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George R R Martin Discuss the writings of author GRRM.


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Old 2nd February 2006, 09:07 PM   #16 (permalink)
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Re: The Food...the drink

Quote:
Originally Posted by napthali
I've made my quota so now i can post this

Here is a list of all the foods..I'm not sure if FFC is included
  • Summerwine is red, with a sweet and fruity flavor (I: 12, 41)
  • Roasted meats (I: 41)
  • Fresh bread (I: 41)
  • Pewter cups and mugs (I: 41)
  • Honeyed chicken (I: 43)
  • Roasted onions, dripped in gravy (I: 44)
  • Trenchers (I: 44)
  • Spiced wine (I: 46)
  • Beer (I: 74, etc.)
  • Honeyed duck (I: 82)
  • Sausage (I: 84)
  • Pastries (I: 84)
  • Honeyed wine (I: 84)
  • Blackberry preserves (I: 113)
  • Mint tea (I: 113)
  • Soft-boiled eggs (I: 113)
  • Bacon (I: 113)
  • Lemon cakes (I: 119)
  • Crab (I: 171)
  • Pomegranate (I: 172)
  • Sweet pumpkin soup (I: 181)
  • Ribs roasted in a crust of garlic and herbs (I: 181)
  • Suckling pig (I: 208)
  • Pigeon pie (I: 208)
  • Turnips soaked in butter (I: 208)
  • Dates (I: 211)
  • Iced milk sweetened with honey (I: 211)
  • Pork pie (I: 223)
  • Blueberry tarts (I: 225)
  • Blood melons (I: 234)
  • Silver goblets (I: 235)
  • Sweetgrass (I: 250)
  • Strawberries (I: 250)
  • Salads of sweetgrass, spinach, and plums (I: 251)
  • Sweetbreads (I: 251)
  • Trout baked in claw (I: 251)
  • Snails in honey and garlic (I: 251)
  • Thick soup of barley and venison (I: 251)
  • Baked apples fragrant with cinnamon (I: 251)
  • Lemon cakes frosted in sugar (I: 251)
  • Pepper (I: 257)
  • Drinking horns (I: 257, etc.)
  • Dark, strong beer (I: 259)
  • Black bread (I: 261)
  • Boiled goose eggs (I: 261)
  • Oranges (I: 261)
  • Lamprey pie (I: 299)
  • Mead (I: 327)
  • Boiled beans (I: 343)
  • Dish of peas and onions (I: 343)
  • Pitchers of cream (I: 362)
  • Sweet orange-scented wine (I: 362)
  • Sour red wine (I: 371)
  • Rack-of-lamb baked in garlic and herbs, garnished with mint (I: 372)
  • Mashed yellow turnips in butter (I: 372)
  • Salads of spinach, chickpeas, and turnip greens (I: 372)
  • Iced blueberries and sweet cream (I: 372)
  • Strawberry pies (I: 396)
  • Blood oranges (I: 397)
  • Porridge (I: 397)
  • Boar with an apple in its mouth, skin seared crisp (I: 422)
  • Applecakes (I: 430)
  • Blood sausage (I: 431)
  • Sweet Dornish summerwines (I: 492)
  • Dry red wine from the Arbor (I: 492)
  • Garlic sausage (I: 566)
  • Apricot tarts (I: 599)
  • Cherries (I: 602)
  • Buttermilk (I: 623)
  • Sweet biscuits (I: 623)
  • Beef-and-bacon pies (I: 647)
  • Boiled eggs (I: 652)
  • Ham steak (I: 652)
  • Plums (I: 652)
  • Lemon in beer (I: 652)
  • Salted beef (THK: 464)
  • Fried bread (THK: 489)
  • Pease porridge (THK: 504. TSS: 120)
  • Salt fish (II: 9)
  • Fish stew (II: 17)
  • Boar cooked with apples and mushrooms (II: 45)
  • Honeycomb (II: 58)
  • Oxtail soup (II: 90)
  • Summer greens tossed with pecans (II: 90)
  • Red fennel (II: 90)
  • Crumbled cheese (II: 91)
  • Crab pie (II: 91)
  • Spiced squash (II: 91)
  • Quails drowned in butter (II: 91)
  • Wheels of cheese (II: 102)
  • Sweetcorn eaten on the cob (II: 103)
  • Minced lamb with pepper (II: 115)
  • Oatmeal (II: 123)
  • Peppercrab stew (II: 124)
  • Salt cod (II: 124)
  • Capon (II: 183)
  • Brown oatbread (II: 183)
  • Stewed plums (II: 192)
  • Stuffed goose sauced with mulberries (II: 195)
  • Cream stews (II: 195)
  • Potted hare (II: 199)
  • Acorn paste that tastes awful, but can be eaten at need (II: 214)
  • Wine sweetened with honey and fragrant with cinnamon and cloves (II: 238)
  • Auroch joints roasted with leeks (II: 238)
  • Venison pies chunky with carrots, bacon, and mushrooms (II: 238)
  • Mutton chops sauced in honey and cloves (II: 238)
  • Peppered boar (II: 238)
  • Skewers of pigeon and capon (II: 238)
  • Beef-and-barley stew (II: 238)
  • Cold fruit soup (II: 238)
  • Whitefish and winkles, crabs and mussels, clams, herring, salmon, lobster, and lampreys are all eaten (II: 238)
  • Oat biscuits (II: 238)
  • Beets (II: 238)
  • Berry tarts (II: 238)
  • Pears poached in strongwine (II: 238, 255)
  • Wheels of white cheese (II: 238)
  • Chilled autumn ale (II: 238)
  • Goose-in-berries (II: 239)
  • Nettle tea (II: 246)
  • Tiny, savory fish rolled in salt and cooked crisp (II: 255)
  • Capons stuffed with onions and mushrooms (II: 255)
  • Venison stewed with beef and barley (II: 255)
  • Pastries, cream swans, spun-sugar unicorns, spiced honey biscuits, and apple crisps served as desert (II: 255)
  • Dinnerware such as gravy boats exist (II: 256)
  • Leg of lamb, sauced with mint and honey and cloves (II: 270)
  • Onion pie (II: 289)
  • Pigeon pie (II: 325, 576)
  • The extremely poor will eat whatever is necessary to survival - including dead cats (II: 330)
  • Barley stews with bits of carrot and turnip (II: 334)
  • Cinnamon, nutmeg, honey, raisins, nuts, and dried berries are used in hot spiced wine. Some southrons use lemons as well, but some consider this heresy (II: 374)
  • Some men put lemon in their morning beer (II: 374)
  • Ripe blue cheese (II: 404)
  • Oatcakes (II: 405)
  • The Arbor is said to make the finest wines in the world (II: 423)
  • Soups made of roots (II: 458)
  • Roasted rabbit basted with honey (II: 501)
  • An example of a breakfast: porridge, honey, milk, boiled eggs, and crisp fried fish (II: 555)
  • Creamy chestnut soup (II: 565)
  • Greens dressed with apples and pine nuts (II: 565)
  • Honeyed ham (II: 565)
  • Buttered carrots (II: 565)
  • White beans and bacon (II: 565)
  • Roast swan stuffed with mushrooms and oysters (II: 565)
  • Trout wrapped in bacon (II: 572)
  • Salad of turnip greens, red fennel, and sweetgrass (II: 572)
  • A golden vintage of wine from the Arbor, rich and fruity (II: 617)
  • Mutton roasted with leeks and carrots (II: 620)
  • Sweet plum wine (II: 621)
  • Barley bread (II: 655. III: 190. TSS: 116)
  • Peaches in honey (II: 669)
  • Pale amber wine (II: 686)
  • Hardbread (III: 121)
  • Oatcakes (III: 121)
  • Cider (III: 123)
  • Smoked salt fish (III: 125)
  • Molasses (III: 136)
  • A wedding feast of seventy-seven courses (III: 139)
  • A great wedding pie with a hundred live doves baked within to fly out when the crust is broken (III: 139)
  • Squab (III: 145)
  • A fine page's doublet (III: 145)
  • Duck with lemons, which may be a Dornish recipe (III: 148)
  • Fowl are hung outdoors for a few days before cooked (III: 149)
  • Lemons, olives, and pomegranates come chiefly from Dorne (III: 149)
  • Rabbit roasted on a spit (III: 149)
  • Rabbit stewed with ale and onions (III: 149)
  • Honeyed wine (III: 182)
  • Dried apples (III: 190)
  • Boar's ribs (III: 233)
  • Stewed onions (III: 233)
  • Mutton and mushrooms (III: 252)
  • Pease pudding (III: 252)
  • Baked apples with yellow cheese (III: 252)
  • Eels (III: 274)
  • Cakes with pinenuts baked in them (III: 277)
  • Blackberry cakes (III: 277)
  • Broth with chunks of whitefish, carrots, and onion (III: 286)
  • Meat and mash (III: 286)
  • Fish stew (III: 286)
  • Lamprey pie (III: 286)
  • The wine from the Arbor is known as Arbor gold (III: 323)
  • Pork crackling (III: 324)
  • Six coppers for a melon, a silver stag for a bushel of corn, and a gold dragon for a side of beef or six skinny piglets are all shockingly high prices (III: 354)
  • Thick cream of wheat with honey and butter (III: 372)
  • Dried berries (III: 377)
  • Beef-and-bacon pie (III: 404)
  • Hippocras (III: 421)
  • Prunes (III: 422)
  • Dornish tastes in food and wine are markedly different from those of the Seven Kingdoms, preferring hot spicy meals and strong wine without much sweetness (III: 434)
  • Mashed turnips (III: 449)
  • A bowl of venison stewed with onions (III: 530)
  • Sweet cakes (III: 533)
  • Casks of salt pork (III: 568)
  • Casks of pickled pigs' feet (III: 568)
  • Leek soup (III: 574)
  • Salad of green beans, onions, and beets (III: 574)
  • River pike poached in almong milk (III: 574)
  • Jellied calves' brains (III: 575)
  • A leche of string beef (III: 575)
  • Barrels of salt mutton (III: 612)
  • Iced wine (III: 614)
  • Buns with raisins, bits of dried apple, and pine nuts within (III: 614, 615)
  • Mutton cooked in a thick broth of ale and onions (III: 616)
  • Honeycakes baked with blackberries and nuts (III: 661)
  • Gammon steaks (III: 661)
  • Fingerfish crisped in breadcrumbs (III: 661)
  • Autumn pears (III: 661)
  • A Dornish dish of onions, cheese, and chopped eggs cooked with fiery peppers (III: 661)
  • A creamy soup of mushrooms and buttered snails (III: 674)
  • A pastry coffyn filled with pork, pine nuts, and eggs (III: 675)
  • Sweetcorn fritters (III: 676)
  • Oatbread baked with bits of date, apple, and orange (III: 676)
  • Trout cooked in a crust of crushed almonds (III: 676)
  • Roast herons (III: 676)
  • Cheese-and-onion pies (III: 676)
  • Crabs boiled in fiery eastern spices (III: 676)
  • Trenchers filled with chunks of chopped muton stewed in almond milk with carrots, raisins, and onions (III: 676)
  • Fish tarts (III: 676)
  • Honey-ginger partridge (III: 676)
  • Peacocks served in their plumage, roasted whole and stuffed with dates (III: 676)
  • Blandissory, a mixture of beef broth and boiled wine sweetened with honey and dotted with blanched almonds and chunks of capon (III: 677)
  • Buttered pease, chopped nuts, and slivers of swan poached in a sauce of saffron and peaches (III: 677)
  • Roundels of elk stuffed with ripe blue cheese (III: 678)
  • A leche of brawn, spiced with cinnamon, cloves, sugar, and almond milk (III: 678)
  • Hot, spiced pigeon pie covered with a lemon cream (III: 682)
  • Cups of onion broth (III: 718)
  • Dornish plums so dark as to be almost black (III: 743)
  • Gulls' eggs and seaweed soup are eaten by poorer people in coastal areas (III: 765)
  • Claret (TSS: 92)
  • Blackberries in cream (TSS: 147)
I'll have that for starters, come around later to note the main course

Last edited by cornelius; 2nd February 2006 at 09:28 PM.
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Old 2nd February 2006, 09:08 PM   #17 (permalink)
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Re: The Food...the drink

Quote:
Originally Posted by napthali
What would you order from the menu?
I'd definitely go for the elk, the cheese and onion pie, and the honeycakes, with some wine. Not so sure about the blandissory, though.

The cheese and onion pie would have to have eggs in it to be considered a quiche. Also, mead and mulled spiced wine are both very good. (One of my English Lit. professors would take us out for mead sometimes).

Can't say I would care for anything that the Dothrakis ate. Most of their meals turned my stomach.
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Old 2nd February 2006, 11:00 PM   #18 (permalink)
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Re: The Food...the drink

forgot to add roast "goat" to the menu..I hear it smells like pork

that was soooo wrong..they made him eat himself
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Old 2nd February 2006, 11:21 PM   #19 (permalink)
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Re: The Food...the drink

Quote:
Originally Posted by napthali
forgot to add roast "goat" to the menu..I hear it smells like pork

that was soooo wrong..they made him eat himself
Grooooaaan.
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Old 3rd February 2006, 12:06 AM   #20 (permalink)
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Re: The Food...the drink

Quote:
Originally Posted by napthali
that was soooo wrong..they made him eat himself
Who had to eat himself? Am I dense or just forgetting something?
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Old 3rd February 2006, 01:26 AM   #21 (permalink)
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Re: The Food...the drink

Spoiler.......Spoiler






At Harrenhal..Jamie is told that The Mountain that Rode sliced off bits of Vargo the Hoat and fed it to the prisoners and Vargo himself
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Old 24th May 2006, 06:02 PM   #22 (permalink)
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Re: The Food...the drink

Read the new preview chapter on Tyrion first.


From Tyrion and Illyrio's feast:

-hot peppers and pearl onions
-broth of crab and monkfish
-cold egg lime soup
-quails in honey
-saddle of lamb
-goose livers drowned in wine
-buttered parsnips
-suckling pig with plum sauce
-heron stuffed with figs
-veal cutlets blanched with almond milk
-creamed herring
-candied onions
-foul-smelling cheeses
-snails
-sweetbreads
-a black swan in her plumage (reminded Tyrion of Cersei)
-lots of wine

hungry?
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