Chapter 34: I Wonât Ask For an Instructional Manual
ăTrade? Um, then Kirika will go pick flowers for you, Yuuri-oneechan!ă
ăWait, wait! Donât worry, Iâm preparing lunch for everybody too!ă
I stopped Kirika-chan and Kurtz-kun from bolting out the door.
ăBut Kirika wants a bento, not lunch!ă
ăMe too! Itâs not fair if only Rofas-san gets one!ă
Um, umâŚ
But we were going to have meat-wrapped onigiri tooâŚ
Did the word âbentoâ sound that fascinating to them?
When I thought about it, I remember how I enjoyed having a bento while on a field trip.
Maybe the word âbentoâ didnât exist in this world, so it sounded like something special in their mind. No wait, maybe it existed, but was also incredibly rare?
ăDo you really want a bento?ă
Everyone nodded.
Even you, Bryce-kun? The only time Bryce-kun behaved like a child was when it involved food.
ăOkay, Iâll make bentos for everyone then. Weâll go eat it by the lake!ă
ăBy the lake?ă
Bryce-kunâs cheeks turned a bit red.
Ah, sorry, Bryce-kun. I just made him remember something bad. I didnât mean to. I just thought itâd be nice if we went on a picnic.
ăYou see, a bento is a meal that you bring along with you on a trip. You eat it outside. Itâs a little different than mobile food, but, umâŚă
ăItâs a meal you eat outside but itâs not mobile food? Wow! That sounds like something nobles do!ă
What nobles do?
Like how nobles sit outside in their garden and have tea and biscuits?
No, maybe it was something else.
Was it something like nobles taking several horse carriages with them on a trip, and one was used to bring their personal chef along?
âŚBoth of those were completely different compared to eating a bento outside.
Uu, it felt difficult explaining a foreign culture to them when something similar didnât exist in theirs.
ăAnyways, letâs go do our gathering for the day. Once we hit our quota, Iâll make a bento for everyone. During that time, can I leave the preparations of the mountain birds to the three of you?ă
I was planning to use chicken meat for dinner tonight.
What should I make with them?
I had soy sauce, sake, mirin, ginger ale, and vinegar.
If I had salt, I could make salted yakitori, but unfortunately, I didnât have any. I didnât have skewers or charcoal either, so it wouldnât work.
Actually, what did the mountain birds taste like? Of all the bird meat Iâd eaten in my lifetime, one of them was definitely the well-known chicken.
Back when my husband and I were dating, we went out for Peking duck once, so I also had duck. During Christmas one year, I think I had a real turkeyâŚ
âŚâŚ After we got married though, I couldnât recall my husband ever taking me out for dinner even once. At first I thought; was my cooking that good? But then I realized that maybe he thought it was a waste of money. I suddenly thought of the phrase, âyou never feed a fish youâve caught.â
Other than those⌠thatâs right. Once, when I went with some friends to the Inari Shrine (*1), there was a food cart on the side of the road selling roasted sparrows. Sadly, I didnât have to the courage to try them. Oh, but I had kamo nanban (*2) there.
When it comes to bird meat, I was definitely most familiar with chicken. It should be fine if I made a chicken dish out of the mountain birds.
Oh, but I should think about the menu later.
First, I had to prepare the onions for battle.
ăLetâs confirm our equipment and status.ă
Not forgetting the dungeon rule, we all checked our equipment.
There were no holes in our clothes, and no damage to our weapons.
Well, our weapons in the morning time only consisted of onions and a plank.
ăStatus open.ă
Letâs see. There were many stats I didnât understand in my status menu, so I only checked my level, HP, and MP.
The other stats were things like Attack, Defense, Agility, but there were so many details that I didnât have the willpower to read through them one by one.
Y-yeah, just like reading through an instruction manual. If itâs too thick, nobody would want to read it, right? Especially if itâs a manual for something youâre not familiar with or particularly interested in. Thereâs no way anybody would read it then.
âŚRight?
Electrical appliances usually came with a thin booklet full of simple instructions. Iâd be okay reading through those.
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Authorâs Notes:
Thank you for reading.
There are times when I can reply to your comments instantly and times when I canât. Itâs not on purpose. Although I canât always reply to everybodyâs comments immediately, I do spend some time once a day to read through them. I really enjoy them. I guess itâs a similar feeling to the excitement you get when waiting for a new chapter?
(*1) Inari Shrine: Yuuri is talking about the Inari-Fushimi Shrine in Kyoto.
(*2) Kamo Nanban: A noodle dish where soba or udon noodles are served in a hot dashi soup with duck meat