Cooked Rabbit Wiki Guide

This Minecraft tutorial explains how to craft cooked rabbit with screenshots and step-by-step instructions.

In Minecraft, cooked rabbit is one of the many food items that you can make. However, it is not made with a crafting table but rather with a furnace or a smoker. When you eat cooked rabbit, it will replenish your food meter.

Cooked Rabbit - Wiki Guide 1

Let’s explore how to add cooked rabbit to your inventory.

Where to find Cooked Rabbit in Creative Mode

Minecraft Java Edition (PC/Mac)

Here is where you can find cooked rabbit in the Creative Inventory menu:

Platform Version(s) Creative Menu Location
Java Edition (PC/Mac) 1.8 – 1.19
Java Edition (PC/Mac) 1.19.3 – 1.20
  • Platform is the platform that applies.
  • Version(s) is the Minecraft version numbers where the item can be found in the menu location listed (we have tested and confirmed this version number).
  • Creative Menu Location is the location of the item in the Creative Inventory menu.

Required Materials to make Cooked Rabbit

In Minecraft, these are the materials you can use to craft cooked rabbit:

Cooked Rabbit - Wiki Guide 6 1 Raw Rabbit

How to craft Cooked Rabbit in Survival Mode

You can craft cooked rabbit in Survival Mode using either a furnace or a smoker.

1. Open the Furnace Menu

First, open your furnace so that you have the Furnace menu that looks like this:

Cooked Rabbit - Wiki Guide 7

2. Add Fuel to the Furnace

Next, you need to add fuel to the bottom fuel box in the furnace.

Cooked Rabbit - Wiki Guide 8

In this tutorial, we are going to use coal as our fuel.

TIP: Read our tutorial called How to Add Fuel to a Furnace if you aren’t sure what items can be used as fuel, the length of time each fuel will burn, or how many items each fuel can smelt/cook.

3. Add Items to make Cooked Rabbit

Next, place the raw rabbit in the top box of the furnace. You should see the flames cooking the raw rabbit.

Cooked Rabbit - Wiki Guide 9

Once the raw rabbit is cooked in the furnace, the cooked rabbit will appear in the box to the right.

Cooked Rabbit - Wiki Guide 10

4. Move the Cooked Rabbit to Inventory

Now that you have made cooked rabbit in your furnace, you need to move the new item to your inventory.

Cooked Rabbit - Wiki Guide 11

Congratulations, you have made cooked rabbit in a furnace in Minecraft!

Item ID and Name

Minecraft Java Edition (PC/Mac)

In Minecraft, cooked rabbit has the following Name, ID and DataValue:

Description
(Minecraft ID Name)
Data Value Stack Size Version
Cooked Rabbit
(minecraft:cooked_rabbit)
0 64 1.8 – 1.12
Cooked Rabbit
(minecraft:cooked_rabbit)
64 1.13 – 1.20
  • Description is what the item is called and (Minecraft ID Name) is the string value that is used in game commands.
  • Data Value (or damage value) identifies the variation of the block if more than one type exists for the Minecraft ID.
  • Stack Size is the maximum stack size for this item. While some items in Minecraft are stackable up to 64, other items can only be stacked up to 16 or 1. (NOTE: These stack sizes are for vanilla Minecraft only. If you are running a mod, some mods may change the stack size for an item.)
  • Platform is the platform that applies.
  • Version(s) is the Minecraft version numbers that the Minecraft ID and Name are valid for.

Give Command for Cooked Rabbit

Give Command in Minecraft Java Edition (PC/Mac)

In Minecraft Java Edition (PC/Mac) 1.13, 1.14, 1.15, 1.16, 1.17, 1.18, 1.19 and 1.20, the /give command for Cooked Rabbit is:

/give @p cooked_rabbit 1

In Minecraft Java Edition (PC/Mac) 1.8, 1.9, 1.10, 1.11 and 1.12, the /give command for Cooked Rabbit is:

/give @p cooked_rabbit 1 0

Things to Make with Cooked Rabbit

You can use cooked rabbit to make items in Minecraft such as:

Cooked Rabbit - Wiki Guide 16 How to make Rabbit Stew

Things to Do with Cooked Rabbit

Here are some activities that you can do with cooked rabbit in Minecraft:

Cooked Rabbit - Wiki Guide 17 How to Eat Food

Mods

1.19.4 Mods

1.19.3 Mods

1.19.2 Mods

1.18.2 Mods

1.16.5 Mods

1.15.2 Mods

1.12.2 Mods

1.8.9 Mods

1.7.10 Mods

1.18.1 Mods

1.17.1 Mods

1.14.4 Mods

1.13.2 Mods

1.11.2 Mods

1.10.2 Mods

1.9.4 Mods

Minecraft Modpacks

1.19.4 Modpacks

1.19.3 Modpacks

1.19.2 Modpacks

1.18.2 Modpacks

1.16.5 Modpacks

1.12.2 Modpacks

1.7.10 Modpacks

Forge Mods

Fabric Mods

Quilt Mods

Resource Packs

1.19.4 Resource Packs

1.19.3 Resource Packs

1.19.2 Resource Packs

1.18.2 Resource Packs

1.16.5 Resource Packs

1.15.2 Resource Packs

1.12.2 Resource Packs

1.8.9 Resource Packs

1.7.10 Resource Packs

1.18.1 Resource Packs

1.17.1 Resource Packs

1.14.4 Resource Packs

1.13.2 Resource Packs

1.11.2 Resource Packs

1.10.2 Resource Packs

1.9.4 Resource Packs

Shaders

1.19.4 Shaders

1.19.3 Shaders

1.19.2 Shaders

1.18.2 Shaders

1.17.1 Shaders

1.16.5 Shaders

Maps

1.19.4 Maps

1.19.3 Maps

1.19.2 Maps

1.18.2 Maps

1.16.5 Maps

1.15.2 Maps

1.12.2 Maps

1.8.9 Maps

1.7.10 Maps

1.18.1 Maps

1.17.1 Maps

1.14.4 Maps

1.13.2 Maps

1.11.2 Maps

1.10.2 Maps

1.9.4 Maps

Data Packs

1.19.4 Data Packs

1.19.3 Data Packs

1.19.2 Data Packs

1.18.2 Data Packs

1.16.5 Data Packs

1.15.2 Data Packs

1.18.1 Data Packs

1.17.1 Data Packs

1.14.4 Data Packs

1.13.2 Data Packs

MCPE/Bedrock

Mods & Addons

MCPE 1.19 Add-ons

MCPE 1.19 Mods

Texture Packs

MCPE 1.19 Texture Packs

MCPE 1.19 Resource Packs

Maps

MCPE 1.19 Maps

Clients

MCPE 1.19 Clients

Mod Menu Clients

Shaders

MCPE 1.19 Shaders

Render Dragon Shaders

Launchers

Skin Packs

Clients

1.19.4 Clients

1.19.3 Clients

1.19.2 Clients

1.18.2 Clients

1.16.5 Clients

1.12.2 Clients

1.8.9 Clients

Launchers

1.19.4 Launchers

1.19.3 Launchers

1.19.2 Launchers

1.18.2 Launchers

1.16.5 Launchers

1.12.2 Launchers

1.7.10 Launchers

Seeds

1.19.4 Seeds

1.19.3 Seeds

1.19.2 Seeds

1.18.2 Seeds

Skins

Plugins

Bukkit Plugins

Spigot Plugins

Paper Plugins

Tutorials

Installation Guide

Mobs Wiki Guide

Seeds Wiki Guide

Biomes Wiki Guide

Status Effects Wiki Guide

Enchantments Wiki Guide

Materials Wiki Guide

Command Blocks

Versions

Backlinks