oocI’m sorry about how big this post was! He was a cook during the time and I hadn’t done any writing on preparing food! Thanks for bearing with me. I promise I don’t always do this. A busy, busy, day. That was the only way to define it in Orion's mind. In his time working as a cook there was one thing the blue eyed man had learned. People like food. A lot. And there was only one thing which they liked more. Food they didn’t need to prepare themselves. In to the tavern they would come in never ending masses and it would certainly keep Orion busy. He was but a humble assistant, though, so while the head chef was busy preparing individual, beautiful, tasty dishes, Orion had a less enviable but no less important task. He had to make ‘The Special.” A strange is-it-a-soup-or-is-it-a-stew combination of potatoes, carrots, onions, peppers, leeks, herbs, and if one was a lucky, they’d get a chunk of mystery meat. Orion would, however, contend that those who avoided it were the lucky ones. It was a cheap dish whose consistency was closer to paste than liquid but never quite reached either state. Quantity over quality was its purpose. No other way around it.
Orion sighed as he looked at the piles of food before him. He needed to cut them up and get to work creating another wonderful pot of the meal, but before he could do that, he needed to prepare the water. He’d long since put water in the container, but that was it. The brazier was burning low, so to remedy that the young man tossed a few small logs in the flame to begin getting the heat going and dragged the metal pot over the flame to begin heating the liquid. “Let’s see…what was it…first boil the water….after it’s boiled, add the vegetables.” In order to do that he’d need to have them actually ready to go. Taking the chef’s knife in hand, he began to work. His knuckles were bandaged on his left hand from a few incidents from when he was learning how to properly use this specific style of knife, but he could only hope he was past that now. Grasping the tool by its bolster, with his thumb on the inside of the blade and his index finger on the outside and neither below the blade, of course, Orion began to work, slicing through potato and onion alike. The sharp instrument easily penetrated the skin of the food, as diligent, if slow, slices were made by his hand. The other hand kept the vegetables steady while he worked. Over and over again he sliced and diced while he made his way through green peppers and carrots alike. There was enough to chop up that by the time he finished them, the water was coming to a roaring boil. He added the chopped vegetables, scooping them handful after handful into the vat of bubbling liquid.
“Alright, now to let those cook for a while. I can get the herbs and the meat ready while I do so.” Since they needed to get this meals out quickly, instead of allowing the meat to cook in the pot with the veggies, they would pan sear it and add it after the fact. He tossed the strips of meat on a pan being heated by another brazier and changed his focus to the flavor he’d be adding. “Alright, what do we have here…” Orion examined the two additions he would be using. A lovely variation in flavor these had. The bitter rosemary mixed with the tangy, flavorful, and spicy cumin seed to create a lovely battle for flavor on the palette. He filled the mortar with the seeds and took the pestle in his other hand. Placing the head of the small stone club he began to grind in circles around the bowl, keeping constant pressure and constant movement to take the seeds and turn them into find powder. Stone on stone scraped, thought he boiling veggies and frying meat did much to hide the sound.
After a short while of working at it the cumin was finely ground and ready to be added. He tipped the container over into the pot and tapped the bottom of the mortar to make sure he got as much out as he could. Setting it down, he gave the mix a quick stir and turned his attention to the rosemary, but not before flipping the meat over. Knife in hand, he began finely chopping the herb, it’s bitter flavor not hidden by the aromatic scent it gave off. Once it was ready, he added it, stirred again, and waited on the meat.
“After the meat is added, I’ll add a little flour to thicken it up, and then remove a little heat and let it go for a bit,” he said. Once the food was on the last stage, he was planning on going out to help clear some tables and mingle a little. The sort of stew would need to broil for some time before it could be set off to thicken. After a few more chimes, Orion picked up the pan by its handle and poured the strange meat it, juices, fat, and all. In it plopped, and after he set the pan down, there followed several handfuls of flour. “Give it a quick stir and…there we have it.” Reaching in with a pair of tongs, Orion removed a couple of logs to give it less heat, placing them on an area of stone just for that purpose.
“And now we wait.” He strode out of the kitchen, looking to clear tables, but things would change. His entrance coincided with that of a particularly good looking redhead. Those deep blue eyes stood out in a crowd of plain ones, and he made his way over before any of the servers could do so. “Welcome, welcome. What can I do for you?” He bowed in greeting, flashing his pearly whites as he stood back up. “Follow me, I’ll get you seated, a drink, and a warm meal. How does that sound?”