Difference between revisions of "Tripe ration"

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{{message|Yak - dog food!|You ate a tripe ration and are not an orc, gaining 1 experience point and having a {{frac|2}} chance to become nauseous for 1d14 (more) turns, unless you are a Caveman.<ref name="dogfood"/>}}
 
{{message|Yak - dog food!|You ate a tripe ration and are not an orc, gaining 1 experience point and having a {{frac|2}} chance to become nauseous for 1d14 (more) turns, unless you are a Caveman.<ref name="dogfood"/>}}
 
{{message|That tripe ration was surprisingly good!|You ate tripe as a carnivorous non-humanoid.}}
 
{{message|That tripe ration was surprisingly good!|You ate tripe as a carnivorous non-humanoid.}}
{{message|Mmm, tripe... not bad!|As above, while an [[Orc (starting race)|orc]].}}
+
{{message|Mmm, tripe... not bad!|As above, while an orc.}}
 
{{message|Tastes great! Less filling!|As above while also [[hallucinating]].}}
 
{{message|Tastes great! Less filling!|As above while also [[hallucinating]].}}
  

Revision as of 12:01, 7 March 2023

% Tripe ration.png
Name tripe ration
Base price 15 zm
Nutrition 200
Turns to eat 2
Weight 10
Conduct meat

A tripe ration is a type of comestible item that appears in NetHack.

Generation

Tripe rations have the second-highest random generation probability of all comestibles after food rations: 14% of randomly generated comestibles will be tripe rations.

Description

When eaten, tripe rations provide 200 nutrition, but also have a 50% chance of giving you nausea along with a single experience point.[1] If you are a Caveman, an orc or a non-humanoid carnivorous monster (e.g. a canine through lycanthropy), you can eat it as a normal food item without becoming sick.[2]

Tripe rations are considered a treat for carnivorous pets (like dogs and cats), and increases the pet's apport when fed to them. Throwing tripe to a hostile or peaceful cat or dog will tame it, as will other forms of meat save for corpses; carrying a tripe ration in your main inventory will make a carnivorous pet stick around closer to you.

Strategy

Tripe rations are primarily useful in the early game for pacifying or taming hostile domestic animals that can otherwise do serious damage, allowing you to preserve more dependable sources of nutrition. They can also be instrumental in stealing from early shops, especially when money is scarce - entering a shop that has tripe before your pet does can be useful, since even if you don't have the money to buy the tripe, it still counts for apport if you pick it up and drop it.

Allowing your pet to eat tripe that you've recently handled raises apport, making the pet more likely to pick up items - keeping tripe in your inventory also entices carnivorous pets to keep close by, making pet management slightly easier. As tame cats and dogs will attempt to devour a tripe ration on sight, try to grab any tripe you see lying around before your pet can get to it, if only so you can raise that pet's apport.

Non-orcish characters can use tripe a source of confusion for reading scrolls, similar to eggs. The experience point gained from eating a tripe ration can also be used to regain a recently drained experience level, especially for pacifist conduct.

Messages

Yak - dog food!
You ate a tripe ration and are not an orc, gaining 1 experience point and having a 12 chance to become nauseous for 1d14 (more) turns, unless you are a Caveman.[1]
That tripe ration was surprisingly good!
You ate tripe as a carnivorous non-humanoid.
Mmm, tripe... not bad!
As above, while an orc.
Tastes great! Less filling!
As above while also hallucinating.

Encyclopedia entry

If you start from scratch, cooking tripe is a long-drawn-out affair. Fresh whole tripe calls for a minimum of 12 hours of cooking, some time-honored recipes demanding as much as 24. To prepare fresh tripe, trim if necessary. Wash it thoroughly, soaking overnight, and blanch, for 1/2 hour in salted water. Wash well again, drain and cut for cooking. When cooked, the texture of tripe should be like that of soft gristle. More often, alas, because the heat has not been kept low enough, it has the consistency of wet shoe leather.

[ Joy of Cooking, by I. Rombauer and M. Becker ]

References