ăIâm treating all of ye today! Drink up, drink upď˝ďźďźă
ăYeahďźďźă
ăBooze, boozeďźďźă
ăBring it all over hereďźďźă
Hiroshi and the others simply stared dumbfounded at the sight of the banquet started with the yell of one dwarf. They were not accustomed to this.
ăHey, lady.ă
ăYes, what is itďźă
ăIs this town always so livelyďźă
ăWell, not just this town. Any city with a pub that has a lot of dwarves is always this way.ă
Turn to the right? Dwarves. Turn to left? Also dwarves. This attendant was one of the few humans in the area, answering Makotoâs questions with an awkward smile.
The current city Hiroshi and his group were in was a town by the name of Aragod Mine, fifty kilometers to the north from the northernmost country of the Midas Federation, Genoa, making it one of Forreâs border cities. With it being a mining town, the population demographics consisted of seventy percent dwarves (a bit skewed), but the mining towns at the base of spirit spire mountain were basically the same way.
ăWell, I did hear of a huge cave-in incident today, but apparently there were no deaths or casualties, so I do get why people are so cheerful.ă
ăHahahaâŚâŚă
The attendant spoke as she lined up some food, while the Japanese party just let out dry laughter. After all, the whole reason Hiroshiâs group was here was because they had been involved in the rescue operation for the cave-in incident, demonstrating vigorous spirit in the process. In other words, they knew that there were not only no deaths, but no casualties, and since they were definitely the reason for that, the group couldnât quite hold back their dried laughter.
ăAnd look at them go. At this rate theyâll drink up the shopâŚâŚă
ăItâs all barreled liquor by this pointâŚâŚă
They had started out drinking from mugs for a toast, but by this point there was a barrel at every table despite the food not even being done yet. Not pitchers or even bottles, they were just at whole barrels now. And the dwarves werenât shocked in the slightest by the quantity, simply opening the corks with glee and pouring the contents into their mugs all around.
These barrels were filled to the brim with quite a bit of weight to them. From how they poured the liquor into their mugs without spilling a drop, you could tell how accustomed they were to drinking on a daily basis.
ăYâknow, the three of us kinda stick out, donât weâŚă
ăWe sure doâŚâŚă
ăHooray for being minorsďźă
ăYeah, probablyâŚâŚă
At present, the only ones in the shop not drinking were Hiroshi, Haruna, and Mio. Not just in this country, but in any country, Mio (naturally), Hiroshi and Haruna were strongly opposed to drinking liquor before they became twenty. Hiroshi and Haruna were generally responsible, only ingesting it on New Years or from food that used it, but they had never drank liquor under any illegal means. As for Mio, her body being weak, her parents were rather overprotective of her and there had not been a single trace of alcohol in the house before she was hospitalized. As a result, even if she did sometimes eat food that used liquor in it when going out, Mio had probably never even seen liquor before coming to this world.
So although the minor trio had an interest in the concept of getting drunk, they didnât have much of an interest in liquor itself. They used liquor quite often in cooking, so they were accustomed to the taste, but it was precisely because they knew the taste that they werenât especially eager to break the law just to drink it.
ăWell, thatâs probably it.ă
ăWhat isďźă
ăThereâs just one thing that doesnât seem right to me, based on what happened with the elvesâŚâŚă
ăAhď˝ăI get what youâre trying to say. I feel a bit weird about that too.ă
These dwarvesâ heights ranged from 140-150 cm, with beer barrel body builds and brilliant bearded faces. No matter how you looked at it, these were your typical dwarves found in any fantasy world. At least if they were all men.
ăRight? The elves were one thing, but the dwarves are super loyal to their image.ă
ăBut they donât have to be so loyal that both genders have bearded faces, do they?ă
ăI mean, donât ask me, I dunno.ă
Indeed, the dwarves in this world were your typical fantasy world dwarves, with splendid beards on both genders. You couldnât tell which was which just by looking at them, and yet they sounded just like humans or elves in the way they talked, which felt very off. Some of the female voices were beautiful enough to compete with Haruna or Aearis despite the outward appearance, which created an odd clash between appearance and voice.
ăWait, but if dwarves are this way, why are the elves like thatďźă
ăMio, Mio. I donât think ya can figure that out just by thinkinâ about it.ă
ăBut these are dwarves. We could have had legal lolis or somethingâŚâŚă
ăWell, I think Makoto-sanâll hafta question that strange expectation of yers later on. But anyhow, when itâs this hard to tell âem apart, ma sensorsâre gettinâ purty dull.ă
Hiroshi muttered with an odd expression as he thought about this rather pressing issue. It wasnât like it was problematic to not be able to distinguish between men and women, but this was Hiroshi weâre talking about, who couldnât trust the majority of women in general. Even if they looked that way, there was always the possibility of them being maidens at heart, so Hiroshi couldnât be blamed for cautioning himself.
ăWell, while weâre here, letâs forget about the silly things and eat some Forre cuisine!ă
ăExactly. If thereâs any trouble, weâll deal with it then.ă
Tatsuya and Haruna figured it was time to wrap up the conversation, despite Hiroshiâs earnest predicament. Hearing the proposition, Hiroshi grimaced, nodded, and then started taking some food.
Forreâs cuisine resembled that of German cuisine, which consisted mainly of potato and sausage. Being that this world just didnât really use vinegar as a whole, there was also no pickled food and therefore no pickles or sauerkraut, but in exchange there were stir-fried foods, and cabbage was found frequently in salads. Unlike Darl, the spices here didnât contain anything other than pepper, but as a result, the taste of the ingredients was very clear. From the viewpoint of seasoning, the food here was more similar to Japanâs than Darlâs.
ăThis sausage is supa good.ă
ăAnd the cooked meat and vegetables are quite nice.ă
ăBut the bread, as usual, is hard to the point where you canât bite it through. Itâs firm in a different way from American or German hard bread.ă
The minor trio couldnât do much besides eat, immediately beginning a critical evaluation of the food.
ăActually, when ya eat tasty sausages, donâtcha think about wantin to make hotdogsďźă
ăAhď˝ătrue.ă
ăActually, it kinda feels like they threw in a pinch oâseasoning ân tried to make these into hot dogsâŚâŚă
Hiroshi said as he sneakily took out ketchup, curry powder, and mayonnaise out. This was probably the Kansai-style type with cabbage and curry powder. Some people werenât keen on powdered mustard, so he was probably going to put it on afterward.
ăHiroshi-kun, I get how you feel, but how about we donât do that in a restaurant?ă
ăRight. You need to get permission at least.ă
No matter how you sliced it, bringing your own seasoning into restaurants and added it to the food was seriously bad manners.
ăAhď˝ăsorry sorry. I almost succumbed to temptation there.ă
Scolded by Haruna and Tatsuya, Hiroshi quickly put away the condiments while the attendant wasnât looking. Mio was a little bummed out that Hiroshi was prevented from making new food there, reaching out for salt-grilled river fish.
ăStill, even though itâs close to German cuisine, there isnât really anything raw besides salad, is thereâŚâŚă
Haruna said that weird statement as she smacked her lips at the food in front of her. Everyone around her looked at her.
ăThereâs raw food in German cuisineďźă
ăMhm. I think itâs called mett, and itâs basically specially processed pork that you eat raw.ă
ăIs that seriously okayâŚâŚďźă
ăWell, there seems to be a trick to properly raising the meat to avoid food poisoning, so itâs probably similar to how people feel about eating yukhoe. I donât know too much though, since I didnât eat it while I was in Germany.ă
The Japanese group wasnât sure whether they were fully convinced of Harunaâs explanation. This was especially true for Hiroshi, who had met with a terrible fate with the ground beef/pork mince. Still, Japanese people ate properly processed horse meat and cow meat, so it was a little weird to criticize the food habits of other countries simply because it was pork, so they said nothing.
ăWell anyhow, there isnât a huge difference between Farlane and Forre in terms of specialization, so there might not be much in the way of new breakthroughs in cuisine.ă
ăYup. Seems like thereâre a lotta goods imported from Farlane.ă