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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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Wormwood Gum-arabick Mastich Cyprus Costus Ginger of each half an ounce Calamus Aromaticus Olibanum Aloes of each three drams Cloves Mace Cinnamon Spikenard Nutmegs Gallia Moschata Schaenanthis of each one dram and a half with Rob of Quinces make it into an emplaister and when you have spread it upon a cloth persume it with wood of Aloes and apply it to your stomack 167 A Preservative against the Pestilence when it is first suspected Take a half-penny weight of English Saffron two pennie weight of Bole Armanack one penny weight of Mace made all in fine powder and of Treacle the quantity of a hasell nut put them all in small Ale luke-warm mixe it well with the Ale and let the partie drinke it and lie down on a bed and lay upon him a temperate quantity of clothes and so let him sweat two hours 168 An approved good drink for the Pestilence Take six spoonfuls of Dragon water two good spoonfuls of wine vinegar two penny weight of English Saffron and as much treacle of Jane as a little Walnut resolve all these tother upon the fire and let the Patient drink it blood-warme within twenty hours or sooner that he is sick and let him neither eate nor drink six hours after but lie so warme in his bed that he may sweat This expelleth the disease from the heart and if he be disposed to a sore it wil straightwaies appear which you shall draw out with a plaister of Flos Unguentorum 169 A medicine for the Plague Take of Setwal grated one root of Jane treacle two spoonfuls of Wine vinegar three spoonfuls make all these more then luke-warm steep them well together and drink them off at once Sweat after this six or seven hours and it wil bring forth the plague sore To break which lay a roasted Onion also seeth a white Lillie root in Milk til it be as thick as a Pultis and lay it to the same If these faile lance the sore and so draw and heal it with salves for Botches or Boils 170 Signs of death in the Plague Take a live Frog and lay the belly of it next the sore if the Patient will escape the Frog wil burst in a quarter of an houre then lay on another and this you shall doe til more do burst for they draw forth the venome If none of the frogs do burst the party wil not escape This hath been frequently proved Some say a dried toad will do it better 171 A water to drive out any infection Take Dragons Angelica Rue Wormwood of each a handfull chop them pretty smal and steepe them in a quart of White-wine twenty four hours then distil them in a Stil and reserve the water in a glasse close stopped Give to the sick Patient six or seven spoonfuls hereof at a time fasting and let him fast an hour and an halfe after and keep himself very warm in his bed or otherwise 172 A Medicine for a Plurisie Stitch or VVind offending in any part of the Body Gather the young shoots of Oak after the fall of a Wood and picking out the tenderest and softest of them especially those which look reddest bind them up together in a Wet paper and rost them in hot Embers as you doe a Warden whereby they will dry to a powder of which powder let the patient take a spoonful in a little Posset Ale or Beer warmed in the morning fasting after it two hours or more if he be able doing the like about three afternoon and two hours after supper four or five daies together which thus done in the beginning of the disease is by often experiments found to cure such windy pains in the side stomack or other parts of the body You may dry them also in a dish in an oven after the bread is drawn you shall do well to gather enough of them in the spring and make good store of the powder then to keep for all the yeare following 173 A great and sore Plurisie cured by M. R. A certain man of 24 years old was vexed with a most grievous Plurisie with a pricking shooting and a cough with a continual fever and inflamation of the tongue First there was good store of blood taken from the liver vein on that side where the pain was then were these syrups that do decoct and purge ministred unto him Take Syrupi de Liquoritia de Hysopo acetosae ana one ounce Oximelitis squilitici acet squilit ana three drachms make thereof a loch Of this he licked in the morning with a liquorice stick which caused him to spit easily and took away the heat or burning of the tongue being used with this direction following of French barley three ounces Carduus Benedictus M. 1. Roses Violets ana P. 1. Liquorice scraped three drams three figs Raisins a pound and a half Sugar Candy two ounces Boil them in sixteene pound of water till two pound be wasted and so to drink them cold His diet was also light and thin as broth and drink c. 174 To take away Pock holes or any spots in the face Wet a fine cloth in white Rosewater and set it all night to freeze and then lay it upon your face till it be dry also take three Poppies the redest you can get and quarter them taking out the garbage then still them in a quart of new milk of a red Cow and with the water thereof wash your face 175 A Pultis to stay fluxes proceeding from a cold cause to be applied to the Belly Take oasts of Bread steeped in vinegar six ounces beat it in a mortar and adde Mace Mastick Mirtle Berries stones of Raisins Galany Cloves flowers of Pomegranates of each one ounce oyl of Wormwood and Mints of each two ounces Make a Cataplasm 176 For the heat of the Back Take oyl of Roses six ounces and an half and put it to a little wax and foure drops of vinegar and annoint the Back therewith 177 Astma or the Ptisick and its cure This disease is cured four manner of waies First by letting blood under the tongue cutting those veins overtwhart and sucking them as much as may be which evacuates and opens the opilation of blood and easeth the lungs of all the offending matter Secondly By taking a dose of Aromatico Leonardo which evacuateth the stomack of all evil qualities that offend the lungs Thirdly By eating every morning for a month together one ounce of Electuario de Althea Fourthly By annointing the stomack every night with Magno liquore For speeding the cure take every ten daies a dose of Electuario Angelica Leonardo and keep a sober diet refraining Fish Pork Slimie things spice baked meats cheese and such like which nourish grosly and infect the blood 178 A very good Poultesse for any Member swelled and inflamed and not broken to take away the pain Take three pints of new milk of stale Manchet crummes two handfuls or so much as shall make the milk somewhat thick adde thereto
when they are baked ice them with Rosewater and sugar and the white of an egge being beaten together then take a feather and gild them then put them again into the oven and let them stand in a little while and they wil be iced clean over with a white ice and so box them up and you may keep them all the year 56 To make Paste of Carrots Take Carrot roots boil them take out of the pith one pound paring off all the outside beat the pith in a Morter with half a pint of Rosewater then take one pound of Sugar finely beaten and the yolks of sixteen egges beat them with the Carrots altogether then put it in a dish and dry it and being thus made into paste put it to what use or in what fashion you like best 57 To make the Macaroones Blanch a pound of the best Almonds and put them in fair cold water as you blanch them then drie them out of the water in a clean cloth and beat them in a morter then take a sawcer full of Rose water wherein of music and Ambergreece half a grain of each is dissolved and therewith stil sprinkle the Almonds as you beat them and when they are almost beaten enough put in by degrees a pound of fine sugar very smal beaten and searced all but two or three spoonfuls when they are beaten enough put them into a dish and take the whites of three Egges very wel beaten and the froth taken off put the clear thereof to the Almonds with a spoonful of fine flower and the two or three spoonfuls of sugar you left and the rest of the Rosewater with the musk and Ambergreece dissolved in it mixe all these very well together in the dish and lay them upon March-pane Paper the bignesse and fashion of an eg laying them rough and high Then put some other Papers under your water Paper for feare of burning and bake them in a oven hot enough to bake a light oven Pudding having a care that they scald not 58 To make Paste of Almonds Take one pound of smal Almonds blanch them out of hot water into cold then drie them with a cloth and beat them in a stone morter til they come to paste putting now and then a spoonful of Rosewater to them to keep them from oiling when they are beaten to fine Paste take half a pound of sugar finely beaten and searced put it to your Paste and beat it till it will twist between your fingers and thumbe finely without knots for then it is enough then make thereof pies Birds Fruits Flowers or any pretty things printed with Moulds and so gild them and put them into your Stove and use them at your pleasure 59 To make a March-pane Take two pound of small Almonds blanch them and beat them as you do for your Paste of Almonds then drive it into a sheet of Paste and spread it on a bottome of Wafers according to the proportion or bignesse you please then set an edge round about it as you doe about a Tart and pinch it if you will then bake it in a pan or Oven when it is enough take it forth and ice it with an ice made of Rose water and Sugar as thick as Barter spread it on with a Brush of Bristles or with feathers and put it in the Oven again and when you see the Jee rise white and dry take it forth and stick long Comfits in it and set up a stadderd in the middest of it so gild it and serve it 60 To make past of Violets or any kind of Flowers Take your flowers picke them and stamp them in an Alabaster Morter then steep them two hours in a Sawcer of Rose water after straine it and steep a little Gumme Dragon in the same water then beat it to paste print it in your moulds and it wil be of the very colour and taste of the Flowers then gild them and so you may have every flower in his own colour ond taste better for the mouth then any printed colour 61 To make the white Paste royal Take half a pound of white Barbary sugar finely beaten and searced put it into an Alabaster morter and therewith a little Gumme Dragon steeped in Rose water beat it by little and little til it come to a Paste when you have beaten it unto a perfect fine paste print it with your moulds and gild it and dry it in your stove set them on white papers and dry them on a hand-peel before the fire and when they be through dry box them and keep them for your pleasure 62 To make a red Paste royal Take half a pound of Barbary sugar finely beaten and searced put it into a stone mortar with a quarter of an ounce of Gumme Dragon steeped in rose water then strowing a little powder de Rosita on it beat it to a perfect paste then print it gild it stove it or otherwise dry it and keep it at your pleasure 63 To make the Paste royal in Spices Take four ounces of double refined sugar beaten and searced put thereto one ounce of searced Cinnamon beat it in a stone mortar to paste then print it with your moulds and turn some upon sticks to make them shew like Gummes they be called in Confectionary Cinnamon sticks or Cinalonians then gild them and put them into your stove but draw not out the sticks till they be dry for else they wil shrinke 64 To make Paste of Pippins Take twenty fair smooth skind Pippins pare them and cut them into quarters and core them then boile them in a quart of fair water til they be tender then powring the liquor from them strain them and dry them on a Chafingdish full of coals and put as much sugar to them as they weigh then boil them to the height of Manus Christi and fashion some like plummes some like leaves so stove them when they are stoved one night you may put two halves of the plummes to ether and put a stone between them and prick a stalk in the end so may you make some like plummes with stones and stalkes some with leaves I suppose it should be like leaves for the Pippin is the best fruit to counterfeit any plumme 65 To make Paste of Genua Take of Quinces two pound and two pound of reaches bake them in a pot in the Oven then pulp them thorow a hair sieve dry them on a Chasingdish of coals then take two pound of sugar boil it to the height of Manus Christi and put it to your dried pulpe make it to the fashion of great water leaves put them into an Oven after the bread is drawn let it stand all night in the morning warm the Oven again and turn your Paste and put it in again after that for the space of three or four daies set a chafingdish with coals into the oven to it and when it is thorow drie box it and keep it all the year 66. To
Buglosse ibid Syrup of Calamint ibid Syrup of Scabious ibid To make Syrup of Saffron pag. 38 Syrup of Folefoot or Colts foot ibid To make syrup of Pomecitrons pag. 39 A Syrup against Melancholly humors especially where there is wind in the stomack ibid Syrup of Wormwood simple pag. 40 Sprup of Marsh mallows pag. 41 Syrup of Radishes ibid Syrup of Popies pag. 42 Hony of Rosemary flowers ibid Experiments in PHYSICK CHIRURGERY Distillations Waters and Oyles Their Vertues and Uses 1 Doctor Stevens his Water TAke a Gallon of Gascoin wine of Ginger Gallingall Cinnamon Graines Cloves Mace Nutmegs Annis-seeds Caraway-seed Coriander-seed Fennel-seed and sugar of every one a dram then take of Sack and Ale a quart apiece of Camomill Sage Mint red Roses Time Pellitory of the wal wild marjoram wilde Time Lavender Peneroyal Fennel roots Parsley roots and Setwall roots of each halfe a handfull Then beate the spice small and bruise the herbs and put them all together into the wine and so let it stand sixteene hours stirring it now and then Then distill it in a Limbeck with a soft fire and keep the first pint of the water by it selfe for it is the best and the rest by it self for it is not so good as the first The principal use of this water is against all cold diseases it preserveth youth comforteth the stomack cureth the stone of what nature soever using but two spoonfuls in seven daies It preserved Doctor Stevens ten years bed-red that he lived to ninety eight years 2 To make Cinnamon Water Of the best Cinnamon you can get take one pound bruise it wel and put it into a gallon of the best Sack and infuse it three daies and three nights and then distill it as your Aqua Coelestis 3 Angelica water Of Cardus take and drie a handfull Angelica roots three ounces of My the one drachm Nutmegs half an ounce Cinnamon Ginger of each four ounces Saffron one drachm and a half Cardomons Cubebs Gallingale and Pepper of each a quarter of an ounce Mace two drachms Grains one drachm Lignum-Aloes Spikenard Juncus-odoratus of each a drachm Sage Borage Buglosse Violets and Rosemary flowers of each halfe a handful bruise these and steep them in a pottle of Sack twelve hours and distill it as the rest 4 Aqua Mirabilis Take three pints of White wine one pint of Aqua vitae one pint of juyce of Salendine one drachm of Cardamer a drachm of Melliot flowers Cubebs a drachm of Galingale Nutmegs Cloves Mace and Ginger of each a drachm mingle all these together over night the next morning set them a stilling in a glass Limbeck The Vertues This water dissolveth swelling of the Lungs and being perished doth help comfort them it suffereth not the blood to putrifie he shall not need to be let blood that useth this water it suffereth not the heart-burning nor melancholy or flegm to have dominion it expelleth Urine and profiteth the stomack it preserveth a good colour the visage memory and youth it destroys the Palsie Take some three spoonfuls of it once or twice a week or oftner morning and evening first and last 5 Balm water Take Balm dry three ounces Thyme Penniroyal of each an ounce Cinnamon four ounces a drachm of Cardomus grains half an ounce sweet Fennel seeds an ounce Nurmegs and Ginger of each a drachm Galingale one ounce Calamus Cypress Cubebs and Pepper of each two drachms of Caper-roots half a drachm of Diptamus one drachm bruise these things and put them to a pottle of Sack and steep them 24 hours and then use it as the former waters 6. Another Balm VVater Take a gallon and a quart of Sack put to it Annis seed and Fennel seed of each one pound Liquorice scraped and bruised a quarter of a pound of Coriander seed corrected and Caraway seed of each as much Cowslip flowers clipt from the whites and Rosemary flowers wel pickt of each one pound of red Mints wilde Time of each a good handful and of Baulm 2 pound steep all these first in the Sack 4 hours in the brasse pot wherein they shall be distilled and then distil them in a Limbeck 7 A Barly water to purge the Lungs and Lights of all diseases Take halfe a pound of fair Barley a gallon of running water Liquorice half an ounce Fennel seed Violet leaves Parselie seed of each one quarter of a ounce red Roses as much of Isope and Sage dried a good quantitie of either of Harts tongue twelve leaves a quarter of a pound of Figs and as many Raisins still the Figgs and Raisins put them all into a new earthen pot with the water cold let them sceth well and then strain the clearest from it drink of this a good quantity morning and afternoon observing good diet upon it it taketh away all Agues that come of heat and all ill heat it purgeth the Lights Spleen Kidnies and Bladder 8 A Water for a sore Mouth Take of Sage Rosemary and Woodbine leaves a like quantity viz. a handful and half of either boyl them in a quart of running water with as much of the best Allom as an Egg and let them boil to a pint then put in a pint of white Wine and let them boil again and so soon as it boileth take it off the fire and let it cool and then put it up in a glass and therewith wash your mouth morning evening and at night and other times as couse requires till it be well 9 Another for the same use White wine and fair water of each a quart wine Vinegar a pint red Sage a good quantity Mercury two penniworth Roch Allom half an ounce Rosemary an handfull Woodbine leaves somewhat more and 3 spoonfulls of Honey seeth them together and wash your mouth therewith 10 Rosa solis Take of Liquorice 8 ounces Annise-seeds Carraway of each an ounce Raisins stoned Dates of each three ounces Nutmegs Cinnamon Ginger and Mace of each half an ounce Galingale a quarter of an ounce Cubebs a drachm Figs two ounces Sugar four ounces bruise these and distill it with a gallon of Aqua vitae as the rest But when it is distilled you must colour it with the herb Rosa solis or else Alkanet root 11 Wormwood water Take of Wormwood two ounces and a half Sage Bittony and Rue of each half a handful Rosemary tops a handful Cinamon 3 ounces Nutmegs half an ounce Cloves and Mace of each half a drachm Ginger one ounce Galingale Cubebs and Spikenard of each a drachm and a half of Scordium half an handful bruise these and put them into a pottle of Sack and a pint of Aqua vitae and steep them 24 hours and distil them as the rest 12 Aqua Fortis Take of Vitriol prepared as for oyl of Vitriol two pound Salt Peter purged one pound beat them together and put them in a Retort well luted place it in a furnace with a large receiver and giving fire to it
away dead flesh and ranklings and doth heal again quickly 67 Ointment of red Lead Take of oyl of Roses a pound and a half red lead three ounces Litharge two ounces Ceruss one ounce and half Tutty three drams Camphire two drachms Wax an ounce and a half make it into an ointment according to art in a pestle and morter made of lead 68 A bitter Ointment Take of oil of Rue Savin Mints Wormwood bitter Almonds of each an ounce and a half juyce of Peach flowers and leaves and VVormwood of each half an ounce powder of Rue Mints Century the less Gentian Tormentil of each one drachm the seeds of Colworts the pulp of Colocynthis of each two drachms Aloes Hepatick three drachms Meal of Lupines half an ounce Myrrh washed in grasse water a drachm and half Buls gall an ounce and a half with a sufficient quantity of juyce of Lemons and an ounce and a half of VVax make it into an Ointment according to art 69 Apectoral Ointment Take of fresh Butter washed in Violet water six ounces oyle of sweet Almonds four ounces oyle of Cammomile and Violets white Wax of each three ounces Hens and Ducks grease of each two ounces Orris roots two drachms Saffron half a drachm the two last being finely powdered the rest melted and often washed in Barly or Hysop water make an ointment of them according to art 70 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 Take Steers gall Sallet oyle and Aqua vitae of each five spoonfuls boil them together a little and therewith annoint the place pained by the fire and lay a warm cloth on it 71 An Oyntment for the Sciatica Roast a handful or two of Onions and take Neatsfoot oyle and Aqua-vitae of each a pint stamp or rather boil all these together to an oyle or ointment and strain it into a Gallipot and therewith annoint the place grieved as hot as you can endure it morning and evening 72 An Ointment for any wound or sone Take two pound of Sheeps suet or rather Deers suet a pint of Candy oyle a quarter of a pound of the newest and best Bee-wax melt them all together stirring them well and put to them one ounce of oyle of Spike and half an ounce of the Goldsmiths Boras then heating them again and stirring them all together put it up in a Gallipot and keep it close stopped till you have cause to use it This is an approved ointment to cure any wounds or sores new or old 73 A Purge to drive out the French Pox before you use the Ointment Take half a pint of good Aqua vitae one ounce of Treacle of Gene one quarter of an ounce of Sperma caeti boil all these together on a soft fire half a quarter of an hour and let the Patient drink this as warm as he can and lie down in his bed and sweat and if any of the disease be in his body this will bring it forth and bring him to an easie loosnesse This is thought the best and furest of all other Cures for this infirmity 74 The Ointment for the French Pox Take Barrows grease well dryed from the filmes beat it in a Morter till it be small and fine put thereto of Lethargy one ounce of salt Peter two ounces both in fine powder of Salgemme one ounce of Mastick in sine powder two ounces of Olibanum in powder one ounce of oyle of Spike one ounce oyle of Pulliolum one ounce of Turpentine one quarter of a pound beat all these together into a perfect Ointment and therewith annoint these places 75 What places to annoint for the French Pox Viz. The principal bone in the nape of the neck w th out the shoulder places taking heed it come not neer the Channel bone for then it will make the throat swell else not the elbows on both sides the Hip-bones the Share the knees the Hams and the Ankles If the Patient have no Ach annoint not these places but onely the Sores till they be whole If there be any Knobs lying in the flesh as many have annoint them often and lay Lint upon them and brown paper upon the Lint and keep the Patient close out of the air and this used will make him whole in ten dayes by the grace of God 76 Another purge to heal the French Pox without Ointment Take a great handful of Carduus Benedictus of unset Leeks leaves and all if they be great six if small 10 cut these herbs small and put them in an earthen pan and with a quart of small Ale or white Wine and one ounce of Coloquinrida boyl them to half a pint of liquor then strain out the liquor and keep it in a glass and two or three days before you set the Patient to sweat if his body be of a strong constistitution let him drink half of it if he be weak a third part thereof taking care that the Sign and day be good to purge in 77 An Ointment to kill the Worms in little children Take oyle of Wormwood oyle of Savine and the powder of Aloe Cicatrina finely beaten mix them together warm them and annoint the belly therewith morning and evening and this will kill the belly worms for stomack worms annoint the stomack with oyle of Wormwood and the belly with oyle of sweet Almonds You must not use any Savine in medicines for Maiden children but in stead of oyle of Savine take as much of an Oxes Gall. 78 For the worms Drink Mares milk as hot as you can have it from the Mare in the morning fasting 79 An excellent good Medicine or Salve for any Ach coming of cold easie to be made by any Country good houswife Take of good Neatsfoot Oyle Honey and Waxe a like quantity boil them well together Then put to them a quarter so much of Aqua vitae as was of each of the other and then setting it on the fire boil it till they be well incorporated together then spread it upon a piece of thin leather or thick linnen cloth and so apply it to the place pained 80 For a pain or Ach in the Back Take Nepe Archangel Parsly and Clary of each half a handful wash them clean cut them small and fry them with a little sweet Butter then take the yolks of three or four Eggs beat them well together and put them to the Eggs fry them altogether and eat them fasting every morning with some Sugar to take away the unsavoriness of the herbs Some use to take onely Clary leaves and Parsly washed not cut or Clary leaves alone and pouring the yolks of the Eggs upon them so fry them and eat them 80 A Searcloth for all Aches Take Rosen one pound Perrosen a quarter of a pound as much Mastick Dcers Suet the like Turpentine two ounces Cloves bruised one ounce Mace bruised two ounces Saffron two dachms boil all these together
the flesh and sweet bones beat them in a stone morter and strain out all the juyce with the broth then sweeten it with two ounces of white sugar candy in powder and take thereof half a pint at once early in the morning warm and sleep after it if you can and two hours before supper at your pleasure when you steep the root slice two drachms of white Sanders and as much red and let them boil in the broth 112 A Broth for a Consumption Take a course Pullet and sow up the belly and an ounce of the conserves of red Roses Borage and Bugloss flowers of each of them half an ounce Pine apple kernels and Pistaties of each half an ounce bruised in a mortar two drachms of Amber powder all mixed together and put in the belly then boil it in three quarts of water with Egrimony Endive and Succory of each a handful Sparrow grass roots Fennel roots Caper-roots and an handful of Raisins of the Sun stoned when it is almost boiled take out the Pullet and beat it in a stone morter then put it into the liquor again and give it three or four walms more then strain it and put to it a little red rose-Rosewater and half a pint of white Wine and so drink it in a morning and sleep after it 113 An excellent confortative for the Stomack helping digestion warming the brain and drying the Rheumes Take two ounces of good old conserve of red Roses of chosen Mithridate two drachms mingle them well together and eat thereof to bedward the quantity of a Hasel nut This doth expel all windiness of the stomack expelleth raw humours and venemous vapours causeth good digestion dryeth the Rheum strengtheneth the memory and sight 114 For the Corns on the feet or toes First pare away the corns then take a black snail and bruise it and put a drop or two of the juyce thereof into the place grieved and put thereto a little powder of Sandphire and it will take away the corn very speedily 115 A Cordial for the Sea Take of Syrup of Clove Gilly-flowers Mr. Mounifords water and Cinnamon water of each an ounce Confectio Alcharmis one drachm Borage water an ounce and half the like of Mint-water temper all these together in a Cordial and take a spoonfull at a time when you are at Sea 116 For the Ptisick and dry Cough Take the lungs of a Fox beat them to powder take of Liquorice and Sugar-Candy a good quantity a small quantity of Cummin mix all these well together and put them in a bladder and eat of it as often as you think good in the day 117 An excelient medicine for the Cough of the Lungs Take Fennel and Angelica of each one handfull the leaves in Summer roots in winter sliced figgs twelve but if the body be bound twenty at least greene Liquorice if you can two or three good stickes scraped and sliced Annis-seeds cleaved and bruised two good spoonefuls two or three Parsely roots scraped and the pith taken out and twenty leaves of Folefoot boil all these in three pints of Hysop water to a pint and half then strain it out into a glasse putting as much white Sugar Candie to it as will sweeten it Drink hereof being warmed five spoonfulls at a time first in the morning and last in the evening taking heed that you eat nor drink any thing two hours before or after continue this till it be all done 118 A Medicine for the chin-Cough for a child First take Bores grease and warm the soles of the feet at the fire then chafe them with it and go to bed and keep them warm by lapping clothes about them 119 A Diet drink to clear and temper the blood Take Scurvy grass half a peck Brooklime Watercresses Acrimony Maiden-hair Liverwort Borage Bugloss Betony Sage sweet-Marjoram Sea-wormwood tops of green Hops Fumitory of each a good handfull I very Hartshorn and yellow Sanders of each one ounce red Dock roots two ounces Parsely Fennel Asparagus roots of each an ounce Raifins half a pound boil these very well in a gallon of Beer then stamp and strain them and put it into three gallons more of Beer to work together 120 A Diet drink to open and temper the Liver Take the roots of Fennel Parsly Dock Coroch Kneeholm of each half a good handful the leaves of Endive Bugloss Fumitory Harts-tongue Agrimony garden Wormwood Cetrach of each a good handful the bark of the roots of Capers half an ounce boil these in a convenient quantity of Whey till a third part be spent then clarifie the same Hereof drink in the morning fasting at the least half a pound at a time 121 A Diet drink for a Canker in the mouth First get a Diet pot of the common sort put into it half a pound of Liquorice scraped and bruised half a pound of Annise-seeds bruised twelve ounces of Lignum vitae bought at the Turners and an ounce of the bark of the same wood from the Apothecaries half a pound of Raisins of the Sun stoned an handful of Seabious two ounces of Solyprilla a quantity of white Wine and an ounce of China then fill up your pot with fair water saving a pint then cover your pot with his cover and close it round about the brim with paste then set it on a gentle fire of coals and let it boil three hours till the fourth part be consumed Then put the clearest in bottles and every morning and night drink a good draught for fourteen daies together If you put a little of the wood into the fire and there fry out of it somewhat like oyl be sure it is good 122 To cure the Dropsie be it hot or cold Take of the tops of Red Mint of Archangel or blind nettles and red Sage of either of them ten or twelve stamp them all together and straine the juyce of them into some stale Ale so much as will serve to drink morning and evening do the like every day for nine or ten daies together and God willing it will do away your disease 123 A medicince that hath recovered some from the Dropsie whom the Physicians have given over Take greene Broome and burn it in some clean place that you may save the Ashes of it take some ten or twelve spoonfuls of the same Ashes and boile them in a pint of White wine till the vertue of it be in the wine then coole it and draine the wine from the dregs and make three draughts of the wine and drink one fasting in the morning another at three in the afternoone another last at night neer going to bed continue this and by Gods grace it wil cure you 124 To open obstructions of the Liver and to preserve from the dropsie Take every day half a drachm of fine Rubarb thin sliced with a spconful of Currans steeped and washed in white wine two houres then chop them finely with the Rubarb and eat them fasting nine mornings together at
make Couserves then take of your best ripest Apples you can get and scald them very tender then pare them and take the best and softest of them and strain it with your Barberrie stuff not too thin for fear of blacks going thorow then drie your stuff in a dish upon a Chafingdish of coals and make your syrups after the same manner that you do for Apricock Cakes and when your syrup is boiled high enough cool it a little before you put it into the platter putting it in by a little at once stirring it up continually and so you shall be sure to have your stuffe as thick or as thin as you like best then lay it upon your plates and dry it as you do other Cakes ghessing at the quantity of your sugar according to your own best liking 38 To make a sweet Cake and with it a very sweet water Take damask-Damask-Rose leaves Bay-leaves Lavender tops sweer Marjorome tops Ireos powder Damask powder and a little Musk first dissolved in sweet water put the Rose leaves and herbs into a Bason and sprinkle halfe a quarter of a pint of Rose water among them and stirring them all together cover the Bason close with a dish and let them stand so covered all night and in the morning distil them so shal you have at once an excellent sweet water and a very fine sweet Cake to lay among your finest linnen 39 To make Almond Cakes Take of Jordan Almonds one pound beate them as you do for Almond milk draw them thorow a strainer with the yolks of two or three egs season it wel with sugar and make it into a thick batter with fine flower as you do for Bisket bread then pour it on smal Trencher plates and bake them in an oven or baking pan and these are the best Almond cakes 40 To make a Cake Take half a peck of flower two pound and a half of currans three or four Nutmegs one pound of Almond paste two pound of butter and one pint of Cream three spoonfuls of Rose water three quarters of a pound of sugar half a pint of Sack a quarter of a pint of Yest six egs so make it and bake it 41 To make a Slipcoat Cheese Take five quarts of new milk from the Cow and one quart of water and one spoonfull of Runnet and stir it together and let it stand till i● doth come then lay your cheese cloth into the vat and take up your curd as fast as you can without breaking and put it into your Var and let the whay soak out of it self when you have taken it all up lay a cloth on the top of it and one pound weight for one hour then lay two pound weight for one hour more then turn him when he hath stood two hours then lay three pound weight for one hour more then take him out of the Vat and let him lie two or three hours and then salt him on both sides when he is half enough take a clean cloth and wipe him dry then let him lie a day or a night then put nettles under and upon him and change them once a day the Cheese will come to his eating in eight or nine dayes 42 To make the Angelotta Cheese The best time to make it is in the middest of May You must take your Milk as it comes from the Cowe not beating it at all and put to it some Cream of the Evening Milk and then put in your Runnet as you do in other Cheeses when the Cheese is come Whey it but break it not but put it into your Vat as whole as you can in the meat not thrusting it too close at the first but as it sinks down fill it up again and then shut it up close and let it stand so one night then take it out and lay it upon a board casting salt upon it and so let it lie a day or two turning and salting it then lay it in a Basket or a Flasket with long grasse under it and so let it dry as you do other Cheeses 43 To keep Cherries all the year Take the fairest Cherries you can get but be sure they be not bruised and take them and rub them with a linnen cloth and put them into a barrel of hay and lay them in ranks first laying hay in the bottom and then Cherries and then hay again and then stop them up close that no air may come neer them and lay them under a Feather-bed where one lieth continually for the warmer they are the better yet neer no fire and this doing you may have Cherries at any time of the year FRIGASIES 44 Frigasie of Chickens Kill your Chickens pull skin and feathers off together cut them in thin slices season them with thime and lemmon minced nutmeg and salt an handful of sorrel minced and then fry it well with six spoonfuls of water and some fresh butter when it is tender take three spoonfuls of verjuice one spoonfull of sugar beat it together so dish it with sippets about 45 Frigasie of Lamb. Cut your meat in thin slices season it with Nutmeg Pepper and Salt mince some thyme and Lemmon and throw it upon your meat then fry it slightly in a pan then throw in two eggs beaten in verjuice and sugar into the pan also an handful of Goosberries shake it together and dish it 46 Frigasie of Rabbets Cut your Rabbets in smal peeces and mince an handfull of thyme and parslie together and with a Nutmeg Pepper and salt season your Rabbets then take two Eggs and verjuice beaten together and throw it in the pan stick it and dish it up in sipets 47 Frigasie of Veale Cut your meat in thin slices beat it well with a rowling pin season it with Nutmeg Lemmon and Thyme fry it slightly in the pan beat two Eggs and one spoonfull of verjuice and put it into the pan and stir it together and dish it Divers other ways to dress Flesh 48 How to boil a Capon handsomly Take the fat end of a neck of mutton and cut it into two or three pieces making one piece of two or three bones and boil these with your Capon and of herbs take an handfull of parsley as much thime and half as much Endive and binde them up in a bunch together and boil them with you Capon when it is boiled enough season it with Salt and Verjuice then take a deep dish and cut into it sops of a fine stale Manchet and scald them with the fat which cometh off the Capon and Mutton You must boil readie in a Pipkin or some skillet halfe a pound of choice plunes till they be well and plump but not over boyled and when you serve up your Capon garnish the dish sides with your Prunes and lay them thick upon your Capon You may also boile some marrow with your prunes and lay it on your Capon 47 To roast a shoulder of Mutton with Lemmons Take a Shoulder of
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
make Paste of Lemmons Take half a dozen of thick rined Lemmons cut them through the midst and boil them tender in fair water then stampe them in a morter strain the juyce or pulpe from them and dry it and put sugar to it as to the Paste of Genua then make it into what fashion you will on a sheet of white paper dry it in an oven and turne it often for two daies and two nights for in that time it will be dry enough box it thus up end it wil endure all the year 67 To make Paste of Regia Take half a pound of Almonds blanch them and beat them into fine paste then take half a pound of Pistacius beat it among the Almonds take the Brawn of a Capon mince it very smal and beat it with the Almonds and Pistacius put into it the flesh of two Partriges a dozen of Cock Sparrows all which flesh must be well roasted before you take it from the bones put thereinto also half a pound of Dates thin sliced a quarter of a pound of the four cold seeds a quarter of a pound of sugar candy beat all these together in a morter til it come to be Paste with the yolkes of two new laid egges and two or three spoonfuls of Rosewater then make it up in little Cakes and bake them on papers this is an especiall Paste to preserve against the consumption and to restore him that hath it 68 How to make Paste of Goosberries or Burberries or English Currans Take any of these tender fruits and boile them softly on a chafingdish of coals then strain them with the pap of a rotten apple then take as much sugar as it weighs and boil it to a candy height with as much Rose water as wil melt the sugar then put in the pap of your fruit into the hot sugar and let it boil leisurely till you see it reasonable stiff almost as thick as for Maimelade then fashion it on a sheet of glass and so put it into the Oven upon two billets that the glass may not touch the bottome of the oven for if it do it will make the Paste tough and so let it dry leisurely and when it is dry you may box it and keep it all the year 69 To make an excellent Marmelade Of sugar take a pound and a half boil it with a pint of fair water till it come to the height of Manus Christi then take three or four smal Quinces one good Orange pill both very wel preserv'd and finely beaten and three ounces of Almonds blanched and beaten by themselves Eringo roots preserved two ounces and an half stir these with the sugar til it will not stick and then at last put in of Muske and Amber dissolved in Rose water of each four grains of Cinnamo Ginger Cloves and Mace of each three drams of oyl of Cinnamon two drops These being done put it into your Marmelade boxes and so present it to whom you please 70 To make Marmelade of Lemmons and Oranges Boil ten Lemmons or Oranges with halfe a dozen Pippins and so draw them thorow a strainer then take so much sugar as the pulp will weigh and boyle it as you do Marmelade of Quinces and then box it up 71 To mke Almond Bisket Steep one pound of Almonds so long in cold water till they will blanch then put them in Rosewater and beat them in so much Rose water as will keep them from growing to an oyle and no more take one pound of sugar beaten very fine and sifted thorow a searce take the whites of sixe Egges beat them to a froth as you use to doe for other Bisket with a spoonefull of fine flower set the Almonds and sugar on a soft charcole fire let them boil together til they be very thick and so let them stand til they be almost cold then beat the Egges and that together put in a little Muske for the better taste if you please then lay them upon papers in what proportion you will and dry them in a Oven with a slacke fire 72 How to make the fine Bisket Bread called in some places Norffe-cakes and commonly Diet-bread Take half a peck of fine Wheat flower halfe a pound of sugar beaten in fine powder a good handful of Annis seeds rubbed dusted and made in fine powder a competent spoonfull of Salt one pound and a halfe of Batter mixe all these thus prepared together Then take a Porringer full of light Ale yest and as much of good sweet Creame made luke-warme or somewhat hotter but first take heed your yest be sweet then take the Yolkes of six egges work all these together into Dough then lay it warme to rise while the oven is heating mould them into what forme you wil but let not the rols in dough be bigger then your little finger then put them into the oven wel and clean swept but not too hot for a little heat will bake them when they are baked let them stand till the oven be little more then lukewarme and then take them out till they be thorow cold and put them in againe to dry the space of an houre or more so may you keepe them halfe a yeare or longer and if they chance through moist standing or weather to waxe soft give them a drying for an houre in an Oven that hath stood an houre after a batch of Bread 73 The best receit for Bisket bread Take all the yolks and halfe the whites of sixteen egges beat them well together then put to them a pound of the finest wheat flower as much of the best loaf sugar very finely beaten and searced with a quarter of a pint of Rose water and half a quarter of a pint of Sacke if you please beating them thus compounded together about two houres very wel then strowing upon it two spoonfuls of Coriander-seed and as much Annis seed finely beaten and then working them well into Paste bake it in boxes or upon Plates well buttered keeping a little sugar in a piece of Cobweb Lawne to searce upon it and ice it If you make for some Physicall use then use the Sack and put in a quarter of a pound of Annis-seed and as much Liquorice beaten into fine powder 74 How to make Comfit makers Bisket Of flower take a peck and four ounces of Coriander seed one ounce of Annisseed take three egs three spoonfuls of Ale yest and as much warm water as wil make it as thick as paste for Manchets make it in a long rowl and bake it in an oven one hour and when it is a day old pare it and slice it sugar it with searced sugar and put it again in the Oven and when it is drie take it out and new sugar it again and box it and keep it 75 To make Manus Christi Of refined sugar take half a pound and some Rosawter and boil them together til it come to a sugar again then stir it about while it
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
c. 38 Oyl of Sage Take the Sage and boil it in Oyl of Olives till it be thick and greene then straine the Oyl from the Sage and reserve it 39 Oleum Laureum Take Bay-leaves grinde them well and boil them in Oyl of Olives til it be green then strain it and cool it c. This is for coldness in the Lims Palsies and such mortifications c. 40 Oyl of Tobacco Take the Green leaves of Tobacco cut them small and put them into a glasse or gallipot wel stopped then fil it up with Sallet oyl set it a good while in hot water or in the Sun fourtie daies and you shall find it a precious Balme 41 Oyl of Roses Take Sallet Oyl and put it into an earthen pot then take Rose leaves clip off all the white and bruise them a little and put them into the oyl and then stop the pot close with paste and set it into a boiling pot of water and let it boil one houre then let it stand all one night upon hot Embers the next day take the oyl and straine it from the Rose leaves into a glasse and put therein some fresh rose leaves clipt as before stop it and set it in the Sun every day for a fortnight or three weeks 42 Oyl of Creame Take Creame and seeth it softly upon some embers and it will become an Oyle this wil cure the gout in a hauks leg 43 Oyl of Swallows Take two dozen or twentie Swallows out of the nest a good handful of Rosemary as much Lavender cotton and as much Strawberry leaves strings and all stamp all these together and fry them altogether in May Butter or rather sallet Oyle til the rawnesse be gone then put it in an earthen pot fast stopped nine days and then fry it again wring it thorow a cloth and keep it in a glasse or gallipot and being warmed annoint the place grieved there with it is good for all Aches and for the shrinking of Sinews 44 Oyl of Roses Take a pint of good Sallet oyl or more as you please then take as much red Rose leaves the white clipt off three quarters of a pint put them into a stone pot stop it close with paste and set it so long in a greater pot of boiling water till the strength of the Roses be gone into the Oyl then wring the Roses thorow a Canvas cloth till they be drie then put in new stop them boil strain and change them thus four or five times til you think it strongenough of the Roses then put it up for your use This is the best Pattern for these Oyles 45 The use of Oyl of Violets Oyl of Voilets Camomile Lillies Elder-flowers Cowslips Rue Wormwood and Mint are made after the same sort Oyl of Violets if it be rubbed about the Temples of the head doth remove the extream heat asswageth the head-ach provoketh sleep and moisteneth the Braine it is good against melancholy dulnesse and heavinesse of the Spirits and against swellings and sores that be over hot 46 The use of the oyl of Camomil Oyl of Camomil is good in glisters for the Agues that come of costive stoppings it asswageth all paine and Ach it cureth wearied and bruised parts it loosneth and softneth hard and swoln parts and openeth all which is stopped 47 The use of oyl of Lillies Oyle of Lillies is good to supple mollifie and stretch sinnews that be shrunk it is good to annoint the sides and veines in the fits of the stone 48 The use of the Oyl of Elder-flowers Oil of Elder flowers is good for the hardness and paines of the liver and spleene if the sides be therewith annointed But you must not come neer the bottome of the bellie where the bladder lies nor the hollow of the stomack It is very good to apply to green wounds with some lint dipped in it for it cooleth and heal eth them and also festring sores 49 Oyle of Cowslips Oyle of Cowslips if the nape of the neck be anointed with it is good for the Palsie it comforteth the sinnews the heart and head 50 The use of the Oyl of Rue Oyle of Rue is good to be used in Olisters against the Collick and Stone It is good for the Kings Evill or any swellings in the chroat it doth warme and dissolve cold humors in any joint it provoketh Vrine being annointed about the region of the Bladder it is good to annoint the Spleene for the stopping of it 51 The use of the Oyl of Wormwood Oyle of Wormwood is good for strains and bruises and to comfort the stomack It is made of the green herb as are the Oyles of Camomile Rue and Mint 52 The use of the Oyle of Mint Oyle of Mint comforteth the stomack overlaid and weakned with casting it doth drive back milk and dry up womens brests and doth keepe them from being sore being therewith annointed 53 To make the Oyle of Salerne Take Southernwood Wormwood Lavender tender Crops Rose leaves Camomile Saint Johns Wort red Sage Rosemary tops of each one handfull cut them somewhat smal as it were about an Inch long and bruise them a little then put to them a pint of the best Aqua vita and a pottle of the best Sallet-Oyl you can get boyl them an hour and half upon a soft fire keeping them from burning with continual stirring then strain it thorow a linnen cloth and when it is cold put it up in a glasse and keep it for all cold infirmities When you use it warme the Oyl a little and warme your hand against a Chafingdish of coales and annoint the place pained therewith 54 How to compose the Oyl of Excester Take one pound and a halfe of the Flowers of Cowslips and steep them in three pints of the best Candy oyl and let them so stand three weeks or a month and then take of Calamint Saint Johns-wort Sage Egremony Sothernwood Penneroyal Wormwood Lavender Parietarie Rosemary Camomile Pellitory of Spain Bay-leaves Scabious of each a handful beat them in a stone Mortar as smal as you can then strain the Cowslip flowers from the Oyle and stamp them among the other herbs as smal as you can and put them altogether in aquart of white wine and let them stand therein twenty foure hours then put the Oyl to them and boil them upon a soft fire til they be so incorporate together that it is all become oyl then letting it cool a little while strain it into some earthen pan there keep it till it be cold and then put it up in some glass or gally-pot 55 Oyl of Amber Take of yellow Amber one part burnt flints or powder of tiles two parts distil them in a Retort in sand keepe the white cleare oyl which comes out first by it selfe then distill it on till all come out keep both oyles severally and rectifie them with water gather the salt of Amber which sticks to the neck of the retort and being purged by solution filtration
in oyle of Camomile and keep it for your use 81 An excellent Ointment for any Bruise or Ache. Take two pound of May Butter purified pour it out from the dregs and put in it of Broom flowers and Elder flowers of each a good handful so clean picked that you use nothing but the leaves mix them altogether in a stone pot and boil them seven or eight hours in a Kettle of water being covered with a board and kept down with weights keeping the Kettle always full of water with the help of another Kettle of boyling water ready to fill up the first as it wasteth and when it waxeth somewhat cool but not cold strain the ointment from the herbs into a Gallipot and keep it for your use 82 The cure of grievous pains and aches in the Body A dose of Aromatico Leonardo and the application of Emplastrum foetidum is an approved cure for grievous pains and aches in the knees shoulders or other parts 83 Aches coming by the Pox healed Purge twice or thrice with the said Aromatico Leonardo then take for four or five dayes together half a drachm of the extract of Hermodactiles with white wine then to the articular parts grieved apply Emplastrum foetidum This hath in short time cured one of a dark melancholy complexion who was given over for incurable 84 Back weak or diseased to strengthen c. Take the pith of an Oxes back wash it in Wine or Ale and beating it very small strain it through a course cloth and make a caudle of it with Muskadine or strong Ale boil therein a few Dates sliced and the stones taken out and drink it first and last as warm as you can walking well but temperatly after it Toasted Dates often eaten are very good for the same 85 To take the Ague out of any place Take Vervine and black Hemlock of each an handful boil them in a pint of fresh Butter til they be soft and begin to parch againe Then straine the Butter from the herbs and put it into a gallipot and two or three times a day annoint the place grieved with a spoonful or two thereof Probat 86 For the Ague in children or women with child Take Venice Turpentine spread it on the rough side of a piece of thin leather two fingers breadth and strow thereon the powder of frankincense finely beaten and upon it some Nutmegs grated Binde this upon the wrests an hour before the fit comes and renew it still till the fit be gone 87 An easie and approved Medicine for a quartaine Ague Take a white flint stone for it will best endure the fire without breaking burne it in the fire till it be red hot then quench it in or dinary Beere and let the Patient drink of it a little before the fit cometh and likewise in the fit Let this be done three or four severall daies at the time when the fit is expected A woman by this onely medicine did cure divers of quartain Agues when long and much Physick could not prevaile 88 An Almond milk to cool and induce sleep Take sweet Almonds blanched five pound beat them in a stone mortar by sprinkling them now and then with a little barley-water at last put a quart of barley water to them and four ounces of fine sugar then strain it adding two ounces of Rosewater This may be drawn out with chicken broth and sweetned with Sugar Candy in stead of other sugar 89 For an Andcome Put half a dozen knots of a young oak into a sire pan and burn them to a red coal and take Bores grease and fine suet and two or three corns of salt and stampe them very fine and so make a plaister of it and if it do draw and beal too fast lay lime underneath the salve dresse it twice a day in winter and thrice in summer 90 Liquid Amber and its medcin al vertues Take liquid amber and distil it in a retort and there from will come a red oyl This oyl is used against all indispositions of cold and moisture or wind The same healeth scabs and is good for wounds If you annoint the stomack therewith it will exceedingly comfort the same for it is a thing incorrupptible and like unto Balsamum 91 A most Soveraign Balsam for several diseases Take five pints of Sallet oyl one pound of Venice Turpentine half a pound of Virgins Waxe fix ounces of red sanders halfe a pint of Damaske Rosewater First put your oyl with six spoonfuls of rose-Rosewater into a clean skillet or new pipkin and let it boile a quarter of an hour wash the Turpentine with the rest of the Rose water pare the wax clean and cut it into thin slices and put it into another clean skillet or new pipkin with the Turpentine Let them be wel melted and mixed together then pour the water from the oyl if you can see any and put it into the Wax and Turpentine and let them boyl upon a gentle fire a dozen walms Then take it off and put in the sanders by two ounces at a time mingling and stirring it wel then let it boil a dozen walms more stir it to avoid burning then strain it into a bason fil it into gallipots 92 For a sudden bleeding at the nose Burn an Egg shel in the fire till it be as black as a Cole then beat it to a fine powder and let the party snuffe it up into his nostrils 93 A remedie for the spitting of blood occasioned by the breach of some vein in the brest Take Mice dung beaten to powder as much as will lie upon a groat and put it into halfe a glasse ful of juice of Plantane with a little sugar and so give the Patient thereof to drink morning and evening continuing the same he shall be sound 94 To stop bleeding of a wound Take Vervine dried and made into powder and put it in the wound and it wil leave bleeding Burne also the sole of an old hose and put in the Ashes into a wound and it wil leave bleeding 95 To stop inward bleeding Drinke the juyce of Neepe and it will help you 96 A medicine for those that are given to bleeding Make a Posset take off the curd and take liver-wort and beat it and put the juyce thereof into the Posset-drink and drink it morning and evening warme 97 To stanch bleeding at the nose Take Bolearmanack and the white of an egge and vinegar and beat them together and make plaisters thereof and lay them to your temples 98 To heal the Cut or sore Brest of a Woman Take Buglosse and Yarrow of each two handfuls stampe them and strain them with the third part of a pint of good Ale then stamp the herbs againe and strain them with an other third part of a pint of good Ale then stampe and straine them again the third time and you shall have neer a quart of the Ale keep this in a glasse close stopped and let the
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-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
two handfuls of dryed red Rose leaves and three ounces of Oyl of Roses boil all these together to the thicknesse of a Poultesse then let it stand and cool and while it cooleth take a spoonful of oyl of Roses and with a warm hand rub the place grieved till the oyl be dryed in and then lay the Poultesse as warm as you may endure it to the part inflamed doe this morning and evening for three or four daies as you shall see cause 179 An especial medicine for all manner of poyson Take Hempseed dry it very well and get off the Husks and beat the Hempseed into fine powder take Mints also dry them and make them into powder Boil a spoonful of either of these in half a pint of Goats-milk a pretty while then put the Milke into a cup to cool and put into it a spooneful of Treacle and stir them together til it be cool enough then drink it in the morning fasting and eat nothing till noone or at least in two hours doe the like at night and use it so three daies and it wil kil and overcome any poison 181 A very gentle purge Gerard pag. 1115. Take Borage Buglosse Balme and Fumitory of each three drachms Sene of Alexandria wel prepared and powdred two ounces strow the powder upon the herbs and distil them reserving the water to purge with for such as cannot endure strong purges it being taken in white wine Sugar or some other dainty waies not offending the taste you may according to the nature of the disease add Agarick Mirabolanes c. If Sene be infused in whay and then boiled a little it is very good Physick for melancholly purging the Brain Heart Liver Lungs and Milt it causeth a man to look young breedeth mirth cleereth the sight and strengtheneth the hearing it is very good against old Agues and all diseases caused by melancholly 182 The purge for a Plurisie Stitch or Wind It may be given any sound man or woman at any time in temperate weather not keeping their Chambers for it Take a quart of running water two handfuls of Currants well picked Sene Liquorice and Annis seeds of each half an ounce and the quantity of two Races of Ginger sliced boil all these together til the liquor come to a pint then let it run thorow a Colender and drink it three mornings equally being warmed taking only an hour or two after it a little thin broth 183 Another Purge Take halfe an ounce of Sene two handfuls of Annis-seeds as much Fennel seeds both bruised a stick or two of Liquorice scraped sliced and bruised put them into a pint of Beer boil them scumme them wel and let them seethe til there be but a pretty draught left to drink at one time then take an ounce and a half of Manna dissolve it in three or four spoonfuls of the hot liquor and strain it thorow a thin cloth into the rest then straining the liquor thorow a Colender from the other matters put into it four spoonfuls of syrup of Roses and drink it while it is warm taking a little thin broth after it 184 The purge of Assarabacha which the Lady A.D. used to rectifie her stomack any way offended Take the weight of eight pence of Assarabacha leaves stamp them and strain out the juyce of them with a little fair water or warme broth and mixing it with a little soft English hony warm it drink it fasting taking a little warm posset drink after it and now and then a little more at times betweene the Vomits 185 The Apothicaries Gascon's powder with its use Take of Pearls white Amber Harts-horn eyes of Crabs and white Corals of each half an ounce of black thighs of Crabs calcined two ounces to every ounce of this powder put a drachm of Oriental Bezoar reduce them all into very fine powder and searce them and with Harts-horn jelly with a little Saffron put therein make it up into a Paste and make therewith Lozanges or Trochises for your use You must get your crabs for this powder about May or in September take them before they are boiled When you have made these set them neither by the sire nor in the Sun but in a dry aire till they grow hard The dose is ten or twelve grains 186 A powder for a Rupture Take Shephards purse and Doves foot of each a like quantity dry them until they rub to a powder and drink thereof half a spoonfull in half a pint of broth 187 To kil the Ring-worme and the heat thereof Take a quart of white-wine Vinegar boile therein of Woodbine leaves Sage and Plantane of each one handful of white Coperas one pound of Alum as much as an egge when it is boiled to half a pint strain out the liquor and therewith wash the sore as hard as you can suffer it 188 Rubarb and its vertues The herb called in the Italian tongue Lappacia Maggiore or Rombice domestice is a kind of Rubarb which among the learned Herba●lists is termed by the name of Rha recentiorum whereof one drachm when it is new will loose the body evacuate choler as the Rhabarbarum doth It is very good against opilations it purgeth the blood and takes away scabs You shall have most precious medicines thereof if you mix the green root with hony Cinnamon Saffron Ginger and the powder of Roses If you rost the root in the embers and mix it with condited sugar it breaketh waxing kernels called Scrophulae and mundifies them and healeth them in a short time Some do mix it with the gumme called Ammoniacum an so do bring it into the form of an Unguent and apply it to the parts affected with Scrophulae 189 An approved good medicine for running of the Reins Make Almond milke of Plantane water or else boile plantane in the liquor whereof you make your Almond milke take a quart of it and put thereto three spoonefuls of Lentine Farine and three spoonefuls of Cinnamon water take of this at six in the morning a good draught two houres before dinner another at four of the clock afternoon a third and two hours after supper a fourth and twice or thrice between meals eat a spoonful of conserve of red Roses at a time 190 A medicine for burning or Scalding Take Maidenwort stampe it and seethe it in fresh butter and therewith annoint the place grieved presently 191 To take away the heat of a burn or out of a scald Roft eggs as hard as a stone then take out the yolks of them then take a frying pan and put in the yolks of the hard eggs and so let it fry til it come to an oyl then strain it and annoint the burn with it then take a bladder and annoint it with saller oyl and lay it to the burn 192 For one burned with Gunpowder or otherwise Take one handfull of Groundsel twelve heads of house-leek one pint of goose dung as much chicken dung of the newest that can be
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
be for it worketh this operation viz. as soon as it joineth to the stomack it draweth to it all the evil humors of the body and imbraceth them and carrieth them forth of the body both by vomit and seige and so leaveth nature unburthened which may prevaile at pleasure because it hath no impediment and the order to make it is thus Take fine white sugar four ounces pure Pearls Musk Saffron Lignum aloes Cinamon of each one scruple Petra Philosophale four drams mix them together and make thereof Lozanges with Rose water according to art the which ye shal keep in a box of Wood close shut and the order to use it is thus When the physician goes do visit any sick person and intends to prepare him some medicine to take inward the best and most perfect inward medicine that he can ordain is this Aromatico because it evacuateth the stomack by vomit and the body downward and his operation is such that it doth in manner help any crude sort of infirmity and the quantity is from one dram to two drams and may be taken in broth in wine in water or mix it with any pils or potion giving charge that when it is put into any potion thou leave none in the bottom of the cup where thou drink it out because the Petra Philosophale is heavy and wil remain in the bottome for if that remain it wil not work at all giving also charge the day that you give this medicine that you let the patients drink as much crude water as they wil and give them little meatto eat that day and this is the order to use this medicine 3 Caustick Take Arsenick Cristaline sal Armoniak Sublimate of each alike boil them being sinely ground in as much strong vinegar as the matter weigheth until 2 third parts be consumed and that there remain a third then keep it in a glass close shut for thy use as I wil shew thee in divers places when occasion shal serve 4 A Magistrale Cerot against the white Scal. This Cerot is of great vertue and of marvellous experience to resolve the white scal because it is penetrative Mundificative and Resolutive and causeth the hair to grow where it is fallen away to the great content of the Patient and honor of the Physician and it is made in this order Take Frankincense that is strained from his filth what quantity you wil and distil it in a retort and give it fire at the least forty hours then let it cool and break the glasse and in the bottome thou shalt find a black mase the which make into powder then for every pound of the said powder put thereto one ounce of Wax and four ounces of the said oyl that you distilled and half an ounce of the heads of Bees the which are easie to be had in Summer Mix all the aforesaid things in a vessel of Copper and with a smal fire make them in form of a liquid unguent and when thou wilt use it shave the head and wash it and lay thereon this Cerot upon a fair cloth warme and every two daies change it and so in short time thou shalt see strange effects of his vertue This serveth also against breaking of bones dislocations and for scabs ulcerated because it dryeth and comforteth and resolveth all the evil qualities giving charge in the distilling because the fire many times consumeth it so that in the bottome their remains nothing that is good and therefore beware in the making 5 Pillole Magistrale which is good against any infirmties These pils are of great vertue and especially against all kind of pains coming of corrupt humors for they purge the putrified humors and preserve the body from corruption and the order to make it is thus Take Olibanum Mastick Mirrhe Sarcocolla aloes hepatica Eleborus niger Saffron Turbit Colloquintida of each what you please Stamp them finely and for every ounce of the aforesaid matters put thereunto two Carets of Musk and then incorporate it with hony of Roses and Aqua vitae of each a like and this paste thou mayest keep six months in a vessel of lead the quantity is from two drachms to three drachms in the morning fasting and drink thereon a little wine These pils are most excellent to take away the pains of the Gout and to preserve a man from it they are also good for them that have the french pox because they evacuate the gross and viscous humors and maintain the body in good temperature and using them in those diseases it preserveth the body in good temperature They are also good for women that are troubled with pains of the Mother and retention of their terms for these are aperative and provoke them and purgeth the Matrix of all impediments contained therein They serve against the Megrum and all pains of the head and also against all kind of putrified fevers as the experience thereof hath been seen sundry times 6 To make a Quintessence of marvellous vertue Quintessence is so called because it is an essence taken from the elements without corrupting them and it 's called Quinta essentia because its an effence above the four elements which hath a marvelous vertue in preserving all things from putrefaction and is of so much vertue that drinking every morning half an ounce thereof as soon as a person riseth out of his bed it preserveth in continual health It helpeth wounds and sores of all sorts by washing them therewith It preserveth all flesh fish and fruits that are put therein The order to make it is thus Take fourteen pound of good strong wine common hony one pound Annis-seed Coriander Lignum aloes Calamus Aromoticus of each three ounces Rose water foure ounces Beate those things which are to be beaten grosly and infuse them in the said wine two daies and then put them in a gourd of glasse and distil it by Balneo so long til the extracted water burn and when it wil burn distil it no more then keepe that which is distilled in a glasse close stopped that it take no air and so keep it til thou have occasion to use it for it is a most rare liquor because it resolveth all indispositions that happen to mans body If any desire to have this Quintessence more perfect let him take a tenth part of good hony with a little Cinnamon and distil it again by Balneo and the Flegm wil remain all in the bottom of the vessel and the Quintessence wil be so fine that the air will take it away And therefore he that can make this well shall work strange cures therewith even to admiration 7 Quintessentia solutiva which is of Marvelous operations in divers matters This Quintessentia solutivae evacuateth the body with great ease and without any detriment and it purgeth all parts of the body that are troubled with gross and viscous humours it resolveth swellings and taketh away the pains it preserveth the sight and killeth worms and causeth a
and make them boil a very little while upon a soft fire then take them off the fire and put the Eggs into them as soon as it comes off and stirring them up wel together put them into a fit Bason to receive them and covering them close with a dish set them on a soft fire again til they rise to a Curd then take it off the fire strow it with Cinnamon and sugar and serve it 25 An Almond Caudle Blanch Jordan Almonds beat them with a little smal Ale and strain them out with as much more Ale as you mind to make your Cawdel of Then boil it as you do an Egge Cawdel with a little Mace in it and when it is off the fire sweeten it with sugar 26 To make the Dnsick Cream Take your Cream boil it with some Mace and Cinnamon in it then take it off cool it a little and put in as much Rose water and sugar as wil make it sweet and give it a good taste then put in as much Runnet as wil be sufficient to make it run and then dish it and serve it 27 To make fresh Cheese in Cream Take a pottle of good Milk as it comes from the Cow and halfe a pound of blanched Almonds beaten very smal and make a thick Almond milk with a pint of Cream strained and a little before you go to dinner make it blood-warm season it with a little sugar Rose water and searced Ginger and put to it a little Runnet and when it is scummed bread it up and whey it and put it into a Molde and presse it with your hand and when it is wel wheyed then put it into a dish with Cream you may garnish it if you please with a dozen of Waters made of fine flower sugar and water 28 A messe of fine Cream Take a quart of Cream set it on the fire til it be ready to boil then put into it seven yolks and two whites of egga very wel beaten together and boil them keeping them well stirred til it be almost as thick as a Custard then take it off the fire and let it stand til the Whey be setled from it then strain the thick of it thorow a cloth into a Bason and making it as sweet as you please with Rosewater and Sugar dish it scraping a little Sugar upon it 29 To make French Frumenty Boil your French Barly in two waters first and then in the third whereof you shall make your Frumenty when it is almost boiled enough put into it some yolks of eggs wel beaten and boil them a while you must have your Jordan Almonds ready blanched and laid a good while in cold fair water then beate them very smal with a little Rose water and strain their Milk from them and put it into your Frumenty when it is ready to take off the fire or you may boil them a little while together then take it off the fire season it with some sugar and serve it 30 How to make a Goosberry Fool. Take your Goosberries and pick them and put them into clean water and boil them till they be all as thick that you cannot discerne what it is to the value of a quart take six yolks of eggs smal beaten with Role water and before you put in your eggs season it wel with sugar then strain your eggs and let them boile a little while then take it up put it in a broad dish and let it stand til it be cold thus it must be eaten 31 How to make a Goosberry Custard Take as many Goosberries as you please boil them til they be soft then take them out and let them stand and cool and drain them draw them with your hand thorow a canvas strainer then put in a little Rose water Sugar and three whites of eggs and stir them all together put them in a skillet and stir them apace else they wil burn let them stand and cool a little while and take them off and put them in a glasse 32 To make pap of Barly Take Barly and boil it in fair water softly until it begin to break then put that liquor out then put as much hot water to it as you put forth and so let it boil til it be very soft then put it into a cullender and strain it then take an handful of Almonds and grind them very wel with your barley and some of your liquor so season it with sugar and a little Rose water a little whole Mace and Cinnamon and boile them wel together 33 The Lady of Arundels Manchet Take a bushel of fine wheat flower twenty eggs three pound of fresh butter then take as much salt and barm as to the ordinary Manchet temper it together with new milk prettie hot then let it lie the space of half an houre to rise so you may work it up into bread and bake it let not your oven be too hot 34 To make Spiced bread Take two pound of Manchet paste sweet Butter halfe a pound Currants halfe a pound Sugar a quartern and a little Mace if you wil put in any and make it in a loafe and bake it in an Oven no hotter then for Manchet 35 To make Buttered loaves Take half a peck of fine flower a pint or more of Yest the Yolks of twenty egges one pound of Butter of Cloves and Mace half an ounce of Cinnamon and Ginger one ounce but the least part of Ginger a little Pepper let the spices be beaten very smal make Dough of all these and work them in pieces as big as Manchets and bake them when it is baked pare away the Crusts and slice them in Toasts and steep them in clarified Butter in a fair Charger then poure fine sugar powdered between every of them and make them up like loaves 36 To make Almond Butter Blanch one pound of Almonds or more or lesse as you please lay them foure houres in cold water then stamp them with some Rose water as fine as you can put them in a cloth presse out as much milk as you can and then if you think they be not enough beat them and strain them again til you get as much milk of them as you can then set it on the fire til it be ready to boil putting in a good quantity of Salt and Rosewater to turne it after one boiling being turned take it off cast it abroad upon a linnen cloth being holden between two then with a spoon take off the Whey under the csoth so long as any wil drop or runne then take so much of the finest Sugar you can get as wil sweeten it and melt it in as much Rose water as will serve to dissolve it put thereunto so much Saffion in fine powder as wil colour it and so steeping the Saffron and Sugar in Rose water season your butter therewith when you make it up CAKES 37 To make Barberry Cakes Pick Barberries and plump them in scalding water as you do to
then poure it into a dish and serve it at the Table 63 To make a fine Pudding in a dish Take a penny white loaf and pare off all the crust and slice it thin into a dish with a quart of Creame and set it to boile over a Chafing dish of coals til the bread be almost dry then put in a piece of sweet butter and take it off let it stand in the dish til it be cold then take the yolks of three eggs and the white of one with some Rose water and sugar and stirring them all together put them into another dish well buttered and bake it 64 To make the best Puff-paste Take two great handfuls of fine flower the whites of two eggs and one yolk beate them a little together with two spoonfuls of Rose water and put them to the flower and work it into the paste with as much cold water as is fit very wel together then rol it out like a Pasty and take one pound of sweet butter beating it a little to make it soft and lay it all over the Paste in little pieces and fold it over and wel rol it out again laying on more butter as you did before til the butter all be wrought in and if it be too soft strew a little flower before you rol it all over be very careful you rol it not too thin lest the butter come thorow for if it cleave to the Table it wil not be good Rol out a piece thin to lay in the bottome of a dish or on a paper and put on it Apples or what you like best and cover them over with some of the Paste and cut it round about with Peakes that it may rise up in the baking Pies and Baked meats 65 To make an Artichoke Pie Boil your Artichokes take off all their leaves pul out all the strings leaving only the bottomes then season them with Cinnamon and sugar laying between every Artichoke a good piece of butter when you put your Pie into the oven stick the Artichokes with slices of Dates and put a quarter of a pint of white wine into the Pie and when you take it out of the oven do the like again with some butter sugar and Rosewater melting the butter upon some coals before you put it into the Pie. 66 To make a Neats-foot Pie Take a Neats-foot dry it in a cloth then take it and shred it with Mutton Suet as smal as you think fit putting in no seasoning but Nutmegs and sugar and to every Pie almost a pound of Currants well pickt when you put it into the oven And before you set it into the Oven put in a quarter of a pint of white wine and when you take it out do the like again with a good piece of butter and sugat 67 To bake Beef like red Deer Take a pound of Beef and slice it thin and half a pint of good wine vinegar some three Cloves and Mace above an ounce three Nutmegs pound them all together pepper and salt according to your discretion and a little sugar mix these together take a pound and a half of suet shred and beat it smal in a mortar then lay a row of suet and a row of beef strew your spices beaten every lay then your vinegar so do til you have laid in all then make it up but first beat it close with a rowling pin then presse it a day before you put it in your paste 68 A Calves head Pie for supper Boil your Calves head almost enough cut it in thin s●ices all from the bone season it with 3 beaten Nutmegs a quarter of an ounce of pepper and as much salt as there is seasoning then take a handful of sweet herbs minced smal and two spoonfuls of sugar and two or three Artichoake bottoms boiled and cut them in thin slices and the marrow of two bones rowled in yolks of egs a quarter of a pound of Eringo roots and a quarter of a pound of Currans then put it into your pie put a quarter of a pound of Butter and a sliced Lemmon three or four blades of Mace three or foure quartered Dates let it stand an houre or more in the Oven then when you take it out put into it a cawdle made of sugar white wine verjuice and butter 69 A Lark Pie Take three dozen of Larks season them with four Nutmegs and half an ounce of Pepper and a quarter of an ounce of beaten mace then take Lumbard pie-meat and fill their bellies if you will if not take half a pound of suet and one pound of mutton minced Raisins of the sun half a pound and six apples minced all together very small then season it with a Nutmeg Pepper and salt and one spoonful of sweet herbs and a Lemmon peel minced one pennie loaf grated a quarter of apint of cream two or three spoonfuls of Rose-water three spoonfuls of sugar one or two of verjuice then make this into boles and put it into their bellies and put the Larks into your Pie then put marrow rouled in yolks of Egs upon the Larks and large mace and sliced lemmon and fresh butter Let it stand in the oven an hour when you take it out make a cawdle of butter sugar and white wine Vinegar and put it into the Pie. 70 A Skerret Pie Take a quarter of a peck of Skerrets blanched and sliced season them with three Nutmegs and an ounce of Cinnamon and three ounces of Sugar and ten quartered Dates and the marrow of three bones rouled in yolks of Egs and a quarter of a pound of Eringo roots and preserved Lettice a sliced Lemmon four blades of Mace three or four branches of preserved Barberries and half a pound of Butter then let it stand one hour in the Oven then put a cawdle made of white wine verjuice butter and sugar into the Pie when it comes out of the Oven 71 A Pork Pie Boil your leg of Pork season it with Nutmeg Pepper and salt bake it five hours in a high round Pie 72 How to bake a Steak Pie Cut a neck of mutton in steaks beat them with a cleaver season them with Pepper and salt and Nutmeg then lay them in your coffin with butter and large mace then bake it then take a good quantitie of parslie and boil it beat it as soft as the pulp of an apple put in a quarter of a pint of Vinegar and as much white wine with a little sugar warm it well and pour it over your Steaks then shake it that the gravie and liquor may mingle together scrape on sugar and serve it 73 To bake Chucks of Veale Perboil two pound of the lean flesh of a leg of Veal mince it as small as grated bread with four pound of bief suet then season it with Biscay Dates and Carawaies some Rose-water sugar raisins of the Sun and currans cloves mace nutmeg and cinnamon then mingle them all together fill your Pies and bake
Sinnews of a Cowes heel the flesh and fat cut away slice them as thin as you can and boil them in milk warm from the Cow till it be stiff enough to cut which you shall try with a spoon then strain it thorow a cloth and sweeten it with sugar and a spoonful or two of Rose water then stir them wel together with a spoon and letting it stand til it be cold slice it out in what forme you list and serve it SWEETS 95 To make sweet Bags to lay Linnen in Take Damask Rose buds pluck them and dry the leaves in the shadow the tops of Lavender flowers sweet Margerome and Basil of each a handful all dried and mingled with the Rose leaves Take also of Benjamin Storax Gallingal roots and Ireos or Orris roots twice as much of the Orris as of any of the other beaten into fine powder a piece of Cotton wool wetted in Rose water and put to it a good quantity of Musk and Ambergreee made into powder and sprinkle them with some Civit dissolved in Rosewater lay the cotton in double paper and dry it over a chafingdish of coals Lastly take half a handful of Cloves and as much Cinnamon bruised not smal beaten mix all these together and put them up in your Baggs 96 Sweet bags to lay among linnen Take Orris Ciprus Galamus Fusis all of them gross beaten and Gallingal roots of eath a handful and as much of the smal tops of Lavender dried and put them into bags to lay among your clothes you may put in a handful or two of Damask-Rose leaves dried which will somewhat better the scent 97 Cyprus powder Take of Storax Calamint four ounces Calamus Aromaticus two ounces red Roses two ounces of Marjorome and Rosemary flowers of each one ounce Orange pil one ounce and a half of Cloves and Lignum Rhodium of each two drachms and fine Musk twenty grains Make all these into powder and put it up into a bag fitting 98 Powder of Violets Take of sweet Ireos roots one ounce red Roses two ounces Storax one ounce and a halfe Cloves two drachms Marjorome one drachm Lavender flowers one drachm and a halfe make these into powder then take eight grains of fine Musk powdered also put to it two ounces of Rose water stir them together and put all the rest to them and stir them halfe an hour til the water be dried then set it by one day and dry it by the fire half an hour and when it is dry put it up into bags 99 Cyprus Matches to burn in perfume Take of Willow wood made into Charcoal one pound of Benjamin two ounces Storax liquida one drachm and a halfe of Storax Calamint one ounce Marjorome one ounce Cloves one ounce of fine Musk ten grains beat them altogether into powder then take of Quincy Draggagenty foure ounces put it in Rose water and stir them wel together and let them stand a night and a day then put all the aforesaid parcels to this Rose water which must be no more then wil make it into a Paste and thereof make up your Matches in what forme you list and let them dry in the shadow without fire or sun 100 How to make a sweet water Take a gallon of Wort half a gallon of running water of Lavender and Bay-leaves dried of each two handfuls of Orris powder one ounce put all these together in an earthen pot let them stand one day and one night stirring them often the morrow after distil it putting in a penny worth of Balm and the water which cometh off the distilling wil be very sweet 101 To make a sweet powder Take Orris half a pound six pence Ciprus half a pound ten pence Calamus half a pound eight pence Fusis half a pound twenty pence Benjamin two ounces twelve pence Musk powder twelve pence grains one pound eighteen pence Total seven shillings two pence 102 Another for the same Take Benjamin four ounces two shillings Storax Calaminta three ounces two shillings Fusis of Cloves three ounces nine pence fine Ireos six ounces two pence Santalum Citrinum three ounces eighteen pence Musk 20 grains three shillings four pence Civet ten graines 20d. Total eleven shillings five pence 103 To make the Mosse powder Take of Mosse that groweth upon a sweet Appletree or a pippin tree a good quantity gathered betwixt the two Ladie daies put the mosse into a quart of Damask Rose water stop the glasse set it before the fire let it so remain one day and one night then take it out and lay it on the bottome of a sieve put it into an oven and dry it beat it to powder then take Benjamin Storax Calaminta Lignum aloes of each one ounce Musk Ambergreece Civet of each six ounces beat all these in a mortar together til they come to a powder then mix it with the mosse powder and it wil be a most excellent sweet powder 104 To make a sweet Bal or powder Take Cloves and Nutmegs of each one ounce Cinnamon and Benjamin of either half an ounce Calamus Aromaticus and white Sanders of each two ounces beat every of them severally and searce them into fine powder and then beat them into a past with Rosewater Take then Storax Calaminta two ounces Labdanum one ounce beat them in a mortar with rose-Rosewater til they be wel mixed and then put the other Paste to them and beat them together till they be throughly mixed Then take Ambergreece Musk and Civet of each four or six grains bruise them and mix them wel together in a Sawcer with a little Rose water then put them to the other Paste and work them wel together warming both the paste and your hands very wel with a chafingdish of coals wel kindled standing by you til you have very wel incorporated them together and then while the paste is warme make it up into what assize or forme you please 104 To make Snow Take a quart of thick Cream and five or six whites of Egs a Sawcer ful of sugar finely beaten and as much Rose water beat them altogether and alwaies as it riseth take it out with a spoone then take a loaf of bread cut away the crust set it in a platter and a great Rosemary bush in the middest of it then lay your Snow with a spoone upon the Rosemary and so serve it 105 To make a Junket Take Ews or Goats milk if you have neither of these then take Cows milk and put it over the fire to warm then put in a little runnet to it then pour it out into a dish and let it coole then strew on Cinnamon and sugar then take some of your aforesaid cream and lay on it scrape on sugar and serve it FINIS The CONTENTS of the third Part. For Sallets c. A Lemmon Sallet 181 To keep Clove Gilliflowers For Sallets ibid To pickle Oysters 182 To pickle Quinces ibid To keep Goosberries 183 Purslane ibid How to keep Cucumbers raw