Rurik & Nebbler
Nebbler Nebbler
Hey Rurik, have you ever heard about the ancient recipe for the legendary moon cheese that supposedly vanished with the Ice Age? I read a rumor that it was the most delicious snack ever, and I’m dying to find out how it was made.
Rurik Rurik
I’ve heard the name tossed around in the old taverns of the north, but it’s all stories—no real recipe on record. The “moon cheese” supposedly came from a forgotten glacier that melted in the Ice Age, and the only hints are a few scratched symbols on an ancient slab. If we could decode those, maybe we’d get a clue. Until then, it’s a tasty mystery that keeps me restless.
Nebbler Nebbler
Sounds like a real snack quest! I’d love to help crack those symbols—maybe we can treat it like a puzzle. If you can send me a picture, I’ll try to read it with my “decoding goggles” (or just Google‑translate the shape‑patterns). The idea of a glacier‑made cheese is fascinating—imagine a melt‑free, frozen delight that’s still tasty. Let me know what we find, and maybe we’ll discover the recipe together!
Rurik Rurik
I can’t drop a photo into our chat, but I’ve sketched the slab on a scrap of parchment—just a quick diagram of the symbols, if you want to try the same “decoding goggles” trick. Let me know what you see and we’ll see if the cheese secrets come out.
Nebbler Nebbler
Could you describe the symbols for me? I’ll try to imagine them and see if they look like any alphabet I know, or maybe like a doodle of a cheese wheel. If you can point out any lines or shapes that stand out, that might help me “decode” it. And hey, if we do crack it, we can figure out if the cheese was a round wheel or a long block—important for a snack!
Rurik Rurik
The slab has three rows of symbols. In the first row, there’s a long horizontal line, almost like a base, with a small notch in the middle—like a tiny arrow pointing down. The second row is a loop, but it’s broken in two places, giving it a shape that looks like a sideways “S” with a notch on the right side. The third row has a small circle, but it’s not a perfect circle—more of a donut shape with a small gap on the top left, almost as if it’s missing a slice. The lines are all thick and worn, as if carved by a stone tool, and there’s a faint cross-hatching in the background that might be a shading or a simple background pattern. If you look at the whole set, it sort of looks like a stylized wheel with a missing piece and a notch—could be a symbol for a cheese wheel that’s been cut or melted. The loop in the middle might hint at a rind, and the gap could be the bite taken out. Try matching those shapes to any old alphabets you know—maybe it’s a crude representation of a cheese shape or a word for “cheese” in an ancient tongue. If you can line up the symbols with a known script, we might get the name of the cheese or a clue to its recipe.
Nebbler Nebbler
Wow, that sounds super detailed! I’m picturing a giant, carved‑up cheese wheel right now. The long line with a little arrow could be the edge of a slice, the sideways “S” with a notch might be the rind, and the donut‑like shape with a missing slice could be the actual cheese piece that got eaten. If that’s the case, maybe the slab is saying “cheese cut, eaten, leave behind the rind.” I’ve never seen a symbol that looks like a cheese before, but if the ancient people were marking food, it could be a recipe note: “take a piece of this cheese, leave the rind, melt the inside with heat from a stone fire.” So maybe the recipe is just to reheat that old glacier cheese until it’s gooey. Let’s try making a little test by warming a cheese wheel and see if it melts like a mythic moon‑cheese. Who knows, we might finally taste the mystery!