((So I came upon this idea while reading a history book about the Andes. Supposedly there’s hundreds of varieties of potatoes, and some of them are poisonous unless you eat them with clay—the clay adheres to the toxins and allows them to be passed out of the digestive system without any harm. Natives still eat the poisonous varieties today (with clay!), and it was a staple of their diet back before Columbus. I thought this would translate well to the Dres, ash yams, and ancestor worship. I’m not sure if the alchemical properties of ash yams and ash salts can combine in this way, but if they do, this might also be a good candidate for an Alchemy skill book.))
The Origin of the Ash Yam
by (insert Altmer name here)
The origin of the name "ash yam" seems deceptively simple: it is a species of yam domesticated and cultivated in the ashy steppes of Morrowind. This agricultural practice has assumedly gone on for hundreds of years, ever since the precedents of the Dunmer arrived from the Aldmeri domains of old. I have made a study into the taxonamy of the ash yam however, and come upon surprising results. Ash yam is not a geographical or botanical term, but a cultural one.
My first contact for my study was with a Redoran landowner located south of Baan Malur. In between bellowing at his sparring sons to train harder, this worthy individual related to me an astounding fact: there are more than fifteen different varieties of ash yam, each with their own distinctive shape, color (and if the culinists are to be believed) flavor. All of these species are capable of being crossbred, leading to hundreds of more varieties and plenty of confusion to more amateur horticulturalists than such esteemed personages as myself. When he learned of my interest in the ash yam, this Redoran landowner invited me to dinner at his liege lord's manor.
As I sat down to dinner with his family, a highly ceremonial affair involving more than fifty people variably related by blood or by oath, I witnessed a surprising ritual. Beside each plate was a small earthenware pot of ash. Before touching their meal (an elaborate affair of nix hound steak garnished with scrib jelly, a side of a cheese-like substance the locals call scuttle, and of course, grilled and basted ash yams) I watched in astonishment as each Redoran individual placed a pinch of this ash on the tongue and invoked the names of their ancestors. This was followed by political and familial banter as the worthy family consumed the rest of the ash, a ritual every single one of the attendees completed before digging into their meal.
I was to learn the reason for this strange custom several hours after dinner, wherein I threw up most of the ash yams in front of my sympathetic host. He explained to me then that some of those fifteen species of ash yam mentioned before are poisonous. There is a compound in them that causes nausea, vomiting, stomach pain, and the runs, and it can be distilled down into a popular toxin used in the dispensing of Redoran political justice. He said that ingesting the ashes of the ancestors wards and purifies one from this poison. He was uncertain if the ceremony would work for an outlander, given that we do not cultivate the same kind of familial bonds with our ancestors as the Dunmer do.
The next eve, I again sat down to dinner with the family. Someone had informed the cook of my indiscretion the earlier evening, and the servant was kind enough not to embarrass my constitution again by serving me the ash yams. The family was surprised, therefore, when I asked for the ash yam dish as well as my own portion of the ash.
I was expelled from this Redoran household a few days later, but I am pleased to report that I never again suffered from ash yam indigestion so long as I remembered to ingest at least one measure of ash salts prior to my meal. I have thoroughly studied the alchemical aspects of this matter, and have reason to believe that a handful of fine clay could be used to much the same effect. I would highly suggest this latter approach if the reader finds themselves traveling in Morrowind, so they do not risk offending their host by pilfering too much ash from the family's shrine before dinnertime.
2015-12-12 23:47
3 years 4 months ago
I like it! I would say, don’t use the word “species”, “variety” or some other word would work better.
Does: concepts, textures, youtube vids, admin stuff e.g. PR, handbook, assets, small website things. Activity level: wildly unpredictable. Still active. Find me on Discord.
2015-08-10 20:50
1 month 4 days ago
I like it, but I feel as though this story would work a lot better if the host is of House Redoran rather than House Dres; the Deshaan is probably the least likely place in Morrowind to find ash, ash yams, nix hounds and scribs, the Dres would probably not suffer an outlander and clan stranger to partake in dinner with them, and the Dres would probably consider it a shame for the whole clan if they don’t exact swift and brutal justice on an outlander who has committed as high a crime as pilfering and consuming ancestor ashes. In contrast, all of those creatures and foodstuffs would be found in Redoran lands, Redoran would be more likely to suffer, on occasion, the presence of an outlander and clan stranger to partake dinner with them, and Redoran are morely likely to restrain themselves within Tribunal law and, by extension, Imperial Law which has authority in Morrowind through the Armistice which has authority in Morrowind through being signed by Vivec.
I actually had an idea before that ash yams were naturally very tough and mealy, and that locals generally boiled them in muck to soften them up and make them more (to their tastes) palatable.
2016-01-19 19:35
2 months 4 days ago
I’d like to keep it to Dres lore if at all possible, since I think Redoran lore is pretty well fleshed out and we know so little about Dres. I can see what you’re saying about the setting not quite fitting.
Couple suggested changes to remedy that:
My first contact for my study was with a Dres farmer located north of Tear. I pulled this location out of my hat, but we could change it to a Dres-held place that has ashlands close by.
I was expelled from this Dres household a few days later, but I am pleased to report… Change this to make the consequences sound more dire. Expelled into.. “I had to flee from...” or “I barely got away with my life after the resulting chaos, but I am pleased to report...”
Maybe also drop a line where the host explains to the Altmer that this practice more common among the Redoran, but that it goes back centuries as the Dunmer as a people learned to live in Resdayn. That would tie in to Dres being the most traditional of the houses: they kept this tradition despite not needing it in the more fertile climes.
2015-08-10 20:50
1 month 4 days ago
The issue is that your story already reflects Redoran society very well, so trying to tie it to House Dres will only make the Dres seem more similar to the Redoran, which would be counterproductive. For instance: there are no Dres places close to Ashlands, and considering the fact that Dres lands would have received the least or no ashfall from the eruption of Red Mountain and that, before then, the Dres ancestors lived in the same location as they do now at a time when the whole of Morrowind was either free of ash or had a lot less of it, the only connection the Dres probably ever had to ash is through the ash of their cremated ancestors. Now one could still make use of that connection, but I’m not sure whether we should, because ash already plays a role for the other Houses, and a major one for House Redoran. By deemphasizing ancestor ashes in favour of, for instance, ancestor bones, we would be differentiating the Dres from the other Houses to some degree, which is good. Similarly, one would not expect ash yams, which grow way up in Vvardenfell among other places, to grow anywhere in Dres lands, Dres lands generally having their own flora because Dres lands are toxic even to other Morrowind flora. As such, one would not expect Dres to eat ash yams either, but rather local fare that isn’t found anywhere else in Morrowind.
I think the Dres as we’re portraying them really make things especially difficult, because they’re supposed to be so different from the other modern Houses. There’s plenty of leeway between the Hlaalu, Redoran and Indoril which doesn’t really extend to House Dres.
2016-01-19 19:35
2 months 4 days ago
Alright, that makes this an easy fix at least. I'll be changing Dres to Redoran. I would like to put this locatation the mainland though. (For the line, “a farmer north of Tear”) Where would you suggest for that?
Edit: and OP all fixed for Redoran. I did change the farmer into a landowner and the line about yelling at s slaves to yelling at his sparring sons, as I thought that would fit better into Redoran society.
2016-01-19 19:35
2 months 4 days ago
Chose “south of Baan Malur” as the new location. Edits complete.
2016-01-19 19:35
2 months 4 days ago
Transferred to asset browser. Author has responded to and incorporated suggested edits.