School of Culinary Arts

Most who study the magical arts to do so chasing their ambitions, but not all wizards seek power or transcendence. Many an artist is drawn to magic, but few are drawn as deeply as chefs. Wizardry began in the kitchen, and there it will always find a home.

Bonus Proficiencies

When join the School of Culinary Arts at the 2nd level, you gain proficiency with Cook's Utensils, and may use them as a spellcasting focus, or as improvised weapons.

If you are already proficient with Cook's Utensils, you may add double your proficiency bonus to all checks used to prepare food with them.

Recipe Casting

Beginning when you select this school at 2nd level, you may cast any spell written in your spellbook that targets a specified number of creatures as a recipe. The recipe version of a spell takes 30 minutes longer to cast than normal and does not consume a spell slot or require concentration. It will also require 5sp worth of rations as a material component and cook's utensils as a focus in addition to any material components or focuses it already requires.

When a spell is cast this way, the effects of the spell are not immediate. Instead a dish is created that may be consumed with an action. Any creature that consumes the dish will immediately be effected as if they had been targeted by the spell. If a spell targets multiple creatures, the recipe creates a number of dishes equal to the maximum number of targets. Dishes created this way will last a number of days equal to your proficiency bonus.

You may use this ability a number of times per day equal to your highest spell slot.

Culinary Inspiration

At 6th level, you add two spells of your choice from any class to your spellbook. A spell you choose must be of a level you can cast, or a cantrip, and must be a spell you would be able to cast as a recipe.

Iron Chef

Starting at 10th level, you gain resistance to fire and poison damage, and have advantage on all saves to resist poisoning or food-borne illnesss

Fusion Cuisine

Starting at 14th level, you may bake two spells into a single dish. When you cast a spell as a recipe, you may consume an additional spell slot to add the effects of the second spell to the resulting dish. When determining the casting time of the resulting recipe, you must use the casting time of whichever spell takes longer. Likewise, when determining the number of dishes created, you must use whichever spell has fewer targets.

To use this feature, you must have the second spell written in your spellbook, and must be able to cast that spell as a recipe. You must also provide any spell focuses or material components required by the second spell, the latter of which are consumed upon casting.