Heroes' Feast Flavors of the Multiverse

An Official D&D Cookbook

Look inside
$35.00 US
Clarkson Potter/Ten Speed | Ten Speed Press
12 per carton
On sale Nov 07, 2023 | 9781984861313
Sales rights: World
Explore the cuisines of the Dungeons & Dragons multiverse with more than 75 delectable new recipes from the New York Times bestselling authors of Heroes’ Feast.

“Celebrate with delicious game-inspired recipes to feed your fantasy, fill your hearts, and swell your bellies.”—Todd Stashwick, actor, Star Trek: Picard

Never adventure on an empty stomach! From the D&D experts behind the bestselling Heroes’ Feast comes Heroes’ Feast Flavors of the Multiverse, a mouthwatering cookbook stuffed with eclectic fare for solo adventurers and party quests alike. This culinary tour presents original recipes inspired by regions and settings from across the Forgotten Realms and beyond. All seventy-six dishes, developed by a professional chef from one of the country’s top test kitchens, are delicious, easy to prepare, and composed of ingredients readily found in our world.

The immersive recipes in Heroes’ Feast Flavors of the Multiverse are perfect for sharing and entertaining. Dishes are organized by location with options for every occasion—especially game nights!—including

• otherworldly appetizers such as Talyth and Goldenstars
• savory main courses such as Steak of the Deep and Eldeen Banquet
• alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages such as Elverquist and Kaeth
• and desserts such as Green Ice Rime and Vada’s Vanilla Bean Buns

Adventure has never tasted so good!
Introduction

Can you name a tabletop activity that is highly social, builds community, and has infinite possibilities? If you said dining with friends, you’re right. If you said Dungeons & Dragons, you’re also right! Today, some fifty million people have played the game; D&Dinspired shows and movies top the charts; licensed D&D products fill retail shelves (ahem); and video games based on D&D’s concepts rule the screens. In short, D&D is everywhere—including the kitchen!

Initially published in 1974, Dungeons & Dragons was the world’s first role-playing game and would go on to revolutionize all aspects of the gaming industry and pop culture alongside it. It introduced an array of now-pervasive gaming concepts, from leveling up to gamified role assumption, but it notably held on to some aspects of its war-gaming past. Born out of a gaming culture that prized realistic simulation, the notion of needing food was inherent in the earliest versions of the game, usually represented in the simple tracking of weekly rations. To have any hope of surviving a protracted excursion in the dungeon underworld, you needed to stay fed. Simply put, in D&D, you must eat to live. But adventurers also needed a place to meet, carouse, and gather information, and what better venues to place in front of them than taverns, public houses, and other places of food and drink?

As the game developed through different communities, food became a key part of the game’s narrative experience. In many of the early modules, it was not uncommon for taverns to have long lists of food and drink from which adventurers could choose. For example, in the iconic Keep on the Borderlands, adventurers have the option of no less than five drinks and eight dishes, from honey mead and bark tea to pudding and roast joint. By the time the Forgotten Realms campaign world was in full force, there were entire books devoted to rating and discussing inns and dining establishments (thanks, Volo!). More cosmopolitan venues in the multiverse boasted restaurants that might seem worthy of a Michelin star or two.

Why so many options for an element of realism that could just as simply check the box? Perhaps it’s because early designers realized that food could provide new avenues for the narrative experience. Would a haughty aristocrat be content with iron rations? How well can that halfling hold her drink and what does she do when she doesn’t? This is to say, the unexpected, memorable, and hilarious moments of any given D&D session are as likely to come up over an in-game tankard of Neverwinter Nectar (page 30) as they are while battling a feisty gaggle of kobolds.

In the first book, Heroes’ Feast: The Official D&D Cookbook, we posed the question, “How can food elevate and enhance the D&D experience?” In Heroes’ Feast Flavors of the Multiverse, we ask, “How can cooking and dining play an essential part of the communal gaming experience?” The book that you are holding is both a guide to D&D food and a culinary companion to your game nights. It includes more than seventy-five delicious recipes, which you can enjoy alongside your in-game character. We’ve even created some food-loving characters of our own (once nameless adventurers taken straight from the cover of the first Heroes’ Feast) whose madcap, multiversal adventures provide the locational basis for the dishes herein. Our hope is that this book not only adds a visceral and delicious element to your games but also becomes another avenue to connect with fellow gamers. So, in the immortal words of the original Player’s Handbook, “enjoy, and may the dice be good to you.”
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“An immersive and flavorful dining experience for high fantasy adventuring parties, solo-explorers, and everyday people looking to throw a dinner party their guests won’t soon forget.”—Comic Book Resources

“Dungeons and Dragons fans have large imaginations, but this cookbook allows their creative juices to flow in the kitchen, too.”Popsugar

“Filled with seventy-plus mouth-watering recipes, from apps to desserts to drinks, to level-up your next adventure.”—Yahoo! Entertainment

“More than seventy-five dishes spread throughout seven different realms gives any home chef the choices they need to create a spectacular evening of companionship, adventure, and great food.”—Geeks of Doom

“It’s the type of cookbook that’ll have your D&D party frothing at the mouth just knowing you’re in possession of it.”—Den of Geek

“A joyous romp through the dishes of the D&D multiverse . . . It’s the perfect mix of delightful fan service and step-by-step culinary exploration, with flavors and textures that are out of this world . . . Regardless of your tabletop role-playing game of choice, Heroes’ Feast: Flavors of the Multiverse comes highly recommended.”Polygon

“Dungeons & Dragons has always been about fellowship. Gathering around a table with friends to share a story, a meal for the imagination. Heroes’ Feast Flavors of the Multiverse takes that joy and levels it up, inviting players for an actual meal. Celebrate with delicious game-inspired recipes to feed your fantasy, fill your hearts, and swell your bellies.”—Todd Stashwick, actor on Star Trek: Picard and cocreator of Mystic Libations: Critical Cocktails for the Thirsty Adventurer

“Once again these gents have accomplished the feat of expressing the fun, spirit, and environment of D&D through food and drink! No matter what plane you’re from or where your adventure takes you, you will have suitable sustenance for the journey. I’m pretty sure they must have hacked the guidance cantrip, but this seems like a Nat 20 of a book! This second volume should be considered a legendary magic item to any player or DM!”—Katherine McNamara, actor, baker, and D&D player

Heroes’ Feast Flavors of the Multiverse brings enchantment to the dining table with these delicious and lush recipes! The foodie in me wants to just reach into the pages and take a bite out of those vivid images of hearty meals! Beautiful cookbook.”—Ming-na Wen, actress on The Book of Boba Fett and The Mandalorian

“Who doesn’t want to eat like a dwarven king? Heroes’ Feast Flavors of the Multiverse boasts all the bounties of an elven table with zero attitude.”—Matthew Lillard, actor and cofounder of Beadle & Grimm’s

About

Explore the cuisines of the Dungeons & Dragons multiverse with more than 75 delectable new recipes from the New York Times bestselling authors of Heroes’ Feast.

“Celebrate with delicious game-inspired recipes to feed your fantasy, fill your hearts, and swell your bellies.”—Todd Stashwick, actor, Star Trek: Picard

Never adventure on an empty stomach! From the D&D experts behind the bestselling Heroes’ Feast comes Heroes’ Feast Flavors of the Multiverse, a mouthwatering cookbook stuffed with eclectic fare for solo adventurers and party quests alike. This culinary tour presents original recipes inspired by regions and settings from across the Forgotten Realms and beyond. All seventy-six dishes, developed by a professional chef from one of the country’s top test kitchens, are delicious, easy to prepare, and composed of ingredients readily found in our world.

The immersive recipes in Heroes’ Feast Flavors of the Multiverse are perfect for sharing and entertaining. Dishes are organized by location with options for every occasion—especially game nights!—including

• otherworldly appetizers such as Talyth and Goldenstars
• savory main courses such as Steak of the Deep and Eldeen Banquet
• alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages such as Elverquist and Kaeth
• and desserts such as Green Ice Rime and Vada’s Vanilla Bean Buns

Adventure has never tasted so good!

Excerpt

Introduction

Can you name a tabletop activity that is highly social, builds community, and has infinite possibilities? If you said dining with friends, you’re right. If you said Dungeons & Dragons, you’re also right! Today, some fifty million people have played the game; D&Dinspired shows and movies top the charts; licensed D&D products fill retail shelves (ahem); and video games based on D&D’s concepts rule the screens. In short, D&D is everywhere—including the kitchen!

Initially published in 1974, Dungeons & Dragons was the world’s first role-playing game and would go on to revolutionize all aspects of the gaming industry and pop culture alongside it. It introduced an array of now-pervasive gaming concepts, from leveling up to gamified role assumption, but it notably held on to some aspects of its war-gaming past. Born out of a gaming culture that prized realistic simulation, the notion of needing food was inherent in the earliest versions of the game, usually represented in the simple tracking of weekly rations. To have any hope of surviving a protracted excursion in the dungeon underworld, you needed to stay fed. Simply put, in D&D, you must eat to live. But adventurers also needed a place to meet, carouse, and gather information, and what better venues to place in front of them than taverns, public houses, and other places of food and drink?

As the game developed through different communities, food became a key part of the game’s narrative experience. In many of the early modules, it was not uncommon for taverns to have long lists of food and drink from which adventurers could choose. For example, in the iconic Keep on the Borderlands, adventurers have the option of no less than five drinks and eight dishes, from honey mead and bark tea to pudding and roast joint. By the time the Forgotten Realms campaign world was in full force, there were entire books devoted to rating and discussing inns and dining establishments (thanks, Volo!). More cosmopolitan venues in the multiverse boasted restaurants that might seem worthy of a Michelin star or two.

Why so many options for an element of realism that could just as simply check the box? Perhaps it’s because early designers realized that food could provide new avenues for the narrative experience. Would a haughty aristocrat be content with iron rations? How well can that halfling hold her drink and what does she do when she doesn’t? This is to say, the unexpected, memorable, and hilarious moments of any given D&D session are as likely to come up over an in-game tankard of Neverwinter Nectar (page 30) as they are while battling a feisty gaggle of kobolds.

In the first book, Heroes’ Feast: The Official D&D Cookbook, we posed the question, “How can food elevate and enhance the D&D experience?” In Heroes’ Feast Flavors of the Multiverse, we ask, “How can cooking and dining play an essential part of the communal gaming experience?” The book that you are holding is both a guide to D&D food and a culinary companion to your game nights. It includes more than seventy-five delicious recipes, which you can enjoy alongside your in-game character. We’ve even created some food-loving characters of our own (once nameless adventurers taken straight from the cover of the first Heroes’ Feast) whose madcap, multiversal adventures provide the locational basis for the dishes herein. Our hope is that this book not only adds a visceral and delicious element to your games but also becomes another avenue to connect with fellow gamers. So, in the immortal words of the original Player’s Handbook, “enjoy, and may the dice be good to you.”

Photos

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Praise

“An immersive and flavorful dining experience for high fantasy adventuring parties, solo-explorers, and everyday people looking to throw a dinner party their guests won’t soon forget.”—Comic Book Resources

“Dungeons and Dragons fans have large imaginations, but this cookbook allows their creative juices to flow in the kitchen, too.”Popsugar

“Filled with seventy-plus mouth-watering recipes, from apps to desserts to drinks, to level-up your next adventure.”—Yahoo! Entertainment

“More than seventy-five dishes spread throughout seven different realms gives any home chef the choices they need to create a spectacular evening of companionship, adventure, and great food.”—Geeks of Doom

“It’s the type of cookbook that’ll have your D&D party frothing at the mouth just knowing you’re in possession of it.”—Den of Geek

“A joyous romp through the dishes of the D&D multiverse . . . It’s the perfect mix of delightful fan service and step-by-step culinary exploration, with flavors and textures that are out of this world . . . Regardless of your tabletop role-playing game of choice, Heroes’ Feast: Flavors of the Multiverse comes highly recommended.”Polygon

“Dungeons & Dragons has always been about fellowship. Gathering around a table with friends to share a story, a meal for the imagination. Heroes’ Feast Flavors of the Multiverse takes that joy and levels it up, inviting players for an actual meal. Celebrate with delicious game-inspired recipes to feed your fantasy, fill your hearts, and swell your bellies.”—Todd Stashwick, actor on Star Trek: Picard and cocreator of Mystic Libations: Critical Cocktails for the Thirsty Adventurer

“Once again these gents have accomplished the feat of expressing the fun, spirit, and environment of D&D through food and drink! No matter what plane you’re from or where your adventure takes you, you will have suitable sustenance for the journey. I’m pretty sure they must have hacked the guidance cantrip, but this seems like a Nat 20 of a book! This second volume should be considered a legendary magic item to any player or DM!”—Katherine McNamara, actor, baker, and D&D player

Heroes’ Feast Flavors of the Multiverse brings enchantment to the dining table with these delicious and lush recipes! The foodie in me wants to just reach into the pages and take a bite out of those vivid images of hearty meals! Beautiful cookbook.”—Ming-na Wen, actress on The Book of Boba Fett and The Mandalorian

“Who doesn’t want to eat like a dwarven king? Heroes’ Feast Flavors of the Multiverse boasts all the bounties of an elven table with zero attitude.”—Matthew Lillard, actor and cofounder of Beadle & Grimm’s