Bake into a Pie
Unconditional creature removal in black has always carried a tax: a life payment on the cheaper answers, a targeting restriction that spares certain creatures, or a sorcery-speed limit that leaves you exposed on the opponent's turn. Here the price is paid up front, in mana. Four mana at instant speed is a steep rate for a straight destroy effect, and the Food token is what the design uses to soften it. The refund itself is marginal: three life for a sacrifice you can make at any time, since the Food's ability carries no timing restriction and rarely justifies the mana on its own. But the life was never the point. The token is fuel. A permanent that other cards can count, sacrifice, or trigger off of turns a removal spell into something an engine can consume, feeding sacrifice outlets and payoffs that want a cheap artifact to eat. That is the quiet trick of the Food mechanic here: it lets an efficient interactive effect leave a residue behind, so a card that would otherwise be pure removal becomes a source of the artifacts a sacrifice-driven deck runs on. The flavor closes the loop, a witch's curse rendered as a literal recipe, but the mechanical intent is plain: make the kill spell double as production for the artifacts an aristocrats shell is already built to spend.



