Insider Trader: Cooking for cash

Cooking is one of those secondary professions that anyone can learn, even if they already have two primary professions. Because of this fairly low barrier to entry, there are a lot of cooks around. So many that I've actually never leveled it myself! I just rely on the generosity of friends for my cooking business.
How profitable is cooking? That all depends on what you cook. I got into this because I once paid 100g for five Spiced Mammoth Treats for my hunter's raid night. Why was I buying them on a Tuesday? Poor planning. What did I learn? The value of planning. We're going to start with a very important concept for auctioneers, here: tenacity.
I'm not talking about tenacity that makes you pwn noobs in Wintergrasp better; I'm talking about the ability to keep a business running for the long haul. More than just this batch, just this week. I reasoned that because everyone can cook, there must be tons of incredibly cheap food for sale on the AH. I reasoned wrong, mostly because most people who can cook only cook for themselves. Instead of increasing supply, they're lowering demand.
Having the tenacity to acquire supplies and keep stock for sale in the long run can be very profitable. In the short run, you may be undercut, but unless you're up against someone else with the same tenacity as you, you'll come out ahead at the end. You can sell raiding consumable food at a very nice markup on raid nights.
Getting mats is the hard part
Northrend cooking for raid consumables requires a lot of random bits of meat and fish. These days, Northrend Spices go for a song (25g for 100 on my realm), but unless you happen to have the time to grind the other mats, you'll find that the biggest difficulty in getting and holding a stat food market is in procuring mats. You should be checking for food on the AH as often as possible (twice a day, in my case), and don't forget that if you use Auctioneer, you can set up your snatch list to automatically notify you if your scan contains good deals.
I hear you asking why I wouldn't recommend just farming it yourself. First of all, farming fish means fishing. Leveling fishing in World of Warcraft is the absolute worst thing you can do to yourself, in my opinion. You must do a repetitive task thousands of times. Each cast takes variable amounts of time, can't be automated and forces you to not look away. At least I can watch a movie while I mill. Additionally, all the meat you'll need drops off animals scattered about all over Northrend. Even if you have an epic flier and time to kill, you'd be better served by using that time in a more profitable manner and using those profits to buy what you need from the auction house.
The exception to this is if there is absolutely nothing for sale and the market will support a high enough profit margin that you will make more in the end that you would have by doing whatever your alternative was.
Also, this same logic applies to leveling cooking. Why spend the hours needed to do this, when chances are you can find someone on your server who already has done it, has the most awesome hat in the world (which, by the way, should totally have an equivalent for every other crafting skill) and is willing to cook for you for a tip?
So many recipes!
How do you choose where to start? For starters, take a look at this nice list put together by Michael Gray. You have your raid-wide feasts and some of your stat food. For the sake of completeness, here is the complete list of all the current end-game raiding food:
- Fish Feast for most classes (at least some of the time)
- Blackened Dragonfin for agility classes
- Dragonfin Filet for strength classes
- Hearty Rhino for ArP classes
- Imperial Manta Steak and Very Burnt Worg for haste classes
- Mega Mammoth Meal or Poached Northern Sculpin for AP classes
- Rhinolicious Worm Steak for expertise
- Snapper Extreme and Worg Tartare for hit rating
- Spiced Mammoth Treats for pets
- Spiced Worm Burger and Spicy Blue Nettlefish for crit
- Tender Shoveltusk Steak for spellpower
Pricing techniques
List a little stock every day. If you're the only person making this stuff, decide whether to sell high volume at low prices or lower volume at higher margins. Base this decision on your ability to find mats. I have trouble getting Chunk O' Mammoth reliably, so I sell mammoth-based foods fairly expensively and never undercut. Don't forget that if you are being undercut and have reason to believe that the person doing this is farming it themselves, this is an opportunity to overcut and buy them out. They have a supply limited to their willingness to spend another hour killing Stoic Mammoths for six stacks of meat.
Filed under: Economy, Insider Trader (Professions)






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
AltairAntares May 31st 2010 8:05PM
mammoth meat is easy to get, just go to borean tundra and run over the millions of mammoths running around madly. You can get a stack of meat in a couple minutes with the right class (especially at the level of mobs in that zone).
Ogri Jun 1st 2010 4:47AM
Another great place to farm mammoth meat is in Sholazar Basin, east of the Glimmering Pillar. According to wowhead, the chunk of mammoth has a 93% drop rate from those mobs. Often, they even drop two chunks. Though the mobs are a higher level than in Borean Tundra, most classes should be able to burn them them in a matter of seconds at these current gear levels.
Balmazer Jun 1st 2010 6:34AM
Best place I find is up in Storm Peak near the Hodir guys where there's the pack of 5-8 mammoths running about, that respawn as soon as you kill them. This might be somewhat trickey if you're not a tanking class, I've never done it on anything other than my bear.
Gorgy May 31st 2010 8:06PM
for the caster class you forgot the firecracker salmon, it sells quite well dunno why but it just does :)
Merus May 31st 2010 9:34PM
Well, that's because it's SP and mana.
A low fishing skill is not a problem if you can find the appropriate fishing pools - these days, casts in pools always land the appropriate fish. The tricky bit is that pool tracking is only available to people who have levelled their fishing.
Neyssa Jun 1st 2010 3:47AM
'The tricky bit is that pool tracking is only available to people who have levelled their fishing.'
That's true, however you only need to level fishing to 100, which is very fast and easy. Just head to Barrens, and fish Oily Blackmouth - leveling Alchemists will pay a fair price for it in AH - then go to Zangarmarsh at skill 100, fish up Weather-Beaten journal from the floating junk around the pipes. It is a very high drop rate as I have experienced. Then you can track pools and fish up whatever you need for cooking while waiting for summon or battleground.
Cautha Jun 1st 2010 4:06AM
"The tricky bit is that pool tracking is only available to people who have levelled their fishing."
Download Gathermate! Tracks fish pool spawns :)
Kurtis Jun 1st 2010 7:46AM
Weather-Beaten Journal is also available from several junk nodes in Azeroth. Two of my toons have gotten it from the Schooner Wreckage along the Hillsbrad coast.
xvkarbear May 31st 2010 8:27PM
I'm uncertain of spirit food, but I know as a leveling healer - I adore the mp5 food. It's not as useful at 80.. but from 70+ it's value is much higher.
Tribunal May 31st 2010 9:50PM
Mp5 is the best food (other than just eating fish feast) for a HL Paladin.
So it's worthwhile, albeit a smaller market. But so are some of the other foods.
Tribunal May 31st 2010 10:02PM
Oh, I did forget the haste food.
But still, the Mp5 food does have a use, that was the main point :)
Dwuffy May 31st 2010 8:29PM
Blackened Worg Steak (http://www.wowhead.com/spell=57438) allows you to track humanoids for 1 hour. It's a good sell on active world-PVP servers also.
Basil Berntsen May 31st 2010 9:34PM
I considered adding these, but in the interest of brevity, left them out. The majority of food sold is for raiders, as far as I can tell. I had very little luck moving the rarer foods.
Hal May 31st 2010 8:35PM
I'll sometimes eat Mp5 food when I heal on my pally. Haste is my other choice of food, but most of the time my biggest concern is keeping my mana up, and on really intense fights that extra Mp5 can be just enough to keep me afloat.
Valt May 31st 2010 8:48PM
Dont do like I tried. Yelling that you have almost every recipe in game (164/170 something), chefs hate, small tip etc in trade chat is never working. Ever. I think I got 1 customer in 3.1 tho.
Wich is kinda sad because that would be nice way to make money. Too bad trade is pointless for anything else than drama and spam.
anyway, Im surprised that pet food actually sells... maybe those selected few are ready to pay a lot from them huh? I better try to sell some over the week..
Basil Berntsen May 31st 2010 9:35PM
I use a pet food every time I wipe while learning an encounter. As does any other good hunter.
Docseuzz Jun 1st 2010 10:17AM
plus- I use the spicy mammoth treats on my shammy's wolves - bound to a macro so it feeds them... a lil extra ap on them for minimal extra work on my part = good.
I tend to farm leather out of the mammoths outside of Dunder Mifflin :) on my druid -- starfall + hurricane = pack of dead mammoths in seconds, so I end up with a decent stack of mammoth chunks...
bitssy May 31st 2010 9:47PM
Y O U F O R G O T: FIRECRACKER SALMON ON YOUR LIST-FALLIN DOWN ON THE JOB HERE!
lemur Jun 1st 2010 12:01AM
Tip for warlocks. If you have to farm for meat, and have an affliction spec you can do the following:
Mammoth and Rhino: There are huge herds near the DETA and across the lake where you kill lunchbox. Run into a mass of them and spam seed of corruption. Its fun, and you can kill entire groups in 2 or three seeds.
Shoveltusk: Go to Westguard keep. Go in a circle around the burning area and seed of corruption all the shovel tusks.
Its quick, easy, and you feel powerful/evil doing so.
Borled Jun 1st 2010 12:12AM
There are green mammoths in zul'drak near the altar of mam'thoth that have a higher than 100-percent drop rate on mammoth meat (because some of them often drop two meats). They respawn fast because they're part of a quest.