So I’m rereading your amazing fic and I saw you mentioned the different dwarf clans. I remember the Longbeards, Firebeards, Broadbeams, and the Blacklock but what were the others cuz I couldn’t find the chapter where you listed them (btw keep up the amazing work you are awesome)

Oh hey Nonnie!

The families of the Dwarves are:

Western Dwarves

Longbeards (our main posse, descended from the eldest of the Original Dwarves, Durin, who was bound in sleep and then woke up at Mt Gundabad)

Broadbeams (woke in the Blue Mountains.)

Firebeards (Blue Mountains too. The cities of the Firebeards and Broadbeams were lost when Beleriand was tipped into the ocean during the War of Wrath. They were called Nogrod and Belegost. The range of Ered Luin broke in two and half of it was sunk, and so the remnants of both the Firebeards and Broadbeams fled to Khazad-dum and became a part of the Longbeard population.)

Eastern Dwarves

Blacklocks

Stiffbeards

Ironfists

Stonefoots

(Each of these clans is descended from one of Mahal’s original seven dwarves. The progenitors of the Eastern clans woke in the Orocarni or Red Mountains, far to the East in Rhun.)

I cannot stop myself from giving more information than necessary, can I 😉

How did Bomfris and Kifur meet? Did they work in the same mines, or simply run into each other because they both lived in the same part of town? Sorry, but I love your OCs, and I’ve always been curious what the dwarves of the Company’s parents were like (I’m weird like that). Tolkien didn’t give us much to work with there, regrettably, but your headcanons are so good!

Awwwww, Bomris and Kifur!

(Bomfris, Bombur and Alris’ daughter, is named to honour both Bofur and her – her great-aunt, whom she never met.)

A bit of background on Bomris, first. She’s a small, thin Dwarrowdam with dark skin , black hair and rough hands. She is weary, resigned and beaten-down from her constant responsibilities, her anxiousness and worry. She is softly-spoken and tends to be nervous in company. She often goes without, so that her brother might eat.

Well, Bomris basically raised her younger brother, Bomfur (Bombur and Bofur’s dad). Their parents were lost in a cave-in – common enough in Ered Luin, where the Mountains had been so tumultuously and dramatically altered, half of them sunken and the tunnels waterlogged, treacherous and dangerous.

They were both miners, poor as the fleas on a church mouse. And as poor people who work in groups often do, it was usual to share a beer or two together after such backbreaking, dangerous work. Bomfur had a quiet, friendly drinking pal, who hung out at the taverns (such as good ole Borin’s in Ered Luin!) with the rest of that rather more rowdy bunch. His name was Kifur, and he liked to whistle.

It was in a tavern that Bomfur met the jolly, wisecracking Genna, and began their silly one-upmanship jokes competition. Genna could easily drink any of the others under the table (and then some!!!) and so one day, Bomris was sent for, to come and collect her utterly utterly soused brother. 

That little Dwarrowdam couldn’t quite carry her (much larger!) younger brother, who was slurring and beaming at Genna and was of no use at all. Many of the others thought it hilarious, and slapped their hands on their thighs and roared with laughter at poor introverted Bomris. 

But Kifur stepped forward and slung Bomfur’s arm around him, and hauled him up. “Which way?” he said, straight to Bomris. 

She gave him a look full of gratitude, and showed him the way back to their bare little house. After Kifur had poured the sodden (and singing) Bomfur into his bed, he turned to Bomris and said, “is there anything else I can do for you?”

She shook her head.

He spotted her pick, lying by the door. “That handle’s loose,” he said. “Maybe I could fix that for you?”

She looked up, and a tiny smile crossed her face. “That would be nice.”

(By the next week, Bomris had a new pick-handle. And she had learned to listen for a lilting whistle, coming up her street.)

Dumpling Soup

The Dumpling Soup recipe you got sounds rad (a big appreciative thank you to whiteteawithhoney), but I have a supposition. The dumpling soup recipe probably isn’t one soup recipe – it’s probably many, many recipes, based on what’s available to cook with and a person’s/family’s preferences. So here’s an alternate version of dumpling soup, based on beef rather than lamb. (Note that this is originally one of my grandma’s recipes, and she taught it to me the old-fashioned way – by Eyeing Things rather than actually measuring. So any amounts are more guesswork than hard numbers).
Ingredients:
stewing beef
potatoes (chopped)
carrots (chopped)
bay leaf
cumin
cardamom
diced garlic
red wine vinegar OR cheap red wine OR raspberry cider vinegar
onion (chopped)
peppercorns
a little cilantro. 

Other veggies can be added as desired. Common include: 

cabbage
kale
corn
turnip
parsnip
chard
tomato
lots of types of beans/nuts depending on what you like
leeks
shallots
radish
water chestnuts
dulse if you can get it 

I think each family of Broadbeam heritage would have their own secret, special little additions and modifications also 🙂 This is great, thank you kailthia!

Dets! What part of Middle-Earth are the Broadbeam’s from? (I may or may not be attempting to make a Broadbeam dumpling stew recipe. Shhhh…)

aviva0017:

determamfidd:

OOOOOOH. Tell me how it turns out! And if you want to, you can absolutely send me a recipe! Sansukh Cookbook ahahahaha

OKAY. I’m paraphrasing here, please tell me if I am remembering any of this wrong!

So. Broadbeams were one of the three Western clans of Dwarves. Durin of the Longbeards woke at Mt Gundabad and wandered in the Misty Mountains before he proceeded to build Khazad-dum.

(I’ve always felt that this makes the colonisation of Mt Gundabad by Orcs particularly awful for the Dwarves, aside from the military implications – Mt Gundabad would be a very sacred place. Durin slept there for long ages, and first woke there. OUCH. Jeez. Dwarves can’t catch a break.)

The other two Fathers of the Dwarves (Broadbeams and Firebeards) woke in the Blue Mountains, or Ered Luin. They built their cities there. The Broadbeams built Belegost, and the Firebeards built Nogrod.

Both were lost after the War of Wrath, in which half the Blue Mountains were tipped into the sea. Most of the surviving Dwarves fled to Khazad-dum and mixed with the populace there.

(In Sansukh, I am using the ruins of Belegost as the setting for the Longbeard refugees of Erebor).

For interest, the other four clans (Stiffbeard, Blacklock, Ironfist, Stonefoot) woke in the Orocarni (Red Mountains), to the East 😉

Only thing here that’s technically incorrect is that all we know canonically is that the Broadbeams and Firebeards built Nogrod and Belegost. We don’t know if each city belonged to one race or if they built/inhabited both together. The Nogrod-Firebeards and Belegost-Broadbeams division is technically fanon, though very reasonable fanon that I tend to also use.

That’s super ridiculously nitpicky but you asked XD Good answer otherwise (and man I hope somebody makes that recipe >.>)

Ah, thanks avi! ❤

SOUP. MMMM. 

Dets! What part of Middle-Earth are the Broadbeam’s from? (I may or may not be attempting to make a Broadbeam dumpling stew recipe. Shhhh…)

OOOOOOH. Tell me how it turns out! And if you want to, you can absolutely send me a recipe! Sansukh Cookbook ahahahaha

OKAY. I’m paraphrasing from memory here, please tell me if I am remembering any of this wrong!

So. Broadbeams were one of the three Western clans of Dwarves. Durin of the Longbeards woke at Mt Gundabad and wandered in the Misty Mountains before he proceeded to build Khazad-dum.

(I’ve always felt that this makes the colonisation of Mt Gundabad by Orcs particularly awful for the Dwarves, aside from the military implications – Mt Gundabad would be a very sacred place. Durin slept there for long ages, and first woke there. OUCH. Jeez. Dwarves can’t catch a break.)

The other two Fathers of the Dwarves (Broadbeams and Firebeards) woke in the Blue Mountains, or Ered Luin. They built their cities there. The Broadbeams built Belegost, and the Firebeards built Nogrod.

Both were lost after the War of Wrath, in which half the Blue Mountains were tipped into the sea. Most of the surviving Dwarves fled to Khazad-dum and mixed with the populace there.

(In Sansukh, I am using the ruins of Belegost as the setting for the Longbeard refugees of Erebor).

For interest, the other four clans (Stiffbeard, Blacklock, Ironfist, Stonefoot) woke in the Orocarni (Red Mountains), to the East 😉