LAYOUT
VESSELS
-
Tankards or
horns (on request) are used to serve ale or mead
-
Goblets are
used to serve ka-la-na, ta-wine, palm wine, water, and juices
-
Footbowls
are used to serve paga, sul-paga, and kalda
-
Mugs are used
to serve blackwine
-
Plates are
used to serve meals
STORAGE
-
Tankards and
goblets are stored on the top shelf and second shelf above the counter.
-
Horns are
hanging upon back wall of the servery
-
Footbowls
are stored on the first shelf above the counter in the servery
-
Mugs are stored
on the second shelf above the counter in the servery
-
Plates, trays,
and serving kettles are under the counter in the servery
COOL ROOM
- Casks of Ale
with spigots
Casks of Mead
with spigots
Bottles of
kalana and ta-wine
Botas are found
handing aside the hearth for warmed Paga and such, also in the cold room for chilled
All other items
of food or vegetables that must be kept cool
A crate of
icecubes so a room temp drink can be served chilled
A bucket of icechips
and water for chilling vessels.
~
"My house, incidentally, like most Gorean
houses, had no ice chest. There is little cold storage on Gor. Generally food is preserved by being dried or salted. Some
cold storage, of course, does exist. Ice is cut from ponds in the winter, and then stored in ice houses, under sawdust. One
may go to the ice houses for it, or have it delivered in ice wagons. Most Goreans, of course, cannot afford the luxury of
ice in the summer."
~ Guardsman of Gor, page 295 ~
THE WINE RACK
- All drinks
served at room temp are stored in bottles upon the wine rack, all wines served chilled are located in the cold room upon the
wine racks there
- Casks with
spigots hold room temp ale and mead
- Botas of paga
and sul-paga are available for those that request them
THE HEARTH
Upon
the hearth is a kettle of blackwine, with a ladle. Various pots
and kettles hanging next to it ready for warming paga, ka-la-na, kal-da and cooking.
~
"She built up the fire. I watched her. She
unfolded and adjusted a single-bar cooking rack, placing it over the fire. From this she suspended a kettle of water. The
single bar, which may be loosened in its rings, and has a handle, may also function as a spit."
~ Renegades of Gor, page 150 ~
"The suspension of the meat reminded me of
the way peasant women sometimes cook roasts, tying them on a cord and dangling them, before a fire, then spinning the meat
from time to time. In this way, given the twisting and untwisting of the cord, the meat will cook rather evenly, for the most
part untended, and without spit turning."
~ Renegades of Gor, page 120 ~
Quotes
from the books in reference to serveries:
~
"There were several yards of sausages hung on hooks, numerous
cannisters of flour, sugars, and salts; many smaller containers of spices and condiments. Two large wine jugs stood in one
corner of the room. There were many closed pantries lining the walls, and a number of pumps and tubs on one side. Some boxes
and baskets of hard fruit were stored there. I could see the bread ovens in one wall, theh long fire pit over which could
be put cooking racks, the mountings for spits and kettle hooks; the fire pit was mostly black now, but here and there I could
see a few broken sticks of glowing charcoal, aside from this, the light in the room came from one small thalarion oil lamp
hanging from the ceiling..."
~ Assassin of Gor, pages 271-272 ~
Cooking on the rence islands:
"Before the feast I had helped the women, cleaning fish and
dressing marsh gants, and then, later, turning spits for the roasted tarsks, roasted over rence-root fires, kept on metal
pans, elevated above the rence of the islands by metal racks, themselves resting on larger pans."
~ Raiders of Gor, page 44 ~
VESSELS
The Taverns, inns and households of Gor use a variety of drinking vessels some examples of these
drinking vessels are: cups (brass, gold, silver, steel, ceramic, etc), footed-bowls (silver, golden, steel, etc), goblets
(metal goblets, a silver goblet studded with rubies, a golden goblet, and a kantharos, wineskins or botas made from verrskin
leather, bottles so large they must be supported by a shoulder sling, bronze vessels with a similar strap, a hydria or water
vessel, as well as bottles, sealed with the insignia of the brewer.
Amphora
Is a two
handled, narrow necked vessel with a narrow, pointed base; it is commonly buried overnight in the earth in a storage hole
with only its neck left above the surface; to cool certain beverages. Each Amphora would hold several gallons of liquid, and
are generally used to transport and store wines.
~
I
assumed, in an amphora, buried to the neck in the cool earth. Sometimes Earth girls, first brought to Gor, do not understand
why so many of these two-handled, narrow-necked vessels have such a narrow, usually pointed base, for they cannot stand upright
on such a base.
~
Mercenaries of Gor, page 257 ~
Bazi Tea cups
The Bazi
tea ceremony is carried out using three small cups, as dictated by ritual. These three cups can be made of various materials
from precious metals cups of silver or gold to plain enameled cups. The three cups could be part of a set, specifically for
the tea ceremony or individual cups.
~
Tea is extremely important to the nomads. It is served hot and heavily sugared. It gives them strength
then, in virtue of the sugar, and cools them, by making them sweat, as well as stimulating them. It is drunk three small cups
at a time, carefully measured.
~ Tribesmen of Gor, page 38 ~
BlackWine Vessels
Can be served
in a variety of containers; a silver cup, small red or black enameled cup, thick clay bowls or mug
Brass Cups
~
Some
of the plainer women are sold for as little as a brass cup; a really beautiful girl, particularly if of free birth and high
caste, might bring as much as forty pieces of gold; such are, however, seldom sold.
~
Nomads of Gor, Chapter 2 ~
Botas
A bag with
a reclosable stopper or cork, commonly made of verrskin leather; used to transport liquids. Often utilized by serving slave
girls, especially in the camps. Bota's are 'generally' used for traveling only.
~
They
were passing about a bota of paga and, between dancing and trying to hold one another up, managed to weave unsteadily by.
One of them looked at me and from his eyes I judged he may have seen at least three of me and offered me a swig of the bota,
which I took.
~
Asassins of Gor ~
Bottle
There are
two types of bottles, very large ones, similar to jugs, that are used to refill bowls and goblets, and smaller sizes that
are more like large wine bottles, they come with a corked top, like a wine bottle. Some are so large they must be supported
by a shoulder sling.
~
For
all his uproarious stomping about the wagon last night, Paga bottle in hand, singing gusty Tuchuk songs, half frightening
Miss Cardwell to death, he seemed in good spirits, looking about, whistling, occasionally pounding a little rhythm on the
side of his saddle.
~
Nomads of Gor~
Bowl
From bowls
for eating to bowls holding the oils for the lamps, to a shallow fire bowl. Dinner bowl is 6 inches
across and flat on the bottom. Paga bowl is 5 inches across and footed. Slave
bowl is 4 inches and shallow. Wine bowl or crater 3-4 inches across and is flat on the bottom,
very heavy and very deep.
~
A esture from the proprietor, the grimy man
in the tunic of white and gold, one of the serving slaves, with a flash of ankle bells, hurried to the Assassin and set before
him a bowl, which she trembling filled from the flask held over her right forearm. Then, with a furtive glance at the girl
chained at the side of the room, the serving slave hurried away.
~
Assassins of Gor ~
Cup
~
As
I entered the room the men rose to their feet and shouted and lifted their cups in salute.
~
Outlaw of Gor, chapter 4 ~
Drinking Horns
Are made
from the horns of animals, are often decorated with precious metals or jewels and can be found hanging beside the shelves
in the servery. Some Freepersons carry their own Drinking Horns and may prefer to use them to the ones in the establishment.
Drinking horns are most often used to hold mead.
Glasses / Goblets
There are
many references to glasses and goblets of all sizes.
~
Small,
heavy, curved glass was nearby, on a flat box, which would hold some two ounces of the tea. Bazi tea is drunk in tiny glasses,
usually three at a time, carefully measured.
~
Tribesman of Gor, chapter 8 ~
Hydria
Described
as a high handled water vessel, something similar is used by slave girls to dip paga from simmering kettles.
~
There were perhaps a hundred men, here and
there, within the enclosure, and some fifteen or twenty girls. The girls filled their vessels, which, like the hydria, or
water vessel, are high-handled, for dipping, in a large kettle hung simmering over a fire near the entrance to the enclosure.
Warm paga makes one drunk quicker, it is thought. I usually do not like my paga heated, except sometimes on cold nights.
~
Vagabonds of Gor, page 16 ~
Kantharos
This is
basically just a pitcher used to store various beverages.
~
She knelt near the table, put the tray on
the floor, unbidden performed obeisance and then, as though submissively, put to the tray on the table, and put the paga,
in a small kantharos, and the bread on its trencher, before me. Then she put the bowl of porridge, with a spoon, before me.
~
Renegades of Gor ~
Kegs/Barrels
Are not
exactly drinking vessel but they are used to store some of the beverages that you will be serving . Kegs and Barrels are kept
in the servery along the wall, they have spigots in the face that you turn to draw the beverage from. Be careful when drawing
that you do not allow the contents to foam too much.
Kettle
Used for
heating water or cooking in.
Plate
A plate
is a foot to 18 inches across, think dinner plate.
~
"With a serving prong she placed narrow strips
of roast bosk and fried sul on my plate."
~
Guardsman of Gor, page 234 ~
Rence Beer Serving Vessel
Rence beer
is served in a guord or flagon that it is poured into.
~
~
Raiders of Gor, pages 18 and 44 ~
Spoons
Many different
size spoons from tiny ones for sugar measurements to large ones for cooking
~
"The horn spoon snapped in his hands, and
he angrily threw the pieces into his bowl."
~
Assassin of Gor, page 120 ~
Tray
A tray is
silver, 2 1/2 feet by 2 feet.
~
"She
carried a tray, on which were various spoons and sugars. She knelt, placing her tray upon the table. With a tiny spoon, it's
tip no more than a tenth of a hort in diameter, she placed four measures of white sugar, and six of yellow; with two stirring
spoons, one for the white sugar, another for the yellow, she stirred the beverage after each measure."
~
Tribesmen of Gor, page 89 ~
Turian Liquor Glasses
Like many
strong liquors on urth are served in tiny glasses like shot glasses.
~
She picked up the small tray from the stand near the table. On it was
the small vessel containing a thick, sweet liqueur from distant Turia, the Ar of the south, and the two tiny glasses from
which we had sipped it. On the tray, too, was the metal vessel which had contained the black wine, steaming and bitter, from
far Thentis, famed for its tarn flocks, the small yellow-enameled cups from which we had drunk the black wine, its spoons
and sugars, a tiny bowl of mint sticks, and the softened, dampened cloths on which we had wiped our fingers.
~ Explorers of Gor, page 10 ~
Using knives in the servery
~
"The
ulo, or woman's knife, with its semicircular blade, customarily fixed to a wooden handle, is not well suited to carving. It
is better at cutting meat and slicing sinew."
~
Beasts of Gor, page 262 ~
How do slaves eat?
Seems that
slave girls mostly ate their gruel from troughs or from bowls, using their fingers.
~
"I shared breakfast with Elizabeth who informed
me that it was better than the porridge below in the trough in the feeding room for female staff slaves,..."
~
Assassin of Gor, pages 106-107 ~
This quote
mentions the use of a ladle, and bowls...
~
"The
slender blond girl, who had been giving men water from the skin bag, was now given the work of filling small bowls from the
large wooden bowl, for the bond-maids. She used a bronze ladle...The girls, including the slender blondish girl, emptied their
bowls, even to licking them, that no grain be left..."
~
Marauders of Gor, pages 64-65 ~