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A76199 The ladies cabinet enlarged and opened: containing many rare secrets, and rich ornaments of several kindes, and different uses. Comprized under three general heads. Viz. of [brace] 1. Preserving, conserving, candying, &c 2. Physick and chirurgery. 3. Cookery and houswifery. Whereunto is added, sundry experiments, and choice extractions of waters, oyls, &c. / Collected and practised; by the late Right Honorable and learned chymist, the Lord Ruthuen. With a particular table to each part.; Ladies cabinet opened. M. B.; Forth and Brentford, Patrick Ruthven, Earl of, 1573?-1651. 1654 (1654) Wing B135; Thomason E1528_1; ESTC R16539 109,847 253

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black Cerot of Godfredo di Medio and the beforesaid Cerot Magistrale with Precipitate are able to helpe be they never so evil 219 An approved Remedy to stay Vomiting by M. R. A man of thirty years old was troubled a long time with sore vomiting throwing up presently whatsoever he eat or drank and was relieved by this receipt Take of Malmsey six ounces oyl of Vitriol six drops or more mix them together and take thereof every morning fasting an ounce or thereabout and in short time it wil stay the vomit 220 A Receipt for to make Vomits Take of the glass of Antimony pounded as smal as may be five grains infuse the same all night in four ounces of white wine shaking it divers times early in the morning pour out all the cleer part whereunto adde one ounce of Oximel Julinizans so take it drinking after every vomit a draught of posset-ale Or take of Mercurius vitae five grains in a spoonful of white wine Or take two ounces of Crocus Metallorum Or take warm warer wherein a Raddish root hath been boiled adding to it a little sallet oyl also a little Oximel of the squil may be added This vomit is taken specially for the weaknesse of the stomack and for four or five daies together it is taken for expelling the flegmatick and malign humors 221 To kil Warts an approved Medicine Take a Raddish root scrape off the outer side of it and rub it all over with salt then see it thus dressed upright in a Sawcer or some other smal dish that you may save the liquor which runneth from it and therewith annoint your Warts three or four times in a day the oftner the better and in five or six daies they wil consume away Saepe Probatum 222 For one that cannot make water Take the white strings or filmy roots of Primeroses wash them very clean and boil of them halfe a handful in a pint of Beer or white wine til half be consumed then strain it thorow a clean cloth and drink thereof a quarter of a pint somewhat warm morning and evening for three daies and it wil purge away all viscous or obstructious stopping the passage of the water Probatum 223 An excellent medicine for a child that cannot make water Kill three or four hive Bees then dry them upon an hot slate being thorow dry bruise them to smal powder then put the powder into a quart of small ale and give it the patient to drink and he shal have present remedy 224 For one that pisseth bloud Take Toutsain Sanguinary and Parsley of each one handful stamp them together very smal and mix the herbs juyce and altogether with warm Goats milke and drink a good draught thereof fasting every morning 225 To kil the wild fire Take Plantaine Sorrel Marigold leaves of each one handful stampe them and strain out the juyce and boil it with twice so much vinegar and put it up in a glasse for your use 226 How to order a woman with child before in and after her labour To preserve the infant and prevent abortion take Coriander seed prepared 2 drachms of the root of Bistort the shavings of Ivory and red Coral of each a drachm of white Amber Chrystal of each a scruple Alkerms halfe a scruple Sugar dissolved in four ounces of Rose water make tables each of them weighing a drachm Let the patient take one every other day morning and evening between whiles let her sup up a rathe new egge thickned a little with Magisterium of Pearl or fine powder or red Coral But if her brests after their filling should begin to lessen and fal it is a signe of future abortion to prevent which let her take root of Bistort and Corianders of each two drachms of unripened Gales red Sanders and Hipocistidos of each one drachm Gum Labdanum Mastick of each halfe an ounce choice Frankincense Bdelium the Gum of a tree in Arabiae of each two drachms Coral Amber of each one drachm Powder those which are to be powdered and with oyl of Turpentine and Wax make two or three Cere-clothes apply them sometimes to her loins and sides and someimes under the Navel Shee must avoid all sudden and violent motions both of the mind and body as Coughs sneezeings Frights also spices and strong wines And thus much before labour In labour to procure ease and speed take three or four drops of the distilled oyl of Nutmegs in a spoonful of white wine Or Take white Dictamne root Stones of Dates Borax of each two scruples Cinnamon Cassia lignea Amber fine pearl of each one scruple Saffron half a scruple make a smal powder which divide into two equal parts and let her take one part in a draught of the water of Lilies or posset Ale made with Rhenish wine and the other part let her take about six hours after if need require If shee should be subject to sainting or swouning before or after labour take now and then a spoonful of this excellent Cordial following Take Borage water Rose water Strawberry water and Rhenish wine of each two ounces species of Diamargaricum frigidum one scruple make a warm infusion for the space of an hour then strain it and add thereunto Manus Christi made with Pearl four ounces Syrup of Baum one ounce Syrup of Gilli-flowers of each two ounces Oriental Bezoar Unicorns horn and Ambergreece of each six grains Make a Cordial Julep Many times after labour great pains follow women newly delivered for which this plaine simple remedie is very good Drink a good draught of beer boiled with a spoonful of Camomile flowers and in greater pains let her drink six ounces of the oyl of sweet Almonds fresh drawn To dry up milk a quick and safe remedy is new sponges wet in vinegar where a handful of Comminseed boiled is bruised tyed close to the brests annointing them with Unguentum populeum To procure store of milk use posset drink made and boiled with Fennel and the sweet seeds of Annis seeds and Fennel These Remedies are approved to be safe sure and forcible to effect what is propounded 227 Te bring a woman to a speedy birth Take of Piony root dried as much as half an Almond beat it to very smal powder and give it the woman to drink in an Aleberry 228 For the same Take Hysop Vervine and Betony of each one handful stamp them smal with some old Ale and strain out that Ale and juyce and put as much more ale as will make a pretty draught and let the woman in her labour drink it and shee shall be speedily delivered 229 For a dead child in a womans body Take juyce of Hysop temper it in warm water and give it the woman to drink 230 A medicine for a woman in travel to make her have Throwes Take Coral Amber Date-stones Pearl Piony seeds Saffron Commine beat all these in powder and put it into Malmsie and take Unicorns horn and put it into a spoon with
THE LADIES CABINET ENLARGED and OPENED Containing Many Rare Secrets and Rich Ornaments of several kindes and different uses Comprized Vnder three general Heads Viz. of 1. Preserving Conserving Candying c 2. Physick and Chirurgery 3. Cookery and Houswifery Whereunto is added Sundry Experiments and choice Extractions of Waters Oyls c. Collected and practised By the late Right Honorable and Learned Chymist The Lord RUTHUEN With A particular Table to each Part. London Printed by T. M. for M. M. G. Bedell and T. Collins at the middle Temple-Gate Fleet-street 1654. To the Industrious improvers of Nature by Art especially the vertuous Ladies and Gentlen omen of this Land Courteous Ladies c. THe former Edition of this cal it what you please having received a kind entertainment frō your Ladiships hands for reasons best known to your selves notwithstanding the disorderly and confused jumbling together of things of different kinds hath made me who am not a little concerned therein to bethink my self of some way how to encourage and requite your Ladiships Pains and Patience vertues indeed of absolute necessity in such brave employments there being nothing excellent that is not withall difficult in the profitable spending of your vacant minutes For this purpose I resolved at least to smooth your way a little by bringing each particular to its proper head or since it s called A Cabinet laying each Jewel in his peculiar box and so having fitted it for readier use to have sent it abroad again to salute your gentle hands the second time But hearing in the mean time of certain rare Experiments and choice extractions of Oyls Waters c. the practice of a Noble hand and of approved Abilities to testifie how ready I am to further ingenuous undertakings in this kind I have with much pains and some charges sought after and at length happily purchased them for you Al which with the addition of many other Secrets of several kinds and I hope of valuable concernment I have so incorporated together if I may so say and methodically digested that they may be the more easily and profitably improved And lest any thing might yet be lacking on my part I have caused somewhat like an alphabetical Table to be affixed to every part by the help whereof you may quickly view the particulars of your Treasury and know where to find them at pleasure The whole Cabinet consisteth of three Divisions in each whereof are contained many pleasant and precious pieces of different kinds both for ornament and profit In the first you shall find a delightful Confectionary of Preserves Conserves Candies Syrups and such like and how to make and use them In the second you may take notice of very many and rare Secrets in nature belonging both to Physick and Chirurgery not unworthy the knowledg and practice of most piercing spitits And in the third are set down excellent patterns for the neatest Cooks and good Houswifes The most stately of the three is that in the midst the more delightful are set on each side This like a magnificent palace stands above them these like places of pleasure stand about it Here you may sport there you may rest These are for pomp the other for safety But lest I should be thought tedious to little purpose or any way to endeavour to byasse your affections or abridg your freedom I shall thus leave you at liberty as Lovers in Gardens to follow your own fancies Take what you like and delight in your choice and leave what you list to him whose labour is not lost if any thing please M. B. Experiments in Preserving Conserving and Candying c. PRESERVING 1. The best way to Preserve Quinces white FIrst pare and core the Quinces and boyl them in fair water till they be very tender not covering them Then taking them out of the water take to every pound of them two pound of Sugar and half a Pint of water and boyle it to a sirrup scumming it well then put in some of the Jelly that is washed from the Quince kernels and after that making it boyle a little put in your Quinces boyl them very fast keeping the holes upwards as neer as you can for fear of breaking and when they are so tender that you may thrust a rush thorow them take them off and put them up in your glasses having first saved some sirrup till it be cold to fill up your glasses 2. A Speciall remembrance in doing them When you Preserve Quinces or make Marmelade take the Kernels out of the raw Quinces and wash off the Jellie that groweth about them in fair water Then straine the water and Jelly from the kernels through some fine Cobweb Lawne put the same into the Marmelade or Preserved Quinces when they are well scummed But put not so much into your Quinces as into the Marmelade for it will Jelly the sirrup too much Put six or seven spoonfuls of sirrup into the Jellie before you put it into the Marmelade you must boyle your Quinces more for Marmelade then to preserve your Quinces and least of all when you make your clear Cakes When you would preserve your Quinces white you must not cover them in the boyling and you must put halfe as much Sugar more for the white as for the other When you would have them Red you must cover them in the boyling 3. To Preserve Barberies Choose the fairest bunches of Barberies you can g● pick off the withered and shrunk berries and wash them clean drying them in a clean cloth Then take another good quantity of Barberies well picked and boyl them in Clarret wine till they be soft then straine them well through a strainer rubbing or wringing them through boyl this liquor so strained out with Sugar till it be very sweet and thick and then let it stand till it be cold Then put your bunches or branches of Barberies into gallipots or glasses and fill them up with this liquor and so shall you have both sirrup of Barberies and preserved Barberies 4. Another way to preserve Barberies First take the fairest Barberies and of them the greatest bunches you can get and with a needle take out the stones on the one side of them then weigh out to every half pound of them one pound of Sugar put them into a preserving pan strow the Sugar on them and let them boyle a quarter of an hour softly then taking out the Barberies let the sirrup boil a quarter of an hour more then put in the Barberies again and let them boyl a pretty while with the sirrup then take them from the sirrup let them both stand till they be cold and so put them up 5. To preserve all kind of Flowers in the Spanish Candy in Wedges Take Violets Cowslips or any other kind of flowers pick them and temper them with the pap of two roasted Apples and a drop or two of Verjuyce and a grain of Muske then take half a pound of fine hard Sugar boil
them in cold water and pill off the bark and weigh as much sugar as they weigh and a little more water then will wet the sugar set them on a fire and when they boil up take them off and let them stand two dayes and boil them again once more 18 To preserve Pomecitrons Of your Pomecitrons take one pound and a half and cut them some in halves some in quarters and take the meat out of them and boil them tender in fair water then take two pound of clarified sugar and make syrup for them and let them boil in syrup a quarter of an hour very gently then take them up and let your syrup boil till it be thick and then put it into your Pomecitrons and you may keep them all the yeer If you please you may pare some of them for some delight to have them in the skin and some pared 19 To preserve Eringo roots Take Eringo roots fair and not knotty one pound and wash them clean and when they be washed set them on the fire and boil them very tender pil off their outermost skin but see you break them not as you pare them put them into cold water and let them all remain there till all be finished and then you must take to every pound of roots three quarters of a pound of clarified sugar and boil it almost to the height of a syrup and then put in your roots but look that they boil very gently together with as little steering as may be lest they break until they be enough and when they be cold put them up and keep them 20 To preserve Raspices Take of your fairest and wel-coloured Raspices and pick off their stalks very clean then wash them but in any wise bruise them not then weigh them and to every pound of Raspices you must take six ounces of hard sugar and six ounces of sugar-candy and clarifie it with half a pint of fair water and four ounces of juice of Raspices being clarified boil it to a weak syrup and then put in your Raspices stirring them up and down and so let them boil til they be enough which to know you must take some of the syrup with one Raspice and let it cool and if it will scarce run out it is enough and being cold you may put them up and keep them all the yeer 21 To preserve Enula Campana roots Take of your Enula Campana roots and wash them scrape them very clean and cut them thin to the pith the length of your little finger and as you cut them put them in water and let them lie in water thirtie daies shifting them twice every day to take away the bitterness weigh them and to every pound of roots take twelve ounces of clarified sugar first boiling the roots as tender as a chicken and then put them into the clarified sugar and let them boil upon a gentle fire until they be enough and let them stand off the fire a good while and betwixt hot and cold put them up for your use 22 To Conserve Cowslips Gather your flowers in the midst of the day when all dew is off them cut off all the white leaving none but the yellow blossomes of them so picked and cut before they wither weigh out ten ounces taking to every ten ounces of them or greater proportions if you please eight ounces of the best refined sugar in fine powder put the sugar into a pan and candy it with as little water as you can then taking it off the fire put in your flowers by little and little never ceasing to stir them til they be dry and enough then put them into Glasses or Gally-pots and keep them dry for your use These are rather candied then conserved Cowslips 23 A Conserve of Roses Take red Rose buds clip all the white bruised and withered from them then weigh them out and taking to every pound of Roses three pound of sugar stamp the Roses by themselves very small putting a little juice of Lemmons or Rosewater to them as they wax drie when you see the Roses small enough put the sugar to them and beat them together til they be wel mingled then put it up in Gallipots or Glasses In like sort are the Conserves of flowers of Violets Cowslips Marrigolds Sage and Scabious made 24 The use of Conserve of Violets and Cowslips That of Cowslips doth marvellously strengthen the brain preserves against madnesse against the decay of memorie stoppeth Head-ach and most infirmities thereof For Violets it hath the same use that the sirup hath Vide among Syrups 25 The use of Conserve of Marigolds Conserve of Marigolds taken fasting in the morning is good for melancholy cureth the trembling and shaking of the heart is good to be used against the plague and corruption of the air 26 Of Sage flowers It preserveth against meloncholy doth dry and comfort the Stomack cureth an old cough and openeth the stopping of the Liver 27 Scabious flowers These cleanse the brest and lungs take away old Coughs Impostumes of the brest and all inward parts Probatum 28 Conserve of Barberries Take your Barberries pick them clean in fair branches and wash them clean and dry them on a cloth then take some other Barberries and boil them in claret wine til they be very soft then straine them and rub them so wel through the strainer that you may know the substance of them and boil up this matter thus strained out til it be very sweet and somewhat thick then setting it by til it be cold and then put your branches of Barberies into Gallipots or glasses and fill it up with the cold syrup and so shall you have both syrup and also Barberies to use at your pleasure 29 The Cordial Conserve Take the Flowers of Rosemarry Buglosse and Borage well picked the flowers of Clove Gilliflowers Pauncies Violets Cowslips Red Roses Damaske Roses and Marigolds clipt from their white of each two ounces put to every of them three ounces of Sugar very finely beaten and searced and stamp them all together to a Conserve and keep it in a Gallipot When you would use it take the quantity of a small Walnut every morning fasting 30 To make Muscadine Comfits Take four ounces of double refined sugar finely beaten and searced put thereto two grains of Musk a penniweight of Orris root in powder beat it to perfect fine paste then roll it as thin as paper and cut it like to Diamonds with your knife as with a fine jagged Rowell cutter so drie them in your Stove and keepe them 31 To make black Clove Comfits Take two ounces of Cloves dried in a dish in the Oven beat them to very fine powder then take four ounces of sugar finely beaten and searced adde to that two or three Date stones burned and made into fine powder which bringeth your paste to the blacknesse mix with all these Gumme Dragon steeped in Rosewater beat it up into a comfit paste rol it in
be somewhat cold then take your leaf-gold and mingle with it then cast it according to art that is in round gobbers and so keep them 76 The Syrup of Violets Take fair water boil it scumme it and to every ounce of it so boiled and scummed take fix ounces of the blue of Violets onely shift them as before nine times and the last time take nine ounces of Violes let them stand between times of shifting twelve hours keeping the liquor still on hot embers that it may be milk warme and no warmer after the first shifting you must stampe and strain your last nine ounces of Violets and put in only the juyce of them then take to every pint of this liquor thus prepared one pound of sugar finely beaten boil it and keep it with stirring till the sugar be all melted which if you can let be done before it boil and then boil it up with a quick fire This doth cool and open in a burning Ague being dissolved in Almond milke and taken especially it is good for any inflammation in children the conserves are of the same effect 77 Syrup of Century Take Flowers and green leaves of Century and boil them in a good quantity of faire water being first boiled and well scummed before the Century come in when you think it is boiled enough set it upon hot Embers for twelve houres shifting it again and again till you think it be strong enough of the Century then take to every pint of the liquor thus boiled a pound of sugar and so boil it up It cleanseth the stomack killeth Wormes Agues and the green Sicknesse it must be taken in the morning with Mace Ale 78 Syrup Gresta or Syrup of unripe Grapes Take a good Basket fill of unripe Grapes set them three daies in a vessel after they be gathered stampe them and strain out the juyce of them take thereof six quarts boil it with a soft fire till the third part be consumed then four quarts will remain Let that run thorow a Wollen bag and stand till it be clear in it self then take of the cleerest of it seven pints put thereto five pound of clarified sugar boyl them together to the thicknesse of a syrup and keep it in a glasse It is good for a perbreaking stomack proceeding of Choler and for a swelling stomacke it taketh away thirst and drinesse and Chollericke Agues It is a great comfort to the stomack of women being with child it is a preservative against all manner of venome and against the Pestilence 79 Syrup of Roses Take Damaske Roses clip off the white of them and take six ounces of them to every pint of fair water first wel boiled and scummed let them stand so as abovesaid twelve hours as you did in the syrup of Violets wringing out the Roses and putting in new eight times then wringing out the last put in only the juyce of foure ounces of Roses so make it up as before If you wil put in Rubarbe take to every pint two drachms slice it string it on a thred hang it within the pot after the first shifting and let it infuse within your Roses Some use to boil the Rubarbe in the Syrup but it is dangerous This syrup purgeth Choller and Melancholly 80 Syrup of Wormwood Take halfe a pound of Wormwood leaves of red Roses two ounces of Spikenard three drachms of old and wel relisht white wine two ounces juyce of Quinces two pound and a halfe Let all these stand a day and a night in a stone pot then let them boile softly to the one halfe so let it coole straine it and clarifie it with the white of an egge then put to it two pound of good English honey and let them boile a little together then strain out the liquor and with sugar boile it up to a syrup 81 Syrup of Cowslips In stead of running water you must take the distilled water of Cowslips put thereto your Cowslip flowers cleane picked and the green knobs in the bottome cut off and therewith boile up a Syrup as in the Syrup of Roses is shewed It is good against the Frenzie comforting and staying the head in all hot Agues c. It is good against the Palsie and procures a sick patient to sleep it must be taken in Almond Milke or some other warme thing 82 Syrup of Borage and Buglosse Syrup of Borage and Buglosse are made in the same sort they cool open and comfort the body 83 Syrup of Calamint Doth warm and comfort the stomack it is made ut supra 84 Syrup of Scabious Syrup of Scabious is made of the juyce of the herb strained and clarified as the juyce of Fole foot and the flowers insused or steeped shifted and boiled up as of Roses It cleanseth the brest and lungs cureth an old cough and Impostumes of the brest and of all other inward parts cleansing ripening and healing the same 85 To make Syrup of Saffron Take a pint of Endive water two ounces of Saffron finely beaten and steep it therein all night the next day seeth it and strain out the Saffron then with sugar boil it up to a Syrup 86 Syrup of Fole-foot or Golts-foot Take the leaves of Fole-foot wash them very faire and wipe them with a clean linnen cloth leaf by leaf then lay them on a clean cloth to dry till all the wet be off them then beat them in a morter and put them into a Strainer and wring out all the juyce you can out of them and put it into Glasses and let it stand in them to settle all night the next day pour out the clearest of the juyce from the Grounds into a fair Bason and taking for everie pint thereof a pound of sugar finely beaten boil the juyce of Folefoot softly on a Charcole fire and when you have wel scummed it put in the sugar according to his proportion and so let them boil together keeping it with due scumming until to see when it is enough it will stand on a stiffe purle when you drop some of it upon a Plate of silver or a Sawcer then take it from the fire pour it thorow a Jellie bag into a clean bason putting first a branch or two of Rosemarie into the bags bottome then keep it stirring with a spoone till it be lukewarme foraelse it will have a Cream upon it So letting it stand all night in the bason well covered the next day put it into such glasses as you mean to keep it in It is good to open the brest and Lungs and cureth old Coughes 87 To make Syrup of Pomecitrons Take Pomecitrons and cut them in halves and juyce them but beware you wring them not too hard lest it be slimy and take to every pint of juyce three quarters of a pound of refined sugar and boil it in an earthen pipkin til it come to the height of a syrup and take heed in any case that you boil it not on too hot a fire lest it
burn and then when it is boiled enough put it up and keep it all the year 88 A Syrup against Malencholly humors especially where there is wind in the stomack To make this syrup 't is necessarie to be expert in the Art for it must be made with great diligence Take water of Fumetory of Hops of Wormwood of Maidenhair of each five pound Herewith make a decoction with these following ingredients Take Pollipodium of the Oak one pound Sine leaves Epitimum ana four ounces Cordiall flowers two handfuls Maidenhair one handfull Liquoris Cinnamon Raisins of each two ounces of the four cold seeds two ounces make thereof a decoction accrding to art and straine it then take foure pound of that Decoction and put thereto the juice of Borrage of Buglosse and Hoppes of each two ounces common Honie six ounces then with white sugar make a sirrup in good sorm and aromatize it with musk and amber putting thereunto one ounce of Plyris without musk and then it is made The dose is from three to four ounces in the morning warm and fast thereupon at least three or four hours for this purgeth marvellously the melancholy humours and all other gross humours and dissolveth winde and comforteth the heart 89 Syrup of Wormwood simple Take of the clarified juice of common Wormwood and clarified sugar of each four pound make it into a sirrup according to art After the same manner are prepared simple Syrups of Betonie Borrage Buglosse Cardus Camomel Succorie Endive Hedg-mustard Strawberries Fumetorie Ground-ivie St Johns wort Hops Mercurie Mousear Plantane Apples Purslain Raspberries Sage Scabious Scordium Housleek Coltsfoot Paul's Betonie and other Juices not sowr 90 Syrup of Marsh mallows Take of roots of marsh mallows two ounces the roots of grass Sparagus Liquoris Raisins of the Sun stoned of each half an ounce the tops of mallows marsh mallows pellitorie of the wall burnet plantane maidenhair white and black of each an handfull red cicers an ounce of the four greater and four lesser cold seeds of each three drachms boil them in six pound of clear water till four remain which being strained boile into a sirrup with four pound of white sugar 91 Syrup of Rhadishes Take of garden and wilde Rhadish roots of each an ounce the roots of white Saxifrage Lovage Bruscus Eringo Restharrow Parsley Fennel of each half an ounce the leaves of Betonie Burnet Penniroiall Nettles Watercresses Sampier maidenhair of each an handfull winter Cherries Jujubes of each ten the Seeds of Bazil Bar Parsly of Macedonia Hartwort Caraway Carrots Gromwel the bark of the root of Bay-tree of each two drachms Raisins of the sun stoned Liquoris of each six drachms boil them in twelve pound of water to eight strain it and with four pound of sugar and two pound of honey make it into a Syrup and perfume it with an ounce of Cinnamon and half an ounce of Nutmegs 92 Syrup of Poppies Take off the heads of both white and black Poppies seeds and all of each 50 drachms Maidenhair fifteen drachms Liquoris five drachms Jujubes 30 by number Lettice seeds 40 drachms of the seeds of mallows and Quinces tied up in a thin linnen cloth of each one drachm and a half boil these in eight pints of water till five pints be consumed when you have strained out the three pints remaining adde to them Penides and white sugar of each a pound boil them into a syrup according to art 93 Hony of Rosemarry flowers Take of Rosemary flowers a pound clarified hony three pound mix them in a glasse with a narrow mouth set them in the sun and keep them for use The CONTENTS of the First part The best way Preserve Quinces white pag. 1 A Special remembrance in doing them pag. 2 To Preserve Barberies ibid Another way to preserve Barberies pag. 3 To preserve all kind of Flowers in the Spanish Candy in wedges ibid To preserve green Pippins pag. 4 To preserve Oranges and Lemmons ibid To preserve Peaches pag. 5 To preserve Medters ibid The best way to preserve Goosberies pag. 6 To Preserve Damsins ibid How to Preserve Cherries pag. 7 To Preserve Artichokes ibid To preserve Roses or any other flowers ibid The best way to preserve Apricocks pag. 8 To preserve Bullasses as green as grass ibid To Preserve green Walnuts pag. 9 To preserve Pomecitrons ibid To preserve Eringo roots ibid To preserve Raspices pag. 10 To preserve Enula Compana roots ibid To Conserve Cowslips pag. 11 A Conserve of Roses ibid The use of Conserve of Violets and Cowslips pag. 12 The use of Conserve of Marigolds ibid Of Sage flowers ibid Scabious Flowers ibid Conserve of Barberries ibid The Cordial Conserve pag. 13 To make Muscadine Comfits ibid To make black Clove Comfits pag. 14 To Candy all kind of flowers as they grow with stalks on ibid To make the Rock Candies upon all Spices Flowers and Roots pag. 15 To Candy Sucket for green Ginger Lettice flowers c. ibid To Candy Ginger pag. 16 To candy Eringo roots ibid To make Quince Cakes ibid Cleer Cakes of Quinces or Apricocks pag. 17 To dry Apricocks ibid The best way to dry Plums pag. 18 To dry Pippins ibid A way to drie Cherries pag. 19 How to keep Apples Pears Quinces Wardens c. all the year dry pag. 20 How to dry Fruits in the Sun ibid To make Quidony of Cherries ibid To make printed Quidony of Quinces ibid To make Quidony of Pippins pag. 21 To make Quidony of Raspices ibid Colours for fruitage pag. 22 To make all kind of turned works in fruitage hollow ibid To make Dia Citonicum as it is called but rightly Dia Cydonium ibid How to cast all kind of sugar works into moulds pag. 23 The names and use of your Sugars ibid The names and prices of Gummes for Sugar-work ibid To make Jumbols pag. 24 To make Paste of Carrots ibid To make the Macaroones ibid How to make Paste of Almonds pag. 25 How to make a Marchpane pag. 26 How to make Paste of Violets or any kind of flowers ibid How to make white Paste Royal pag. 27 How to make red Paste royal ibid How to make Paste Royal in Spices ibid How to make Paste of Pippins pag. 28 How to make Paste of Genua ibid How to make Paste of Lemmons pag. 29 How to make Paste of Regia ibid How to make Paste of Goosberies or Barberies or English Currans pag. 30 How to make an excellent Marmelade ibid To make Marmelade of Lemmons and Oranges pag. 31 How to make Almond Bisket ibid How to make the fine Bisket bread called in some places Norffe Cakes and commonly Diet-bread pag. 32 The best receit for Bisket bread pag. 33 To make Comfit-makers Bisket ibid To make Manus Christi pag. 34 To make Syrup of Violets ibid Syrup of Century pag. 35 Syrup Gresta or Syrup of unripe Grapes ibid Syrup of Roses pag. 36 Syrup of Wormwood ibid Syrup of Cowslips pag. 37 Syrup of Borage and
hours shaking it together three or four times then take it out and being cold pour it forth and put almost as much more of the mixed spirits digested as before in a gentle heat by Balneo then put it forth to the first extracted and adde halfe as much more spirits the third time and digest it again and then have you extracted all the special part of the Amber and leave nothing but a black dead earth of no value Then take a pint of the spirit of what herb you will use and dissolve therein one pound of pure white sugar candy or at the least twelve ounces very finely powdered and searced thorow a fine searcer for the speedier resolution thereof It is best to dissolve it cold This dissolution must be twice filtered thorow a thin cap paper to make it very perfect clear then take three parts of this dulcified spirit to one of your extract of Amber drawn with spirit of wine then shake them well together and let them stand in a square glasse very close stopped untill it shall be perfectly clear one drachm of this extraction of Amber will serve to dulcifie and make fit two quarts of the spirit of Mints or Clary or the like and give it a most excellent taste and efficacious vertues 23 Spirit and water of wormwood the lesser Composition Take of the leaves of dried Wormwood two pound Annis-seeds halfe a pound steep them in six gallons of small wines 24 houres then distill them in an Allembick adding to every pound of the distilled water two ounces of the best sugar Let the two first pound you draw out be called Spirit of Wormwood those which follow Wormwood water the lesser Composition 24 Spirit and water of Wormwood the greater Composition Take of common and Roman Wormwood of each a pound Sage Mints Bawm of each two handfuls the roots of Gallanga Ginger Calamus-aromaticus Alacampane of each three drachms Liquoris one ounce Raisins of the Sun stoned three ounces Annis-seeds and sweet Fennel seeds of each three drachms Cinamon Cloves Nutmegs of each two drachms Cardamoms Cubebs of each one drachm Let the things be cut that are to be cut and the things bruised that are to be bruised all of them infused in 24 pints of Spanish Wines for 24 hours then distilled in an Allembick adding two ounces of white sugar to everie pint of distilled waters Let the first pint be called Spirit of Wormwood the geater Composition 25 Spirit and water of Angelica Take of the leaves of Angelica eight ounces of Carduus Benedictus six ounces of Bawm and Sage of each four ounces Angelica seeds six ounces sweet Fennel seeds nine ounces Let the herbs being dried and the seeds be grossy bruised to which add of the spices called Aromaticum Rosatum and of the spices cal'd Diamoscha dulce of each an ounce and a half infuse them two daies in thirtie two pints of Spanish wine then distil them with a gentle fire and with everie pound mix two ounces of sugar dissolved in Rosewater Let the three first pound be called by the name of Spirit the rest by the name of Water 26 Spirit of Wine extraordinarie Take the finest paper you can get or else some virgin parchment strain it very right and stiffe over the glass body wherein you put your Sack Malmsie or Muscadine oyl the paper or virgin parchment with a pensil moistned in the oyle of Ben and distill it in Balneo with a gentle fire and by this means you shall purchase only the true spirit of Wine You shall not have above two or three ounces at the most out of a gallon of wine which ascendeth in the form of a cloud without any dew or veins in the helm Lute all the joynts well in this distillation This pirit will vanish in the air if the glasse stand open 27 Quintessence of Snakes Adders or Vipers Take of the biggest and fatest Snakes Adders or Vipers which you can get in June or July cut off their heads take off their skins and unbowel them then cut them into small pieces and put them into a glasse of a wide mouth and set them in a warme Balneo that they may be well dryed which they wil be done in three or four dayes then take them out and put them into a bolt head and pour on them of the best alcolizated Wine as much as wil cover them six or eight fingers breadth stop the glasse he metically and digest them fifteen daies in Balneo or so long til the Wine be sufficiently covered which pour forth then pour on more of the foresaid spirit of wine til all the quintessence be extracted Then put all the tinged spirits together and draw off the spirit in a gentle Balneo til it be thick at the bottome on this pour the spirit of Wine caryophilated and stir them wel together and digest them in a Circulatory ten daies then abstract the spirit of wine and the quintessence remaineth at the bottome perfect This quintessence is of extraordinary vertue to purifie the blood flesh and skin and consequently all diseases therein It cures the falling sicknesse strengthens the braine sight and hearing and preserveth from gray hairs reneweth youth preserveth women from Abortion cureth the Gout Consumption causeth sweat is very good in and against pestilentiall infections 28 A liquor against the tooth Ach. Take of oyle of Cloves well rectified half an ounce in it dissolve half a drachm of Camphire adde to them of the spirit of turpentine four times rectified in which half a drachm of Opium hath been infused half an ounce A drop or two of this liquor put into a hollow tooth with some lint easeth the tooth ach presently 29 A Liquor to comfort smelling and preserve the head Take Lignum aloes two ounces Annis-seed four ounces Calamus aromaticus one ounce Calamint dried three ounces common hony two pound strong white wine twelve pound let all these be infused for four daies and then distil it in Balneo and when you distil it put into the Receiver six grains of Musk dissolved in two ounces of Rosewater and distil away but three pound the which keep in a glasse close stopped and when you will comfort the smelling wash the face and beard therewith and you shall smell a savour of marvellous effect which comforteth nature marvelousty it comforteth the stomacke and helps a stinking breath it helpeth the mouth being ulcerated and those that have the rupture in short time if you wash it twice a day therewith it helpeth also women that are troubled with descension of the Matrix if you wet a cloth in it and lay it upon the mother in short space it restores great health Also it helpeth those that are troubled with the Meagrum or paines in the head coming of cold or winde if you wash the head with the said liquor it presently giveth ease It hath divers other vertues which I will not now recite 30 To make an Antimonial
the Spring and Fall 125 An approved medicine for the Drepsie Take the herbe called Bitter sweet it groweth in waters and bears a purple flower slice the stalks and boil a prerty deal of them in white-wine and drink thereof first and last morning and evening and it will cure the Dropsie 126 A Bath to comfort the Brain Take a quart of Muscadine sweet Marjoram a handful Rosemary tops half a handful and a few Cloves boyl them upon a soft fire to the one half and bath the head therewith often in the Spring and fall of the lease drying it in with hot Napkin 127 For pain in the Ears or deafnesse Take a hot loafe of the bignesse of a Bakers penny loafe and pull or cut it in two in the middest and lay the middle of the crummy side to the middest or to the holes of the ear or ears pained as hot as they may be endured so bindthem fast together on all night And then if you find any pain in either or both ears or any noise put into your pained ear or eares a drop of Aqua vitae in each and then again binding more hot bread to them walke a little while and after go to bed this done three or four daies together hath taken away the paine hearing noise in the ears and much eased the deafnesse and dulnesse of and in many 128 For the Emrods Take Egremony and bruise it smal and then fry it with sheeps Suet and hony of each a like quantity and lay it as hot as you can suffer it to the sundament and it will heale you very fair and well 129 For the Pinne and Web in the Eye Take the Gall of a hare and clarified hony of each a like quantity mingle them wel together and an noint the web with a feather dipped in the same and within three or four daies it will take it quite a way 130 A Plaister to take away the Filme on the Eye Take a rotten Apple the yolke of one egg and as much grated Maunchet as wil make it pretty stiffe and then put to it two spoonfuls of Egrimony water two of Eyebright water and two of red-Rose water or all six of red Rose-water for want of the other two beat all these together til it be stiffe enough to spread then make a plaister of it and lay to the Eye and when you take off the Plaister to renew it wash the Eye with some of these waters mixed equally together to clear it again 131 A Medicine for sore Bloud shotten and Rheumatick eyes Take ground Ivie Daisies and Celedony of each a like quantity stampe and strain out the juyce of them and put to it a little brown Sugar Candy dissolved in a little white Rose-water and drop two or three drops of this liquor at one time into the grieved eye or eyes with a feather lying upon the back when you doe it and an hour after This by Master Waldgraves own experience and by divers others to whom he taught it proved to be the best Medicine for Byes for it taketh away all inflamatious spots webs itches smarting or any griese whatsoever in the eye yea though the sight were neere hand gone 132 To make the face white and fair Wash thy face with Rosemary boiled in white-wine and thou shalt be fair then take Erigan and stampe it and take the juyce thereof and put it altogether and wash thy face therewith Proved 133 To take the heat out of the face Put Elder flowers Plantane white Daisie roots and herb Robert into running water and wash your face morning and evening therewith 134 To take away the Spots or red Pimples of the face Take halfe a pint of raine water and halfe a pint of good verjuyce seeth it till it be halfe consumed the whiles it boileth fill it up again with juyce of Lemmons and so let it seeth a pretty while then take it from the fire when it is cold put to it the whites of four new laid egges well beaten and with this water annoint the place often 135 A Secret to help all Fevers in the beginning When the Fever is new begun give the Parlent two drachms of Aromatico Leonardo fasting in the morning and the next day about the same hour give him an ounce of Vegitabile Syrup and the third day give him four drachms of the said Electuario Angelica Leonardo with broth which taketh away the Fever altogether And this operation intendeth only to the continual Quotidian Tertian and putrified or pestilentiall Fevers but not to the accidential or Heclick nor Quartain for these three kinds are much differing from the rest because the accidentiall is caused of another infirmity anterior or going before The sever Hectick is caused of weaknesse of natures and the Quartain is caused of great quantity of melancholly humors and they are cured by contrary means to the first the accidental by helping the principall infirmitie the Hectick by helping nature and preserving the liver and lungs from putrefaction the Quartaine by Vomits Unctions Cerrots and drying drinks and these are great secrets to be known For herein consisteth a great part of Physick and Chirurgery if it be well considered 136 To ripen and heal a Fellon Boil Clarret wine and wheat flower to a poultesse and spreading it very thick apply it as hot as you can endure it 137 A medicine for a Fistula Dry Vervine upon a tile and make powder thereof and make clean the sore with a linnen cloth and fil the hole full of the powder 138 A medicine for the falling sicknesse Gather Germander in May when it is in the blossome dry it in the shadow and make it into fine powder and when you will use it take the yolke of an egge or two and stir and break it with a spoonful of the said powder then seeth it and give it to the patient to eat Do this morning and evening eight daies abstaining from wine carnal company of Women from all pulse beans pease vetches tares and such other from salets salt fish and from other things that are hard of concoction A very good and notable secret 139 For the Piles Set a Chafingdish or a Pan of coles under a close stoole-chaire or in a close stoolecase and strow Amber beaten in fine powder upon the coals and sit down over it that the smoke may ascend up into the place grieved 140 An especial good Medicine to make the Piles bleed Beat the yolke of an egge and some sallet oyl or oyl of Roses together with some Saffron and spread it upon a piece of Leather and lay it to the place grieved 141 A Medicine for the Piles Take a little Orpine Hackdagger and Elecampane stampe them altogether with Boares grease into the form of an oyntment and lay them to the place grieved 142 A Cullesse to stop the Bloudy flux Take a gallon of fair running water and a quart of Red wine boil therein a Cock or a Hen of
good appetite with many other good qualities which I shall leave at this time and the order to make it is thus Take Lignum aloes Cinnamon Turbit aloes hepatica of each one ounce Colloquintida two ounces Cloves Saffron of each three scruples Musk of Levant one drachm Julep of Violets one pound Mix all the aforesaid maters together in a glasse and put thereon two pound of Quintessence and so let it stand twelve daies and then strain it and put it into a vessel of glasse close shut this may be taken with broth wine or with what sirup or potion you wil the quantity is from two drams to four drams in the morning fasting without keeping of any diet at two ounces and it shal work wel without trouble at all 8 Syrupo Solutivo or the soluble Syrup with the order how to make and use it This soluble Syrup made in decoction is very wholsome and of great vertue and especially in crude humors for it disperseth the matter and evacuates it with great ease and without danger or trouble of the Patient The order to make it is thus Take Sage Rosemary Siccory Carduus Benedictus Nettles Organy of each an handful Figs Raisins Dates sweet Almonds Sal Gemma of each four ounces Colloquintida Aloes hepatica Cinnamon Mirabolani citrini of each two ounces common hony two pound Stamp them all grosly and put them to infuse in eighteen pound of fair water then boil it til half be consumed then strain it and distil it by a filter and atomatize it with two carets of Musk and a pint of Rosewater and then it is made which you shal keep in a glass bottle close stopped The dose is from foure ounces to six In winter you must take it very warm and in the spring and Autumn take it warm and no more in summer you must take it cold This purgeth the grosse humors of the body and hurteth not the stomack You may use it in a Fever for four or five daies together and it wil help it In crudity of humors as the French Pox Gouts Catarrhs Dogly Artetica and such like matters where there is no accident of Fevers you may take it ten or fifteen daies together and it cannot hurt for it purgeth most excellently It is given against the cough against flux of the urine and pains in the head and carnasity in the yard or the Hemeroids And in brief it is good against all diseases caused of corrupt humors for it hath such vertue that it draweth from all parts and evacuateth the humors intestinal There hath been great experience of this syrup in such persons as had in a manner utterly lost their taste who by using it have been brought to a good temperature there have been also infinite experiments on ulcerated persons and ful of sores ill handled by poverty and weaknesse who finding no means to cure them have been cured by this syrup in fourteen or fifteene dayes Cum multis aliis c. 9 Sirrupo Magistrale Leonardo which serveth against an infinite number of diseases and is a rare medicine This syrup is solutive and very plesant to use and cannot hurt in any wise which is seldom seen in other Medicines and the order to make it is thus The leaves of Sine two ounces Fumitory Maiden hair Harts-tongue Liver wort Epitemum Ellemo Pollipody of the oake the flowers of Borage Bugloss Liquorice of each three ounces Colloquintida Eleborus niger Aloes hepatica Mirabolani Indi of each one ounce Pruins fourteen Sebestien twelve Tamerisk one ounce Stamp them grosly and infuse them in ten pounds of fumitory water then boil it until the consumption of the third part and then strain it and in that which is strained put these things Syrup of Staecados one pound Saffron one scruple mel rosarum six ounces Rectified Aqua vitae four ounces Musk one drachm the mussege of Marish Mallows foure ounces Benjamin one ounce Rose water three ounces and then it is made which ye shal keep in a glasse close stopt and keep it in a temperate place and this you must take warm the quantity is from two ounces to four ounces and it is a most safe medicine to be used without keeping of any diet It helpeth those much that have Pellaria Scabs Hemeroids and such like diseases and may be given unto a woman with child without any danger when she shal have occasion to use any 10 To make artificial Balm and the vertues thereof This balm hath all the vertues of the natural balm although not in quality yet in vertue The order of making it is this Take one pound of Venice Turpentine oyl of Bayes perfect without mixture four ounces Galbanum three ounces Gum Arabic four ounces Olibanum Mirrha elect Gum Hederae of each three ounces Lignum Aloes Galingal Cloves Consolida minore Cinnamon Nutmegs Ginger Zedoaria Diptamnum album of each one ounce Musk of Levant Ambergreece of each one drachm Beat all these things together and put them into a Retort of glass wel luted and put thereto six pound of rectified Aqua vitae without flegm and so let it stand eight daies and then distil it by sand and the first extraction wil be white water mixed with oyl then keep the fire smal until there come forth a blackish oyl then change the receiver and set thereto another and increase the fire til all the spirits be drawn out then separate the oyl from the black water and likewise from the white and keep them a sunder by themselves The first water that is white is called Aqua del Balsamo or a Balm water and the oyl seperated from that is called Oleum del Balsamo or oyl of Balm The second water that is black is called Mater del Balsamo or mother of Balm and the oyle separated from that water is called del Balsamo artificiato or artificial Balme which should be kept as a most precious Jewel Each of these Waters and oyls have their several admirable vertues and operations for effecting of wonderful cures but the artificial Balm is a most miraculous liquor as for the Stitch in the side for which the dose is two drachms the Cough Catarrhe coldnesse in the head or stomack wounds in the head andinfinite others yea I know no disease either hot or cold but it doth good to it and that by its own quality and hidden vertues cooling the hot and heating the cold In a word whosoever hath this precious liquor may be kept from or cured of all infirmities and need not seek for the natural Balm with so great expences and the hazard of life as hath been often seen 11 Vegetable syrup which is miraculous and divine This Syrup is a secret with which many miracles have many times been wrought in divers operations on many infirmities The order to make this syrup is thus Take Lignum aloes Riopontico Eupatorio red Saunders of each two ounces beat them and make thereof a decoction in good form and
it to the height of Manus Christi then mixe them together and pour it on a wet Pie-plate then cut it in Wedges before it be through cold gild it and so you may box it and keep it all the year It is a fine sort of banquetting stuff and newly used Your Manus Christi must boil a good while and be kept with good stirring 6. To preserve green Pippins Take Pippins pare them very thin while they are greene then take ten smal green Pippins worse then the other pare them and boil them in a pottle of water till they be all to pieces then strain it from the cores then take two pound of sugar and put it into the same liquor so strained and set it on the fire and so soon as it boileth put in the Pippins you purpose to preserve so let them bo●le leisurely till they be enough and when they are preserved they wil be green In like sort you may preserve Quinces Plums Peaches or Apricocks if you take them green 7 To preserve Oranges and Lemmons Take your Oranges or Lemmons lay them in water three daies and three nights to take away their bitternesse then boil them in fair water til they be tender make as much Syrup for them as will make them swimme about the Panne let them not boil too long therein for it will make the skinnes tough then let them lie all night in the syrup to make them take the syrup in the morning boile your syrup to his thicknesse and put them in Gallipots or Glasses to keep all the yeare And this is the best way to preserve Oranges Lemmons or Citrons 8 To preserve Peaches Heat water scalding hot first then scald your Peaches till you may pull off the skin which done boil your Rosewater and Sugar till it be somewhat think then put in your Peaches one by one stowing the Sugar on them and as the fire melteth cast on more four or five times letting them boyl with a soft fire till hey be tender keeping them covered as long as they seethe then take them out and put them up for use 9 To preserve Medlers Take the fai●est Medlers you can get but let them not be too ripe then set on faire water on the fire and when it boyleth put in your Medlers and let then boil till they be somwhat soft then while they are hot pill them cut off their crowns and take out their stones take then to every pound of Medlers three quarters of a pound of Sugar and a quarter of a pint of Rosewater seeth your syrup scumming it clean then put in your Medlers one by one the stalks downward when your syrup is somewhat cool then set them on the fire again let them boile softly till the syrup be enough then put in a few Cloves and a little Cinamon and so putting them up in pots reserve them for your use 10 The best way to preserve Goosberies Gather them with their stalks on cut off their heads and stone them then put them in scalding water and let them stand therein covered a quarter of an hour Then take their weight in Sugar finely beaten and laying first a layer of Sugar then one of your Goosberries in your preserving Skillet or Pan till all be in putting in for every pound of Goosberries six spoonesuls of fair water set them on the Embers till the Sugar be melted then boil them up as fast as you can till the syrup be thick enough and cold and then put them up This way serveth also for Raspices and for Mulberies 11 To preserve Damsins Take the Damsins before they be full ripe but new gathered off the tree allow to every pound of them a pound of Sugar put a little rose-Rosewater to them and set them in the bottome of your Pan one by one boile them with a soft fire and as they seeth strow your Sugar upon them and let them boil till the syrup be thick enough then while the syrup is yet warm take the Plums out and put them in a Gallipot Syrup and all 12 How to preserve Cherries Take the Cherries when they be new gathered off the tree being full ripe put them to the bottome of your preserving pan weighing to every pound of Cherries one pound of Sugar then throw some of the Sugar upon the Cherries and set them on a very quick fire and as they boil throw on the rest of the Sugar till the Syrup be thick enough then take them out and put them in a Gallipot while they are warme You may if you will put two or three spoonfuls of Rose-water to them 13 To preserve Artichokes Heat water scalding hot first then put in your Artichokes and scald them and take away all the bottoms and leaves about them then take Rosewater and Sugar and boil them alone a little while and then put the Artichokes therein and let them boil on a soft fire til they be tender enough let them be covered all the time they boile then take them out and put them up for your use 14 To preserve Roses or any other flowers Take one pound of Roses three pound of sugar one pint of Rosewater or more make your syrup first and let it stand til it be cold then take your Rose-leaves having first clipt off all the white put them into the cold syrup then cover them and set them on so soft a fire that they may but simper for two or three hours then while they are hot put them out into pots or glasses for your use 15 The best way to preserve Apricocks Take the weight of your Apricocks what quantity soever you mind to use in sugar finely beaten pare and stone your Apricocks and lay them in the Sugar in your preserving pan all night and in the morning set them upon the Embers till he sugar be all melted and then let them stand and scald an hour then take them off the fire and let them stand in that syrup two daies and then boile them softly till they be tender and wel coloured and after that when they are cold put them up in glasses or pots which you please 16. To preserve Bullasses as green as grass Take your Bullasses as new gathered as you can wipe them with a cloth and prick them with a knife and quaddle them in two waters close covered then take a pound of clarified Sugar and a pint of Apple water boile them well together keeping them wel scummed unto a syrup and when your Bullasses are wel dript from the water put them into the syrup and warm them three or four times at the least at the last warming take them up and set them a dropping from the syrup and boil the syrup a little by it selfe till it come to a Jellie and then betweene hot and cold put them up to keep for all the year 17 To preserve green Walnuts Take Walnuts and boil them til the water do taste bitter then take them off and put
long smal rols and with a knife cross cut them at one end like a Clove blossom so stove them and serve them This is an excellent comfit it wil taste like a Glove and eat pleasantly 32 To Candy all kind of flowers as they grow with their stalkes on Take the Flowers cut the stalkes somewhat short then take one pound of the whitest and hardest sugar you can get put to it eight spoonfuls of Rosewater and boil it til it wil rol between your finger and your thumb then take it from the fire cool it with a stick and as it waxeth cold dip in all your flowers and taking them out again suddenly lay them one by one on the bottome of a sieve then turn a joyned stool with the feet upward set the sieve on the feet thereof cover it with a faire linnen cloth and fet a chafindish of coals in the middest of the stool underneath the sieve and the heat thereof wil run up to the sieve and dry your Candy presently then box them up and they wil keepe all the yeare and looke very pleasantly 33 To make the Rock Candies upon all Spices Flowers and Roots Take two pound of Barbary sugar clarifie it with a pint of water and the whites of two egges then boil it in a posnet to the height of Manus Christi then put it into an earthen Pipkin and therewith the things you wil Candy as Cinnamon Ginger Nutmegs Rose buds Matigolds Eringo rootes c. Cover it and stop it close with clay or paste then put it in a Still with a leisurely fire under it for the space of three daies and three nights then open the pot and if the Candy begin to coine keep it urst pped for the space of three or four daies more and then leaving the syrup take out the Candy lay it on a Wier grate and put it in an Oven after the bread is drawn there let it remain one night and your Candy wil be dry This is the best way for rock candy making so smal a quantity 34 The Candy Sucket for green Ginger Lettice flowers c. Whatsoever you have preserv'd either herbs fruits or flowers take them out of the syrup and wash them in warm water and dry them wel then boil sugar to the height of candy for flowers and draw them thorow it then lay them on the bottom of a sieve dry them before the fire and when they are enough box them for your use This is that the Comfit-makers use and call Sucket Candy 35 To Candy Ginger Take very fair and large Ginger and pare it and then lay it in water a day and a night then take your double refined sugar and boil it to the height of sugar again then when your sugar beginneth to be cold take your Ginger and stir it well about till your sugar is hard to the pan then take it out race by race and lay it by the fire four hours then take a pot and warm it and put the Ginger in it then tie it very close and every second morning stir it about roundly and it wil be rock-candied in a very short space 36 To candy Eringo roots Take of your Eringo roots ready to be preserved and weigh them and to every pound of your roots you must take of the purest sugar you can get two pound and clarifie it with the whites of Egges exceeding wel that it may be as cleer as Chrystal for then it will be very commendable it being clarified you must boil it to the height of Manus Christi and then dip in your roots two or three at once til they be all candied and so put them in a stove and keep them all the year 37 To make Quince Cakes Prepare your Quinces and take the just weight of them in sugar beaten finely and searcing half of it then of the rest make a syrup using the ordinary proportion of a pint of water to a pound of sugar Let your Quinces be wel beaten and when the syrup is Candy height put in your Quinces and boil it to a paste keeping it with continual stirring then work it up with the beaten sugar which you reserved and these Cakes will taste wel of the Quinces 38 Cleer Cakes of Quinces or Apricocks Take of the best sugar finely beaten and searced one pound to a pound of Quinces or Apricocks set your sugar upon a chafingdish of coals and dry it about halfe an hour then cooling it stir into it a little Muske and Ambergreece finely beaten and powdered then pare your Quinces c. and boil them in fair water whole til they be tender and not covering them for so they will be white Then take them and scrape off all the Quince to the core into a silver dish and boil it therein til it grow drie which you shal perceive by the rising of it up when it is thus wel dried take it off let it cool and strow on the Sugar setting some other to strow it til it be all thorowly wrought in then lay it out on Glasses Plates or Prints of Flowers or Letters an inch thick or lesse as you please 39 To dry Apricocks Take them when they are ripe stone them and pare off their rinds very thin then take half as much sugar as they weigh finely beaten and lay them with that sugar into a silver or earthen dish laying first a lay of sugar then of the Fruit and let them stand so all night and in the morning the sugar will be all melted then put them into a skillet and boil them apace scumming them wel and as soon as they grow tender take them from the fire and let them stand two dayes in the sirup then take them out and lay them on a fine plate and so dry them in a stove 40 The best way to dry Plums Take you Plums when they are full grown with the stalks on them but yet green split them on the one side and put them in hot water but not too hot and so let them stand three or four hours then to a pound of them take three quarters of a pound of sugar beaten very fine and eight spoonfuls of water to every pound set them on hot embers till the sugar be melted and after that boil them till they be very tender letting them stand in that sirup three daies to plump them Then take them out wash the sirup from them in warm water and wipe them with a fine linnen cloth very dry and lay them on plates and set them to dry in a Stove for if you drie them in an Oven they wil be tough 41 To dry Pippins Take half a pound of powder sugar boil it to a sirup in a pint of fair water and clarifie it with the white of an eg then strain it thorow a linnen cloth and set it on the fire again in another clean skillet while this is doing pare eight pippins cut them in halves and core them putting in every
half into the sirup as you pare them and so let them boile stil scumming them til the sirup be almost all wasted away within three or four spoonfuls then take out the Pippins lay them on plates and dry them in a stove 42 A way to drie Cherries Take three quarters of a pound of sugar and a pound of good Cherries their stalks and stones taken from them then put a spoonful of clean water in the skillet and so laie one laie of Cherries and another of sugar til your quantitie be out then set them on the fire and boil them as fast as conveniently you can now and then shaking them about in the skillet for fear of burning and when you think they are enough and clear then take them off the fire and let them stand till they be half cold then take them out as clear from the sirup as you can and lay them one by one upon sheets of Glasse setting them either abroad in the Sun or in a window where the Sun may continually be upon them If they drie not so fast as you would have them then in the turning scrape some loaf sugar finely upon them but add no greater heat then the Sun wil afford which wil be sufficient if they be wel tended and let not dew fall on them by any means but in the evenings set them into some warm cupboard 43 How to keep Apples Pears Quinces Wardens c. all the yeer dry Pare them take out the coars and slice them in thin slices laying them to dry in the Sun in some stone or metalline dishes or upon an high frame covered with course canvas now then turning them and so they wil keep all the yeer 44 How to dry Fruits in the Sun If it be smal fruit you must dry them whole by laying them abroad in the hot Sun in stone or pewter dishes on iron or brass pans turning them as need requires 45 To make Quidony of Cherries Take your Cherries while they are red at the stone put out the stones and boil them til they be broken then strain then thorow a very clean strainer and take the matter strained forth boil it again and giving it in the boiling as much sugar as is sufficient when you think it thick enough put it into your boxes 46 To make printed Quidony of Quinces Take two pound of Quinces pared coated and cut in small pieces put them into a clean posnet with a quart of fair water and when they are boiled tender put into them one pound of sugar clarified with half a pint of fair water let them boil till all the Fruit fall to the bottome of the Posnet then let the liquid substance run through a fair linnen cloth into a clean Bason then put it into a Posnet and boil it til it come to a Jellie then print it in your moulds and turn it into your boxes you shall know when it is ready to print by rowling on the back of a Spoon 47 To make Quidony of Pippins Take two pound of Pippins pare core and quarter them and put them into a quart of fair water boil them til they begin to break then put in a pound of Brasil sugar clarified with half a pint of water and the white of an egge boil them then til the fruit fal to the bottome then take it up draw all the liquid substance from it as in your Quinces and boil it in a posnet til it come into a Jellie trie it on the back of a spoon and when it is ready to print put it into your Moulds and when it is cold turn it off upon wet Trenchers and put it into boxes 48 To make Quidony of Raspices Take a quart of red Raspices put them into a wodden dish with three spoonfuls of fair water bruise them all to pieces with a spoon or a rolling pin then strain them through a cloth into a fair dish season it with half a pound of Sugar finely beaten boile it on a Chafindish of coals stirring it till it come to a Jellie your trial is on the back of a spoon as in all other Jellies and when it is ready for the print print it and it will be a very orient colour you must not put too much water to the Raspices for they wil not abide too much boiling for losing their colour 49 Colours for fruitage Saffron is the best yellow Sap green the best green Indian Lake the best red All your colours must be tempered with Gumme water made of Rasewater 50 To make all kind of turned works in fruitage hollow Take the strongest bodied sugar you can get boil it to the height of Manus Christi then take your stone or rather Pewter Moulds being made in three pieces tie the two great pieces together with Inkle then powre in your sugar being highly boyled turn it round about your head apace and so your fruitage wil be hollow whether it be Orange Lemmon or whatsoever your Mould doth cast after they be cast you must colour them after their natural colours 51 To make Dia Citonicum as it is called but rightly Dia Cydonium Take four or five very fair Quinces pare them quarter them core them and boil them in a Pipkin with a pint of fair water when they are tender put to them halfe a pint of red wine vinegar and one pound of sugar let them boil an hour after it and then let the sirrup and all run thorow a strainer into a fair posnet and let it there boil til it come to a Jellie as thick as Quidony then put it up into a glasse or gallipot This is a most special Cordial and comfortable matter for a sick body 52 To cast all Kind of Sugar-works into moulds Take one pound of Barbarie sugar clarifie it with the white of an egge boil it til it rol between your finger and your thumb then cast it into your standing moulds being watered two houres before in cold water take it out and gild them to garnish a Marchpane with them at your pleasure 53 The names and use of your Sugars Refined sugar hard and white is best for paste of Genua and to cast all kind of sugar works Barbary sugar is best to preserve withal Brasile sugar white and dry is best to make Quidony 54 The names and prices of Gummes for Sugar work Gumme dragon the ounce iiii d Red Rosset the ounce i. d Sap green the ounce ii d Indian Lake ii d. weight iii. d Fine gold the booke xvi d Party gold the booke vi d Buy your Gold at the Gold-beaters your Gummes and your colours at the Talbut in Newgate Market 52 To make Jumbols Of almonds being beaten to paste take half a pound with a short cake being grated and two egges two ounces of carroway seeds being beaten and the juce of a Lemmon and being brought into a paste roule it into round strings then cast it into knots and so bake it in an oven and
cup and to cast divers figures of Antimony Take the best crude Antimony very well powdered Nitre of each a pound of crude Tartar finely powdered two pound mix them well together and put them into a crucible cover the crucible and melt them and the Regulus will fall to the bottome and be like a melted metall then pour it forth into a brass morter being first smeared over with oyl This Regulus when you have made enough you may melt again and cast into what moulds you please You may cast it into the forms of shillings or half crowns either of which if you put into two or three ounces of Wine in an earthen glazed vessel or glasse and infuse in a moderate heat all night you may have a liquor in the morning which will cause vomit of which the dose is from two drachms to two ounces and half You may put a little Cinamon into the wine to correct and give a grateful relish to it It is the custom to fil the Antimonial cup with wine and to put as much wine round about betwixt that and the little earthen cup where it stands and so infuse it all night and then drink up all that wine but I fear that so much wine wil be too much a being three or four ounces when as we seldom exceed the quantity of two ounces of the infusion of Antimony These cups or pieces wil last for ever and be as effectual after 1000 times infusion as at first and if they be broken at any time as easily they may being as brittle as glass they may be cast again into what forms you please Note that he that casts them must be skilful in making his spawde as also in scowring them and making them bright afterwards for if they be carefully handled they wil look even as bright as silver 31 How to make the true spirit of Antimony Take of the subtil powder of the Regulus of Antimony as much as you please sublime it out of it self till it will sublime no more stil putting what is sublimed to that which remains at the bottom or with salt Armoniack six or seven times remembring that then you must dulcifie it with warme water by dissolving therewith the salt and dry the precipitate afterwards Set this fixed powder in a celler laying it very thin upon a marble Stone and in about six weeks or two months it wil all be dissolved into water which must be filtered Then evaporate part of this water and let it stand two or three daies in the Cellar to crystallize these Crystals purifie and drie mix them with three times the quantity of the gross powder of Tiles and distil them in a retort and there will come forth first a white spirit and then a red which you may rectifie in Balneo 32 The true Oyl or essence of Antimony is made thus Take of the foresaid crystals dissolve them in good rectified spirit of wine digest them two months in Balneo or horse dung then evaporate the spirit of wine and there will remaine in the bottome the true oyl or essence of Antimony Then take new crystals of Antimony and let them inbibe either this oyl or the foresaid spirit till they will inbi be no more then digest them two months in sand and they will become a flowing fixt salt and of excellent vertue The foresaid spirit this oyl and essence of Antimony may be equallized to Aurum Potahile to all intents and purposes according to a medicinalure especially the fixt essence The dose is five or six grains 33 Wormwood wine Take a handful of dried Wormwood for every gallon of wine stop it in a vessel close and so let it remain in steep So is prepared Wine of Rosemarie flowers and Eye bright 34 To make an Artificial Malago VVine First take a wine barrel well hooped and dressed with one end being open to which a close cover must be well fitted which must be to take off and put on at pleasure Set it in a warm place winter or summer and fill it full with clear and pure water to each three gallons put six pound of the best Malago Raisins which you must bruise in a stone morter and then strew upon the water upon each twenty gallons of which you must cast an handfull of Calx vive then cover the vessel close with the cover and cast clothes upon it to keep it warm and let it stand four or five dayes to work as Wine or Beer doth when they be new then see if the raisins be risen up to the top of the water if so then put them down again and cover it again as before let them thus stand three weeks or a moneth together the Raisins being every fourth or fifth day put down in case they rise up Then put a tap into the Vessel three or four fingers above the bottome and try if it be good and taste like wine if not let it stand a while longer but if so draw it off into another wine Vessel and to every twenty gallons that you have drawn off put a pint of the best Aqua vitae two new laid Hen-egs and a quart of Alligant beaten well together and let it stand in a Cellar as other wine doth til it be clear and fit to be drunk 35 How to make artificial Claret wino Take six gallons of water two gallons of the best Cider put thereunto eight pound of the best Malago Raisins bruised in a mortar let them stand close covered in a warm place the space of a fortnight every two dayes stirring them well together then presse out the Raisins and put the liquor into the said Vessel again to which add a quart of the juice of Raspberries and a pint of the juyce of Black-Cherries cover this liquor with bread spread thick with strong Mustard the Mustard side being downward and so let it work by the fire side three or four dayes then tun it up and let it stand a week and then bottle it up and it wil taste as quick as bottle-Beer and become a very pleasant drink and indeed far better and wholsomer then our common Claret 36 How to make good Raspberry VVine Take a gallon of Sack in which let two gallons of Raspberries stand steeping the space of twenty four hours then strain them and put to the liquor three pound of Raisins of the Sun stoned let them stand together four or five dayes being sometimes stirred together Then pour off the clearest and put it up in Bottles and set it in a cold place If it be not sweet enough you may add some sugar to it 37 Oyl of Almonds Take Almonds blanch them and put them into a pot and set that pot in another pot of water that boileth and the steam of the seething pot will arise and enter into the pot with the Almonds and that will become Oyl when they are stamped and wringed through a cloth thus they make oyl of the kernels of Filberts VValnuts
face if it be annointed therewith Moreover it is marvellous in old diseases inwardly if ye give thereof every morning a drachm with halfe an ounce of Vegitabile Syrupo Leonardo The fire cureth sores and such like and the earth remaineth in his state Ye shall understand that these are great secrets of importance which I have revealed of this Gumme and happy shall he be that useth them in the time of need Now the order to make this oyl is thus Take as much Frankincense as thou wilt and put it into a Retort of glasse with the fourth part of common ashes and set it to distill and give it first a small fire until the oyl change colour then presently change the Receiver and augment the fire untill all the substance be come out Ye shall understand that this oyl is best fresh for when it is old it wil wax thick and cannot pierce so well 204 The secrets of Mercury or Quick-silver Quick-silver is a liquid Mineral and volatile which the Alchymists call Sulpher volatilis and wil accompany with all other metals but with smal fire they may be separated again and wil fly away in fume and for that cause the Philosophers call it Servus fugitivus as a man would say it can hold friendship with none but so soon as he hath done his service he flyeth away as it is seen by Gold-Smiths that gild plate for when they have laid him on with the gold they put it to the fire and he flies away and the like it would do when any man doth occupie him in any sort of infirmity And the order to calcine it is this Take a long pot of stone that is very wel glazed with the neck a foot and half long and that hath a very narrow mouth as is possible and put therein two or three pound of Quick-silver then set the same pot in a sallet of Iron and lute them close together and set it upon a furnace and give them fire according to art until the Quick-silver remain calcined having special care that your head and receiver be very wel luted lest you lose some part of the Quick silver and thus in eight daies it shal be finished which shall be apt for solution Also this calcination serveth to divers and sundry medicines it mortifieth corrosive Ulcers without any pain The solution is made in this order Take the said Calx and put it into a long neck'd glass and put thereon distilled vinegar and set in warm sand four and twenty houres and then give it one walm and when it hath boil'd pour out the vinegar and then if there remaine and feces in the bottome put in fresh vinegar and do as thou didst before and this thou shalt do so often till it be dissolved into water and when all is dissolved evaporate away the vinegar that there remain but little in the bottom then put thereto water of hony made by distillation and so the solution of Mercury shal be finished which is miraculous in many infirmities It serves against the cough Catarrhe and for those that have their stomacks putrified with the Pox using it with other syrups and potions It helpeth those whose milt is indurated and also for those that have any kind of Fistula in any part of the body It is also good for divers other things which I will not insert here because others should endeavour too by exercise to find out other secrets thereof as I have done 205 To make the representation of the whole world in a glasse Take of the purest salt Nitre as much as you please of Tin half so much mix them together and calcine them hermetically then put them into a Retort to which annex a glasse receiver and lute them wel together let leaves of gold be put into the bottome thereof then put fire to the retort until vapours arise that will cleave to the gold augment the fire till no more fumes ascend then take away the Receiver and close it hermetically and make a lampe fire under it and you wil see presented in it the Sun Moone Stars Fountains Flowers Trees Fruits and indeed even all things which is a glorious sight to behold 206 In a fit of the stone when the water stops Take the fresh shels of Snailes the newest will look of a redish colour and are best take out the Snails and dry the shels with a moderate heat in an Oven after the bread is drawn Likewise take Bees and dry them in the same manner and beat them severally into powder then take twice so much of the Bees powder as of the Snails and mix them well together keep it close covered in a glaffe and when you use it take as much of this powder as will lie upon a six pence and put it into a quarter of a pint of the distilled water of Bean flowers and drink it fasting or upon an empty stomack and neither eat nor drink for two or three hours after This wil both cause the urine to come away and bring the gravell or stone away with it and hath done very much good 207 A Medicine for the Stone Pellitory of the wall Smallage Holioaks Mallows Tansie and Saxifrage of each take an handfull chop them small and quile them in a little linnen bag then take three pints of Cream half a pint of malmsie a quarter of a pint of running water and set them on the fire and when it doth seethe then put the bag of herbs into the pot and when the bag is throughly hot wring it between two trenchers over the pot to save the liquor then lay the bag to the grief as hot as you can suffer it and as soon as it cooleth make it hot again in the same liquor and so apply it to the grief 108 Another very good medicine for the Stone Make a posset of a quart of Rhenish wine a pinte of Ale and a pint of milk then take away the Curd and put into the drinke two handfuls of Sorrel one handful of Burnet and halfe a handful of Baulm boil them together a good while but not too long lest the drink be too unpleasant then take of the drink a quarter of a pint or rather half a pint at once at morning and to bedward putting therein first two or three spoonfuls of juyce of Lemmons This is an excellent medicine for the Stone in the Kidnies to dissolve and bring it away It is very good in these diseases of the Stone to use Burnet often in your drink at meals and often to steep it in over night and in the morning put in three or four spoonfuls of juyce of Lemmons and to drink thereof a good draught every morning a week together about the Full Moon three daies before and three daies after 209 To dissolve the Stone which is one of the Physicians greatest secrets Take a peck of green Bean Cods wel cleaved and without dew or rain and two good handfuls of Saxifrage lay the same
with four pound of the decoction make a syrup and put thereto these things following while it is hot Saffron one scruple Ginger one drachm Musk two Carets the solution of our Petra Vegetabile three ounces Cloves Nutmegs of each one scruple and a half then keep it in a glasse close shut and this is vegetable Syrup which worketh miracles in divers infirmities for by its nature it purifieth the blood mundifieth the liver comforteth the heart preserveth the stomack provoketh urine dissolveth gravel in the reins it helpeth the cough and helpeth disgestion and quieteth all the humors in the sick person with divers other vertues which it hath This may be taken with broth with distilled water or with any decoction or medicine fasting The quantity is from one drachm to two drachms and happy shal they be that use it 12 Unguento Magno Leonardo This Unguento magno is called so because of his great vertue and operation for it worketh so strangely in some diseases that it in a manner reviveth the patient and the order to make it is thus Take Otnegra ovium six ounces Oximel Squilliticum halfe an ounce mix them together in an earthen dish until the Otnegra ovium be become like ashes then it is deifitrom then put thereon two ounces of vinegar and wash it wel until it remain pure and clear then take Olibanum half an ounce Cerusae one ounce beat them fine and mix it in a stone morter with as much Magno Liquore as wil serve to incorporate them wel then put thereto the otnegra ovium and mix them very wel together that being done put thereto Auxungia porcina eight ounces and mix them altogether and then it is made which keep in a vessel wel glazed for it wil keep a long time without corruption and is apt to help those that are lame ful of pains sores and swellings pains of the eyes the Stone in the reins and such like matters it helpeth all manner of French pox if ye annoint them therewith til their gums be sore and then leave But ye shall note that the body must first be wel purged before ye annoint them This unguent cooleth all corrosive ulcers and helpeth them in short time it helpeth all pains in the eyes if yee put it therein and taketh away all burning with speed and to be short it helpeth those diseases in most short time so that it is to be wondred at The CONTENTS of The Second Part Containing Experiments in Physick and Chirurgery c. Waters Liquors Syrups DOcter Stevens his water pag. 47 To make Cinnamon Water pag. 48 Angelica water ibid Aqua Mirabilis ibid Its vertues pag. 49 Balm water ibid Another Balm water ibid A Barly water to purge the Lungs and Lights of all diseases pag. 50 A Water for a sore Mouth ibid Another for the same use pag. 51 Rosa solis ibid Wormwood water ibid Aqua Fortis pag. 52 Water of Snails ibid An excellent water against the Stone in the Kidnies pag. 53 A water for outward or inward VVounds Impostume and Ulcers and a sore mouth ibid A very excellent water against worms pag. 54 An excellent sweet water ibid How to make artificial Tunbridg water pag. 55 How to make artificial Epsome water pag. 56 Spirit of Confection of Alkermes its Vertues pag. 57 Spirit of Saffron its vertues ibid Extract of Ambergreece ibid Spirit and water of Wormwood the lesser Composition pag. 59 Spirit and water of Wormwood the greater Composition ibid Spirit and water of Angelica pag. 60 Spirit of Wine extraordinarie ibid Quintessence of Snakes Adders or Vipers pag. 61 A liquor against the tooth Ach. pag. 62 A Liquor to comfort smelling and preserve the head ibid To make an Antimouial cup and to cast divers figures of Antimony pag. 63 How to make the true spirit of Antimony pag. 64 The true Oyl or essence of Antimony pag. 65 Wormwood wine pag. 66 To make an Artificial Malago VVine ibid How to make artificial Claret wine pag. 67 How to make good Raspberry VVine ibid Oyls Oyl of Almonds pag. 68 Oyl of Sage ibid Olcum Laureum ibid Oyl of Tobacco ibid Oyl of Roses ibid Oyl of Creame pag. 69 Oyl of Swallows ibid Oyl of Roses another way ibid The use of Oyl of Violets pag. 70 The use of the oyl of Camomil ibid The use of oyl of Lillies ibid The use of the Oyl of Elder-flowers pag. 71 Oyle of Cowslips ibid The use of the Oyl of Rue ibid The use of the Oyl of Wormwood ibid The use of the Oyle of Mint pag. 72 To make the Oyle of Salerne ibid How to compose the Oyl of Excester ibid Oyl of Amber pag. 73 How to make an excellent Oyl of Hypericon ibid Oyl of St. Johns Wort. pag. 74 Oyl of yolks of Eggs. pag. 75 To make oyl of Mandrakes ibid Oyl of Musk how made ibid How to make Oyl of Snakes and Adders pag. 76 Ointments c. An oyntment for a Rupture pag. 77 Flos unguentorum ibid Unguentum Populionis commonly called Pompillion ibid Doctor Lewins Unguentum Rosatum good for the heat in the Back pag. 78 Vnguentum Sanatinum ibid Ointment of red Lead pag. 79 Abitter Ointment ibid Apectoral Ointment ibid An Ointment for an Ach to be made at any time of the year and is approved good and hath helped old pains griefs and aches pag. 80 An Oyntment for the Sciatica ibid Ointment for any wound or sore ibid A purge to drive out the French Pox before you use the Oyntment pag. 81 The Ointment for the French Pox. ibid What places to annoint for the French Pox ibid Another purge to heal the French Pox without Ointment pag. 82 An oyntment to kil the worms in little children ibid For the worms pag. 83 An excellent good Medicine or Salve for any Ach coming of cold easie to be made by any Country good houswife ibid For a pain or Ach in the Back ibid A Searcloth for all Aches pag. 84 An excellent Ointment for any Bruise or ach ibid The cure of grievous pains and aches in the Body pag. 85 Aches coming by the Pox healed ibid Back-weak or diseased to strengthen c ibid To take the Ague out of any place ibid For the Ague in children or women with child pag. 86 An easie and approved Medicine for a quartaine Ague ibid An Almond milk to cool and induce sleep ibid For an Andcome pag. 87 Liquid Amber and its medcinal vertues ibid A most Soveraign Balsam for several diseases ib For a sudden bleeding at the nose pag. 88 Aremedie for the spitting of blood occasioned by the breach of some vein in the brest ibid To stop bleeding of a wound pag. 89 To stop inward bleeding ibid A medicine for those that are given to bleeding ibid To stanch bleeding at the nose ibid To heal the Cut or sore Brest of a Woman ibid A Medicine to breake and heal sore brests of Woman used by Midwives and other skilful
them 74 To make Symbals Take fine flower dryed and as much sugar as flower then take as much whites of Egs as will make it a paste and put in a little Rose-water then put in a quantitie of coriander seed and Annis seed then mould it up in that fashion you will bake it in 75 To make Cracknels Take five or six pints of the finest wheat flower you can get to which you must put in a spoonful and not above of good Yest then mingle it well with butter cream rose-water and sugar finely beaten and working it wel into paste make it in what form you will and bake it TARTS 76 To make fine Pippin Tarts Quarter pare core and stew your Pippins in a pipkin upon very hot embers close covered a whole day for they must stew softly then put to them some whole Cinnamon six Cloves and sugar enough to make them sweet and some Rosewater and when they are stewed enough take them off the fire and take all the spice from them and break them small like Marmelade and having your coffins ready made not above an inch deep fill them with it and lay on a very thin cover of Puff-paste close and fit so bake them and serve them in cold but you must take heed you do not over-bake them 77 How to make a Tart of Butter and Eggs. Take the yolks of sixteen Egs well parted from the whites three quarters of a pound of Butter well clarified and strain it twice or thrice in a fair strainer seasoned with sugar and a little Rosewater wherein Spinage first a little boiled hath been strained to make it green Be sure your paste be well made and whole and so bake it up and serve it 78 A Tart of Strawberries Pick and wash your Strawberries very clean and put them in your paste one by another as thick as you can then take Sugar Cinnamon and a little Ginger finely beaten and well mingled together cast them upon the Strawberries and cover them with the lid finely cut into Lozanges and so let it bake a quarter of an hour then take it out and strewing it with a little Cinnamon and Sugar serve it 79 A Tart of Hips Take Hips and cut them and take out the seeds very clean then wash them season them with Sugar Cinnamon and Ginger then close your Tart bake it ice it scrape on sugar and serve it 80 A Tart of green Pease Take green Pease and seethe them tender then pour them out into a cullender season them with Saffron salt and sweet butter and sugar then close it then bake it almost an houre then draw it forth and ice it put in a little verjuyce and shake it well then scrape on sugar and serve it 81 To make a Tart of Wardens You must first bake your wardens in a pot then cut them in quarters and core them then put them into your Tart with Sugar Cinnamon and Ginger then close up your Tart and when it is almost baked do it as your warden Pie scrape on sugar and serve it 82 To marble Beef Mutton or Venison Stick any of these with Rosemary and Cloves then roast it being first joynted very wel then baste it often with water and salt and when it is throughly roasted take it up and let it coole then take Clarret wine and vinegar and as much water boile it with Rosemary Bayes good store of Pepper Cioves Salt when it hath boiled an houre take it off and let it cool then put your meat into a vessel and cover it with this liquor and herbs then stop it up close the closer you stop it the longer it wil keep 83 To marble Fish Take Flounders Trouts Smelts or Salmons Mullets Makrel or any kind of shel-fish wash them and dry them in a cloth then fry them with sallet oyl or clarified butter fry them very crisp then make your pickle with clarret wine and fair water some Rosemary and Thyme with Nutmegs cut in flices and pepper and salt when it hath boiled halfe an houre take it off and let it cool then put your fish into a vessel cover it with liquor and spice and stop it close 84 To make a very good Tansie Take fifteen eggs and six of the whites beat them very wel then put in some sugar and a little sack beat them again then put in about a pint or a little more of Cream and beat them again then put in the juyce of Spinnage or of Primrose leaves to make it green then put in some more sugar if it be not sweet enough then beat it again a little and so let it stand til you fry it when the first course is in then fry it with a little sweet butter it must be stirred and fryed very tender when it is fryed enough then put it in a dish and strew some sugar upon it and serve it in 85 To make excellent bottle Ale Take two or three drops of the extracted oyl of Sage and mingle it with a quart of Ale brewing the same wel out of one pot into another and this way a whole stand of Sage-Ale is very speedily made The like is to be done with oyl of Mace or Nutmegs But if you wil make a right Gossips cup that shal far exceed all the Ale that ever mother Bunch made in her life time then in the bottling up of your best Ale tun half a pint of white Ipocras that is newly made and after the best Receipt with a bottle of Ale stop your bottle close and drink it when it is stale Some commend the hanging of roasted Oranges prickt ful of cloves in the vessel of Ale til you find the taste thereof sufficiently graced to your own liking 86 The particulars of the Ipocras made usually in London Cinnamon one ounce Ginger one ounce Nutmegs half an ounce Cloves Coriander seed long Pepper of each one quarter of an ounce bruise all these in an mortar Sugar one pound Rosewater a fit quantity milk half a pint Rosemary a little to lay in the bottome of the bag a gallon of the pleasantest High-Country White wine Some add to this a quantity of Galingal and some Raisins of the Sun JELLIES 87 How to make a fine Crystal Jelly Take a knuckle of Veal and four calves feet and set them on the fire with a gallon of fair water and when the flesh is boiled tender take it out then let the liquor stand still till it be cold then take away the top and the bottome of that liquor and put the rest into a clean pipkin and put into it one pound of clarified sugar four or five drops of oyl of Cinnamon and Nutmegs a grain of Musk and so let it boil a quarter of an hour leisurely on the fire then let it run thorow a Jelly-bag into a bason with the whites of two egs beaten and when it is cold you may cut it in lumps with a spoon and so serve three or four lumps on
a plate 88 To make Jelly of Pippins Take Pippins and pare them and quarter them and core them lay them in water and when you set them on the fire shift them in another water and put them in a skillet and put in as much water as wil cover them and a little more set them over the fire and make them boil as fast as you can when the Apples are soft and the liquor tastes strong of the Apples then take them off and strain them thorow a canvas cloth gently take to a pound of juice a pound of sugar then set it on the fire when it is melted strain it into a bason and rince your skillet again set it on the fire and when it is boiled up then scumme it and make it boil as fast as you can and when it is almost boiled put in the juyce of three Lemmons strained thorow a cloth if you wil have Orange pil pare it thin that the white be not seene and then lay them in fair water all night then boil them in the water til the pil be soft then put it into the syrup and stir it about and fill your glasses and let it stand til it be cold and then it is ready to eat 89 To make a Jelly Take either Veal a Cock or which is best of all Calves feet boil them wel in one water or as they cal it scald them til you can get off the skin and clawes so make them very clean and let them cool Then set on more water and when it seetheth put in the Calves feet which for these proportions may be four or six and let them boil until they wil Jelly which you shal know by letting it stand til it be cold when it is enough strain the clearest from the other and let the best stand til it be cold Then an hour after set it on the fire again and put to it a pint of white wine and so much sugar as wil make it sweet two ounces of Cinnamon bruised in a Morter one ounce of Nutmegs and the white of one Egg wel beaten and when it beginneth to boile after they are put in put in two or three spoonfuls of white-wine Vinegar then make ready your white Cotton bag and put in the bottom thereof a sprig or two of Rosemary and while this is doing set the liquor on the fire againe and when it beginneth to seeth put in the white of one egge more well beaten first then take it off the fire and let it run thorow the Cotton bag then take that which is run thorow set it on the fire again as soon as it seetheth put in another white of an egge and then let it run thorow the bag again do so again the third time after it is heated and clarified and then it wil be enough then put it up in glasses wel covered and not in pipkins or gallipots and keep it for your use 90 A direction to make a Jelly Take three Calves feet flea and wash them very clean take also a fleshie Pullet or a piece of Veal pick the fat away and put them into an earthen pan or bason and to them so much water as wil cover them steep it therein two daies a night changing the water and bruising the flesh six or seven times a day then put it into a clean brass pot pour to it more then a gallon of fair water keep it boiling and alwaies scummed til it come to the height of a Jelly putting thereto first when you see the liquor half wasted more then a pint of white wine When it is enough strain it thorow a double linnen cloth let it stand til it be cold when if you can see any fat take it off lightly then pour the Jelly into a bason set it on a Chafingdish of coals and put thereto of the finest sugar finely beaten so much as wil sweeten it throughly then take of Cinnamon scraped and gross beaten half a pound three Nutmegs one ounce of white Ginger scraped and grossy bruised a little and a very little scraped and only broken ten Cloves bruised a little and a very little white salt put to them the whites of eight eggs new laid lightly beaten together stirre them together til they be all throughly mixed so let it boile softly til it taste of the spice and in the places where it riseth in boiling drop in here and there a spoonful of white wine vinegar and lastly three spoonfuls of the best damask-Rose water when you find it boiled enough take a clean Jelly bag put into the bottome of it of Thime and Rosemary of each a branch three branches of sweet Marjorome a handful of Violets if they may be had sprinkle the herbs and bag with good store of Damask-Rosewater hang the bag neare a good fire and put therein your Jelly taking great heed that no dust or smoak hurt it and so let it run into a clean bason thorow your bag twice at least then put it up in fittest sort for your use LEACHES 91 To make Leach of Ipocras Take one pint of Ipocras two ounces of Isonglas six spoonfuls of Rose water two grains of Musk and four ounces of sugar candy boil it leisurely upon a chafingdish of coals then let it run thorow a Cotten bag into a bason and when you serve it cut it in what fashion you wil with a spoone knife or otherwise being coloured as you please 92 To make fine white Leach of Almonds Take half a pound of smal Almonds beate them and strain them with Rosewater and sweet milk from the Cow put into it two or three pieces of large Mace one grain of Musk two ounces of Isonglas and so boil it on a Chafingdish of coals a quarter of an hour till it wil stand which you shal try thus Set a sawcer on or in a little cold water so that none come into it and put a spoonful of the Leach into it and if you see that stand take the other off the fire then you may slice it in what fashion you please 93 To make Leaches Take a pottle or gallon of Milk as you think fit make it hot as it came from the Cow then take a quantity of Almonds blanched and ground answerable to the Milk strain them with the milk and seeth them with so much sugar as wil sweeten it and some bruised Nutmeg Ginger and Cinnamon and a little Salt tied in a cloth with some Rose water and one ounce or more of Isonglas being washed and steeped before three or foure hours in faire water let them seethe altogether til it be so clammy that it wil cut with a knife then strain it thorow a cooler that the Isonglas may be taken away and the next day when it is cold cut it in slices into a dish and serve it So you may make it red with red Sanders yellow with Saffron green with c. 94 The Cooks common white Leach Take the