
You're bound to want a drink to go with all this rich Viking food, so be sure to check out our guide to brewing mead in the Fermenter. Right now there are only two recipes that use the oven, but they do provide some of the highest food buffs in the game. The Stone Oven is a new cooking mechanic added in Valheim's Hearth & Home update. Lox Meat x2, Cloudberries x2, Barley Flour x4 Raspberries x8, Blueberries 圆 (yields 4)īoar Meat x1, Entrails x4, Thistle x1 (yields 4)Ĭooked Serpent Meat x1, Mushroom x1, Honey x2


Food ItemĬooked Dear Meat x1, Carrot x1, Blueberry x1 If you're one of the many players wondering why you can't cook sausages any more, it's because you now need to upgrade your Cauldron to Level 2 (Spice Rack) and have butchered a specific animal (Boar) for its meat. In addition to getting a heap of new recipes, the Cauldron now has several upgrade levels affecting what recipes you can cook. The Cauldron has seen the most significant changes in the Hearth & Home update. Now the game tracks which animal you harvested a piece of meat from and provides a unique food buff accordingly. With the Hearth & Home update, gone are the days of generic meat and its slightly unappetising implications. The Cooking Station allows you to process raw meats into something edible. N/A (neutralises other active food buffs by causing your character to vomit)Ĭultivated from seeds found in the Black Forest biomeĬultivated from seeds found in the Mountains biomeīurial Chambers, Troll Caves, and Sunken Crypts Some - though not all - of these raw ingredients can be eaten as you find them for a low-level buff.

At its most basic level, you can forage foods from the game's various biomes, or cultivate crops in your base.

All recipes in Valheim and where to cook them Valheim: edible raw foodsĬharacters in Valheim don't actually need to eat to survive (this is an afterlife, after all), but food can provide Health and Stamina buffs that can mean the difference between (un)life and (another) death when in combat.
