Richard's Butchers
797 year old Human construction, medium sized
Location: Port Fendown
Owned by: Richard Gilmore
A half-timbered house with a thatched roof. The dwelling also serves as a Butchers.
Occupants
| Name | Role | Age | Gender | Race | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bartholomew Gilmore | Butcher's Apprentice | 18 | Male | Human | He is an adolescent human with blue eyes, brown hair worn in a rounded bowl cut, and light brown skin. |
| Charles Moulton | Housekeeper | 32 | Male | Human | He is an adult human with grey eyes (behind a pair of spectacles), long flowing strawberry hair, bushy sideburns, and light pink skin. |
| Estelle Gilmore | 67 | Female | Human | She is an elderly human with amber eyes, scruffy white hair, and dark brown skin. | |
| Lavina Gilmore | Housekeeper | 43 | Female | Human | She is an adult human with amber eyes, scruffy black hair, and medium brown skin. |
| Martha Moulton | Housekeeper | 31 | Female | Human | She is an adult human with blue eyes, long blond hair with a fringe cut, and light pink skin. |
| Richard Gilmore | Butcher | 40 | Male | Human | He is an adult human with green eyes, blond hair worn in a rounded bowl cut, a full beard, and light pink skin. |
| Silas Blackwell the 2nd | Butcher's Apprentice | 15 | Male | Human | He is an adolescent human with amber eyes, short black hair in a side parting, and medium brown skin. |
Family Tree
- Richard Gilmore (♂/40) + Lavina Gilmore nee Kenney (♀/43/Richard's wife)
- Charles Moulton (♂/32/Richard's brother in-law) + Martha Moulton nee Gilmore (♀/31/Richard's sister)
- Estelle Gilmore (♀/67/Richard's aunt)
Items for sale
At this location, items are priced between 88% and 92% of their base value.
| Available | Price | Value | Item | Description | Weight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 | 4 gp 5 sp | 5 gp | A Leg of Boar | A delicious roasting joint, low in fat. Suitable for occasions when you are feeding larger groups of people. | 17 lbs. |
| 3 | 7 sp 9 cp | 9 sp | A Whole Duck | Plucked and gutted, this plump bird is ready to be cooked. | 5 lbs. |
| 1 | 1 gp 8 sp | 2 gp | A Whole Goose | Plucked and gutted, this substantial bird is ready to be cooked. | 4 lbs. |
| 7 | 4 sp 6 cp | 5 sp | A cut of Boar Belly | An inexpensive, fatty cut of meat from the underside near the loin. | 1 lb. |
| 2 | 1 sp | 1 sp | Boar Cheek | Meaty little portions marbled with fat. | ³⁄₁₆ lb. |
| 1 | 1 gp 3 sp | 1 gp 5 sp | Boar Loin | A bargain choice if you're looking for a tender cut of meat that cooks well for a crowd. | 3 lbs. |
| 3 | 8 sp 8 cp | 1 gp | Boars Spareribs | Cut from the side near the belly, this lean rack of ribs will cook well over an open fire. | 3 lbs. |
| 7 | 9 cp | 1 sp | Cow's Kidney | The Kidney has been carefully removed and are being sold as a delicacy. | |
| 1 | 3 cp | 3 cp | Duck Giblets | 'All the best bits'. Sold by the pound. | 1 lb. |
| 4 | 8 cp | 8 cp | Duck Livers | Tender and sweet, these duck livers would go well with bacon. | ¹⁄₁₆ lb. |
| 1 | 8 cp | 8 cp | Goose Back | What's left after you remove wings, breast and legs - this cut is low on meat, but high on fat and bone marrow. Good for making stock. | ½ lb. |
| 2 | 3 sp 6 cp | 4 sp | Goose Breast | A premium cut of goose. Sold with the skin on. | ½ lb. |
| 1 | 8 cp | 8 cp | Goose Neck | There isn't much meat on a neck, it is all bones, skin and stringy bits. Most often boiled for soups. | ³⁄₁₆ lb. |
| 2 | 8 cp | 8 cp | Goose Wings | All three wing parts. A hearty snack. You'll need at 2 of these to call it a meal. | ⁷⁄₁₆ lb. |
| 4 | 6 sp 4 cp | 7 sp | Jerky | Salted, dried, and chewy. The traveler's choice. Will last a year. | 1 lb. |
| 7 | 4 sp 5 cp | 5 sp | Rations (1 day) | Rations consist of dry foods suitable for extended travel, including jerky, dried fruit, hardtack, and nuts. | 2 lbs. |
| 28 | 1 sp 8 cp | 2 sp | Richard's chicken sausages | Sausages made from the finest cuts of chicken and Port Fendown's famous herbs. Sold in strings of four. | ³⁄₁₆ lb. |
Note
- Butchers can be hired to kill a live animal or prepare a carcass, but the cost will usually exceed the price of buying the same meat from them directly. They will buy game stock at a roughly half the price that they sell the butchered product, but only if their stock is low. They wont buy livestock from a walk in.