To Cook or Not to Cook, That is the Question...
If only the wood cooking rack is available, cooking is a no-brainer. One cannot eat raw meat and meat is the only thing one can cook. Unless one wishes to be a vegetarian viking, one must cook.
Once the Cauldron comes into play, the cooking question becomes more complex. Cooking in a cauldron has three major advantages to raw foods:
1) A cooked food gives a viking more combined health and stamina points than any single one of its raw components;
2) The healing rate of a cooked food (2 hit points per tick) is double that of any raw food; and,
3) Except for the various jerkies, cooked foods have a duration of 300 seconds more than any raw food.
I have seen complaints posted that consuming a cooked food gives a lower combined total of hit points and stamina points than consuming one of each of its raw components. Consuming one each of those raw components requires two of three available eating slots. Consuming one cooked food only requires one slot. Consuming any one of the raw components in a second slot will result in more combined hit and stamina points than the two raw components. That is before one even considers the increased healing rate and the increased duration of the food buff.
Of course one may disagree with the overall balance between raw and cooked foods. If one fails to consider all three advantages of cooked food, one's argument will be as weak as a viking who only eats to fill one of the three available slots.
Once the Cauldron comes into play, the cooking question becomes more complex. Cooking in a cauldron has three major advantages to raw foods:
1) A cooked food gives a viking more combined health and stamina points than any single one of its raw components;
2) The healing rate of a cooked food (2 hit points per tick) is double that of any raw food; and,
3) Except for the various jerkies, cooked foods have a duration of 300 seconds more than any raw food.
I have seen complaints posted that consuming a cooked food gives a lower combined total of hit points and stamina points than consuming one of each of its raw components. Consuming one each of those raw components requires two of three available eating slots. Consuming one cooked food only requires one slot. Consuming any one of the raw components in a second slot will result in more combined hit and stamina points than the two raw components. That is before one even considers the increased healing rate and the increased duration of the food buff.
Of course one may disagree with the overall balance between raw and cooked foods. If one fails to consider all three advantages of cooked food, one's argument will be as weak as a viking who only eats to fill one of the three available slots.
9:13 pm, November 12, 2021
Mharr replied to To Cook or Not to Cook, That is the Question... November 12, 2021 @ 1:46:32 pm PST
As a further detail, some later recipes will require raw ingredients so don't cook *everything*.
12:13 am, November 13, 2021
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jjones_50 replied to To Cook or Not to Cook, That is the Question... November 12, 2021 @ 2:58:01 pm PST
Onion soup, turnip stew and honey is super easy stamina food on farm.
12:13 am, November 13, 2021
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ChinoValley replied to To Cook or Not to Cook, That is the Question... November 12, 2021 @ 12:47:12 pm PST
Cook your food ffs, you're a viking, not a barbarian.
9:13 pm, November 12, 2021
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Meatball replied to To Cook or Not to Cook, That is the Question... November 12, 2021 @ 12:55:35 pm PST
Cooked food gives more than eating one of the raw pieces. Eating all raw may give more than the cooked food. BUT you can stack multiple cooked food for better stats than raw.
Cooked Deer, carrot, and blueberry may give more than one deer stew. BUT if I ate deer stew, carrot soup, AND boar jerky, that is WAYYYY more than just 3 raw foods.
Late game you want this big buff from cooked foods, as the raw stuff just doesnt scale well.
Cooked Deer, carrot, and blueberry may give more than one deer stew. BUT if I ate deer stew, carrot soup, AND boar jerky, that is WAYYYY more than just 3 raw foods.
Late game you want this big buff from cooked foods, as the raw stuff just doesnt scale well.
9:13 pm, November 12, 2021
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blankitosonic replied to To Cook or Not to Cook, That is the Question... November 12, 2021 @ 12:58:08 pm PST
In every survival game i saw or played raw meat its a big NO NO , like in real life can give you some dangers in your vital system
The cooking in valheim is a entire system that involves all your handicap ( hp stamina and hp regeneration ) so making more elaborated foods will give you more power , not coocking in this game , EVEN raw meat will not make you advance to black forest
The cooking in valheim is a entire system that involves all your handicap ( hp stamina and hp regeneration ) so making more elaborated foods will give you more power , not coocking in this game , EVEN raw meat will not make you advance to black forest
9:13 pm, November 12, 2021
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Meatball replied to To Cook or Not to Cook, That is the Question... November 12, 2021 @ 1:04:55 pm PST
In every survival game i saw or played raw meat its a big NO NO , like in real life can give you some dangers in your vital system
The cooking in valheim is a entire system that involves all your handicap ( hp stamina and hp regeneration ) so making more elaborated foods will give you more power , not coocking in this game , EVEN raw meat will not make you advance to black forest
Yeah, the cooking feels similar to Breath of the Wild. I like it
9:13 pm, November 12, 2021
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