From Farm to Table: Unlock Every Recipe and Buff in Stardew Valley

Stardew Valley Ultimate Cooking Guide

Track recipes, ingredients, and maximize food buffs

From Farm to Table: Unlock Every Recipe and Buff in Stardew Valley

Cooking in Stardew Valley transforms your gameplay from mere survival to thriving with powerful buffs and energy boosts. Skip the field snacks-you’ll need a kitchen first, which requires upgrading your farmhouse through Robin for 10,000g and 450 wood. Don’t have that yet? Jump to temporary cooking methods while you save up. Already cooking but overwhelmed by ingredients? Our essential ingredients checklist shows exactly what to gather and when, while our buff optimization guide reveals which meals give you game-changing advantages for mining, fishing, and more. New to 1.6? We’ve documented all the cooking-related changes to keep you updated.

Getting Started with Cooking

The journey from raw ingredients to delicious, buff-providing meals starts with understanding the basic cooking mechanics in Stardew Valley. If you’ve been living on foraged items and field snacks, it’s time for an upgrade.

Unlocking Your Kitchen

Before you can start whipping up culinary masterpieces, you’ll need to upgrade your humble farmhouse. The kitchen isn’t available from the start of the game, which is why many new players struggle to figure out how cooking works.

Step 1: Visit Robin’s Carpentry Shop

Step 2: Purchase the House Upgrade

Step 3: Wait for Construction

Once complete, your expanded house will include a kitchen with two critical components:

  1. Stove/Kitchen Counter: The cooking interface where you’ll prepare meals
  2. Refrigerator: 36-slot storage connected directly to your cooking menu

The refrigerator functions as an extension of your inventory when cooking. Any ingredients stored inside (or in your backpack) will automatically appear as available when using the stove. This connectivity makes cooking convenient, as you don’t need to manually transfer ingredients from storage to your inventory.

The kitchen interface shows all recipes you’ve learned as icons. Recipes you haven’t learned yet appear as black silhouettes with question marks. Recipes that you’ve learned but are missing ingredients for will appear grayed out.

Alternative Cooking Methods

Can’t afford a house upgrade yet? There’s a temporary solution for aspiring chefs without kitchens:

The Cookout Kit

To use a Cookout Kit:

  1. Craft the kit through your crafting menu
  2. Place it on the ground (almost anywhere outside)
  3. Interact with it to access a cooking interface
  4. Cook your meal
  5. The kit disappears after use

Remember that Cookout Kits are single-use items, so craft several if you plan on cooking multiple meals away from home. They’re particularly useful for long mining excursions when you might need to cook healing or buff foods on the spot.

Learning Your First Recipes

You start the game knowing just one recipe: Fried Egg. To expand your culinary repertoire, you’ll need to collect recipes through various methods:

Your First Recipes (Easy to Obtain)

  1. Fried Egg - Known from start (1 Egg)
  2. Omelet - Purchase from Stardrop Saloon for 100g (1 Egg, 1 Milk)
  3. Pancakes - The Queen of Sauce on Spring 14, Year 1 (1 Wheat Flour, 1 Egg, 1 Milk)
  4. Bread - Purchase from Stardrop Saloon for 100g (1 Wheat Flour)
  5. Hashbrowns - The Queen of Sauce on Spring 7, Year 1 (1 Potato, 1 Oil)

For complete beginners, these simple recipes provide better energy restoration than raw ingredients. The Fried Egg recipe converts a single egg (50 energy, 22 health) into a cooked meal with the same values but is useful for completing cooking collections.

As you progress, more complex recipes will provide substantial buffs-but first, you’ll need to learn them. Let’s explore all the ways to expand your cookbook.

Mastering Recipe Collection

With 80+ recipes available in Stardew Valley, building your cookbook takes time and strategy. Some recipes are seasonal, some require specific friendships, and others only become available in later game years. Here’s how to efficiently collect them all.

The Queen of Sauce Schedule

The Queen of Sauce cooking show airs on your farmhouse TV every Sunday, teaching you a new recipe each week on a two-year cycle. Additionally, reruns air on Wednesdays, featuring recipes you might have missed.

How to Watch The Queen of Sauce:

  1. Interact with your TV
  2. Select “The Queen of Sauce”
  3. Watch the episode to automatically learn the recipe

Complete Queen of Sauce Schedule (Year 1):

Date Recipe Ingredients
Spring 7 Hashbrowns 1 Potato, 1 Oil
Spring 14 Pancakes 1 Wheat Flour, 1 Egg, 1 Milk
Spring 21 Radish Salad 1 Radish, 1 Oil, 1 Vinegar
Spring 28 Omelet 1 Egg, 1 Milk
Summer 7 Baked Fish 1 Sunfish, 1 Bream, 1 Wheat Flour
Summer 14 Fried Mushroom 1 Common Mushroom, 1 Morel, 1 Oil, 1 Kale
Summer 21 Pizza 1 Wheat Flour, 1 Cheese, 1 Tomato
Summer 28 Bread 1 Wheat Flour
Fall 7 Autumn’s Bounty 1 Yam, 1 Pumpkin
Fall 14 Vegetable Medley 1 Tomato, 1 Beet
Fall 21 Cranberry Sauce 1 Cranberries, 1 Sugar
Fall 28 Artichoke Dip 1 Artichoke, 1 Milk
Winter 7 Roasted Hazelnuts 3 Hazelnut
Winter 14 Bean Hotpot 1 Green Bean
Winter 21 Glazed Yams 1 Yam, 1 Sugar
Winter 28 Plum Pudding 2 Wild Plum, 1 Wheat Flour, 1 Sugar

Complete Queen of Sauce Schedule (Year 2):

Date Recipe Ingredients
Spring 7 Bruschetta 1 Bread, 1 Oil, 1 Tomato
Spring 14 Coleslaw 1 Red Cabbage, 1 Mayonnaise, 1 Vinegar
Spring 21 Complete Breakfast 1 Fried Egg, 1 Milk, 1 Hashbrowns, 1 Pancakes
Spring 28 Lucky Lunch 1 Sea Cucumber, 1 Tortilla, 1 Blue Jazz
Summer 7 Dish O’ The Sea 2 Sardine, 1 Hashbrowns
Summer 14 Tom Kha Soup 1 Coconut, 1 Common Mushroom, 1 Shrimp
Summer 21 Trout Soup 1 Rainbow Trout, 1 Green Algae
Summer 28 Maki Roll 1 Fish (any), 1 Seaweed, 1 Rice
Fall 7 Blueberry Tart 1 Blueberry, 1 Wheat Flour, 1 Sugar, 1 Egg
Fall 14 Rice Pudding 1 Milk, 1 Sugar, 1 Rice
Fall 21 Chocolate Cake 1 Wheat Flour, 1 Sugar, 1 Egg
Fall 28 Carp Surprise 1 Carp
Winter 7 Pumpkin Soup 1 Pumpkin, 1 Milk
Winter 14 Super Meal 1 Bok Choy, 1 Cranberries, 1 Artichoke
Winter 21 Shrimp Cocktail 1 Tomato, 1 Wild Horseradish, 1 Shrimp
Winter 28 Fish Taco 1 Tuna, 1 Tortilla, 1 Red Cabbage, 1 Mayonnaise

Pro Tip: If you’ve missed recipes from previous years, purchase the Queen of Sauce Cookbook when available to instantly learn all recipes aired up to that point. This book occasionally appears at the Traveling Cart for 5,000-10,000g and is well worth the investment for serious chefs.

Friendship Recipes from Villagers

Many recipes are sent in the mail when you reach certain friendship levels with villagers. Each villager has specific recipes they’ll share with you once you’ve reached 3, 5, 7, or 9 hearts with them.

Friendship Recipe Guide:

Villager Heart Level Recipe
Caroline 3 Parsnip Soup
Caroline 7 Vegetable Medley
Clint 3 Algae Soup
Demetrius 3 Bean Hotpot
Emily 3 Salad
Evelyn 3 Cookie
Evelyn 7 Fiddlehead Risotto
Gus 3 Spaghetti
Gus 7 Cranberry Sauce
Jodi 3 Fried Calamari
Jodi 7 Chocolate Cake
Kent 3 Roasted Hazelnuts
Kent 7 Crispy Bass
Linus 3 Blueberry Tart
Linus 7 Dish O’ The Sea
Marnie 3 Farmer’s Lunch
Marnie 7 Pumpkin Pie
Pam 3 Cheese Cauliflower
Pam 7 Stuffing
Robin 3 Spaghetti
Robin 7 Radish Salad
Sandy 3 Tom Kha Soup
Sandy 7 Mango Sticky Rice
Shane 3 Pepper Poppers
Shane 7 Strange Bun
Willy 3 Maki Roll
Willy 7 Fish Stew
Willy 9 Lobster Bisque

Relationship Building Strategy for Recipe Hunters:

  1. Focus on giving villagers their favorite gifts twice per week
  2. Talk to them daily
  3. Complete their quests on the bulletin board
  4. Include them in seasonal festival activities
  5. Give birthday gifts (worth 8× normal friendship points)

If you’re specifically hunting for recipes, prioritize friendships with Caroline, Evelyn, Gus, Jodi, Kent, Linus, Marnie, Pam, and Willy as they each provide multiple recipes.

Other Recipe Sources

Beyond The Queen of Sauce and villager friendships, there are several other ways to obtain recipes:

Skill Level Unlocks:

Purchase Locations:

Special Events:

Stardrops and Secret Notes:

The Queen of Sauce Cookbook:

For completionists aiming to learn all 80+ recipes, a systematic approach is necessary. Focus first on watching The Queen of Sauce weekly, then building relationships with key villagers, and finally leveling up skills to unlock the remaining recipes.

Organizing Your Ingredients

With over 80 recipes requiring diverse ingredients, organization is key to efficient cooking. A well-planned strategy for gathering, storing, and managing ingredients will save you countless hours of foraging and searching.

Essential Ingredients Checklist

To cook every recipe in Stardew Valley once, you’ll need this comprehensive list of ingredients. Use this as your master checklist for achieving cooking perfection.

Crops Needed (by Season):

Spring Crops:

Summer Crops:

Fall Crops:

Tree Fruits:

Forageable Items:

Fish and Water Creatures:

Crab Pot Items:

Animal Products:

Store-Bought Ingredients:

Other Essential Items:

Recipes Used as Ingredients in Other Recipes:

Pro Tip: Create a dedicated chest for each season’s ingredients, and move them to your refrigerator as needed. This prevents your fridge from becoming cluttered while ensuring you always have the right ingredients on hand.

Fridge Organization Tips

Your refrigerator is more than just storage-it’s an extension of your cooking interface. Any ingredients stored in the fridge will automatically appear as available when cooking, without needing to be in your inventory. Here’s how to organize it effectively:

Understanding Fridge Mechanics:

Strategic Fridge Organization:

Priority Section (Top Rows):

Seasonal Section (Middle Rows):

Special Items Section (Bottom Rows):

What NOT to Store in Your Fridge:

Mini-Fridge Strategy:

  1. First Mini-Fridge: Seasonal crops and foraged items
  2. Second Mini-Fridge: Fish and crab pot items
  3. Third Mini-Fridge: Prepared ingredients (Tortilla, Bread, etc.)

Remember that the game searches your storage in a specific order, so place lower-quality ingredients in the positions that will be checked first (bottom-right of inventory or fridge). This ensures that your higher-quality items are saved for selling or for recipes where quality matters for buffs.

Seasonal Ingredient Planning

Planning your farming, foraging, and fishing around cooking needs can save you significant time and ensure you never run out of critical ingredients. Here’s a seasonal breakdown to help you prepare:

Spring Preparation:

Summer Preparation:

Fall Preparation:

Winter Preparation:

Year-Round Strategies:

Crop Planning Calendar (Days to Maturity):

Crop Season Days to Maturity Continued Harvest Notes
Parsnip Spring 4 No Easy early crop
Kale Spring 6 No Harvest with scythe
Potato Spring 6 No May yield extras
Garlic Spring 4 No Year 2+ only
Cauliflower Spring 12 No Giant crop potential
Blue Jazz Spring 7 No For Lucky Lunch
Green Bean Spring 10 Every 3 days Requires trellis
Rhubarb Spring 13 No Desert seeds only
Tomato Summer 11 Every 4 days Priority crop (8 recipes)
Blueberry Summer 13 Every 4 days Multiple harvests
Hot Pepper Summer 5 Every 3 days For Pepper Poppers
Melon Summer 12 No Giant crop potential
Radish Summer 6 No For Radish Salad
Red Cabbage Summer 9 No Year 2+ only
Corn Sum/Fall 14 Every 4 days Cross-season crop
Pumpkin Fall 13 No Giant crop potential
Yam Fall 10 No For Glazed Yams
Cranberries Fall 7 Every 5 days Multiple harvests
Eggplant Fall 5 Every 5 days For Eggplant Parmesan
Artichoke Fall 8 No Year 2+ only
Bok Choy Fall 4 No For Super Meal
Amaranth Fall 7 No Harvest with scythe
Pineapple Island 14 Every 7 days Ginger Island only
Taro Root Island 10 No Ginger Island only

By following this seasonal guide, you’ll ensure you have all the necessary ingredients available when you need them, without wasting valuable farmland on unnecessary crops.

Best Dishes for Different Activities

Not all cooked dishes are created equal. Different activities in Stardew Valley benefit from specific food buffs, and knowing which meals to prepare can dramatically improve your efficiency and success.

Mining and Skull Cavern Meals

The mines and Skull Cavern are dangerous places where the right food buffs can mean the difference between success and a costly collapse.

Top Mining/Skull Cavern Meals:

Dish Ingredients Buffs Duration Energy/Health Why It’s Great
Spicy Eel 1 Hot Pepper, 1 Eel +1 Speed, +1 Luck 7m 115 energy, 51 health Perfect combo of luck and speed
Pumpkin Soup 1 Pumpkin, 1 Milk +2 Defense, +2 Luck 11m 200 energy, 90 health Great luck bonus with defense
Lucky Lunch 1 Sea Cucumber, 1 Tortilla, 1 Blue Jazz +3 Luck 11m 100 energy, 45 health Best luck buff in the game
Crab Cakes 1 Crab, 1 Wheat Flour, 1 Egg, 1 Oil +1 Speed, +1 Defense 16m 47s 225 energy, 101 health Long-lasting speed and defense
Squid Ink Ravioli 1 Squid Ink, 1 Wheat Flour, 1 Tomato +1 Mining, Prevents debuffs 4m 39s (Mining), 2m 59s (Debuff Protection) 125 energy, 56 health Prevents slime and other debuffs
Triple Shot Espresso 3 Coffee +1 Speed 4m 12s 8 energy, 3 health Stacks with food buffs
Ginger Ale 3 Ginger, 1 Sugar Immune to stun effects 5m 30 energy, 13 health Prevents monster stun attacks

Skull Cavern Buff Strategy:

  1. Primary Food: Spicy Eel or Lucky Lunch (doesn’t stack with other food)
  2. Drink: Triple Shot Espresso (stacks with food buffs)
  3. Backup Healing: Cheese or other high-energy foods without buffs

Pro Tip: Rather than cooking Spicy Eel, trade Ruby gems at the Desert Trader (1 Ruby = 1 Spicy Eel). This is more efficient than catching eels and growing hot peppers. Similarly, trade Diamonds for Triple Shot Espresso (1 Diamond = 1 Triple Shot Espresso).

Mining Meal Preparation Checklist:

Fishing Enhancement Foods

Successful fishing, especially for rare and difficult catches, requires specialized buffs to increase your fishing skill level and tackle bar size.

Top Fishing Buff Meals:

Dish Ingredients Buffs Duration Energy/Health Why It’s Great
Seafoam Pudding 1 Flounder, 1 Midnight Carp, 1 Squid Ink +4 Fishing 16m 47s 175 energy, 78 health Highest fishing buff
Fish Stew 1 Crayfish, 1 Mussel, 1 Periwinkle, 1 Tomato +3 Fishing 16m 47s 225 energy, 101 health Long-lasting high buff
Lobster Bisque 1 Lobster, 1 Milk +3 Fishing, +50 Max Energy 16m 47s 225 energy, 101 health Adds max energy bonus
Dish O’ The Sea 2 Sardines, 1 Hashbrowns +3 Fishing 5m 35s 150 energy, 67 health Easier ingredients
Trout Soup 1 Rainbow Trout, 1 Green Algae +1 Fishing 4m 100 energy, 45 health Simple early-game option

Fishing Strategy by Fish Difficulty:

Pro Tip: For the toughest legendary fish, combine Seafoam Pudding with the +1 Fishing buff from the Angler profession, a Cork Bobber (+24% bar size), and fishing at the right time/weather conditions.

Fishing Meal Preparation Checklist:

Farming and Foraging Boosts

While less dramatic than mining or fishing buffs, food bonuses for farming and foraging can significantly speed up your daily work and increase profits.

Top Farming and Foraging Meals:

Dish Ingredients Buffs Duration Energy/Health Why It’s Great
Farmer’s Lunch 1 Omelet, 1 Parsnip +3 Farming 5m 35s 200 energy, 90 health Best farming buff
Fruit Salad 1 Blueberry, 1 Melon, 1 Apricot +2 Farming, +2 Foraging 8m 30s 160 energy, 72 health Dual buff for mixed work
Survival Burger 1 Bread, 1 Cave Carrot, 1 Eggplant +3 Foraging 5m 35s 125 energy, 56 health Best foraging buff
Maple Bar 1 Maple Syrup, 1 Sugar, 1 Wheat Flour +1 Farming, +1 Fishing, +1 Mining 16m 47s 225 energy, 101 health Multi-purpose buff
Complete Breakfast 1 Fried Egg, 1 Milk, 1 Hashbrowns, 1 Pancakes +2 Farming, +50 Max Energy 7m 200 energy, 90 health Farming + energy boost

When to Use Farming Buffs:

When to Use Foraging Buffs:

Pro Tip: The Foraging buff increases the chance of getting higher-quality foraged items, which can significantly increase your earnings during berry seasons (Salmonberry in Spring, Blackberry in Fall).

All-Day Speed and Energy

Some days in Stardew Valley require maximum efficiency, whether you’re running between shops before they close, completing time-sensitive quests, or simply trying to accomplish more in a day.

Best All-Day Buffs:

Dish Ingredients Buffs Duration Energy/Health Why It’s Great
Crab Cakes 1 Crab, 1 Wheat Flour, 1 Egg, 1 Oil +1 Speed, +1 Defense 16m 47s 225 energy, 101 health Longest speed buff
Triple Shot Espresso 3 Coffee +1 Speed 4m 12s 8 energy, 3 health Stacks with food
Pepper Poppers 1 Hot Pepper, 1 Cheese +1 Speed, +2 Farming 7m 130 energy, 58 health Good farming day combo
Coffee 5 Coffee Beans +1 Speed 1m 23s 3 energy, 1 health Quick speed boost
Spicy Eel 1 Hot Pepper, 1 Eel +1 Speed, +1 Luck 7m 115 energy, 51 health Speed + luck combo

Tag-Team Buff Strategy:
For maximum effect, combine buffs that stack:

  1. Primary Food: Crab Cakes or Pepper Poppers
  2. Drink: Triple Shot Espresso (adds +1 Speed on top of food buff)

With this combination, you can maintain a +2 Speed buff for extended periods, allowing you to cover more ground and accomplish more tasks each day.

Energy Management Strategy:
For days when energy is more important than buffs:

  1. High-Energy Foods: Glazed Yams (200 energy), Salmon Dinner (125 energy)
  2. Emergency Refills: Always carry Cheese (Cheese press) or Cave Carrots (mining)
  3. Late-Game Option: Iridium-quality Goat Cheese (325 energy, 146 health)

Pro Tip: A pond full of crabs can produce a steady supply of ingredients for Crab Cakes, which provide the longest-lasting speed buff in the game.

Advanced Cooking Strategies

Once you’ve mastered the basics of cooking, it’s time to optimize your culinary pursuits. Whether you’re tracking your cooking achievements, maximizing efficiency with substitutions, or cooking strategically for profit or gifting, these advanced techniques will elevate your Stardew Valley kitchen skills.

Tracking Your Cooking Progress

The game provides a helpful way to track which recipes you’ve already prepared, which is essential for completionists aiming for the “Gourmet Chef” achievement (cook every recipe).

How to Enable Recipe Tracking:

  1. Open the game menu
  2. Go to Options
  3. Toggle “Show Advanced Crafting Information” to ON
  4. Return to your cooking interface

With this setting enabled, when you hover over a recipe in the cooking menu, you’ll see additional information at the bottom of the tooltip, including “Times Cooked: X” for recipes you’ve already prepared. Recipes you haven’t cooked yet won’t show this information.

Achievement Tracking:

Systematic Tracking Method:

  1. Create a cooking journal or spreadsheet
  2. List all recipes alphabetically or by source
  3. Mark recipes as you learn them
  4. Check off recipes as you cook them
  5. Note key ingredients needed for uncompleted recipes

For the truly organized chef, consider using one of the community-created tracking spreadsheets (linked in the Tools and Resources section) to monitor your progress toward cooking completionism.

Ingredient Substitutions

The cooking system in Stardew Valley offers flexibility with certain ingredient categories, allowing for strategic substitutions that can save rare items or make cooking more efficient.

Valid Substitution Categories:

  1. Eggs:

    • Any egg can be used in any “Egg” recipe slot
    • This includes: Chicken Egg, Large Egg, Brown Egg, Duck Egg, Void Egg, Dinosaur Egg, and Ostrich Egg
    • Strategic tip: Use regular eggs for cooking and save large or special eggs for shipping or artisan goods
  2. Milk:

    • Any milk can be used in any “Milk” recipe slot
    • This includes: Milk, Large Milk, Goat Milk, and Large Goat Milk
    • Strategic tip: Use regular milk for cooking and process large milk into cheese
  3. Fish (for generic recipes):

    • Some recipes call for “Fish (any)” which accepts any fish
    • This includes: All rod-caught fish, algae, and even some crab pot items
    • Strategic tip: Use the lowest-value fish for these recipes
  4. Seafood (for certain recipes):

    • Some recipes like Fish Stew accept various seafood items
    • Strategic tip: Save specific fish for specific recipes and use common varieties for general “fish” requirements

Substitution Strategy Examples:

Recipe Called For Can Substitute Strategic Choice
Omelet Egg (1) Any egg type Regular chicken egg (lowest value)
Pancakes Egg (1), Milk (1) Any egg, any milk Regular egg, regular milk
Complete Breakfast Fried Egg (1), Milk (1) Any milk Regular milk
Sashimi Fish (any) (1) Any fish/algae Cheapest fish (Anchovy, Sunfish)
Maki Roll Fish (any) (1) Any fish/algae Green Algae (abundant)

Optimization Tip: When using the “Organize” button in your inventory, the game automatically selects ingredients from the bottom-right slot first. Place your preferred substitution ingredients in positions that will be selected first (bottom-right) to ensure your valuable items aren’t used accidentally.

Cooking for Profit vs. Utility

While cooking primarily provides utility through buffs and energy restoration, you might wonder if it can also be profitable. Let’s analyze when to cook for sale and when to prioritize utility.

Cooking for Profit Analysis:

Most cooked dishes sell for less than the sum of their individual ingredients. For example:

However, a few recipes do provide modest profits:

Recipe Selling Price Ingredient Cost Profit Profit %
Maple Bar 300g ~270g ~30g 11%
Lucky Lunch 250g ~220g ~30g 14%
Tropical Curry 500g ~450g ~50g 11%
Pink Cake 480g ~440g ~40g 9%

When to Cook for Profit:

When to Cook for Utility:

  1. Buff Foods: Always prioritize cooking meals that provide buffs you need
  2. Energy Efficiency: Some cooked foods provide more energy than their raw ingredients
  3. Achievement Progress: Cook new recipes to work toward the Gourmet Chef achievement
  4. Healing Items: Prepare combat healing meals before dangerous mining expeditions

Economic Efficiency Tip: Rather than selling cooked dishes, it’s usually more profitable to:

  1. Sell high-quality crops directly
  2. Process lower-quality crops into artisan goods (wine, juice, pickles)
  3. Cook primarily for personal use, gifts, and quests

Meal Gifting Strategy

While raw ingredients often make fine gifts, certain villagers specifically love cooked dishes. Strategic cooking for gift-giving can rapidly build relationships with minimal effort.

Most Gift-Efficient Recipes:

Recipe Loved By Easy to Make? Ingredients
Pancakes Jodi Yes Wheat Flour, Egg, Milk
Chocolate Cake Abigail, Caroline, Evelyn, Jodi, Vincent Moderate Wheat Flour, Sugar, Egg
Pink Cake Haley, Jas, Marnie, Vincent Complex Melon, Wheat Flour, Sugar, Egg
Vegetable Medley Caroline, Jodi Simple Tomato, Beet
Complete Breakfast Alex Complex Fried Egg, Milk, Hashbrowns, Pancakes
Salmon Dinner Alex Moderate Salmon, Amaranth, Kale
Fried Calamari Pierre Simple Squid, Wheat Flour, Oil
Sashimi Sebastian Very Easy Any Fish
Pepper Poppers Shane Simple Hot Pepper, Cheese
Pumpkin Soup Robin, Sebastian Simple Pumpkin, Milk
Miner’s Treat Dwarf Moderate Cave Carrot, Sugar, Milk
Blackberry Cobbler Demetrius, Linus, Maru Simple Blackberry, Sugar, Wheat Flour
Roasted Hazelnuts Clint Very Easy Hazelnut (3)

Universally Liked Dishes:
These dishes are “Liked” (not “Loved”) by almost everyone, making them good all-purpose gifts:

Gift Optimization Strategy:

  1. Focus on easy-to-make loved gifts for priority relationships
  2. Use universal likes for general friendship building
  3. Save complex recipes for birthdays (8× friendship points)
  4. Remember that high-quality ingredients don’t affect gift value for cooked items

Birthday Gift Planning:
Create a calendar of villager birthdays and prepare their loved dishes in advance:

Season Notable Birthdays Loved Food Gifts
Spring Haley (Spring 14) Pink Cake
Sebastian (Spring 10) Sashimi, Pumpkin Soup
Pierre (Spring 26) Fried Calamari
Summer Alex (Summer 13) Complete Breakfast, Salmon Dinner
Shane (Summer 20) Pepper Poppers
Fall Robin (Fall 21) Pumpkin Soup
Caroline (Fall 7) Vegetable Medley, Chocolate Cake
Winter Jodi (Winter 11) Pancakes, Chocolate Cake, Vegetable Medley
Vincent (Winter 10) Pink Cake, Chocolate Cake

Pro Tip: Cooked meals don’t spoil, so you can prepare birthday gifts far in advance and store them for the appropriate season.

New Cooking Features in 1.6

The 1.6 update for Stardew Valley introduced several exciting additions and changes to the cooking system. If you’re returning to the game or just curious about what’s new, here’s everything cooking-related in the latest major update.

Changes to Recipes and Ingredients

The 1.6 update added new recipes, ingredients, and cooking mechanics to expand your culinary repertoire.

New Recipes in 1.6:

New Ingredients:

Recipe Adjustments:

Vinegar Production:

Ingredient Production Updates:

With these additions, players can now produce every store-bought ingredient (Flour, Sugar, Rice, Oil, Vinegar) on their farm rather than purchasing them from Pierre’s.

The 1.6 update introduced several new systems that interact with cooking, from mastery perks to additional food-related gameplay elements.

Mastery System:

1.6 Pet System Updates:

Prize Machine:

Spouse Portraits:

Big Tree Quest Line:

While not all 1.6 features directly impact cooking, many of these additions enhance the overall experience of maintaining your farm and kitchen. The ability to produce all basic cooking ingredients on your farm is particularly significant, allowing for complete self-sufficiency in your culinary pursuits.

Tools and Resources

The Stardew Valley community has created numerous tools and resources to help players master the cooking system. From spreadsheets to mods, these resources can significantly enhance your cooking experience.

Cooking Spreadsheets and Checklists

Community-created tools help you track progress, plan ingredient gathering, and optimize your cooking efficiency.

Essential Spreadsheets:

  1. Stardew Valley Checklist/Spreadsheet

    • Comprehensive tracking for all game aspects
    • Includes minimum ingredients needed for all recipes
    • Updated for latest version
    • Perfect for completionists
  2. Visual Guide of Cooking Ingredients

    • Color-coded visual reference
    • Organized by ingredient type
    • Shows exact quantities needed
    • Useful for quick reference
  3. Seasonal Crop Planner

    • Helps plan crop rotations around cooking needs
    • Calculates optimal planting schedules
    • Ensures you’ll have ingredients when needed

How to Use Cooking Spreadsheets Effectively:

  1. Make a personal copy of the spreadsheet (usually through Google Docs)
  2. Update it regularly as you learn new recipes
  3. Use it to plan seasonal farming activities
  4. Track ingredients you still need to collect

For players who prefer physical reference materials, consider printing a cooking checklist to keep beside you while playing, marking off recipes as you complete them.

While vanilla Stardew Valley offers a robust cooking system, mods can enhance the experience with new recipes, better organization, and quality-of-life improvements.

Top Cooking-Related Mods (Updated for 1.6):

  1. The Love of Cooking

    • Adds a cooking skill with progression
    • Includes 35+ new recipes
    • Adds unique buff types
    • Includes tool upgrades and seasonings
    • Compatible with 1.6
  2. Cooking Skill

    • Simpler alternative to Love of Cooking
    • Adds professions related to cooking
    • Increases energy from food as you level up
  3. Cooking and Crafting Recipes for Sale

    • Makes all recipes purchasable from the Stardrop Saloon
    • Perfect for players who don’t want to wait for TV shows or friendships
    • Great for replays or when you’ve missed recipes
  4. Better Fridge Storage

    • Increased fridge capacity
    • Better organization options
    • Visual improvements for kitchen storage
  5. UI Info Suite

    • Shows which recipes you’ve cooked
    • Displays ingredient information
    • Tracks cooking achievement progress

How to Install Mods:

  1. Install SMAPI (Stardew Modding API)
  2. Download mods from Nexus Mods
  3. Extract mod files to your Stardew Valley/Mods folder
  4. Launch the game through SMAPI

Note: Always back up your save files before installing mods, and check for compatibility with your game version. Some mods may not be updated immediately after game patches.

Visual Guides for Ingredients

Visual learners may benefit from image-based guides that show ingredients and recipes at a glance.

Useful Visual References:

  1. Cooking Collection Grid

    • Shows all 80+ recipes as they appear in the Collections tab
    • Useful for identifying which recipes you’re missing
  2. Seasonal Ingredient Maps

    • Shows where to find seasonal ingredients
    • Includes forageable items by location
    • Marks fishing spots for recipe-specific fish
  3. Kitchen Organization Guides

    • Example layouts for refrigerator organization
    • Chest labeling systems for ingredient storage
    • Efficient kitchen setups with multiple fridges
  4. Buff Visualization Charts

    • Color-coded guides showing which foods provide which buffs
    • Compares buff strength and duration visually
    • Helps quickly identify the optimal food for different activities

These visual guides complement text-based information and can make the cooking system more accessible, especially for newer players or those returning after a long break.

Community Resource Hub:
The Stardew Valley community continually updates and creates new tools. Check the official forums, Reddit (r/StardewValley), and Discord communities for the latest resources.

Action Steps Recap

Build your kitchen first through Robin’s shop, watch The Queen of Sauce every Sunday, befriend villagers strategically, organize ingredients seasonally, cook buff-specific meals for different activities, produce all basic ingredients on your farm for self-sufficiency, and use community tools to track your progress toward cooking mastery.

Further Resources

Patch-History

Stardew Valley Cooking-Related Patch History

Version Date Change Impact on Cooking
1.6 March 2025 Added Moss Soup recipe New forage-based recipe requiring the new moss resource
1.6 March 2025 Added vinegar production from rice Complete self-sufficiency for cooking ingredients
1.6 March 2025 Added mastery system with cooking-related perks New ways to enhance cooking efficiency
1.6 March 2025 Added prize machine with recipe rewards New way to obtain recipes
1.5 December 2020 Added Ginger Island and tropical recipes New ingredients and recipes like Tropical Curry
1.5 December 2020 Added Qi Fruit New crop (not used in cooking)
1.5 December 2020 Added ability to move kitchen furniture Better kitchen organization options
1.4 November 2019 Added aged roe and caviar New fish-based products (not used in cooking)
1.4 November 2019 Fish Ponds added New way to get fish ingredients consistently
1.3 August 2018 Multiplayer kitchen functionality Multiple players can use kitchen
1.1 October 2016 Added coffee and its speed buff Important buff food/drink
1.0 February 2016 Base game cooking system Foundation of cooking mechanics