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40d:Food

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Revision as of 15:58, 30 July 2009 by Höhlenschreck (talk | contribs) (this has been missing much too long)
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Food is anything dwarves eat to ward off starvation, but if they are not able to attain sustenance then they will eventually die. The most common foods are meat, fish, crops, and gathered shrubs.

A healthy adult dwarf consumes approximately 9 units of food per year.[Verify]

Eating good food will make your dwarves happy, so a good cook is an excellent investment. Also, each dwarf has a preference for certain foods.

For details on the different ways to obtain food, see the Food guide.

Food is essential

Food is the only resource that a dwarf will die from not having access to. This makes food crucial to the survival of your fortress. Before you know it your 200 population will dive-bomb right down to 10 or even lower. Your population will go on a downward spiral because of all the Miasma and dead bodies, and of course you'll have fewer farmers/hunters to generate new food. If you're very lucky you can start again in another area, or you can get some helpful migrants.

Remember to keep a large stockpile of food. If you do not have food;

  • Dwarves will become unhappy and generate bad thoughts
  • Dwarves will start hunting for vermin instead of doing important jobs
  • Dwarves will get upset and start breaking things
  • Dwarves will get mad and start trying to kill each other
  • Dwarves will die from starvation
  • The new dead bodies will only make everyone even more depressed

Sources

The possible sources of food are farming, plant gathering, fishing, trading, butchering animals, hunting, and a few exotic processes. Farming is by far the most reliable, plant gathering is perhaps the easiest to manage, and fishing is good early in a fortresses' life. If you are constantly experiencing problems with starvation, you are well advised to look into additional means of procuring food.

Processes

Some food is inedible raw, and needs processing first. For example:

Unprocessed food and non-food crops will be stored in a food stockpile and take up barrel space, the bookkeeper can tell you how much of each type of "food" you have in the stocks screen.

Eating

A dwarf with the "Eat" task will pick up a unit of food, often according to his or her dietary preferences, but also influenced by proximity and age of the item (new first), then bring it to an available table or chair for consumption. A private room will normally be chosen over a public room; for this reason, note that a dwarf who owns a table-less office but no dining room will complain about the lack of tables, even if a high-quality public dining room is available. This problem is easily solved by adding a table next to such an office-chair (like you would in a dining room). Also note that eating in a high-quality dining room does wonders for a dwarf's mood.

Dwarves will eat two meals per season on average, and drink four drinks. A fortress of 100 dwarves will thus consume 800 meals (food-units) and 1600 drinks (booze-units) in a single year. Plan your stockpiles accordingly.


Types

Food comes in two main varieties: meat and plants, with cooked food possibly mixing the two.

Plants can be grown underground or on the surface, and a single dedicated grower/harvester can produce enough food for all but the largest of fortresses. The advantages of plants are the infinite and readily available supply, and the versatility; plants can be brewed, made into clothing and dye, and also used as further ingredients for cooking. Further processing plants leads to greater amount delivered as an end product. The small disadvantage is it's potential continuos growth; when you do produce more plants than your dwarves eat, plant stockpiles will eventually envelop all available space. Check occasionally and possibly let your plots lie fallow for some time.

Meat can be obtained from hunting and fishing, as well as raising livestock. Uncooked meat and fish is subject to wear and will eventually rot if it is not cooked, even in barrels, even on stockpiles. The advantages are the additional skills raised during hunting, and there is less mass labor required for butchering meat or cleaning fish than planting a seed, harvesting, eating or processing the crop, moving the seed to a pile and "re-"plant it. Cleaned Turtles leave behind bones and shells. Animals, when butchered, leave behind large stacks of bones, tallow, and usually raw hides and skulls. An export industry devoted to bone crafts can be worthwile, and marksdwarves always benefit from a cheap supply of bolts made from bone. The disadvantages are a limited supply of food; in the current version, animals are eventually depleted from a map, and even though aquatic life restocks, there are limited numbers present at a particular time, so larger fortresses usually cannot be supported with hunting/fishing alone. There is also no way to make alcohol from animals, so without trading, some plants are necessary. Finally, even though livestock breeding can be unlimited, the additional units on the map required for this to work put additional strain on the CPU, slowing the game down.

On occasion, if you have a trapper that has captured a vermin creature in an animal trap, a dwarf may eat that creature instead of other food.

Storage

Food is stored in food stockpiles and may be placed in barrels. Seeds (and powders, such as flour or dye) are put in bags, which are themselves stored within barrels. Meat and prepared meals will rot (making it inedible) if not placed on a stockpile within a month or so. Plants not on a stockpile will wither, which also makes them inedible but does not produce miasma. Food on a stockpile will never rot, nor will food in a barrel even if it is not on a stockpile. Seeds will never rot no matter where they are.

According to Toady, vermin can eat your food, even when it is on a stockpile (although the amount they eat appears to be quite minimal). Food in barrels is even less likely to be eaten by vermin.

Cooking

Raw food can be cooked into meals at a kitchen. Cooking gives meat and seafood unlimited shelf-life. Cooked meals also have a quality modifier, and a high quality meal is far more valuable as a trade item or in generating happy thoughts in the dwarf eating the meal. The wider the variety of ingredients that a meal contains, the greater the number of dwarves who will have a preference for that meal. Cooking destroys all seeds, shells and bones.

See Also: Kitchen