Post by sweetlarma on May 30, 2006 7:52:39 GMT -5
slave wine
Step 1: siproot must be gathered from the woods around Ragnar.. a small basket easily carried is ideal for this portion of the task..
Step 2: the root needs to be washed and scrubbed thoroughly.. then chopped with the cooking knife or broken with her hands into fair size hunks.. similar she thinks to preparing earth potatoes for boiling..
Step 3: place the clean chopped sip root in a large cauldron or cooking kettle.. the pot needs to be at at least double the size of the amount of root.. hang the pot over the fire.. add the liquid ingredient.. the kalana, perhaps using any inferior kalana that might be available and unfit for serving to the Frees in Home..
Step 4: the "brew" needs to be monitored closely.. stirred often with a large wooden paddle to insure that it doesn't scorch or stick as it cooks and seeps ever so slowly over the fire for the required 12 ahn.. adding more kalana if necessary as it simmers..
Step 5: once the cooking process is complete.. remove the kettle carefully from the fire and set it aside to cool.. again this process may take a few ahn depending on the quantity and size of the cooking vessel..
Step 6: fetch a number of empty bottles, a small funnel and ladle .. carefully fill the bottles with the cooled mixture and cork them.. clean up your work area, the kettle and any utensils used
"Slave wine is bitter intentionally so. Its effect last for more than a Gorean month. I did not wish the females to conceive, A female slave is taken off slave wine only when it is her Masters intention to breed her." --Marauders of Gor pg 23,24.
"He proffered me a cup and I with one hand holding the blanket about me with the other drank its contents. It was a foul brew but I downed it. I did not know at the time but it was slave wine. Men sledom breed upon their slave s." --Slave of Gor pg 69.
"I held the object before her. She regarded it with dismay, I have already chewed sip root within the moon, she said. She did not need the sip root of course for as she had pointed out she had had some within the moon and indeed the effect of sip root in the raw state in most women is three or four moons." Blood Brothers of Gor pg 319.
(( **Quotes showing SLAVE WINE Lasts indefinately** )) "In the concentrated state as in slave wine developed by the Caste of Physicians the effect ( of sip root ) is almost indefinite, usually requiring a releaser for its remission, usually administered to a slave in what is called breeding wine or second wine." -- Blood Brothers of Gor pg 319.
"Have you had your slave wine?" asked Ina. "Yes," I said. This is not really wine, or an alcoholic beverage. It is called slave wine I think for the amusement of the Masters. It is extremely bitter. One draught of the substance is reputed to last until the administration of an appropriate releaser. In spite of this belief however or perhaps in deference to tradition, ing from earlier times, in which, it seems less reliable slave wines were available, doses of this foul stuff are usually administered to female slaves at regular intervals usually once or twice a year. Some s rather cynical ones, I suspect speculate that the Masters give it to them more often than necessary just because they enjoy watching them down the terrible stuff." --Dancer of Gor pg 174.
Slave wine makes sense in a slave-holding ure, such as Gor. The breeding of slaves, like any sort of domestic animals, and particularly valuable ones, is carefully controlled. As a slave, of course, I could be bred or crossed, when, and however, my master might see fit. It is the same with other animals. . .
. . . When the is taken to the breeding cell or breeding stall, she is normally hooded. Her selected mate is also hooded. In this fashion personal attachments are precluded. She is not there to know in whose arms she lies, or piteously, and in misery, to fall in love, but to be impregnated. And in accord with the prescribed anonymity of the breeding, as would be expected, the slaves do not speak to one another. They may be slain if they do. Their coupling is public, of course, in the sense that the master, or usually, masters, and sometimes others, whether in an official capacity or not, are present, to make any pertinent payments or determinations. --Dancer of Gor, pg. 175
"What is it? I asked, startled. It seemed he had produced this almost by magic. It was a soft, leather botalike flask, drawn from within his tunic. Slave wine he said. Need I drink that? I asked, apprehensively. Unless you have had slave wine, he said, I have no intention of taking you through the streets clad as you are. Suppose you are d. I put the flask, which he had opened, to my lips. Its opening was large enough to drink freely from. It is bitter! I said, touching my lips to it. It is the standard concentration, and dosage, he said, plus a little more, for assurance. Its effect is indefinite, but it is normally renewed annually, primarily for symbolic purposes. I could not believe how bitter it was. I had learned from Susan, whom I had once questioned on the matter, the objectives and nature of slave wine. It is prepared from a derivative of sip root. The formula, too, I had learned, at the insistence of masters and slavers, had been improved by the caste of physicians within the last few years. It was now, for most practical purposes, universally effective. Too, as Drusus Rencius had mentioned, its effects, at least for most practical purposes, lasted indefinitely. Have no fear, said Drusus Rencius. The abatement of its effects is reliably achieved by the ingestion of a releaser." ( Kajira of Gor pg. 130)
Step 1: siproot must be gathered from the woods around Ragnar.. a small basket easily carried is ideal for this portion of the task..
Step 2: the root needs to be washed and scrubbed thoroughly.. then chopped with the cooking knife or broken with her hands into fair size hunks.. similar she thinks to preparing earth potatoes for boiling..
Step 3: place the clean chopped sip root in a large cauldron or cooking kettle.. the pot needs to be at at least double the size of the amount of root.. hang the pot over the fire.. add the liquid ingredient.. the kalana, perhaps using any inferior kalana that might be available and unfit for serving to the Frees in Home..
Step 4: the "brew" needs to be monitored closely.. stirred often with a large wooden paddle to insure that it doesn't scorch or stick as it cooks and seeps ever so slowly over the fire for the required 12 ahn.. adding more kalana if necessary as it simmers..
Step 5: once the cooking process is complete.. remove the kettle carefully from the fire and set it aside to cool.. again this process may take a few ahn depending on the quantity and size of the cooking vessel..
Step 6: fetch a number of empty bottles, a small funnel and ladle .. carefully fill the bottles with the cooled mixture and cork them.. clean up your work area, the kettle and any utensils used
"Slave wine is bitter intentionally so. Its effect last for more than a Gorean month. I did not wish the females to conceive, A female slave is taken off slave wine only when it is her Masters intention to breed her." --Marauders of Gor pg 23,24.
"He proffered me a cup and I with one hand holding the blanket about me with the other drank its contents. It was a foul brew but I downed it. I did not know at the time but it was slave wine. Men sledom breed upon their slave s." --Slave of Gor pg 69.
"I held the object before her. She regarded it with dismay, I have already chewed sip root within the moon, she said. She did not need the sip root of course for as she had pointed out she had had some within the moon and indeed the effect of sip root in the raw state in most women is three or four moons." Blood Brothers of Gor pg 319.
(( **Quotes showing SLAVE WINE Lasts indefinately** )) "In the concentrated state as in slave wine developed by the Caste of Physicians the effect ( of sip root ) is almost indefinite, usually requiring a releaser for its remission, usually administered to a slave in what is called breeding wine or second wine." -- Blood Brothers of Gor pg 319.
"Have you had your slave wine?" asked Ina. "Yes," I said. This is not really wine, or an alcoholic beverage. It is called slave wine I think for the amusement of the Masters. It is extremely bitter. One draught of the substance is reputed to last until the administration of an appropriate releaser. In spite of this belief however or perhaps in deference to tradition, ing from earlier times, in which, it seems less reliable slave wines were available, doses of this foul stuff are usually administered to female slaves at regular intervals usually once or twice a year. Some s rather cynical ones, I suspect speculate that the Masters give it to them more often than necessary just because they enjoy watching them down the terrible stuff." --Dancer of Gor pg 174.
Slave wine makes sense in a slave-holding ure, such as Gor. The breeding of slaves, like any sort of domestic animals, and particularly valuable ones, is carefully controlled. As a slave, of course, I could be bred or crossed, when, and however, my master might see fit. It is the same with other animals. . .
. . . When the is taken to the breeding cell or breeding stall, she is normally hooded. Her selected mate is also hooded. In this fashion personal attachments are precluded. She is not there to know in whose arms she lies, or piteously, and in misery, to fall in love, but to be impregnated. And in accord with the prescribed anonymity of the breeding, as would be expected, the slaves do not speak to one another. They may be slain if they do. Their coupling is public, of course, in the sense that the master, or usually, masters, and sometimes others, whether in an official capacity or not, are present, to make any pertinent payments or determinations. --Dancer of Gor, pg. 175
"What is it? I asked, startled. It seemed he had produced this almost by magic. It was a soft, leather botalike flask, drawn from within his tunic. Slave wine he said. Need I drink that? I asked, apprehensively. Unless you have had slave wine, he said, I have no intention of taking you through the streets clad as you are. Suppose you are d. I put the flask, which he had opened, to my lips. Its opening was large enough to drink freely from. It is bitter! I said, touching my lips to it. It is the standard concentration, and dosage, he said, plus a little more, for assurance. Its effect is indefinite, but it is normally renewed annually, primarily for symbolic purposes. I could not believe how bitter it was. I had learned from Susan, whom I had once questioned on the matter, the objectives and nature of slave wine. It is prepared from a derivative of sip root. The formula, too, I had learned, at the insistence of masters and slavers, had been improved by the caste of physicians within the last few years. It was now, for most practical purposes, universally effective. Too, as Drusus Rencius had mentioned, its effects, at least for most practical purposes, lasted indefinitely. Have no fear, said Drusus Rencius. The abatement of its effects is reliably achieved by the ingestion of a releaser." ( Kajira of Gor pg. 130)