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Animals are (sorry to all the vegetarians out there) essentially food. However, Gamp's Law of Elemental Transfiguration states that you can't conjure / transfigure the inedible into the edible. Do animals in living form count as not being food yet or are they just not edible?

Somewhat related thought which just popped up: Do animagi revert to their human form when killed, and if they don't, is eating them, knowingly or unknowingly, counted as cannibalism?

SBoss
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1 Answers1

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I believe this quote answers your Question.

As per Hermione

Hermione: "It’s impossible to make good food out of nothing! You can Summon it if you know where it is, you can transform it, you can increase the quantity if you’ve already got some..."

For instance the spells Molly Weasley uses to cook with would surely involve the preparing of Animals and then the cooking of them into food.

It appears I was misled by the question body and did not answer the title question.

As I see it a Transfiguration would last through an animals death as it is not a part of the animals magic it is to do with the caster. For instance you could transfigure a Cup into a Gerbil (inanimate to animate - Cornelius Fudge does so in front of the Prime Minister). When you transfigured you change the structure of the object/being (not limited to inanimate) into the new object. As far as the magic itself goes it is the most scientific of the magic that we see by which I mean it requires the most precise actions to achieve a desired result.

"When Transfiguring, it is important to make firm and decisive wand movements. Do not wiggle or twirl your wand unnecessarily, or the Transfiguration will certainly be unsuccessful." —Emeric Switch, A Beginner's Guide to Transfiguration.(pottermore)

-The following has no found canon quotes as of the moment so please do not take it as complete truth refer to the comments for a discussion with the esteemed HP answerer @alexwlchan.

It's worth noting that Transfiguration is not permanent which means you couldn't transfigure a piano into a cow and then cook and eat the cow as at some point it would turn back into a piano. That would be bad.

CandiedMango
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    “Transfiguration is not permanent” – source? – alexwlchan Jul 15 '14 at 08:19
  • @alexwlchan I'll have to have a look. I'm relatively sure I saw it somewhere but now I'm thinking it might have been in HP:MoR – CandiedMango Jul 15 '14 at 08:25
  • @alexwlchan I can't find anything on it other than other people posting it without sources, HPLexicon mentions nothing about permanence. It is also possibly for something to be permanently stuck half transfigured, this could mean that transfiguration is only permanent when gone wrong or is always permanent and when it goes wrong is harder to undo. There is also a branch of magic called untransfiguration focussed on the reversal of transfigured objects (from the shady source of HP wiki though but definitely believable although we see none of it in early years possible newt level class) – CandiedMango Jul 15 '14 at 08:34
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    You could carve a piece of meat from a live cow and eat it raw. Would that piece of meat taste like piano, or would it turn back into part of the piano upon cutting it off? I doubt that JK thought about these ridiculous fringe cases so I'll understand if this remains unanswered. – SBoss Jul 15 '14 at 08:45
  • IF what I said was true then it would behave and be as a cow for as long as the spell lasted. – CandiedMango Jul 15 '14 at 08:47
  • @alexwlchan: The books explicitly imply that transfiguration wears off on the caster's death. See Lily's fish that she gave to Slughorn that vanished when she died. – user21820 May 11 '16 at 14:47
  • @alexwlchan Well, in that case, the Prime Minister's niece is going to be very confused someday when she finds a teacup in her gerbil's cage. :) – Emily Campbell Jun 09 '16 at 20:11