v50 Steam/Premium information for editors
  • v50 information can now be added to pages in the main namespace. v0.47 information can still be found in the DF2014 namespace. See here for more details on the new versioning policy.
  • Use this page to report any issues related to the migration.
This notice may be cached—the current version can be found here.

Quarry bush

From Dwarf Fortress Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Quarry bush
· ·
· ·
· =
= =
. .
Urist likes quarry bushes for their gray leaves.
Seed

· Rock nuts

Graphic

No graphic

Seasons
Spring Summer Autumn Winter
Biome

  • Underground Depth: 1-3
Wet Dry
Products
Leaf Quarry bush leaf
Oil Rock nut oil
Plant Properties
Edible No
Cookable No
Leaf Properties
Edible No
Cookable Yes
Seed Properties
Edible Yes
Cookable Yes
Uses
This article is about the current version of DF.
Note that some content may still need to be updated.

The quarry bush is one of the six known subterranean crops, and as such it may only be grown underground. They can be planted in spring, summer and autumn.

Quarry bushes may be processed at a farmer's workshop into bags of quarry bush leaves, which then must be cooked at the kitchen to be edible. You will need an empty bag to be available for this task. Quarry bushes cannot be brewed into alcohol.

Processing quarry bushes at a farmer's workshop requires one bag, and will produce 5 quarry bush leaves (and one rock nut) for every plant in a given stack of quarry bushes. Quarry bush leaves will be removed from their bag if taken for cooking while still in a farmer's workshop.

Cooking quarry bush leaves can result in very large stacks of Prepared Food, thus saving space and barrels. In a fortress that relies on selling large, expensive stacks of Prepared Food, quarry bush leaves are great filler: a lavish meal made from whip wine and dwarven cheese with two stacks of quarry bush leaves for filler is worth almost ten times more than an easy meal made from wine and cheese alone.

Some dwarves like quarry bushes for their gray leaves.

Rock nuts

Quarry bush seeds are known as rock nuts. Although their material definition marks them as being edible raw, dwarves will not eat them.

Rock nuts can be milled at a millstone or quern into rock nut paste, using the s job to mill seeds/nuts to paste. This paste can then be used in cooking, or pressed at a screw press into a rock nut press cake and a jug of rock nut oil.

Both the rock nut paste and rock nut press cake are cookable and considered a single food category, referred to as "rock nut" in the cooking permissions screen (not to be confused with "rock nuts", the entry for the seeds), the Stocks screen compacted view, and Prepared meal descriptions.

The rock nut oil can be cooked or used in place of tallow to make soap.

Use moderation when commanding rock nuts converted to paste - the nuts are required to re-plant the crop; if you grind up your entire supplies, you can't grow new quarry bushes.

The main attraction of grinding up rock nuts is the production of rock nut oil as soapmaking ingredient. Both the globs of paste and the press cakes are minimum-value cooking ingredients, at 1☼ each. When looking at cooking ingredients, the quarry bush leaves completely overshadow what can be gained from an oil-pressing operation.

Plant Gathering

Due to a quirk in the Raws, a wild Quarry Bush plant growing underground (not planted) can yield 6 leaves if placed in a Gathering zone. An Herbalist will first harvest a single leaf growth, then collect the entire plant, which can be processed as usual afterwards for 5 more leaves.

Food Value

Thanks to the increased value of rock nut oil as a by-product of rock nut processing, the highest potential value of products gleaned from one quarry bush plant is 56 (five leaves at a value of 10 each, plus oil and a press cake).

  • Grow time: 500
  • Plant value: 2
  • Spice value: 10(x5)
  • Seed value: 1
  • Mill value: 1
  • Press cake value: 1
  • Press oil value: 5
Surface
Crops
Garden
Other
Subterranean
Surface
AbacaAcaciaAlderAlmondAppleApricotAshAvocadoBananaBayberryBirchBitter orangeCacao treeCandlenutCarambolaCashewCedarCherryChestnutCitronCoconut palmCoffeeCustard-appleDate palmDesert limeDurianFeather treeFinger limeGinkgoGlumprongGuavaHazelHighwoodKapokKumquatLarchLimeLycheeMacadamiaMahoganyMango treeMangroveMapleOakOliveOrangePapayaParadise nutPeachPearPecanPersimmonPinePlumPomegranatePomeloRambutanRound limeRubber treeSaguaroSand pearTeaWalnutWillow
Subterranean
Surface
Subterranean