction Diet, yes?
>
> I've had the honor of meeting Mr. & Mrs. deCamp a few times because they
> always made sure to attend the "real armored fighting in history" demo and
> lecture done by Duke Lloyd von Eaker and myself. They were lovely people
> who had a true interest in getting things right. Of course I was always a
> gushing fanboy because he was the only writer other than Robert E. Howard
> who ever seemed to get Conan right.
>
> >J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis used meals to enhance the good places and
> >the bad places in Middle-Earth and Narnia respectively. Supper with
> >Hobbits or Beavers is far preferable than dining with Orcs. Don't ask
> >me where they got tomatoes and potatoes without a voyage over the sea,
> >however.
>
> I've been thinking of hosting a series of dinner parties and attempting to
> recreate the meals he went into such details about. From the meals of
> Tom Bombadil to even the spartan dinner behind the waterfal to the
> sumptous dinner at the Prancing Pony. I think it would be fun.
>
> >That should get you started. Bon Appetit -- in any world!
> >Selene
>
> Yers,
>
> Gunthar
>
>
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