A Collection of Above Three Hundred Receipts in Cookery, Physick, and Surgery: For the Use of All Good Wives, Tender Mothers, and Careful Nurses

Capa
executrix of Mary Kettilby, and sold, 1734 - 263 páginas
 

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Página 178 - MS. receipt-book, dated 1752 : ' For the Bite of a Mad Dog. — Take the leaves of Rue, picked from the Stalks and bruised. Six ounces of Garlick picked from the Stalks and bruised. Venice Treacle, or Mithridate, and the Scrapings of Pewter, of each four ounces ; boil all together over a slow fire in 2 Quarts of Strong Ale till one pint be consumed ; then keep it in a bottle close stop'd...
Página 115 - Sugar, and take as much as will lie on a Shilling every Morning for a Month conftantly.
Página 85 - Eggs well beaten ; put thele to the Water cold ; then let it boil three quarters of an Hour, taking off the Scum as...
Página 170 - ... half an ounce of mace, half an ounce of cloves, a quarter of an ounce of whole pepper, three or four large pieces of ginger, and two quarts of large mushroom-flaps rubbed to pieces.
Página 40 - Rub the pieces all over with the seasoning, fry them brown in oil, and let them stand till they are cold. Then put them into vinegar, and cover them, with oil.
Página 58 - Way. HPAKE three fmooth fair Lemons, pare •*• them, and fqueeze out the Juice ; cut the Peel in fmall Pieces, and put it to the Juice ; for two or three Hours, cover it clofe ; and when it taftes of the Peel, add to it the Whites of four Eggs, and the Yolks of two ; beat this well with two Spoonfuls of Orangeflower Water ; then put all thefe to a Pint of fair Water, ftrain it, and fweeten it with double-refin'd Sugar ; fet it over a gentle Fire, and ftir it carefully, till 'tis as thick as Cream...
Página 32 - Nutmeg and Salt ; let this ftew very well over the Fire, then beat it up with Butter, and put it under the Wild-fowl, which being under-roafted, will afford Gravy to mix with this Sauce.
Página 72 - ... it on the fire again, and let it boil till it draws in hairs, which you may perceive by holding up your spoon; then put in the flowers, and set them in cups or glasses.
Página 175 - till 'tis full, and be fure they do not touch each other in any of the Layers* when you would ufe them, lay them in warm, Water...
Página 48 - GRIND, or beat half a Pound of Rice to Flour ; mix it, by Degrees, with three Pints of Milk, and thicken it over the Fire with Care, for fear of burning, till 'tis like a...

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