Published , by Jason Faulkner
Published , by Jason Faulkner
The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild has a deep cooking system that allows you to cook food and elixirs that can restore Link's health and provide him with status buffs. However, how you cook in Zelda: BOTW isn't explained very well in the game. Instead the Old Man you meet at the beginning of the game may tell you some vague facts about cooking and then you're pretty much left to figure it out for yourself. Below we'll show you the basics of how to cook in BoTW so you can get started using food and elixirs to help you out at the start of your adventure.
The question of how to cook in Breath of the Wild stumped me the first time I tried it. When it comes to cooking single ingredients, it's easy enough. You can toss apples, meat, and other singular components straight into the flames of a campfire and grab the cooked results. However, making complex dishes is a bit harder. After all, the only direction the game gives you is to dump up to five ingredients into a cooking bowl. However, what BOTW doesn't tell you is that the metal pot has to have a fire under it before you can place in ingredients in it.
There are plenty of these cooking pots scattered throughout Hyrule, but if you find one without a fire under it, it's useless until you light it up. Once you've lit a fire under the pot, you can choose up to five different ingredients and throw them in a pot. After a short cooking period, you'll receive the result of your cooking attempt, and you'll be free to cook another food or elixir if you'd like.
Hyrule is filled with items for you to cook. You can pick wild herbs, fruits, and vegetables; hunt animals for meat, or trap fish. If you use these ingredients, you'll cook food, which typically is best used to restore health and add a small buff to Link. These buffs can be defensive, offensive, allow you to move faster, or protect you from the weather or certain kinds of damage.
To cook elixirs, which give you better buffs, but don't restore as much health as food, you need monster parts and critters. Cooking an elixir can be trickier than cooking food because the items you use to cook them are much more vague in the description of what they do. You can use common sense to guess which items of food will work best together when cooking, but not so with elixirs.
Cooking food and elixirs in Zelda: Breath of the Wild is a blast, and the resulting items can make your life a lot easier. The following tips will help you get started on your path to being a Zelda: BOTW cooking master.
Need to get around faster to gather more cooking ingredients? Learn how to tame a horse to move around Hyrule quicker, or consult our The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild guide for more helpful info.