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| #Post#: 10-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Foods of Gor | |
| By: kharma Date: January 9, 2014, 1:17 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Foods of Gor | |
| Apricot | |
| Presumably identical to an Earth apricot | |
| I brushed away two sellers of apricots and spices. Come with me | |
| to the cafe of Red Cages, said a boy, pulling at my sleeve.� | |
| ~ Tribesman of Gor page 45 | |
| Arctic Gant Eggs | |
| Eggs of the migratory Arctic gant; when frozen, they are eaten | |
| like apples. | |
| �I stepped aside to let a young girl pass, who carried two | |
| baskets of eggs, those of the migratory arctic gant. They nest | |
| in the mountain of the Hrimgar and in steep, rocky outcroppings, | |
| called bird cliffs, found here and there jutting out of the | |
| tundra. The bird cliffs doubtless bear some geological relation | |
| to the Hrimgar chains. When such eggs are frozen they are eaten | |
| like apples.� | |
| ~ Beasts of Gor page 196 | |
| Beans | |
| No description | |
| �Initiates do not eat meat, or beans. They are trained in the | |
| mysteries of mathematics. They converse among themselves in | |
| archaic Gorean, which is no longer spoken among the people.� | |
| ~ Marauders of Gor page 81 | |
| Biscuits | |
| A dried pressed biscuit described as baked in Kailiauk from | |
| Sa-Tarna flour. | |
| �...Grunt, from his own stores, brought forth some dried, | |
| pressed biscuits, baked in Kailiauk from Sa-Tarna flour.� | |
| ~ Savages of Gor page 328 | |
| Black Bread | |
| Baked soft and full flavored from Gorean grains, heavy and dark, | |
| served with clotted Bosk Cream or honey. | |
| �The great merchant galleys of Port Kar, and Cos, and Tyros, and | |
| other maritime powers, utilized thousands of such miserable | |
| wretches, fed on brews of peas and black bread, chained in the | |
| rowing holds, under the whips of slave masters, their lives | |
| measured by feedings and beatings, and the labor of the oar.� | |
| ~ Hunters of Gor page 13 | |
| Bond-Maid Gruel | |
| A porridge served to bond-maids in Torvaldsland made of damp | |
| Sa-Tarna and raw fish. | |
| �Another of the bond-maids was then freed to mix the bond-maid | |
| gruel, mixing fresh water with Sa-Tarna meal, and then stirring | |
| in the raw fish.� ~ Marauders of Gor page 67 | |
| Bosk | |
| Large, shaggy, long horned bovine similar to the Earth cow; | |
| served as beef is served. | |
| �The meat was a steak, cut from the loin of a bosk, a huge, | |
| shaggy, long-horned, ill-tempered bovine which shambles in | |
| large, slow-moving herds across the prairies of Gor.� | |
| ~ Priest Kings of Gor page 45 | |
| Butter | |
| Churned from the milk of the Bosk or the Verr. | |
| �"Olga," he said, "there is butter to be churning in the | |
| churning shed.� ~ Marauders of Gor page 81 | |
| Cabbages | |
| No description given | |
| �...too, there would be peas, and beans, cabbages and onions, | |
| and patches of the golden sul, capable of sur-viving at this | |
| latitude. I saw small fruit trees, and hives, where honey bees | |
| were raised; and there were small sheds, here and there, with | |
| sloping roofs of boards; in some such sheds might craftsmen | |
| work; in others fish might be dried or butter made.� | |
| ~ Marauders of Gor page 81 | |
| Candy | |
| Soft, rounded, succulent candies, usually covered with a coating | |
| of syrup or fudge, rather in the nature of the caramel apple, | |
| but much smaller, and, like a caramel apple, mounted on sticks. | |
| the candy is prepared and the stick, from the bottom, is thrust | |
| up, deeply, into it. | |
| �These are not candies, incidentally, like sticks, as, for | |
| example, licorice or peppermint sticks, but soft, rounded, | |
| succulent candies, usually covered with a coating of syrup or | |
| fudge, rather in the nature of the caramel apple, but much | |
| smaller, and, like a caramel apple, mounted on sticks. The candy | |
| is prepared and then the stick, from the bottom, is thrust up, | |
| deeply, into it. It is then ready to be eaten.� - | |
| Dancer of Gor p 81 ( also see below Mint Sticks) | |
| Cheese | |
| Pressed from the milk of the Bosk they are sharp in taste and | |
| travel well resisting molds in their hard rinds. | |
| �The Tarn Keeper, who was called by those in the tavern Mip, | |
| bought the food, bosk steak and yellow bread, peas and Torian | |
| olives, and two golden-brown, starchy Suls, broken open and | |
| filled with melted bosk cheese.� ~ Assassin of Gor page 168 | |
| Cherries | |
| Grown in Tyros. | |
| "It reminds me of the cherries of Tyros," I said. "I do not know | |
| what the flavor is," she said, "but it is lovely, is it not?" | |
| "Yes," I said.� ~ Beasts of Gor page 349 | |
| Cosian Wingfish | |
| Also known as songfish due to its whistling mating song; a tiny | |
| blue salt-water fish with 4 poisonous spines on its dorsal fin; | |
| found in the waters off Port Kar; its liver is considered a | |
| delicacy in Turia. | |
| �"Now this," Saphrar the merchant was telling me, "is the | |
| braised liver of the blue, four-spired Cosian wingfish." This | |
| fish is a tiny, delicate fish, blue, about the size of a tarn | |
| disk when curled in one's hand; it has three or four slender | |
| spines in its dorsal fin, which are poisonous; it is capable of | |
| hurling itself from the water and, for brief distances, on its | |
| stiff pectoral fins, gliding through the air, usually to evade | |
| the smaller sea-tharlarions, which seem to be immune to the | |
| poison of the spines. This fish is also sometimes referred to as | |
| the songfish because, as a portion of its courtship rituals, the | |
| males and females thrust their heads from the water and utter a | |
| sort of whistling sound.� | |
| ~ Nomads of Gor page 84-85 | |
| Dates | |
| These come from the City of Tor; they are sold in a tef (a | |
| handful with the 5 fingers closed; a tefa is 6 tefs (a small | |
| basket); Five such baskets constitute a huda. In large | |
| compressed bricks they are used in trade. | |
| �The principal export of the oases is dates and pressed-date | |
| bricks. Some of the date palms grow to more than a hundred feet | |
| high. It takes ten years before they begin to bear fruit. They | |
| will then yield fruit for more than a century.� ~ Tribesman of | |
| Gor page 46 | |
| Eel | |
| A voracious animal which can maim or kill a slave in moments. | |
| Some varieties are edible and considered a gorean delicacy. | |
| Varieties include: river eel, black eel, and spotted eel. | |
| �Many estates, particularly country homes, have pools in which | |
| fish are kept. Some of these pools contains voracious eels, of | |
| various sorts, river eels, black eels, the spotted eel, and | |
| such, which are Gorean delicacies.� ~ Magicians of Gor page 428 | |
| Eggs | |
| Usually vulo eggs.. but there are many varieties available | |
| depending on the region. | |
| She had been carrying a wicker basket containing vulos, | |
| domesticated pigeons raised for eggs and meat. | |
| ~ Nomads of Gor page 1 | |
| Fish, Parsit | |
| A silvery fish having brown stripes, they follow the 'parsit | |
| current' in the polar basin. In Torvaldsland, it is smoked and | |
| dried, stored in barrels, and used in trade to the south. | |
| �The slender striped parsit fish has vast plankton banks north | |
| of the town, and may there, particularly in the spring and the | |
| fall, be taken in great numbers. The smell of the fish-drying | |
| sheds of Kassau carries far out to sea.� ~ Marauders of Gor page | |
| 27 (references also on pages 56, 63 and 64) | |
| Garlic | |
| Not described in detail | |
| �"I have peas and turnips, garlic and onions in my hut," said | |
| the man, his bundle like a giant's hump on his back.� | |
| ~ Outlaw of Gor page 29 | |
| Grunts | |
| Great Speckled - a fish inhabiting the Thassa and caught as food | |
| for sailors. | |
| �Half out of the water, then returning to it, I saw a great | |
| speckled grunt, four-gilled. It dove, and swirled away.� ~ Slave | |
| Girl of Gor page 360 | |
| White-bellied | |
| a large game fish which haunts the plankton beds in the Polar | |
| North to feed on parsit fish. It's eggs are considered a rare | |
| delicacy.. like caviar. | |
| �Three other men of the Forkbeard attended to fishing, two with | |
| a net, sweeping it along the side of the serpent, for parsit | |
| fish, and the third, near the stem, with a hook and line, baited | |
| with vulo liver, for the white-bellied grunt, a large game fish | |
| which haunts the plankton banks to feed on parsit fish.� | |
| ~ Marauders of Gor page 59 | |
| Honey | |
| No description given.. just that honey bees are raised. | |
| �I saw small fruit trees, and hives, where honey bees were | |
| raised; and there were small sheds, here and there, with sloping | |
| roofs of boards; in some such sheds might craftsmen work; in | |
| others fish might be dried or butter made.� ~ Marauders of Gor | |
| page 81 | |
| Katch | |
| Foliated leaf vegetable similar to lettuce. | |
| �...a foliated leaf vegetable, called Katch,..� ~ Tribesmen of | |
| Gor page 37 | |
| Kes Shrub | |
| A shrub whose salty, blue secondary roots are a main ingredient | |
| in sullage. | |
| �...and the salty, blue secondary roots of the Kes Shrub, a | |
| small, deeply rooted plant which grows best in sandy soil.� | |
| ~ Priest-Kings of Gor page 45. | |
| Kort | |
| Often served sliced with melted cheese and nutmeg, a large, | |
| brownish-skinned, sphere-shaped vegetable of the Tahari usually | |
| some 6 inches in width. The interior is yellowish, fibrous and | |
| heavily seeded. | |
| �and korts, a large, brownish-skinned, thick-skinned, | |
| sphere-shaped vegetable, usually some six inches in width, the | |
| interior of which is yellowish, fibrous and heavily seeded.� ~ | |
| Tribesmen of Gor page 37 | |
| Larma | |
| They come in two types: juicy - a segmented, succulent fruit, | |
| and hard, rather like an apple, having one pit, commonly called | |
| the pit fruit, it is sometimes sliced and fried, and served with | |
| browned honey sauce; offering a larma, real or imagined, by a | |
| slave girl to her master is a silent plea for the girl to be | |
| raped. | |
| �I took a slice of hard larma from the tray. This is a firm, | |
| single-seeded, applelike fruit. It is quite unlike the | |
| segmented, juicy larma. It is sometimes called, and perhaps more | |
| aptly, the pit fruit, because of its large single stone.� ~ | |
| Players of Gor page 267 | |
| Melons | |
| Yellowish, red-striped spheres. | |
| �"Buy melons!" called a fellow next to her, lifting one of the | |
| yellowish, red-striped spheres toward me.� ~ Tribesmen of Gor | |
| page 45 | |
| Mint Sticks | |
| Just mentioned as tiny mint sticks in a bowl | |
| �On the tray, too, was the metal vessel which had contained the | |
| black wine, steaming and bitter, from far Thentis, famed for its | |
| tarn flocks, the small yellow-enameled cups from which we had | |
| drunk the black wine, its spoons and sugars, a tiny bowl of mint | |
| sticks, and the softened, dampened cloths on which we had wiped | |
| our fingers.� ~ Explorers of Gor page 10 | |
| Mushrooms | |
| No description given | |
| �I am an Alar,� Hurtha explained. �Have a stuffed mushroom.� I | |
| pondered the likely prices of a stuffed mushroom in a | |
| black-market transaction in a war-torn district,..� ~ | |
| Mercenaries of Gor page 82 | |
| Olives | |
| Are commonly from the City of Tor. (referred to as Torian | |
| Olives); also Red Olives which come from the groves of Tyros. | |
| �Clitus, too, had brought two bottles of Ka-la-na wine, a string | |
| of eels, cheese of the Verr, and a sack of red olives from the | |
| groves of Tyros.� ~ Raiders of Gor page 114 | |
| Onions | |
| No description given | |
| �...cabbages and onions, and patches of the golden sul...� | |
| ~ Marauders of Gor page 81 | |
| Oysters | |
| From the Vosk Delta | |
| �Other girls had prepared the repast, which, for the war camp, | |
| was sumptuous indeed, containing even oysters from the delta of | |
| the Vosk, a portion of the plunder of a tarn caravan of Ar, such | |
| delicacies having been intended for the very table of Marlenus, | |
| the Ubar of that great city itself.� ~ Captive of Gor page 301 | |
| Pastries | |
| No specific mention | |
| �Before each guests there were tiny slices of tospit and larma, | |
| small pastries ...� ~ Fighting Slave of Gor page 276 | |
| Peas | |
| These are mentioned as a menu item, though not described | |
| �In them were growing, small at this season, shafts ol Sa-Tarna; | |
| too, there would be peas, and beans, cabbages and onions ...� | |
| Marauders of Gor page 81 | |
| Peppers | |
| Not described | |
| �Telima had prepared a roast tarsk, stuffed with suls and | |
| peppers from Tor.� ~ Raiders of Gor page 113 | |
| Radishes | |
| Not described in detail | |
| �Ottar dug for the Forkbeard and my-self two radishes and we, | |
| wiping the dirt from them, ate them.� ~ Marauders of Gor page | |
| 102 | |
| Ramberry | |
| Small, succulent berries. | |
| "A guard was with us, and we were charged with filling our | |
| leather buckets with ram-berries, a small reddish fruit with | |
| edible seeds, not unlike plums save for the many small seeds." | |
| ~ Captive of Gor, page 305 | |
| #Post#: 11-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Foods of Gor | |
| By: kharma Date: January 9, 2014, 1:18 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Rence | |
| A water plant, the grain is eaten and the stems harvested and | |
| pressed into paper or woven into cloth. The pith may be boiled | |
| or ground into a paste and sweetened; this paste can also be | |
| fried into a type of pancake. | |
| The plant has many uses besides serving as a raw product in the | |
| manufacture of rence paper. The root, which is woody and heavy, | |
| is used for certain wooden tools and utensils, which can be | |
| carved from it; also, when dried, it makes a good fuel; from the | |
| stem the rence growers can make reed boats, sails, mats, cords | |
| and the kind of fibrous cloth; further, its pith is edible, and | |
| for the rence growers is, with fish, a staple in their diet; the | |
| pith is edible both raw and cooked; some men, lost in the delta, | |
| not knowing the pith edible, have died of starvation the the | |
| midst of what was, had they known it, an almost endless | |
| abundance of food.� ~ Raiders of Gor page 7 | |
| Salt | |
| �Most salt at Klima is white, but certain of the mines deliver | |
| red salt, red from ferrous oxide in its composition, which is | |
| called the Red Salt of Kasra, after its port of embarkation, at | |
| the juncture of the Upper and Lower Fayeen.� ~ Tribesman of Gor | |
| page 238 | |
| Also there are references to yellow salt as 'of the south' and | |
| on a table exist, but no other description has been found. | |
| �I gathered, that I would sit at one of the two long side | |
| tables, and perhaps even below the bowls of red and yellow salt | |
| which divided these tables.� ~ Assassin of Gor page 86 | |
| Sa-Tarna | |
| Grain, specifically wheat, yellow, usually described as being | |
| cut in wedges | |
| �There were great quantities of the yellow Sa-Tarna bread, in | |
| its rounded, six-part loaves.� ~ Raiders of Gor page 114 | |
| Sa-Tassna | |
| Meat; food in general. | |
| �Interestingly enough, the word for meat is Sa-Tassna, which | |
| means Life-Mother. Incidentally, when one speaks of food in | |
| general, one always speaks of Sa-Tassna.� ~ Tarnsman of Gor page | |
| 43 | |
| Slave Porridge | |
| A cold, unsweetened mixture of water and Sa-Tarna meal, on which | |
| slaves are fed; in Torvaldsland, it is called 'bond-maid gruel', | |
| and often mixed with pieces of chopped parsit fish. | |
| �One of the smiths from below was summoned with a bowl of slave | |
| porridge, which he mixed half with water, and stirred well, so | |
| that it could be drunk. There are various porridges given to | |
| slaves and they differ. The porridges in the iron pens, however, | |
| are as ugly and tasteless a gruel, and deliberately so, as might | |
| be imagined.� ~ Assassin of Gor page 126 | |
| Snail | |
| Much like the snails on Earth these are small slug-like | |
| creatures living inside of thin shells in the waters. often they | |
| are trapped with water inside the bilge of a ship. | |
| �Once the Forkbeard went to her and taught her to check the | |
| scoop, with her left hand, for snails, that they not be thrown | |
| overboard. Returning to Me, He held one of the snails, whose | |
| shell He crushed between His fingers, and sucked out the animal, | |
| chewing and swallowing it. He then threw the shell fragments | |
| overboard. "They are edible," He said, "and We use them for fish | |
| bait.� ~ Marauders of Gor page 62 | |
| Sorp | |
| A shellfish, common esp. in the Vosk river, similar to an oyster | |
| �"They are probably false stones," I said, "amber droplets, the | |
| pearls of the Vosk sorp, the polished shell of the Tamber clam, | |
| glass colored and cut in Ar for trade with ignorant southern | |
| peoples. "They are probably false stones," I said, "amber | |
| droplets, the pearls of the Vosk sorp, the polished shell of the | |
| Tamber clam, glass colored and cut in Ar for trade with ignorant | |
| southern peoples."� ~ Nomads of Gor page 20 | |
| Sugar | |
| White and yellow are commonly used | |
| �With a tiny spoon, its tip no more than a tenth of a hort in | |
| diameter, she placed four measures of white sugar, and six of | |
| yellow, in the cup; with two stirring spoons, one for the white | |
| sugar, another for the yellow.� ~ Tribesmen of Gor page 89 | |
| Sul | |
| Starchy, golden brown, vine borne fruit; principal ingredient in | |
| sullage, a tuberous vegetable similar to the potato; often | |
| served sliced and fried. | |
| �The principal ingredients of Sullage are the golden Sul, the | |
| starchy, golden-brown vine-borne fruit of the golden-leaved Sul | |
| plant.� ~ Priest Kings of Gor ch 6 | |
| Sullage | |
| A soup made principally from suls, tur-pah, and kes, along with | |
| whatever else may be handy. | |
| �First she boiled and simmered a kettle of Sullage, a common | |
| Gorean soup consisting of three standard ingredients and, as it | |
| is said, whatever else may be found, saving only the rocks of | |
| the field.� ~ Priest Kings of Gor page 44 | |
| Tabuk | |
| Swift gazelle like animals known for their sweet meat and speed, | |
| the Tabuk is generally served roasted. | |
| �Once I brought the carcass of a tabuk, one of Gor's | |
| single-horned, yellow antelopes, which I had felled in a | |
| Ka-la-na thicket, to the hut of a peasant and his wife.� ~ | |
| Outlaw of Gor page 76 | |
| �The tabuk is the most common Gorean antelope, a small graceful | |
| animal, one-horned and yellow, that haunts the Ka- la-na | |
| thickets of the planet and occasionally ventures daintily into | |
| its meadows in search of berries and salt.� ~ Outlaw of Gor page | |
| 126 | |
| Ta Grapes | |
| Purple fruit similar to earth grapes comes from the Isle of Cos. | |
| �The grapes were purple and, I suppose, Ta grapes from the lower | |
| vineyards of the terraced island of Cos some four hundred | |
| pasangs from Port Kar. I had tasted some only once before, | |
| having been introduced to them in a feast given in my honor by | |
| Lara, who was Tatrix of the city of Tharna.� ~ Priest-Kings of | |
| Gor page 45 | |
| Tarsk | |
| Porcine animal akin to the Earth pig, having a bristly mane | |
| which runs down its spine to the base of the tail, often roasted | |
| whole. | |
| �Still later that afternoon some groups of small, fat, grunting, | |
| bristly, brindled, shaggy-maned, hoofed, flat-snouted, rooting | |
| animals had been herded in, also with pointed sticks, and they, | |
| too, had been guided into identical cages. We had looked out of | |
| our cage, our fingers hooked in the mesh, to other cages, some | |
| of them with girls in them, some with the fat, flat-snouted, | |
| grunting, short-legged, brindled quadrupeds. "Those are tarsks," | |
| said one of the Gorean girls.� ~ Dancer of Gor page 108 | |
| Tumits | |
| A large carnivorous bird of the plains, is hunted and eaten by | |
| the Nomadic people of Gor. Traditionally hunted with bolos the | |
| sport lies in whether you or the bird gets to eat that night. | |
| �...beyond them I saw one of the tumits, a large, flightless | |
| bird whose hooked beak, as long as my forearm, attested only too | |
| clearly to its gustatory habits;� ~ Nomads of Gor page 2 | |
| Tospit | |
| Yellowish-white fruit: like an Earth peach. They are bitter but | |
| edible, and are sometimes served sliced and sweetened with | |
| honey, and in syrups, and to flavor, with their juices, a | |
| variety of dishes. They are also carried on sea voyages to | |
| prevent nutritional deficiencies. They almost always have an odd | |
| number of seeds, except for the rare, long-stemmed ones. The | |
| Wagon People often bet on the number of seeds. | |
| �...on the top of which was placed a dried tospit, a small, | |
| wrinkled, yellowish-white peachlike fruit, about the size of a | |
| plum, which grows on the tospit bush, patches of which are | |
| indigenous to the drier valleys of the western Cartius. They are | |
| bitter but edible.� ~ Nomads of Gor page 59 | |
| Turnip | |
| Grown on the oasis of the Tahari | |
| �At the oasis will be grown a hybrid, brownish Sa-Tarna, adapted | |
| to the heat of the desert; most Sa-Tarna is yellow; and beans, | |
| berries, onions tuber suls, various sorts of melons, a foliated | |
| leaf vegetable, called Katch, and various root vegetables, such | |
| as turnips, carrots, radishes..� ~ Tribesmen of Gor p 37 | |
| Tur-pah | |
| An edible tree parasite with curly, red, ovate leaves; grows on | |
| the tur tree; a main ingredient in sullage. | |
| �The principal ingredients of Sullage are the golden Sul, the | |
| starchy, golden-brown vine-borne fruit of the golden-leaved Sul | |
| plant; the curled, red, ovate leaves of the Tur-Pah, a tree | |
| parasite, cultivated in host orchards of Tur trees,...� | |
| ~ Priest Kings of Gor page 45. | |
| Vulo | |
| A tawny-colored bird, similar to a pigeon, exists in the wild; | |
| used for meat and eggs. | |
| �She had been carrying a wicker basket containing vulos, | |
| domesticated pigeons raised for eggs and meat.� ~ Nomads of Gor | |
| page 1 | |
| �Behind them another four haruspexes, one from each People, | |
| carried a large wooden cage, made of sticks lashed together, | |
| which contained perhaps a dozen white vulos, domesticated | |
| pigeons.� ~ Nomads of Gor page 84 | |
| ***************************************************** |