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A93181 The accomplished ladies rich closet of rarities: or, The ingenious gentlewoman and servant-maids delightfull companion Containing many excellent things for the accomplishment of the female sex, after the exactest manner and method, viz. (1.) The art of distilling. (2.) Making artificial wines. (3.) Making syrups. ... (14.) The accomplished dairy-maids directions, &c. ... To which is added a second part, containing directions for the guidance of a young gentle-woman as to her behaviour & seemly deportment, &c. J. S. (John Shirley), fl. 1680-1702. 1687 (1687) Wing S3498A; ESTC R230430 96,141 246

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pound of Cinamon bruise it and steep it in a quart of White-wine a quart of Rose-water and a pint of Muscadel twelve hours with often stirring and from this Alembeck three pints which will not be only pleasant but fortifie nature and restore lost vigour To make Rosemary-Water Take the Flowers and Leaves of Rosemary in their prime half a pound and four ●unces of Elicampane Roots a handfull of Red Sage three ounces of Cloves the same quantity of Mace and twelve ounces of An●iseeds beat the Herbs together and the Spices separately putting to them four gal●ons of White-wine and after a weeks standing distill them over a gentle fire Spirit of Wine how to make it To Distill or rather Alembeck Spirit of Wine is to draw off any Wine you think fit over a gentle fire to what height you please by often rectifying it and is very good moderately taken in cold distempers or to mix with Cordial Waters of a cooler nature To make Treacle-water excellent good in case of Surfeits or the like disorders of the Body Take the Husks of green Walnuts four handfulls of the Juyce of Rue Cardus Marigolds and Baum of each a pint green Petasitis Roots one pound Angelica and Masterwort of each half a pound the Leaves of Scordium four handfulls old Venice-Treacle and Mithridate of each eight ounces six quarts of Canary of Vinegar three quarts and of Lime-juyce one quart which being two days dijested in a Bath in a close Vessel distill them in Sand c. A Cordial Mint-Water is thus made Take two handfulls of Mint green two handfulls of Cardus and one of Wormwood and soak them in new Milk being bruised and after three or four hours infusion draw off the water by way of Distillation and keep is close stopped for your use it being excellent good in case of pains in the Belly or Stomach An excellent Water for Sore Eyes or to Restore the sight Take Smallage Rue Fennel Vervein Agremony Scabeous Avens Hounds-tongue Eufrace Pimpernel and Sage of each a handfull Roach-Allum half an ounce Honey a spoonfull dissolved in Rose-water distill them in a cold Still and when you use it put in a little Allum and Honey and suffer it to dissolve washing your Mouth with it Evening and Morning An excellent Water for a Canker Take of the Bark of an Elder-tree Sorrel and Sage of each two handfulls stamp them well and strain out the Liquid part mingling it with double the quantity of White-wine and often with a feather dipped in it wash the Sore c. A Water very good for a Fistula Take a pint of White-wine an ounce o● the Juyce of Sage Borace in Powder thre● peny weight Camphire-powder the weigh● of a groat boil them two hours over a gentle fire strain them through a Woollen-cloth and being cold wash therewith the place grieved An excellent Water to cleanse any filthy Ulcer Take of the Water of Plantane and that of Red Roses each a pint the Juyces of Housleek Nightshade and Plantane of each a quarter of a pint Red Roses half a handfull Myrtle Cyprus-nuts of each half an ounce of the Rind of Pomgranate three drams St. John's Wort half a handfull Flowers of Molleyn half as much Myrrh Frankincense each a scruple Honey of Roses a pound and four ounces distill them together and of the Water take a pint and dissolve in it six ounces of Conserve of Roses and one ounce of Syrup of dry Roses with twelve drops of the Oyl of Brimstone and wash the place grieved An excellent Water for the Heats and Inflammation of the Eyes Take of Alloes Epatick fine Sugar Tutty-stone powdered each an ounce of red and white Rose-water each a pint put them in a double glass and set them in Balneo Maria five or six days often shaking them and with a feather dipped in it wash your Eyes as often as you see occasion as likewise your Forehead and Temples An excellent Water for a sore Leg or for a Canker in any part or place Take of Woodbine-leaves Ribwort Plantane Abinte of each a handfull clarified English Honey three spoonfuls Roach-Allum an ounce put them into three quarts of Running-water and let them seeth till a third part be consumed then strain out the liquid part and keep it in a new glazed Earthen-pot for your use washing the afflicted place with it twice a day A Water to turn back the Rheum that afflicts the Eyes Take of red rose-Rose-water six ounces White-wine and eye-bright-Eye-bright-water of each the like quantity Lapis-Tuttiae three scruples Alloes Epatick the like quantity fine Sugar two ounces put them into a Glass with a narrow neck and set them in the Sun for the space of thirty days shaking them twice a day and then with the liquid part wash the Eye-lids Temples Forehead and the Nape of the Neck An excellent Water to cool the Liver and Heart as also in case of a Feaver Surfeit or Ill digestion Take two handfulls of Wood-sorrel the like of Barbary-leaves half a dozen Plantane-roots washed and sliced two ounces of Mellion-seed of Comfry and Borrage-flowers each an ounce steep them in a gallon of fair water well sweetned with Sugar-candy and distill them giving the party grieved two ounces of the Water with an ounce of the Syrup of Citron or Lemon An excellent Water for an Internal Bruise Take two handfulls of Scabeous-flowers of Peny-royal Camomoil Smallage and Bay-leaves each a handfull Myrrh pulverized half an ounce Harts-horn two ounces and two quarts of Malaga-wine bruise the Herbs c. in the Wine and then distill them altogether and let the party drink two ounces of the Water morning and evening An excellent Water for the Stone to provoke Urine and prevent Stoppage c. Take two quarts of new Milk Saxifrage Parsley Peletory of the Wall Mother Time green Sage Radish-roots sliced of each a handfull steep the Herbs and Roots over night in the Milk and distill them the next morning which done mingle six spoonfulls of the Water with as much White-wine into which grating a third part of a Roasted Nutmeg drink it off and so continue to do divers times and you will find extraordinary benefit thereby Poppy-Water how to make it Take two pound of red Poppy-leaves half an ounce of bruised Cloves and the like quantity of sliced Nutmeg steep these in a quart of Canary and after two hours standing put them into your Still and draw off the Water over a gentle fire Cordial Angelica-Water is made thus Take of Cardus Benedictus a handfull well dried of Angelica-roots three ounces of Nutmeg Cinamon and Ginger each an ounce of Myrrh half an ounce and one dram and a half of Saffron of Cardamums Cubebs Galingal and Pepper of each a quarter of an ounce bruise them and steep them in two quarts of Canary and draw them off with a common Still Aquamirabilis is thus made Take three pints of White-wine of the ●ce of Celendine and Aquavitae each
a pint Cardamer and the Flowers of Melilot a dram of each of Cubebs Gallinga● Cloves Mace and Ginger of each a dram bruise them and put them to the Liquo● where soaking all night the next morning se● them on a Stiil in Glass Alimbeck and draw off the Quintessence The Water prevents the Putrefaction of th● Blood is good in case of the swelling of th● Lungs removes the Heart-burn and purgeth Flegm and Melancholy c. Divers other Waters of Physical Vertu● I might mention but having many thing yet to propose and intending brevity shall proceed from Distilled Physical Water to give Directions for making Artifici●● Wines c. And as for such Waters as a● for Beautifying I shall treat of them in another place CHAP. II. Instructions for a Gentlewoman how to make Artificial Wines and other pleasant Liquors necessary and profitable both for Sale and to be kept in private Houses for the Accommodation of Friends c. AS there are many pleasant Liquors made rather Artificial than Natural so it will not be amiss to say something of them which for variety may not prove pleasant only but profitable and are very commendable to be kept in the House for the Entertainment of Friends and Strangers who being perhaps rarely used to such will set a value on them above any other But to the purpose To make Cherry-Wine Stone your Cherries before they are too ripe press them in a Press or through a clean cloth and let the Juyce settle then draw it off and bottle it up with half an ounce of Loaf-sugar and a piece of Cinamon in each bottle and tying the Cork down let it stand six weeks and then being opened it will drink pleasant and brisk Hypocras is made thus Take a gallon of White or Rhenish-wine and put to it two pound of Loaf-sugar Cinamon Mace Pepper Grains Galingal and Cloves of each a quarter of an ounce bruising the Spices and putting them into the Wine in which they having been close covered for the space of ten days draw of the Wine and renew it with other Wine and an addition of Sugar and so you may do three or four times but the first is the best nor is there a pleasanter Liquor imaginable To make Wormwood-Wine Take a gallon or what quantity you think fit of the smallest White-wine put into it the peel of two Lemons half an ounce of Mace and a quarter of an ounce of Cinamon adding a pound of white Sugar to each gallon and stop them up close in a Vessel and after they have stood six days you may draw off the Wine and put it up in Bottles Rasberry Strawberry or Curran-wine may be made as that of Cherries but the liquor being boiled up with the Sugar before the Spices are put in will keep the longest An excellent Liquor may be likewise drawn from Plumbs of pleasant taste dissolving in some of the Liquor hot two or three spoonfulls of New-Ale-Yest to make it work and afterward keep it in a cool place that it may Rarifie the better Goosberry-wine is made the same way only adding some blades of Mace and slices of Ginger As for the Wine of English Grapes only Rarifie it with fine white Sugar-candy beaten into Powder And since there ●re other pleasant Liquors besides these I ●hink it not improper to say something of ●hose that are most in request To make the best sort of Mead. Take a quart of Spring-water and three ●uarts of small Beer as clear as may be add ●o them a pound and a half of clarified Ho●ey two ounces of the distilled Water of ●weet Marjorum three or four sprigs of Rosemary and Bays boil them together on 〈◊〉 gentle fire ever scuming off what rises to ●he top and then put it into a vessel to purge ●●x days after which bottle it up for your use To make Steponey a Liquor formerly much in use Take a gallon of Spring-water and stone 〈◊〉 pound and a half of the best Raisins of the ●un and putting to them half a pound of fine ●ugar press upon them the Juyce of three Lemons slicing likewise the peel and ad●ing to the Water a quart of White-wine ●il it and when it is boiling-hot pour it in●● a pot upon the Raisins Sugar c. and ●pping it close let it stand six hours after at stir it about and let it stand two days more at the end of which strain it and press the Raisins and when you find the Liquor clear put it up into Bottles for your use Cock-Ale is thus made Take a young Cock and having stoned four pound of Raisins of the Sun boil the● and him in fair water and then slice four Nutmegs adding to them an ounce of Mace and half a pound of Dates beat them well and put them into two quarts of Canary and having added to them the boiled Liquor in which the Cock must be boiled in a manner to pieces strain the Liquor and pre● what is solid and after your Ale has don● working pour it in and stop it down close two quarts is sufficient for a Barrel the bottle it up and in a month it will be fit 〈◊〉 drink To make Rack an Indian Liquor Take a quart of Water a pint of Brand and a pint of Canary add half an ounce 〈◊〉 beaten Ginger and the like quantity of C●namon the Juyce of four Lemons and tw● ounces of rose-Rose-water with half a pound 〈◊〉 fine loaf-Loaf-sugar put into it a hot Toast it b●ing well stirred it is the Prince of Liquors Choccolate is made with Choccolate Mill Eggs White-wine rose-Rose-water and Mace Cinamon which the party fancies they bei●● ●ll boiled together over a gentle fire two ●unces of Choccolate eight Eggs half a pound ●f Sugar a pint of White-wine an ounce of Mace or Cinamon and half a pound of Sugar ●nswering in this case a gallon of Milk. Many other Liquors there are as Methe●in Perry Syder Bracket Tea Coffee c. ●ut the way of making them being vulgarly ●nown I shall spare my Instruction and pro●eed to Directions for making Syrups CHAP. III. ●●structions for a Gentlewoman in preparing and making Physical and Cordial Syrups pleasant and profitable on sundry occasions c. Highly necessary to be kept in Families for the preservation of Health c. ●Yrups are of two kinds one Physical and the other pleasant and usefull on sundry ●her occasions But of these I shall treat ●●thout distinction the use of them being so ●●blickly known and indeed it is improper ●e to incert it But to proceed To make Syrup of Clove-Gilliflowers Take the red part of the Flowers separa●●●● from the white to the quantity of half a peck let them soak a night in spring-Spring-water then boil them and add to them a gallon Water wherein they were boiled and in which after boiling they have been strong pressed twelve pound of white Sugar an● half a pint of rose-Rose-water then boil up t●● Liquor with the Sugar
into the thickness o● Syrup and keep it for your use Some the● are that make it without fire but in my op●nion this way must be the best for keeping To make Syrup of Violets Take the Flowers of the blew Violet● clipping off the Whites and to a pound them add a quart of boiling-boiling-water and for pound of white Sugar stirring them to●●ther and stopping them close in an Earth vessel four days then strain them press●● out the liquid part which being moderate heated on a gentle fire will thicken into Syrup To make Syrup of Wormwood Take Roman Wormwood the Lea●● only half a pound Leaves of red Roses Flowers two ounces Indian-spike th● drams of the best White-wine a quart 〈◊〉 the like quantity of the Juyce of Quinces for want of it Syder bruise and infuse th● for the space of twenty six hours then being them till the liquid part is half consum●● strain out the remainder and adding two pounds of sugar boil it up into a syrup To make Syrup of Lemons Take a gallon of the Juyce of sound Lemons strain it and let it clarifie and boil it up with six or seven pounds of fine sugar till it be of the thickness of a syrup and sweet enough for your purpose An Excellent Syrup to preserve the Lungs and for the Astma Take of Nettle-water and Coltsfoot-water each a pint Anniseed and Liquorish-powder of each two spoonfuls Raisins of the Sun one handful sliced Figs number four boil them together till a fourth part be consumed strain the liquid part and make it up into a syrup with a pound of white Sugar-candy bruised into powder and take two spoonfuls of it each morning fasting An Excellent Syrup to open Obstructions and help the shortness of Breath Take Hysop of the first years growth and Peny-royal of each a handful stamp them and strain out the Juyce and add of English Honey the like proportion heat them in a Pewter dish over a chasing-dish of Coles till ●he Juyce and Honey be well incorporated and making it continually fresh let the party afflicted take early each morning and late each night two spoonfuls To make Syrup of Roses by Infusion Take of the Water of Infusion of white Roses five pounds clarified Sugar four pounds and boil them with a gentle fire to the thickness of a syrup then soak two pounds of fresh white Roses in six pound of warm water suffering them to stand for the space of twelve hours close covered then ring them out and put in other fresh Roses and so continue to do till the Water has the perfect scent of the Roses and then the Water is fitting for the Sugar to be dissolved in and used as aforesaid This Syrup draweth from the Entrails thin choler and waterish humours and is therefore fitting to be taken moderately by children aged Persons and such as are afflicted with the superabundance of either Choler or Phlegm How to make Catholicum Majus Take of the four great cold seeds cleansed and of white Poppy-seeds each a dram Gum-Dragant three drams red Roses yellow Saunders Citron and Cinamon each two drams Ginger one dram of the best and choicest Rubarb and Diacridum each hal● an ounce Agarick Turbith of each two drams white Sugar dissolved in rose-Rose-water wherein two ounces of Senna have been concocted one pound make them into Tables of three scruples and let one Table be the dose It gathereth humours from all parts of the Body and expells them without molesting health or impairing of the strength but rather fortifying nature c. Syrup of Radish how to make it Take of the Roots of Garden and wild Radishes of each an ounce of Saxifrage Kneeholm Borage Sea-Holly Pettywhin O Cammack or Ground-Furz Parsley Fennel each half an ounce the Leaves of Betony Pimpernel wild Time Tendercrop of Nettles Cresses Samphire Venus-hair of each a handfull the fruit of Sleepy Night-shade and Jubebs of each twenty the seed of Basil Burr Parsley of Macedonia Carroways Seseli yellow Carrots Grommel Bark of Bay-tree Root of each a scruple Raisins stoned Licoras of each a dram boil them in ten pounds of water till four of them be consumed then strain it and with four pounds of Sugar and half the quantity of clarified Honey make the liquid part into a Syrup over a gentle fire adding an ounce of beaten Cinamon and half the quantity of grated Nutmeg This being taken at convenient times expelleth Gravel and Stone and scowreth the Kidneys if it be mixed with other lenitive and scowring matters and also provokes Urine Syrup of Vinegar compound how to make it Take of the best Wine-Vinegar a gallon boil it and take off the scum that arises then stamp Endive Maiden-hair and Wood-sorrel with Barbaries or green Grapes press out the Liquor and put it into the Vinegar to the quantity of a quart boil them up till a fourth part be consumed then add six pounds of Sugar or so much as will make it into a Syrup and give two spoonfulls at a time with success in case of any hot distemper or feavorish disorder of the Body or to expell gross phlegmatick humours Oxymel simple how to make it Take of the clearest Water and clarified Honey of each four pounds boil them till half the Water be consumed then add of Wine-Vinegar two pounds and suffer them to boil to a syrup This syrup extenuateth the gross humours takes away slimy matter and opens all Obstructions and Asthma that is Obstruction of the Lungs with Phlegm from whence ariseth shortness of breath Syrup of Barberries is made thus Take your Barberries picked from the stalks boil them to a pulp then strain and rarifie the Juyce then boil it up being six pounds with six pounds of fine Sugar into a syrup or if you find that will not thicken it sufficiently you may add more To make Syrup of Cowslips Take a gallon of the Distilled simple Water of Cowslips and put into it half a peck of the flowers clean picked the yellow part only boil them up with the Water and add to the liquid part after it is strained from them six pound of sugar heating it over the fire till it become a syrup To make Syrup of Maiden-hair Take the Herb so called to the quantity of six ounces shred it a little and add of Licorish-powder two ounces and a half steep them twenty four hours in three quarts and a pint of hot water add five pounds of fine Sugar to the Liquor after it is boiled and consumed a third part and set it again on the fire till it become a syrup To make Syrup of Licoris Take of the Root of Licoris newly drawn from the ground two ounces scrape it into Powder of Coltsfoot four ounces of Maiden-hair and Hysop each half an ounce infuse them twenty four hours in three quarts of Water then boil them till a half part be consumed which done strain out the remainder and with a pound of clarified Honey and the like
quantity of loaf-Loaf-sugar boil it up into a syrup To make Syrup of Cittron Peels Take of the Peels of yellow Cittrons a pound of the Berries or Juyce of the Berries of Cherms a dram steep them a night in spring-Spring-water to the quantity of two quarts then boil them till a half part be consumed and taking off the scum strain it then boil it up to a syrup with two pound and a half of Sugar To make Syrup of Harts-horn or rather Harts-tongue Take of the Herb called Harts-tongue the Roots of both sorts of Bugloss Polipodium of the Oak Bark of Caper-roots Tameris Hops Maiden-hair Baum of each two ounces boil them in five quarts of spring-Spring-water till a fifth part be consumed to which add four pounds of fine sugar and boil it up to a syrup To make Syrup of Cinamon which is excellent good in case of Faintings or cold Distempers Take of the best Cinamon four ounces bruise it and steep it in three pints of White-wine and a pint of small cinamon-Cinamon-water three days by a gentle fire add three pound of Sugar when it is strained and boil it up to a syrup To make the Syrup of Quinces Take three quarts of the Juyce of Quinces let it be well setled and clarified boil it over a gentle fire till half be consumed then add three pints of Red-wine with four pounds of white Sugar and a dram and a half of Cinamon and of Cloves and Ginger two scruples and boil them up into a syrup To make Syrup of Hysop Take a handfull of the Herb so called Figs Dates and Raisins of each an ounce boil them in three pints of Water till a third part be consumed strain and clarifie the remainder with the Whites of two Eggs adding two pound of fine Sugar and so make it up into a syrup and it will continue good a twelvemonth To make an Excellent Syrup for a Cough or Cold or to restore decaying Lungs Take two quarts of spring-Spring-water put into it an ounce of Sydrack half an ounce of Maiden-hair two ounces of Elicampane-roots sliced boil them in an Earthen-vessel till half be consumed add more to the liquid part strained off two pound of Sugar and boil it up into a syrup two spoonfulls of which take morning and evening being a wonderfull restorative To make Syrup of Elder now greatly in use Take the Elder-berries fresh when they are full ripe strain out the Juyce boil it till a third part be consumed scum it clean and add to a gallon an ounce of Mace and six pound of Sugar boiling it up to a syrup To make Syrup of Roses Take a gallon of fair water and a quart of White-wine put into them when they boil a peck of red Roses pickt and let them boil till they appear white then press them and put them into the liquid part and boil it often adding the Whites of two Eggs well beaten and a pound of Sugar to each pint of Liquor and when you find it sufficiently thick preserve it in Glasses or Earthen-vessels close stopped for your use To make Syrup of Vinegar Take of the Roots of Smallage Fennel Endive of either three ounces of the Leaves of Anniseed Smallage Fennel Endive half an ounce of each boil them gently in three quarts of spring-Spring-water till half be consumed then strain and clarifie it with three pound of Sugar and add a quart of White-wine Vinegar and boil it up to a syrup To make Syurp of Saffron Take a pint of endive-Endive-water two ounces of Saffron finely beaten steeping it in the Water for the space of two days at the end of which strain out the Saffron and with a pound of Sugar boil it up to a syrup To make Syrup of Mint Take the Juyce of ripe Quinces and of Pomgranets of each a pint and a half dried Mint half a pound and of the Leaves of red Roses two ounces let them steep a day and a night in the Liquor boil it then till half is consumed and add four pound of Sugar to make it into a syrup These as the most material I thought fit expresly to mention what remains a Gentlewomans discretion by these Rules may direct her to perform And so I proceed to give Directions for Preserving and Conserving c. CHAP. IV. Instructions for a Gentlewoman in Preserving and Conserving Fruits Flowers Roots and what else is usefull on sundry occasions for setting out Banquets c. PReserving of Fruits Roots and Flowers c. to be at hand for ornament or taste is no doubt a curious Art. Wherefore that a Gentlewoman should not be ignorant of such curiosities I shall incert many Directions worthy to be observed and at the same time speak something of Conserving c. To Preserve Mulberries Strain two quarts of the Juyce of Mulberries and add to it a pound and a half of sugar boil them together over a gentle fire till they become in a manner a syrup then put into it three quarts of Mulberries not over ripe and after they have had one boil take them off and put them together with the Liquor into an Earthen-vessel stop them close and keep them for your use To Preserve Gooseberries Take them before they be over-ripe cut off their stalks and tops and if you have leasure stone them then laying in an Earthen-vessel a Layer of sugar lay upon it a Layer of Goosberries and so do between every Lay till your Vessel be almost full then add about a pint of Water to six pound of Goosberries and the Goosberries having before been scalded set them in this manner over a gentle fire and let the sugar melt when being boiled up you may stop them up and reserve them for your use To preserve Cherries Take your Cherries when they are in their prime and scattering some Sugar and rose-Rose-water at the bottom of your Preserving-pan put them in by degrees still casting in your sugar remembring there be put an equal weight of either and being set on a quick fire you may add a pint of White-wine if you would have them plump and when you find the syrup boil'd up sufficiently take them off and put them into your Gally-pots for use To Preserve Apricocks Observe when they are moderately ripe to pare and stone them laying them a night in your Preserving-pan amongst Sugar it being layed in Lays and in the morning put a small quantity of fair Water or White-wine and set them on Embers and by increasing a gentle fire melt the Sugar when being a little scalded take them off and letting them cool set them on again and boil them up softly till they are tender and well coloured at what time take them off and when they are cool put them up in Glasses or Pots for your use To preserve green Walnuts Observe to gather them on a dry day before they have any hard shell and boil them in fair water till they lose their bitterness then put them into cold water and
Fa● there let it continue till it is very stiff the salt it and when it is so let it dry and a● the end of three Months eat it To make Sage-Cream Take a quart of Cream boil it well the add a quarter of a pint of the Juyce of re● Sage half as much rose-Rose-water and a qua●ter of a pound of Sugar and it will be a excellent dish And thus you may use 〈◊〉 with any sweet Herbs which will render pleasant and healthfull Messeline or Mixture of rare and curious Receipts Things and Matters Added as an Appendix to this Impression for the better encouragement of the Buyer not any of them being to be found amongst the Curiosities of the first Edition of this usefull Book Most Approved Physical Receipts ●n Excellent Balm for the Epilesie Vertigo Palfie Cramp and Pain in the Back and all cold Afflictions of the Nerves and Joynts TAke of the Red sort of Old Tile-stone in small pieces Calcine or burn them ●nd quench them in the purest Olive-oyl ●fter which beat them into fine Powder and ●ut that Powder sprinkled with a little Mus●adel into a Cucurbite of Glass Luting the ●oynts well together and it being in that ●anner set over a gentle fire the Balm will ●rise which being taken away and used by anointing the afflicted part or snuffing u● the Nostrils will ease the Pains premised A Receipt to make Orvetine or the famous Antidote against Poyson Infection by being amongst diseased persons or suddenly coming into infections or noysome Air and to prevent o● eraducate any contagious Disease disperse Cold and prevail against Agues and Feavers Take of the Powder of Bezora-stone two drams the Powder of dried Foxes Lung● half an ounce the Oyl of Cinamon a dram half an ounce of the Juyce of Herb-a-grace the Powder of Red Corral a dram and two scruples of beaten Peel add to these half an ounce of Elecampane-roots and two dram● of Storax bruised into Powder put them into half a pint of Red-wine and let them simper over a gentle fire till they are well incorporated and then make them into an Electuary keeping it as close as may be from the Air and take as occasion requires it abou● the quantity of a Hazle-nut and after it som● warm Broth or warm Posset-drink keeping your self close for an hour or two after and it will effect wonders An Excellent Wine or Medicinable Drink against the Pox Plague Measles Small Pox Spotted Feaver or any infectious disease Take of the best Old Mallaga a quart add it a pint of Rhenish-wine Then take of ●um Sage Rue Red Sage Maiden-hair ●d the Leaves of Germand each an ounce ●uise them and boil them gently in the Wine 〈◊〉 a third part be consumed then add Pep●er Ginger and Nutmeg of each three drams ●●ll beaten and of Venice-Treacle an ounce ●astly put in a quarter of a pint of Saffron ●d angelica-Angelica-waters and Morning and Even●g take a spoonfull to your great advantage 〈◊〉 thereby you will be eased of the oppressi● that Nature labours under and be inabled 〈◊〉 conquer the disease Rare Curiosities not before made Publick Marmalade of Pruins Raisins Currans c. how to make it of an Amber Colour capable of keeping a Year TAke your Fruit and steep them in a proportionable quantity of Water till ●y being over a gentle fire they become soft ●nd pulpy then stone the Pruins or Raisins ●nd put them into as much Canary as will yet them after that press out the pulp and ●oil it up with some slices of Quinces then strain it again and put to each pound h● a pound of Sugar and half a pound of c●rified brown Sugar-candy in powder a●so putting the pulp well mixed with the a●dition and sprinkled with Rose-water into glazed-pot dry it a little in an Oven or Ston● and keep it for your use A Perfume wherewith to Perfume any Confect●ons c. Take of Myrrh a scruple Musk the lik● quantity Oyl of Nutmeg the like infu● them in Rose-water and with it sprinkle you● Banqueting preparatives and the scent w● be as pleasant as the taste To make a Dish seem a pleasant Garden or pleasant Hill of Fruits and Flowers Take a dish that is somewhat large cove● it with it with another of the like bigness an● place the uppermost over with Paste of A●monds in lay'd with red white blew an● green Marmalade or Quiddany in the figur● of Flowers and Banks then take the Branches of candied Flowers and fix them up right in order and upon little Bushes erected and covered over with Paste fix your preserved or candied Cherries Plumbs Pears Apples Gooseberries Currans and the like each in his proper place and for Leaves you may use coloured Paste Wax Parchment or Horn ●d this especially in Winter wi●l appear not ●y gloriously strange but even strike if it be ●ll ordered admiration in the beholders ●e Approved way to keep Gooseberries Cherries Currans Cornelian-Berries Plumbs Apricocks Grapes and the like all the Year in their substance colour and proper taste in order to make Tarts or the like at any time of the year as if it were at the proper season Take Stone-bottles glazed within and with●ut boil them well in fair water then dry ●em in the Sun after which having gather●d your Fruit somewhat before they are ripe ●●ke them free from Leaves and with but indifferent Stalks and put them whole without any bruising into the Bottles then take ●ir water and boil it till no more scum will ●ppear after that let it settle and so draw 〈◊〉 off adding to each quart a quarter of a ●ound of white Sugar-candy in Powder and 〈◊〉 boil it up again with a quarter of a pound ●f loaf-Loaf-sugar till no more scum will appear ●hen the liquid part being cool fill up the Bottles after which stop them with sound Corks and having pieces of thin and pliable Lead clap them over the Corks and wyre 〈◊〉 down under the bearing or rising of the Necks and set them in a close Vault and when you open them the Fruit will be fresh and sound Some there are that hold this may be done without any Liquor but t● I hold the best and surest way to prese● them either from shriveling up for want moisture or becoming musty To make Frayse appear like Rashers of Bacon Take of fine Flowre half a peck ming● one half by it self with Water and Butt● and to the other add Milk wherein Turnso● has been steeped with a little of the Powd● of Lake and having cut them out into ●ces fix a slice of the one to a slice of the ●ther at your discretion and when they a●fryed gently or rather baked they will d●ceive the most curious as to the sight of the● Curiosities rare and new for th● Beautifying and Adorning th● Female Sex with other matte● of moment To make a young Face exceeding Beautifull an● an old Face very Tollerable TAke of Benjamine two handfulls Scab●ous the like
the purpose half an ounce of Catholicum will not be amiss It is usual for Women to Wash after Delivery and how to make these Washes not being vulgarly known I shall give directions For the first Wash Take a handfull of Chervil which being boiled in a quart of Water add a spoonfull of Honey of Roses and wash with it eight days and then use another viz. Take red Roses put them in a Linnen bag boil them in half a pint of Water and as much White-wine strain the liquid part and use it Some require a third and that may be made of the Decoction of Roses and a pint o● Myrrh-water To make Astringents usefull on this occasion Take the Seed of Pomgranet Roach-Allom and Galls of each two ounces Red Roses and the Roots of Knot-grass of each four ounces the Rinds of Pomgranet and Cassa of each three ounces Water-Roses Myrrh and Burnet of each an ounce half a quartern of White-wine and of Smith's-Water a quarter of a pint Take two bags of a quarter long and half the breadth boil them in Water with the Drugs c. and apply them successively as is convenient To make an excellent Plaster Take Venice-Turpentine Spermaceti Rose and Plan●ane-water of each an ounce and a half with eight ounces of Bees-wax bruise and melt them adding an ounce of white Lead make a Plaster of it and apply them to the Belly and Nipples anointing them first with Spermaceti and it will remove the Inflamation and afford much strength Cleansing before rising being convenient I shall not omit to give Directions as thus Take half a pound of bitter Almonds blanch them and beat them into Paste with Powder of Grise and the yolk of an Egg put it into bags of Shammey and dip it into Red-wine and apply it to the places whence the Cere-cloth was taken and wash it in the Wine wherein Orange-flowers have been steeped To prevent the curdling of the Milk in the Breast Boil the Roots of Althaea in White-wine-Vinegar strain the liquid part through a Sieve adding Bean-flower an ounce Oyl of Mastick two ounces Powder of dried Mint and Rue of each a dram make them into an Oynment and anoint the Breasts To dry up the Milk many ways are used but this the best viz. Take new Honey the Juyce of a Sparemint and Shepherds-purse of each an ounce and put half an ounce into Chicken-broth each morning To renew a pain in the Breast Take two ounces of Bees-wax Oyl of Nutmeg and Rape-oyl of each half an ounce make them into an Oyntment spread them Plaster-wise and apply them to the Breast In case the Belly swell which after delivery often happens Take Barley and Bean-flowre finely sifted of each four ounces half a pound of Spanish Figs of the Powder of Brick two ounces one ounce of Cyprus-nuts boil them well in the Water of a Smith's Forge and apply them as a Linament to the Belly If an Inflamation of the Breast happen make a Cataplasm of the Leaves of Melilot and Night-shade each a handfull boiled in Spring-water adding two ounces of Bean-flowre of Oyl of sweet Almonds and Oatmeal each an ounce and make a timely Application To cure a Tumour in the Breast which ●oceeds from a thick and unnatural Vapour ●ising from the Menstrual blood the Wo●an must be moderate in diet drinking Wa●●r wherein Cinamon and Anniseeds have ●een concocted as likewise the Rind of Ci●on observing evermore to take such things ●s are proper to provoke the Courses as the ●uyce of Celendine Groundsel Camomoil ●nd Ground-Ivy boiled in White-wine and 〈◊〉 often so doing you will remove the pain ●nd render ease to the part Additional Experiments or the Judicious Midwives farther Instructions not published in the former Edition And first of Weakness c. IF it happen that the Woman after her Delivery be very weak then to prevent her much striving the Nurse with other help must turn her as occasion requires lest the whole frame being out of order the dispersed humour gather to one place and create a relapse which is very dangerous notwithstanding for a farther prevention of it she may take at the end of _____ days the following Cordial viz. Take of the Syrup of Violets half an ounce the like quantity of that of Citrons add t●● these two drams of the Powder of Rhubarb and an ounce of treacle-Treacle-water with as muc● Diascordium dissolved in it as will lye upon 〈◊〉 Six-pence and to all these add half a pint o● hysop-Hysop-water and let her take an ounce at 〈◊〉 time and after it some Broth or warm Posse● the Midwife being ever carefull that nothing of the After-birth remains lest thereby Fits and Obstructions may be occasioned The Woman in this case ought likewise to be very carefull of her self till the Body that by any violent or unnatural Birth especially is much distempered and disordered be setled and in good temper for often by a too timely rising and stirring the cold has opportunity to penetrate and settle in the open parts of the Joynts causing numbness and pains in Limbs and sometimes by such violent intrusions ferments the Blood to the degree of a Feaver To prevail against which Take of the Powder of Elecampane an ounce Conserve of Red Roses two ounces Pomgranet-seeds beaten to Powder an ounce dissolve them in White-wine two drams or somewhat more at a time and drink the Wine as warm as may be convenient New and rare Experiments in Cookery not before made Publick as also in Dairying To roast a Salmon whole the Italian way TAke a middle-siz'd Salmon draw him and scrape off the Scales drying him without and within with a cloth Then take ●●ne grated Bread grated Nutmeg the Juyce of sweet Marjorum Currans and Butter ma●ing them up with new Milk into a Pudding ●he which you must thrust in at his Gills till ●he Belly be pretty well stuffed then with white Filliting bind him to the Spit and at first baste him with a little Salt and Water then with Verjuyce and Sugar and lastly with Butter and Red-wine beaten up together when being enough open his Belly slit him in two halves and lay the Pudding one half on one side and the other on the other side and serve him with a Garnish of whole Spices and Anchovey-sawce To roast a Turky Swan Heron or Bittron the French way Draw your Fowl put sweet Herbs shread into a Linnen bag with Butter and Spices put that into its Belly then with hot water baist it till it is in a manner parboiled on the Spit after that dry it with a cloth then bai● it with Butter and Ginger till it is roasted and serve it up with Butter Anchoveys and th● sweet Herbs garnishing the dish with Lemon-peel and green things c. To make a Spanish Syllabub the best way Take new Milk a gallon the Flowre o● sweet Almonds half a pound rose-Rose-water two ounces Lime-juyce half a pint the Juyce of Strawberries or
to grow stiff and cool dip your Flowers into it and taking them out presently lay them one by one in a Sieve and hold over a chasing-dish of Coles and they wi●● dry and harden To dry Plumbs Pears Apples Grapes or the lik● You must first Preserve them then was● or wipe them after which set them upo● Tin Plates in a Stove or for want of it a● Oven not to hot and turn them as you see occasion observing ever to let them hav● their Stalks on These things more especially being fit to be understood by a young Gentlewoman 〈◊〉 have spoken of them in order And since there are many other things necessary o● which I have said nothing I shall proceed to give Instructions as they occur which I hope will prove altogether as profitable CHAP. VI. ●●structions for a Gentlewoman in making of Marmalade Paste of Fruit Artificial Fruit Jellies of Fruit Quiddanies Fruit-cakes Honey Conserve for Tarts Maccaroons Comfits and Confections after sundry forms and manners To make Marmalade of Oranges ●Are your Oranges as thin as may be and let 'em boil till they are soft in two or ●ree waters then take double the number ●f good Pippins divide them and take a●ay the core boil them to pap without lo●ng their colour strain the pulp and put a ●●und of Sugar to every pint then take out ●e pulp of the Oranges and cut the peel ●nd boil it till it is very soft bruise it in the ●●yce of two or three Lemons and boil it up 〈◊〉 a thickness with your Apple-pap and half pint of rose-Rose-water To make Paste of Cherries Boil the Cherries till they come to be ve●● soft and strain the pulp through a fine ●eve and add a pound of Sugar to a pint ●ffen it with Apple-pap and boil it up to a ●ght then spread it upon Plates and dry it To make Marmalade of Grapes Take the ripest Grapes gathered in a dr● day spread them upon a Table where th● Air and the Sun may come at them afte● which take from them the stalks and seed boiling the Husk and Pulp or Juyce in a Pa● with often scuming whilst it is reduced to third part and then let the heat be gentle and when you find it thickned strain 〈◊〉 through a Sieve and boiling it once more add a small quantity of fine sugar or th● Powder of white Sugar-candy and so put i● up in Pots covered with Paper for you● use To make Honey of Mulberries Take the Juyce of the black Mulberries and add to a pound and a half of their Juyc● two pound of clarified Honey and boil ther● up with often scuming till a third part be consumed To make Jelly of Quinces Currans or Gooseberries Take the Fruit and press out the Juyce clarifie it and add to each quart a pound o● sugar clarified and boiled up to a Candy hight then boil them together till a thir● part be consumed then add a pint of White wine wherein an ounce of Cherry-tree o● Plumb-tree Gum has been dissolved and i● will make it a perfect Jelly To make Lemon-Cakes or Cakes of Lemons Take fine sugar half a pound to two oun●es of the Juyce of Lemons and the like ●uantity of rose-Rose-water boil them up till ●hey become Sugar again then grate into it ●e rind of hard Lemons and having well ●●corporated them put them up for your ●se into coffins c. being cold and cover ●m with Paper Artificial Walnuts are thus to be made Take a Sugar-plate and print it like a Wal●ut kernel yellowing the in-side with Saf●on then take seraced Sugar and Cinamon ●nd work them with Rose-water in which ●um-dragon has been steeped into a Paste ●nd print it in a Mould made like a Walnut-●ell and when the kernel and shell are dry ●ose them together with Gum-dragon or ●um-Arabick and they will deceive the ●uest who will take 'em for real Walnuts To make Artificial Oranges and Lemons Take Moulds of Alablaster made in three ●eces bind two of them together and let ●em lye in the water an hour or two boil●●g to a hight in the mean time as much su●ar as will fill them the which being poured to the Mould and the lid put quickly on by suddenly turning will be hollow And so in this case to the colour of the Fruit yo● cast you must colour your sugar in boiling To make red Quince-Cakes Take the syrup of Quinces and Barbarie● of each a quart cut into it about a doze● Quinces free from rind and core boil the● till they are very soft then strain the pu● or liquid part and boil it up with six poun● of sugar till it be Candy-proof then take out and lay it upon Plates as thin as yo● think convenient to cool Clear or transparent Quince-Cakes are ma● thus Take a pint of the syrup of Quinces an● a quart of that of Barberries boil and cl●rifie them over a gentle fire keeping the● free from scum then add a pound and quarter of Sugar to the Juyce Candying a● much more and putting it in hot and 〈◊〉 keeping it stirring till it be near cold at wha● time spread cut it into Cakes as the forme● To make Marmalade after the Italian fashion Take about thirty Quinces pare them take out their cores and put to them a quar● of water and two pound of sugar boil them till they are soft then strain the juyce and th●● pulp and boil them up with four pound o● sugar till they become sufficiently thick To make white Quince-cakes Clarifie your sugar with the Whites of ●ggs putting to two pound a quarter of a ●●nt of water which being boiled up add ●●y sugar and highten it to a Candy then ●●e Quinces being pared cored and scalded ●eat them to pulp and put them into the ●iling sugar not suffering them to boil long ●efore you take them off and lay them on ●lates To make Maccaroons Blanch a convenient quantity of Almonds ●y putting them into hot water beat them ●e in a Mortar strewing on them as you ●eat fine seraced Sugar and when they are ●ell mixed add the Whites of Eggs and ●ose-water and when they are of a conve●●ent thickness drop the Butter on Wafers ●yed on Tin-plates and bake 'em in a gen●●e Oven To make a Leach of Almonds Take half a pound of Almonds blanched ●eat them in a Mortar and add a pint of ●●w Milk and strain them add more two ●●oonfulls of rose-Rose-water and a grain of ●●usk with half an ounce of the whitest ●●ng-gass and strain them a second time for our use To make Sugar smell like Spice Lay lumps of Sugar under your Spice sprinkle them with some of the Distilled-wat●● To make a Quiddany of Plumbs Apples Quin● or any other Fruit that is proper Take a quart of the Liquor of the Preseved Fruit and add a pound of the Fruit ra● separated from the stone rind or core b● it up with a pound of Sugar till it stands u●on
Fork or Spoon and raising it conveniently lay it upon a Trencher or Plate in the best order not by any means delivering it to the hand of the party with your Knife Fork or Spoon but on a Plate All sorts of Tarts Custards wet Sweet-meats and Cakes being cut in the dish wherein they were served up must be layed likewise with the point of a Knife handsomely on a Plate and presented Thus having shewed you how to behave your self and in some part to manage good cheer it will be highly necessary to consider that a young Gentlewomans Beauty is an Ornament next to that of her Virtue and though Nature is prodigally lavish in furnishing your Faces with charms yet seeing she is deficient and casualties impair the perfection of you lovely Sex I think fit to impart such Secrets as by harmless ways what is wanting or disordered may be supplied or repaired In which the following Treatise will direct you CHAP. VIII The Closet of Beauty or Modest Instructions for a Gentlewoman in making Beautifying Waters Beautifying Oyls Pomatums Reparations Musk-balls Perfumes and other Curiosities Highly necessary and advantageous in the Practice c. GEntlewomen Imagine not that I undertake this Treatise to create in you the least self-conceit or extravagant opinion of your Merits by putting into your hands an opportunity to render your selves more beautifull if possibly it may be but to preserve what you have at least from the ruins of time or any unfortunate accident for neatness on this side the Region of Pride is to be observed in that as well as in Apparel nay in a cleanly observance even Health it self is concerned But to proceed If Hair that comely Ornament of your Sex be wanting occasioned by Sickness or defect of moisture c. To recover it Take the Ashes of Hysop-roots the Juyce of Marshmallows and the Powder of Elicampane-roo●s of each an ounce boil them in half a pint of White-wine with a dram of the Oyl of Tartar till half be consumed and with the remainder Anoint the ball'd place and the hair will be restored To preserve the Hair from falling off Burn Pigeons dung to Ashes of which take the quantity of an ounce put them into 〈◊〉 pint of water where Wood-ashes have ●oaked then add two ounces of the Juyce of ●enegreen or Housleek and one of fine Sugar-candy and half an ounce of Rosemary ●lowers boil them together strain them well and wash the place six or seven times and the Hair will not only remain firm but what is fallen off will renew Of Hair grow too thick or unseemly in any part of the Body Take Gum-Arabick and boil it to the ●hickness of a Salve in the Juyce of Hemlock and lay it on the place Plaster-wise and when it is taken off which must not be un●er two days it will bring off the Hair by ●he roots not permitting any more to grow ●n that place To make the Hair fair and beautifull Cleanse it from dust by washing it in Rose-Vinegar then boil an ounce of Turmerick the like quantity of Rubarb with the leaves of Bay-tree cut small to the quantity of a handfull boiled in a quart of water wherein half a pound of Allom has been dissolved and by often washing your Head with th● decoction it will make your Hair fair an● lovely unless it be a deep red or exceedin● black To cleanse the Skin of the Face and make beautifull Take and distill the Blossoms of Pease an● Beans with the like quantity of the flowers o● Fumitory and Scabeous and wash the Fac● with it morning and evening anointing it a●terward with a small quantity of Oyl o● Myrrh and by often using it you will hav● cause to admire the effects Rosemary flowers boiled in White-wine have likewise thei● wonderfull quality in this kind To take away Freckles Take the Galls of two Cocks a handful● of Rye-flower or Meal a pint of Verjuice● two ounces of Plantane-water and one o● the Oyl of Bitter Almonds boil them an● strain out the liquid part when a third par● is consumed then boil it again till it become● a kind of an Ointment and often anointing the Face therewith will remove ' em To make a clear white and smooth Skin Take an ounce of Barrows grease the Whites of two Eggs half an ounce of the ●shes of Bay-tree roots or leaves a quarter ●f an ounce of Honey of Roses and a quarter ●f a pint of Plantane-water boil them till ●hey become an Ointment and use it to the ●nd above-mentioned To take away Sun-burn A handfull of Spanish Salt dissolved in the ●uyce of two Lemons is a speedy remedy ●he Face and Hands being often rubbed with 〈◊〉 and it as often suffered to dry upon them To take away Wrinkles and make the Face look youthfull Take of Brandy or Spirit of Wine a quar●er of a pint of Bean-flower and red Rose-●ater each four ounces Water of Lillies our ounces the Juyce of Briony-roots two ●unces and of the decoction of Figgs two ●unces Incorporate them over a gentle fire ●nd use it as a Wash To take away the Red Spots occasioned by the Small Pox. Wash your Face with Juyce of Lemon 〈◊〉 which beaten Allom and Bay-salt has been ●issolved and to wear out the Pits or pre●ent them gnawing deeper as you grow in ●ears Take half a pint of the Spirit of Vine●ar an ounce of Mustard-seed a quarter of 〈◊〉 pint of the Juyce of Marshmallows and a handfull of Bran boil them together an● put the liquid part in a Viol with whic● wash your Face morning and evening an● you will find the effect will answer the trouble To take away Pimples and Redness in the Face Dissolve half an ounce of Alom in th● White of an Egg and a spoonfull of Vinegar beat it together till it is well mixed an● when you go to bed lay it Plaster-wise upon the place and your desire will be effected To take away the hot swelling of the Face Boil Rosemary-blossoms or leaves o● Groundsil and Chamomile in White-wine and not only wash your Face in the Juyce but lay the Herbs stamped with a small quantity of Oyl of Roses Pultis-wise to the plac● afflicted To Restore a Ruby Face to its former Complexion Take the yolks of two Eggs an ounce o● fresh Butter four drams of Camphire ha● a pint of rose-Rose-water an ounce of the Oy● of Bays mingle them well by heating then over a fire and anoint the Face with th● Oyntment for they will produce if well bea●●n and kept stirring and strained through a ●oollen cloth an Oyl c. To make the Hands soft and white Take of Bean and Lupin-flower of each handfull of Starch Corn Rue and Orice ●nd sweet Almonds two ounces beat or ●rind them together and with the Powder ●ash your Hands often To make an Excellent Wash-ball for the Hands and Face Take two ounces of Calamus aramaticus of Rose-flowers and the flowers of Lavender each a
Lavender-cotton six ●nces Storax half an ounce red Rose-●aves two ounces Rhodium an ounce dry ●●em and beat them to Powder and lay them 〈◊〉 a bag wherein Musk has been and they 'l 〈◊〉 an excellent scent and preserve your oaths from Moths or Worms To make Musk-balls Take of the flower of Almonds six ounce Castle-sope six ounces wet them in Ro●●-water and infusing two grains of Mus● make the Paste up into balls without he●ing To make burning Perfume Take an ounce of Storax the like quanty of Mace Cinamon and Nutmeg bru● them together and add the Powder of C●sa and two ounces of the Oyl of Myrrh more if that suffice not to make it into roll or instead of it you may use Virgins Wa●● and being set on fire it will cast a precio●● scent To make a scent of Rosemary Take your Perfumer and heat it over chasing-dish of coals put into it being pr●ty hot two spoonfulls of rose-Rose-water h●● a handful of Rosemary-tops and six dra● of Sugar and all the house will be scented Another excellent Perfume how to make it Take a quarter of a pint of Rose-wate● two grains of Amber-grease two peny weig● of Sugar and a grain of Civit beat them t●gether and put them into your Perfumin● pot over the fire and it will send forth a d●licate odour An Excellent Perfume good against Infectious Air and exceeding pleasant how to make it Observe to take half a quartern of spike-Spike-water as much of rose-Rose-water a quarter of an ounce of Cloves with seven or eight Bay-●eaves shread and six grains of Sugar and boil them in your Perfumer To make Musk-Cakes Take half a pound of red Roses bruise them well and add to them the water of Basil the Powder of Frankincense making it up with these a pound add four grains of Musk mix them well to a thickness make them into Cakes and dry them in the Sun. Thus Gentlewoman have I made you sensible of such Curiosities as are not only pleasant but as highly advantageous And now least you should be wanting in what is further necessary in the preservation and restauration of Health I shall give you some admirable Receipts in Physick and Chyrurgery that you may be helpfull to your self and others Such they are as have been often administred and used with success and such as if rightly and seasonably applied can do no harm nor are they unfit for the Closet of a Gentlewoman therefore accept them in good part CHAP. IX Instructions for a Gentlewoman in many Excellent Receipts Physical and Chyrurgical tending to the restauration and preservation of Health in old and young according to the bes● approved Rules and Methods safe and easi● in the Application and successful in the Operation IF any person be afflicted with the Griping of the Guts Take Juniper-berries Fennel Anniseeds Bay-berries Tormentilo Bistwort Balaustius and Pomgranet-seeds o● each an ounce bruise them adding of Rose-leaves a handfull boil them in Milk pres● out the liquid part and add more the yolk o● an Egg and six grains of Laudanum prepare it warm and give it Clister-wise For Pains in the Head. Take a Rose-cake steep it in Bettony water and apply it to the Forehead and Temples cold often wetting it and the Pai● will abate In case of an Ague Take Rye-meal temper it well with the yolk of an Egg then spread it Plaster-wise and strow upon it the Powder of Juniper berries and lay it to the parties Wrists giving him to drink a draught of hot Ale wherein blew Lilly-roots have been steeped a night and a white Flint-stone red hot quenched and let him or her thereupon go into a hot bed and by several times using it the advantage will appear Or Take two quarts of small Ale shread into it a handfull of Parsley and the like quantity of red Fennel of Centory and Pimpernel each a handful boil them in the Ale till a third part be consumed sweeten it then with Sugar-candy and let the party drink it hot upon the approach of the cold fit For the yellow Jaundice Take a large Onion make it as hollow as you can put into the cavity a quarter of an ounce of Venice-Treacle and as much Honey with a dram of Saffron set the Onion on a gentle fire and when by often turning it is sufficiently roasted press it together with what was in it and let the party grieved take a spoonfull of it for three days together in White-wine For the black Jaundice Take Sage Parsley Groundsil and Smalage and boil them in Pottage with Swines-flesh and in often eating it the grievance will be removed For a dry Cough Take Anniseeds an ounce the like quantity of Ash-keys as many Violet-flowers and the Powder of Licoris beat them together when dried till they be a Powder then put them into a pint of White-wine sweetning it with two ounces of white Sugar candia boil them into an Electuary and le● the party take the quantity of a Walnut every morning fasting drinking after it a glas● of warm Ale or Milk. To make a green Ointment Take a pound of Barrows-grease add 〈◊〉 it an ounce of Verdigrease of Salgem ha● a scruple make them up into an Ointment over a soft fire and it is used with success i● case of old sores or bruises To break an Imposthume or Swelling Take an ounce of the Roots of White Lilies half a large Onion and half an ounce of Barrows-grease stamp them together and being fryed lay it hot to the place To remove the humour that occasions the Green sickness in Virgins and young Widows Take a quart of Claret a pound of bles● Currans a handfull of young Rosemary-top● with half an ounce of Mace bruise them and boil the liquid part to a pint and let the party afflicted drink half a pint hot morning and evening for a week together Sir Philip Parry's Emplaister how to make it and its Virtue Take of Olive-oyl two pounds red Lead one pound white Lead one pound beat and serace them of Castle-sope twelve ounces incorporate them in an Earthen-pot well glazed then set them on a gentle fire for an hour and half stirring them continually till the matter become the colour of Oyl and somewhat dark Try it on a Plate if it cleave not thereto it is enough then spread it on your Linnen or dip the Linnen into it and smooth it with a sleek-stone and it will not lose it's Virtue in many years This Plaister applied to the Stomack provoketh Appetite taketh away the grief or pain Applied to the Reins it stoppeth the Bloody-flux the Running of the Reins the Heat in the Kidneys and the weakness of the Back and is good for Swellings Bruises Aches c. A most Approved Plaister for the Rupture Take of Alloes and Cittron one ounce Dragons blood an ounce Myrrh an ounce Mastick Bole-Armonick Gum-dragant of each three ounces make them into a Powder and with the Juyce of red Housleek work them into a
Plaister A Salve Excellent to draw and heal c. Take a pennyworth of Turpentine as much Virgins Wax as a Walnut the like quantity of fresh Butter a spoonfull of Honey melt them into a pan and strain the substance into fair water and make it into a Roll for your use An Excellent Emplaister for a new or old Sore Take of Rosine four ounces melt it then of Turpentine take an ounce and two ounces of Wax the like of Sheeps-suet cleared from the skin and a spoonful of Olive-oyl boil them over a gentle fire and then strain them into water and apply them as a Salve Dr. Morsus Emplaister commonly called Oxecrotium Take Ship-Pitch Saffron Colophony Bees-wax of each three ounces Turpentine Galbanum Amoniacum Myrrh fine Frankincense Mastick of each an ounce and three scruples lay your Galbanum a night in Vinegar then boil and strain it melt your Gums and mingle them by stirring put in last your Turpentine and being well incorporated make it into Rolls and use it in case of Pains Aches Bruises Strains Dislocations and to strengthen the Nerves c. Oyl of Rosemary-flowers how to make it with its Virtual Operation Take a good quantity of Rosemary-flowers stamp them and put them into a Glass with strong Wine stop the Glass close and set it in the Sun six days then distill the Flowers and Wine with a soft fire and the effect will produce both Water and Oyl separate them and keep the Oyl close in a Glass This Oyl is good against the inveterate Head-ach it comforteth the Memory and perserveth the sight by being drunk in a Glass of Wine or dropped into the Eyes being dropped into the Ears it helpeth Deafness and is good in case of the Dropsie yellow Jaundice Rising of the Mother c. An Excellent Powder to provoke Urin and send forth the Gravel and Stone Take a Flint-stone and beat it in a Mortar to a fine and subtil Powder serace it and keep it in a Bladder till you have occasion to use it then take half a dram fasting in a Glass of White-wine or Ale and keep your self warm A Powder to ease the Pains of the Gout Take of fine Ginger two drams four drams of dried Elecampane-root Licoras half an ounce Sugar-candy three ounces beat them to a fine Powder and serace the● drinking off the Powder a dram at a time fasting in a Glass of Ale. A Water for easing the Pains in the Teeth Take of red Rose-leaves half a handfull Pomgranet-flowers the like quantity two Galls thin sliced boil them in three quarters of a pint of red Wine and half a pint of fair Water untill a third part be consumed strain them and hold a spoonfull at a time in your mouth and lay a hot cloth to your cheek dipped in the liquid part c. An Excellent Water for the Ulceration of the Yard Take Water wherein Iron has been often 〈…〉 ●●●ces of Pomgranet-piles and flowers of each three drams of Plantane and Housleek each an ounce and a half of Honey of Roses Turpentine each half a pound Allum six ounces white Copperas three drams boil them till half be consumed then add Verdigrease three ounces strain them and gently boil them again then letting them settle take the thin and rarify'd part and inject it with a Syringe anointing the place grieved with the other part An Ointment to cleanse Sores either old or new Take two ounces of Turpentine wash it well in a Barly-water put it to the yolks of six new-laid Eggs Honey of Roses or common Honey four ounces mingle them well over a gentle fire till they become an Ointment and then dip the Tents or Pledgets in it and apply them Flos Unguentorum how to make it together with its Excellent Virtue Take Rosin Perrosin of each half a pound Virgins Wax Frankincense of each four ounces Mastick half an ounce Stags-suet four ounces Camphire two drams Pound and melt them over a gentle fire then strain them into a Pottle of White-wine and when it is luke-warm put thereto three ounces of Turpentine stirring it till it be cold and then put it up for your use It is exceeding good for old Wounds in order to the ingendring good flesh and cleansing them wasting likewise the bad flesh and is good for all manner of Imposthumes in the Head and in the Body also for Strains in the Sinews It draweth out Thorns or Splinters of Bones it healeth Botches and Scabs and is good for the Noli me tangere and is an excellent Sear-cloth for the Gout Sciatica or Aches in any part of the Body For a Scald or any Burn an Excellent Ointment Take of Cream a quart Fern-roots a handfull slice and wash the Roots and the● boil them in the Cream in an Earthen-pot till they Jelly and at what time there is an occasion to use it Ferment it with a Spatula and apply it on a Linnen-cloth often renewing it An Excellent Ointment to asswage Pain and coo● any extraordinary Heat by what means soever it happen Take of white Carrate four ounces Oyl of Roses ten ounces red and white Saunders red Roses Myrrh Olibanum and Mastick of each two drams Camphire half a dram Turpentine two ounces and a half and make them into an Unguent A Tobacco-Salve for any fresh Wound Take of the Juyce of green English Tobacco a quart of Olive-oyl a pint of Wax and Turpentine each an ounce and half an ounce of Verdegrease boil them over a gentle fire for an hours space and make them up in Rolls for your use Note That the best Cloth for Plaister is new Lockram and the worst Calico or such cloth as has been starched For the shrinking of the Nerves or Sinews a Plaister Take of Water-cresses and Cammomile each a handfull stamp them and fry them with a handful of Wheaten-meal and two ounces of Honey then spread them on a cloth and apply them to the place at hot as may be well endured A Dredge Powder that purgeth Choler Phlegm and Melancholy Take of Turbith one ounce Ginger Cinamon Mastick Gallengale grains of Paradise Cloves Anniseeds the Herb called Mercury's Finger and Diagr●dium of each half an ounce the leaves of Senna two ounces Loaf-sugar four ounces dry them that the● may be pulverized and mingling them well take a dram in a morning fasting either in a glass of White-wine or warm Ale. An Excellent Powder to purge the Head by Sneezing Take of the Roots of Sneezing-wort o● Bartram an ounce Castorum half an ounce of white Hellebore and black Hellebore each an ounce Marjorum a handfull dry them and make them into a Powder using the Powder moderately as you see occasion An Excellent Powder for the Falling-sickness Take a Mans Scull that has not ben above a year buried bury it in hot Embers till it become white and easie to be broken Then take off the uppermost part of the head to the top of the crown and beat it into
two drams Cummin-see● a dram make them small and apply the with the Juyce of Mint upon a plaster or sod● of Flax. For Hard breeding of Teeth Rub the Gums with your finger dipped Honey or give the Child Candle made o● Virgins Wax to nable on and Foment th● cheeks with the Decoction of Althaea Camm●mile-flowers the seed of Dill. For the Bladder in the Gums Take Lintills husked beat them into powder and lay them upon the Gums or take half an ounce of the flower of Mellium make it into a Lineament and apply it To prevent Squint-Eyes Hang a Picture and set a Candle on the contrary side or use to cocker the Infant on that side till the Eye-strings contract For a Scald Head. Take the Scab off gently with a cleanser moistning the skin with Hogs grease upon Colewort-leaves or rather take the Juyce of Fumitory Dock Coleworts and Elecampane of each half an ounce with Litherage Oyl of Rue Hogs-grease and Wax make a mollifying Oyntment then take Starch two ounces Rosin half an ounce boil them in water and lay them upon the scald places Poultis-wise suffering them to lye there several days then suddainly pull them off and use mollifying things to correct the distemper c. In case of a Feaver Give the Infant a quarter of an ounce of Syrup of Violets and as much of that of Wood-sorrel for the Measles or Small Pox Give them Saffron and a small quantity of Manna in Milk or a spoonfull of White-wine And thus much for the principal Distempers in Children As for the Nursery-Maids business to whose care Children are frequently committed when capable of running about it is to love and cherish them to see they have wha● is fitting in due season to keep them within compass and government to see they carry their legs and bodies strait and even and that they disorder themselves by no untoward tricks and actions but that they be cleanly and neat and if she discovers any alteration in complection constitution or habit of body tending to sickness or other discommodity either to apply fit remedies her self or inform those of it who delivered them to her charge without delay least a Remedy come too late She is to keep them within bounds but no● be churlish nor dogged to them but rather to be merry and pleasant contriving such Pastimes as may best sute with their age and constitutions keeping their Apparel in goo● order and not shewing too much love t● one nor disregard to the other And by thi● means a Maid will gain Love and Applaus● from all parties CHAP. XII The Compleat Chamber-Maids profitable Instruction as to her Behaviour in Managing of Affairs making choice Spoon-meats Pickling Sawces Washing and Starching Tiffany Lawn Sarsenets Silks Point c. Scowring Gold and Silver Lace taking Spots out of Silk Woollen Linnen Stuffs Perfuming c. A Chamber-Maid that would be preferred gain or continue a good opinion must in the first place be grave and respect●ull to those whom she serves neat in her ●abit loving to her fellow-servants and affa●le to all declining wanton gestures that may ●ender her suspected of Livity that she ●eep all things in her Chamber in good or●er and have them in readiness on all oc●asions to take off the care of the Mistriss killed likewise she must or ought to be in ●●ying fine knacks and be just in returning ●●er accounts If there be no Butler she must ●e all things decently managed for the Ac●ommodation of the guest in the Parlour and ●ining-room and above all have a regard 〈◊〉 the Linnen Plate and other Furniture un●●● her Command And besides her skill in ●ressing and Attiring her Mistriss be skilfull making Spoon-meats Pickling things usefull for Sawces or Garnishing Washing and Starching Tiffanies Lawns black and whit● Sarsnet Points and other curious Lace A● likewise she ought to be skilfull at making such scowring Materials as will cleanse Si●ver or Gold Lace Silver or Gold Plate take Spots out of Linnen Silks Stuffs or Cloth And because these are in a manner secrets shall lay down Instructions for as many a● are materially usefull And first of Spoon meats To make a French Barley-Posset after the newest fashion Boil half a pound of French Barley in tw● quarts of new Milk and when the Milk 〈◊〉 near boiled away add three pints of swee● Cream then boil it a quarter of an hour an● sweeten it with fine sugar put in three o● four blades of Mace and a piece of Cinamon this done take a pint of White-wine an● pour the liquid Cream into it frothing it up To make an Excellent Broth. Cut off the wings and legs of two Cock wash and parboil them till the scum appear take them out and wash them in cold wate● then with a pint of Rhenish-wine and tw● quarts of strong Broth put them into a Pikin add two ounces of China root an oun●● and a half of Harts-horn with a small qua●●ity of Cloves Nutmegs Mace Ginger whole Pepper and Salt stop the Pipkin close and setting it in a pot of boiling-water so ●hat that water get not into it for the space of six hours then pour out the Broth and squeese the Juyce of Lemons into it and serve it up To make Pottage of French Barley Take a pound of Barley very clean put it into three quarts of Milk whilst boiling then add a quart of Cream an ounce of Salt six blades of Mace and a piece of Cinamon let them boil a little and become thick serve it up with white sugar scraped thereon To make Pannado after the best fashion Take a quart of spring-Spring-water which being hot on the fire put into it slices of fine Bread as thin as may be then add half a pound of Currans a quarter of an ounce of Mace boil them well and then season them with rose-Rose-water and fine Sugar and serve them up To make an Excellent White-pot Take two quarts of Cream boil in it in a short time half an ounce of Mace a piece of Cinamon and half a Nutmeg then cut a white peny loaf exceeding thin then lay the slices at the bottom of a dish and cover them with Marrow add likewise a dozen yolks of Eggs to the Cream well beaten in rose-Rose-water and sweeten it with a sufficient quantity of Sugar then take out the Spices beat up the Cream well and fill a broad Bason in which the Bread Raisins and Marrow was laid and bake it when it is enough scrape white Sugar on it and serve it up All strengthning Jellies are made by boiling such Flesh as are of a tender and gluttenous substance till it is in a manner dissolved in the Broth and adding Wine Sugar Spice Salt or as you will have it seasoned and serving it up with Sipits or alone More I might mention of this kind but intending largely to treat of Cookery I shall wave them and proceed to the next which is Pickling Fruits and Flowers c.
Dairy-Maids place and office though not so universal is little inferiour to that of the Cook-Maid in making variety of Junkets besides which her chief business is to go neat and cleanly and to keep all so under her Jurisdiction observing the Kine are well fed and that Butter and Cheese are made of proper Milks and in their proper season To make which few that undertake that business being ignorant I shall proceed to give Instructions for the making of Junkets the most curious part of her office and for which Persons of Quality peculiarly retain such Servants But to proceed To make fresh Cheese of Cream Take a Pottle of new Milk warm from the Cow Almonds blanched half a pound beat them small add a pint of Cream a quarter of a pint of rose-Rose-water half a pound of Sugar half an ounce of beaten Cinamon and Ginger then add Runnet bread it up and whey it press it in a Mould and serve it up in a dish of Cream Cream and Codlings how to order in the best manner Scald your Codlings take off the skins and cut the core mix the pulp with Sugar and Rose-water add a quarter of a pint of Canary and a quart of Cream and serve it up To make an Excellent Junket Take Goats or Ews Milk put them over a fire and when they are a little warm then add Runnet and let it cool then strow on it Cinamon and Sugar over that cast Cream and strew Sugar upon the Cream with rose-Rose-water To make a Whip'd Syllabub Take a pint of Cream six spoonfulls of Sack the Whites of two Eggs two ounces of fine Sugar and with Birch-twigs beat it till it froth well scum it and put it into your Syllabub-pot To make Cream of Codlings Seald them and peel off the skin scrape the pulp from the core and strain the pulp mixed with Sugar and rose-Rose-water through a course lin●●n cloth lay your Codling-pulp in the ●idde of a dish and raw Cream round it adding more Sugar and rose-Rose-water To make a Cream-Tart Take Manchet chip it and grate it mix it with good Cream and sweet Butter take a dozen yolks of Eggs beat them well with Cream adding four ounces of sugar boil them altogether till they come to a thickness make two leaves of Paste as thin as can be raised but very shallow put the Materials before mentioned into it and cover it with the lid then bake it strew sugar on it and serve it up To make Curran-Cream Bruised red Currans in boiled Cream strain them through a Sieve add Sugar and Cinamon and so serve it up And so you may by Rasberries or Strawberries To make Cream of Eggs. Take a quart of Cream and when it is hot beat into it the Whites of five Eggs and let it boil adding two spoonfulls of rose-Rose-water being enough let it cool and add a little salt and scrape on it fine sugar To make Curd-Cakes Take a pint of Curds four Eggs leaving two of the Whites add sugar and grated Nutmeg with a little Flowe● mix them well and drop them like ●●itters into a Frying-pan in which Butter is hot To make fresh Cheese Take a race of Cinamon scald it in new Milk or Cream and taking it off sweeten it with sugar then take a spoonfull of Runnet to two quarts of Milk cover it close and let it stand till the Cheese comes strew then upon it Sugar and Cinamon and serve it up with sipits dipped in Canary or White-wine To make Gooseberry-Cream Let your Gooseberries be boiled or for want of green ones your Preserved ones will do and when your Cream is boiled up put them in adding small Cinamon Mace and Nutmeg then boil them in the Cream and strain all through a cloth and serve it up with Sugar and Rose-water To make a Cream Fool. Heat two quarts of Cream when it is boiled add the yolks of twelve Eggs having first beat it in the three or four spoonfulls of cold Cream straining them into the hot stir them to prevent burning when having boiled a pretty while take them off and let them cool adding two or three spoonfulls of Sack fasten sipits to the dish with syrup of Rasberries sweeten your Cream pour it in and serve it up To make Clouted Cream Set new Milk on the fire twelve hours without suffering it to boil add Sugar and Cinamon with a third part of Cream and serve it up To make a Gooseberry-Fool Pick your Gooseberries not ripe boil them in clean water to a pulp take six yolks of Eggs a quart of new Milk rose-Rose-water and Sugar put the latter in when the former is well boiled and suffering them to boil a while serve the whole up in a large dish when it is cold To make a Tansey Take six Eggs but the Whites only of three beat them in Cream then stamp green Wheat-blades Violets Spinage Succory and Strawberry-leaves of each a handfull with a few Walnut-tree-buds adding Cream as you beat them strain out the Juyce and add it to the Eggs and more Cream as also crumbs of Bread Cinamon Nutmeg Salt and sweet Butter the latter being put into the Frying-pan adding lastly the Juyce of Tansey and Sugar fry them like a Pan-cake very thin and serve it up with rose-Rose-water and Sugar To make Snow-Cream Take the Gleer of half a dozen Eggs and rose-Rose-water beat them with feathers till they ●ecome like Snow lay it on heaps and Cream that has been boiled and cooled with scraped Loaf sugar heat it again and serve ●up as soon as it comes to be cold a second ●●me upon Rosemary or Bay-branches to ●hicken that it may stick the better add ●●me grated Bread. To make a pleasant Syllabub Take two quarts of Milk come newly from ●he Cow half a pint of Verjuyce being ad●ed take off the curd and put to it more a ●int and a half of Cream beat them together with Sack and Sugar and put them in●o your Syllabub-pot for your use To make a Cream called Quince-Cream Roast four or five ripe Quinces and pare ●hem cut them from the core in thin slices ●oil the slices in a pint of sweet Cream with 〈◊〉 root of whole Ginger when it is boiled to pulp strain it and adding Sugar serve it ●p cold To make the best Jumballs Take a handfull or two of Wheat-flower ●nd a pound of white Sugar mix them well adding the Whites of two Eggs and a poun● of blanched Almonds well beaten with ha● a pound of sweet Butter and a spoonfull o● two of Rose-water to these add more ha● a pint of Cream mould it till it become a Past rowl it into what shape you please and dry it a while then gently bake it O this quantity you may make twenty or mor● How to make an Angellet Take a pint of Cream and double th● quantity of Milk putting to them a sma● quantity of Runnet and when it thickens take it up with a Spoon and put it into a
The Child being thus ordered let the Midwife commit it to the Nurse or the Woman that assists and take care of the Womad in bed in taking from her the Secon●ine or After-birth with care and caution which is easiest done they being contracted Membranes by easily moving till Nature effect the rest and if there appear a difficulty ●herein many are of the opinion that the Womans holding Salt in her hand fast grasp●d it is much available in facilitating the ●usiness Breathing hard or rather straining when the Breath is held is another expedi●nt or by straining to Vomit all being helps ●o Nature But if these prove ineffectual the ●cent of Assa-foetida is an Expedient or drink●ng the Juyce of Elder especially if the Woman be troubled with the Wind-colick cha●ing the Belly is not the least expedient to forward the matter for thereby the Wind that obstructs is dispersed or expelled 〈◊〉 these fail the Midwife by her discretion must gently draw them forth Many Births there are that are called Unnatural because they by accident or the evi● scituation of the Womb come not forward the right way some lying cross others with their feet downward others sprawling som● with their necks bowing and others wit● their arms stretched out so that they creat● great pain and trouble Therefore of these I shall speak and give Instructions to those of the profession that herein are ignorant In many of these cases great caution mus● be used to turn the Child not only by th● motion of the Woman but by Fomentations if occasion require and by the hand o● the Midwife either to turn the Child in th● Womb the right way or to contract th● Members that it may be brought forth by delating the Womb and thereby making sufficient way to do it removing what obstructs the passage and having by degree brought the Infant into a convenient posture if it may be tenderly move it the hand being before that attempt anointed with Pomatum the weakest or what is more convenient fresh Butter letting forth the Waters i● they are not come down and whether i● lye cross or sprawling feel for the feet and having gotten them by degrees draw the ●nfant gently forth incouraging the Woman ●o strain and giving her leave between whiles 〈◊〉 breathe and that in such a case the hold ●ay not fail a linnen cloth about the Thigh ●f the Child will not be amiss and after the ●irth do as in case of a Natural Birth If a dead Child be in the Womb and Na●ure be deficient as in that case mostly it is ●rt must be used and the Child if it can●ot be otherwise must be drawn forth with ●n Instrument hooked and fastned in the Scull ●y the Eye-hole This likewise must be done with caution and the Woman after it care●ully regarded incouraging her and not be●ng dismayed at any cross accident but ra●her recollect her senses that she may be the ●etter able to perform her office Wit in the ●reatest Exegencies being most needfull And when she is cased of her burthen give ●er for her further comfort a Toast in Ipo●ras or Canary or in case she cannot be de●●vered with conveniency the better to inforce it let her take the following Drink Cut blew Figs six or seven Mugwort the ●eeds of Rue and Fenugreek of each two ●rams Water of Peny-royal and Mother-wort six ounces decoct them till half be consumed strain them and add of Saffron ●hree grains and the Trochises of Myrrh a dram and a dram of beaten Cinamon swee●en the liquid part and suffer her to drink it not Resting a while let her again try her strength but not put it out to extremity lest she become too feeble and then if she be not eased of her burthen it will not be amiss to make a Suffumation of Oppoponax Castor Sulphur and Assa-foetida of each a dram beaten to Powder and wetted to a stiffness with the Juyce of Rue burnt on a chafing-dish o● coles and the smoak pass through the narrow end of a Funnel so as to affect the Matrix only and so wait the good time A Woman being delivered either of a Natural or Cross Birth it will be convenient i● she have had hard labour to wrap her in the Skin of a Sheep the fleshy side being warm towards her especially to her Reins and Belly or for want of it a Coney or Hare's Skin newly flea'd and warm chafing her Belly with Oyl of St. John's Wort and swathing her Back and Belly with fine linnen a quarter of a Yard broad covering her Flanks with a Quilt or little Pillow applying a warm cloth to her Nipples but use not presently striving by any Application to drive back the Milk lest it cause an Inflamation by the continuing of the evil humour twelve hours at least being allow'd by Physitians for the circulation and settlement of the Blood and what was cast upon the Lungs by vehement agitation for in this case Nature is wonderfully out of frame there not being a Vein nor Artery but what is stretched and moved About six hours after Delivery or less a restorative may be made of the yolks of two Eggs a pint of White-wine a quart of Milk of Oyl of St. John's Wort and Roses each an ounce Plantane and Rose-water of each the like quantity mix them well and dip a cloth into them folded warm it and apply it to the Breasts and it will much abate the pangs To sleep immediately though the Woman be inclinable is not at all convenient four hours after Delivery give her Caudles and nourishing Liquids and let her sleep if she is minded And in case of a Natural Birth no more is required unless some more than ordinary indisposition happen But in case of Unnatural Births or extremity other things are to be considered As to observe a temperate diet which must consist for the first five days of Penados-broths Jelly of Chickens or Calves-feet poached Eggs French Barley-broth c. and as she strengthens so let her increase her eating If no Feaver afflict her she may as she sees occasion drink Wine moderately Syrup of Roses or Maiden-hair and such-like Astringents And so the danger being past Broths of Meat or Meat it self will not be amiss that she may the better recover her strength the eighth day being the soonest to venture on them the Womb then for the most part purging it self avoiding as much as may be sleep in the day-time And in case of Costiveness or the like obstruction which too frequently happen a Clyster of mollifying Herbs are a present removal And in all such cases and many other what follows is held material Marsh and Field-mallows Peletory of the Wall Camomoil and Melilot-flowers of each a handfull boil them in Water wherein a Sheeps-head has been boiled strain them when boiled and into a quart put an ounce of course Sugar and as much Honey with an ounce and a half of fresh Butter and if it opperate not to
peel off their Rine and lay them in your Preserving-pan with layings of Sugar to the weight of the Nuts and as much water as will wet it so boil 'em up over a gentle fire and again being cool do it a second time and put them up for your use This way Nutmegs with their green Husks are Preserved To preserve green Pippins Observe to take them e're they are too ripe chusing the greenest pare them and boil them in water till they are exceeding soft then take out the cores and mingle the pulp with the water ten Pippins and two pound of Sugar being sufficient to boil up a Pottle of water and when it is boiled to a thickness put in the Pippins you intend to Preserve and let them boil till they contract a greener colour then natural And in this manner you may preserve Plumbs Peaches Quinces or any thing of that kind that you are desirous to have green and pleasant To preserve Barberries Observe that you chuse the fairest bunches gathered in a dry day and boil several bunches in a Pottle of Claret till they are soft strain them then and add six pound of Sugar and a quart of Water boil them up to a syrup put your Barberries scalded into the liquor and they will keep the year round To Preserve Pears Observe that you gather those that are sound not over-ripe and laying at the bottom of an Earthen-Pot or Pan a laying of Vine-leaves lay another laying of Pears upon them and so do till the Pot is full then to a pound of Pears add half a pound of Sugar and as much fair Water as will dissolve it over a gentle fire where suffer them to boil till they are somewhat soft and then set them by for your use To preserve Black Cherries Pluck off the stalks of about a pound and boil them in Sugar and fair Water till they become a pulp then put in your other Cherries with stalks remembring to put half a pound of Sugar to every pound of Cherries when finding the Sugar to be boiled up to that thickness that it will rope take them off and s● them by using them as you see convenient To Preserve Eringo-Roots Take of the Roots that are fair and kno●ty two pound wash and cleanse them the● boil them over a gentle fire very tender a●ter that peel off their out-most Rind but b●ware of breaking them after they have lai● a while in cold water put them into you Sugar boiled up to a syrup allowing to eac● pound of Sugar three quarters of a pound o● Roots which boiling a short time over 〈◊〉 gentle fire you may set them to cool an● then put them up for your use As for Elicampane-Roots scrape and cu● them thin to the pith in lengths about you● finger and put them into water which yo● must often shift to take away the bitterness at which rate being used twenty days pu● three quarters of a pound of Sugar to every pound of Roots the Roots being first boiled tender over a gentle fire till you find the Sugar has sufficiently taken and then being cool put them up in a Gally pot or Glass And much at the same rate may manage any thing of this or the like nature as Grapes Peaches Plumbs c. Conserving Flowers or Fruits is somewhat different from this Wherefore for the better instruction I shall say something concerning it ●o Conserve or keep any sort of Flower as Roses Violets Cowslips Gilleflowers c. Take your Flowers well blown and clean ●cked bruise them very small in a Mortar with three times the weight of Sugar after which take them out and put them into a ●ipkin and having thorowly heated them ●ver the fire put the Conserve up in Gally-●ots for your use To Conserve Strawberries Strain them being first boiled in fair wa●er and boil the pulp in White-wine and Sugar as much as is convenient to make them ●iff c. And thus you may Conserve any ●ort of Fruit the difference not being great ●etween this and making Fruit Paste of which I shall speak hereafter CHAP. V. Instructions for a Gentlewoman in Candying Fruits Flowers Roots c. As also in drying Fruits and other things necessary to be observed after the exactest and newest Mode and Method c. CAndying Fruits Roots and Flowers being an excellent way of gendering them pleasant and lasting is the next thing intended to be discoursed on Directions for which take as followeth To Candy Ginger Take the fairest pieces pare off the rind and lay them in water twenty four hours and having boiled double-refined Sugar to the hight of Sugar again when it begins to be cold put in your Ginger and stir it till i● is hard to the Pan when taking it out piece by piece lay it by the fire and afterward put it into a warm Pot and tye it up close and the Candy will be firm To Candy Orange-peel Take Peels of the best Civil Oranges the meat being taken out and put them into Water and Sugar boiling hot where being well softned boil rose-Rose-water and Sugar up to a hight till it becomes Sugar again the● draw your Peels through it and dry them in an Oven or Stove or before the fire To Candy Cherries Take them before they are full ripe stone them and having boiled your fine Sugar to a hight pour it on them gently moving them and so let them stand till almost cold and then taken out and dried by a fire c. To Candy Elicampane-Roots Take them from the syrup in which they ●ave been Preserved and dry them with a ●loth and for every pound of Roots take a ●ound and three quarters of Sugar boil it ●o a hight and dip your Roots into it when ●ot and they will take it well To Candy Barberries You must take them out of the Preserve ●nd wash off the syrup in warm water then ●ift fine Sugar on them and put them into ●n Oven or Stove to dry stirring or moving them the mean while and casting more Sugar upon them till they are dry To Candy Grapes You must take them after they are Preserved and use them as the former To Candy Eringo-Roots Take the Roots pared and boiled to a convenient softness and to each pound add two pound of fine Sugar clarifie it with the Whites of Eggs that it may be transparent and being boiled to a hight dip in your Roots two or three at once and afterward dry them in an Oven or Stove for your use And in this fashion you may Candy any thing as to Fruit or Roots to which Candying is proper And as for Flowers which that w● are pleasant and ornamental you may Ca●dy them after the following manner wi● their stalks and leaves viz. Take your various sorts of Flowers 〈◊〉 the stalks if they are extraordinary long somewhat shorter and having added abo●● eight spoonfulls of rose-Rose-water to a pound● white Sugar boil it to a clearness and as begins
a knife-point like a Jelly To make a Conserve for Tarts of any Fruit th● will keep all the Year Take the Fruit you intend peel off t●● rind and remove the core or stone th● put them into a Pot and bake them with small quantity of Water and Sugar bei●● bak'd strain 'em through a strong cloth adding Cinamon Sugar and Mace very sinly seraced boil them on a gentle fire t● they become as thick as a Jelly and th● put them up into Pots or Glasses stopp● close and they will have their proper ta●● at any time To preserve Medlers Take the Fruit and scald them in fair w●ter till the Skin may be easily taken off th● stone them at the head and add to ea●● pound a pound of Sugar and let them boil till the Liquor become ropey at what time take them off and set them by for your use To make Sweet-meats of any Apples Make your Jelly with those that are most soft and pleasant then cutting other Apples round-ways put them into a Glass or Pot and let them stand six days then boil 'em with the addition of a quarter of a pound of Sugar to a pound of Liquor not breaking them but seasoning them further with the Juyce of Lemons Oranges Cloves Mace and Perfuming them with a grain of Amber-grease To make each sort of Comfits vulgarly called Covering-seeds c. with Sugar observe as followeth You must provide a Pan of Brass or Tin to a good depth made with Ears to ●ang over a Chafing dish of Coles with a Ladle and Slice of the same Mettal then cleanse your Seeds from dross and take the finest Sugar well beaten put to each a quar●er of a pound of Seeds two pounds of Sugar the Seeds being first well dried and your Sugar melted in this order put into ●he Pan three pounds of Sugar adding a ●int of Spring-water stirring it till it be moi●tened and suffer it to melt well over a clear fire till it ropes after that set it upon hot Embers not suffering it to boil and so from your Ladle let it drop upon the Seeds and keep the Bason wherein they are continually moving and between every Coat rub and dry them as well as may be and when they have taken up the Sugar and by the motion are rolled into order dry them in an Oven or before a fire and they will be hard and white Thus Gentlewomen have I let you understand the depth of Curiosities of this kind and such as are sutable to be done by your self or at least to be observed whether they are done as they ought by those you imploy to perform 'em whether your House-keeper or Woman for if your self appear ignorant herein those that perform it will either have your want of understanding in contempt or not perform as they ought Wherefore leaving them to be considered and practised by you at leasure I shall proceed to the remaining Curiosities in their order And first as to what belongs properly especially in many cases to your self lest by too long abstenance your Appetite should be paul'd I invite you to a Table furnished with dainties and really let you understand what your Behaviour must or ought to be abroad or at home and how if it comes to your turn you must handle your Knife and Fork c. in Carving the several sorts of Fowl Fish and Flesh of Beasts c. CHAP. VII Instructions for a Gentlewoman in her Behaviour at the Table abroad and at home with the Terms and Manner of Carving Fowl Flesh of Beasts and Fish with Directions to know the choicest pieces in either and such as are most acceptable THough you may think it strange and altogether a matter that might have been spared to instructed you as to Behaviour in a Marriage state yet let me tell you though I shall hereafter say something as to this Point yet the Behaviour of Youth differs from that of riper years and since it is an Introduction to other matters let your wonder cease and observe what follows Being at the Table in your due place observe to keep your Body strait and lean not by any means with your Elbows nor by ravenous Gesture discover a voracious Appetite Knaw no bones but cut your Meat decently with the help of your Fork make no noise in calling for any thing you want but speak softly to those that are next or wait to give it nor be so dis-ingenious as to shew your dislike of any thing that is before you if strangers be at the Table especially at anothers Table Eat not your Spoon-meat so hot that it makes your Eyes water nor be seen to blow it Complain not of a queazy stomack wipe your Spoon every time you dip it in the dish if you eat Spoon-meat with others eat not too fast nor unseemly neither be nice or curious at the Table by mincing or mimping as if you liked not the Meat or the Company where you see variety yet reach not after them but stay till you have an opportunity and then shew an indifferency as to your choice and if it chance to happen you have a Plate with some piece you fancy not presented wait your opportunity till it be taken away and changed no● be inquisitive for that is uncomely to know what such a Fowl or such a Joynt cost no● discourse of Bills of Fare take not in you● Wine or other liquor too greedily nor drink till you are out of breath but do things with decency and order If you are abroad a● Dinner let not your hand be first in an● dish nor take your place unseemly neithe● be induced to Carve though the Mistriss 〈◊〉 the house out of a complement intreat it unless you see a necessity for it and wher● ever you Carve keep your fingers from your mouth throw not any thing over you● shoulder neither take or give any thing on that side where a Person of Quality or one much above you is seated nor reach your arms over other dishes to reach at what you like better And so leaving what else is requisite in this kind to be observed I proceed to give you First the Terms of Carvers Secondly the manner of Carving and Thirdly Directions to know the best pieces c. And of these in their order First That you may the better be enabled to direct those you appoint to Carve if you Carve not your self the most expert in that dextery give the following Terms by way of distinguishment and properly in the cutting up all manner of small Birds the direction for it is Thighing them as Larks Woodcocks Pigeons c. Directions for cutting up a Plover is to mince it a Quail and Partridge to wing them a Pheasant to ●lay it a Curlew to untie it a Bittern to unjoynt it a Peacock to disfigure it a Crane to display it a Hern to dismember ●t a Mallard to unbrace it a Chicken to ●n frust it a Swan to lift it a Goose
Powder then grate a Nutmeg and put it to it with two ounces of the blood of a Dog dried and powdered mingle them together and give the grieved party a dram morning and evening in White-wine or new Milk. An Excellent Powder for hollow Ulcers Take Frankincense Mastick Myrrh Sarcocol Bole-armorick Dragons blood and ●arly-meal of each an ounce make them ●nto a Powder and sprinkle a little of it in the Ulcer c. and bind it up which often doing will fill it with flesh A Powder to Incarnate any Wound Take of Hog-Fennel half an ounce Flowerdelize five drams Myrrh three grains ●he greater and lesser Centaury of each two ●rams Round Aristolocia Tuttioe Oppoponax Meal of Orobus each two drams and a half ●eat them into fine Powder and strew them ●pon the wound as you see occasion An Excellent Powder to stay the bleeding of Wounds c. Take Quick-Lime Dragons Blood Al●es Frankincense Copperas of each four ●rams incorporate them and being finely ●owdered with Cobwebs and the White of ●n Egg apply the Powder by sprinkling it ●n the wound An Excellent Poultis for any Ach Sprain or Dislocation Take of Smallage Marshmallows Cammomile and Groundsil each a handful well ●icked stamp them and fry them in six ounces of Barrows grease with the yolks of two Eggs and apply them as hot as may be well endured to the place grieved An Excellent Powder in case of the Small Pox or any Infectious distemper Take half an ounce of English Saffron dry it till it may be pulverized add to it six grains of Bezoar-stone a dram of Myrrh and an ounce of white Sugar-candy Incorporate them and let the party take a dram at a time in White-wine not exceeding a spoonfull An Excellent Confection to preserve against t●● Plague or any Pestilential disease as al● from the effects of bad Airs Take green Walnuts number six Bau●● and Rue of each a handfull Plantane an● Bettony the like quantity bruise them wit● fine Sugar and Spirit of Wine then dry th● whole matter in an Oven or Stove till it becomes as solid as Conserve of Roses and le● the party take fasting as much as a Hazle-nu● For the Consumption an Excellent Receipt Take the Hearts of three Sheep new killed cleansed from the blood and strings soak them a night and a day in White-wine dry them again and put them into a new glazed Pipkin covering them above and below with Rosemary-branches then add Cloves Sugar Harts-horn of each three ounces and four ounces of white Sugar-candy and as much Asses Milk as will cover them then stop them close with Paste and let them stand in an Oven the Baking o● Houshold-bread after that press out the liquid part and take a spoonful morning and evening An Excellent Drink for the Windiness of the Stomack or Spleen Take a handful of Broom-buds the like quantity of Anniseeds of the Roots of Scabeous an ounce boil them in a quart of new Ale sweeten the liquid part with brown Sugar and drink half a quartern hot at a time morning and evening or when you find your self oppressed and in so continuing it for a week you will find great relief The Lord Denise's Excellent Medicine for the Gout how to make and apply it Take four handfulls of Burdock-leaves with the stalks on shread them and bruise them strain out the Juyce and clarifie it adding half the quantity of Olive-oyl and keep it close stopped in a glass and as you use it apply it with a hot cloth to the place grieved To make Gascoign-Powder Take of white Amber Seed Pearls Harts-horn Eyes of Crabs and white Corral of each half an ounce of the black Thighs of Crabs calcined before they are boiled two ounces adding to every ounce before mentioned an ounce of Oriential Bezoar bruise and serace them to a fine Powder and it is excellent two scruples of it drunk in a spoonfull of Wine to expell evil vapours from the brain to comfort and corroborate the heart and restore a decaying constitution and for the better keeping you may make it into Lozenges with the Jelly of Harts-horn and Saffron For the Dropsie Take Setwell Calamus-aromaticus and Galingale of each an ounce of Spikenard hal● an ounce bruise them and hanging in a bag let them be covered with two gallons o● Ale the which at four days end let the party drink morning and evening To make an Excellent Water for any Disease in the Eyes Take half a pint of White-wine and as much of white Rose-water of the Water of Celendine Rue Eye-bright and Fennel each two ounces of Prepared Tuttiae six ounces of Cloves as many of Sugar-Rosate a dram mix them over a soft fire and being clarified wash your Eyes therewith as you see occasion To break the Wind. Take the Juyce of red Fennel and Anni-seed in warm Ale. To prevent spitting Blood. Take Rue Smallage Mint and Bettony boil them in new Milk and drink the liquid part as hot as you can To stay bleeding at the Nose Take the Juyce of Bettony with a small quantity of Salt in it and snuff it up your Nose ●●d stop it in with the Herb the Juyce of ●●ung Nettles and Sugar is good upon the ●●e occasion To kill a Fellon Take the hard roasted yolk of an Egg ●●d beating it with a roasted Onion lay it to ●●e place grieved ●● make an Excellent Salve for a Scald Burn 〈◊〉 Cut or any old Sore Take a pint of Olive-oyl half a pound of ●ees-wax red Lead three ounces red Wine ●wo ounces and Deers-suet three ounces ●oil them together in a glazed Earthen-vessel ●ll they are of a darkish colour and then ●ake it up into a Salve for your use To remove the Pain of the Tooth-ach Take Henbane-seed Hysop-seed and the ●owder of the root of black Helebore bruise ●hem together and make them up into small ●ellets with a little Tar or Turpentine If ●●e Tooth be hollow stop it in with Lint if ●ot let it lye between your Cheek and ●um For the Feaver Take two handfulls of Wood-sorrel the ●ke of the Leaves of Barberries boil them 〈◊〉 spring-Spring-water sweeten it with Sugar and give the party two scruples of Bezoar-po●der in a quarter of a pint of it and it wond●fully prevails against the distemper Many more things there are that rem● fitting for a Gentlewoman to know but 〈◊〉 to be tedious I shall refer them to your S●●vants in their several places and station And supposing you by this time to have re●ed the fruits of a chaste and happy Marriag● and blessed with a tender yet smiling O● spring that it may flourish Taking my lea●● Madam of you I shall proceed to give yo● Nurse and Nursery-Maid instructions and ●●rections and so to the rest in order CHAP. X. The wet Nurse her Duty and Office and how s●ought to be qualified that undertakes so gre● a charge With directions how she ought to 〈◊〉 her self as to her Diet and by what
means keep her Milk in good temper c. AS for Directions to a dry Nurse who● business it is to look after a Gentlewoman when she lyes in it will not be ami● to wave them since few that undertake su●● a charge are ignorant what is necessary as 〈◊〉 Usage and Diet Nor is the Midwife in th● case wanting to give Directions if the Ge●tlewoman her self as few are after the first ●ing in were ignorant in that affair ●herefore intending to say something of it treating of the Duty and Office of a Mid●fe I willingly here omit it and proceed to ●e Charge and Office of a wet Nurse whose ●re it is to bring up Children till a conve●ency offer to wean them And first I shall ●scribe what manner of Person a good ●urse ought to be In this case a good Nurse ought to be of a ●iddle-stature plump of body though not ●ver corpulent of a sanguine complection ●easant and cheerfull clear skinn'd and well ●oportioned For her Conditions they must be sutable ●nger must be a stranger to her and her de●ght naturally in Children not drowsie nor ●lf-conceited her Age must be a Medium ●etween five and twenty and forty being ●ne that has been well Educated and see ●e want for nothing for if she be necessitaed the Child must pine or if Sickness hap●en through accident or disorder her Milk ●s injured thereby Yet Temperance must ●e her greatest care for fear by excess of ●eat or drink the Milk be corrupted or in●amed and in all things her care of her ●harge must let her Prudence appear Take 〈◊〉 Woman whose Child was a Boy to Nurse ●ne of that kind and on the other side the contrary considering she ought not to 〈◊〉 with child during the discharge of this g●● Office least she spoil both her Nursery a● that she goes with A Nurse in this case ought in her Diet avoid salt Meats Onions Garlick Lee● Mustard too much Salt Vinegar or Pepp● and such like things as create bad nutrime● or inflame and heat the blood Strong dr● immoderately must be shunn'd for that w● occasion a super-abounding of Choler in t● Child as Cheese and Fish will Melancho● and Phlegm nor ought she to sleep sudda●ly after Meals but be active and in motion 〈◊〉 create a natural digestion a good Air oug● to be chosen for the more kindly respiratio● for a gross Air is frequently the occasion o● dull wit and much corpulency and a pu● thin Air of the contrary the Air on ma● occasions being advantageous or disadva●tageous to the faculties of Life or passions the Mind in their several operations it bei● a kind of a food to the Intellectuals As for the Milk divers things are to 〈◊〉 considered but the chief is wholsome a● moderate Diet and to correct defects L● her observe if her Milk be too hot which o●ten appears by the Childs frowardness if let the Nurse take in her Posset-drink Salad 〈◊〉 Pottage Endive Succory Lettice Sorr●● Plantane or such like cooling Herbs If s●● ●d it too cold which will appear by the ●●ilds over-drowsiness let her do the like ●th Cinamon Vervine Bugloss Mother ●ime or Burrage To cause Milk where it is wanting Take ●art of the Hoof of the fore-foot of a Cow ●●lcined to Powder a dram of which let ●e Nurse drink morning and evening in ●arm Cows Milk or Ale. For want of the former Take Lady-Thistle stamp it and squeeze out the Juyce which boiled in Milk an ounce to a pint you may conveniently take drinking it off warm And thus being careful in seasonably order●ng the Child in dressing undressing and what ●n the like nature is convenient no doubt it will thrive and come to perfection The best Colour of a Child when new-born is red which soon turns to a Rosey for those that are white if they live will be subject to diseases A little crying if not too often eases the brain of watery-matter and inlarges the Lungs but too much crying occasions Catarrhs and Ruptures The first month it must only suck often changing the breast but not over-charging its stomack after which a pap of white Bread and Milk seasonably given between whiles will strengthen it and let there be an hour between sucking and feeding using it in that manner till the Teeth come The Teeth coming forth by degrees gi●● it more solid food not denying it Meat th●● is small cut and may be easily chewed Keep it well swathed and beware it stan● not too soon for fear of distorting the Leg● In such places as bathing of Children is co●venient omit it not from the seventh month twice a week till it is weaned At a twelvemonth old if it be health● wean it not giving it suddainly strong food but by degrees and the first seven years Diet ought to be such as by it's nourishment causeth growth And from this I shall proceed to say somewhat of Diseases incident to Children and prescribe Remedies which Nurses ought to use on sundry occasions CHAP. XI Of Distempers in Infants and how to Remedy them Together with Directions to the Nursery-Maid in the discharging her Duty and Office c. CHildren in their tender age are subject to many distempers wherefore a Nurse ought to be skilful in Medicines such as are prevalent on sundry occasions by reason 〈◊〉 Child may be lost before a Physitian can be ●●d Wherefore I shall give her Instructi●ns what to do in the most dangerous cases For the Epilepsis or Convulsion Take Majestery of Cole a scruple of Male Piony-roots a scruple and as much of ●eaf Gold work them into a Powder and ●ive it the Child in a spoonfull of Breast-Milk For the Chasing of the Hips Change the Clouts often sprinkling on ●hem Litherage of Silver Seed and Leaves of Roses Frankincense and burnt Allum made ●nto a Powder or anoint them with white Ointment and Diapompholigos To remove the Stoppage of Urine Take Saxifrax-roots six drams Calcine ●hem with an ounce of the Blood of a Hare bruise them into a Powder and give the Child from a scruple to half a dram in a spoonful of White-wine For the Strutting of the Navel Use a Plaister or Poultis of Cumming Lupins and Bay-berries beaten into Powder and wet with White-wine For the Inflamation of the Navel Take a quarter of a handful of Mallows stamp them with half an ounce of Bar● meal and with Fenugreek and Lupins t● ounces of each make them into a Ca●plasm with Oyl of Roses and apply them the place grieved To destroy Worms Take of Worm-seed two drams and Coralline and Harts-horn prepared each dram Roots of Piony Dittany Majeste● of Coral each a scruple make them into Powder and give a scruple at a time in spoonful of Peach-flower water For Vomiting Take a quarter of an ounce of Honey Roses and the like quantity of Syrup Mint and give it the Child at four times For the Hickets Take Mastick an ounce Dill and Fran●incense of each
or Chickens and white Broth being frequently the first dish dress it after this manner Boil the Capon c. in water and salt then take three pints of the strongest Broth adding to it a quart of White-wine and a quarter of a pound of Dates stew it in a Pipkin and add half a pound of white Sugar and a small quantity of large Mace the Marrow of three Marrow-bones and of white Endive a handfull stew 'em leasurely and strain the yolk of ten Eggs with part of the Broth before the Capons or Chickens are dished up observing ●hat the Eggs curdle not the Fowls being dished up garnish the dish with Dates Mace Endive and Preserved Barberries Red or Fallow Deer how to Roast Take a Side or half the Hanch and parboil it so doing stuff it with all manner of sweet Herbs mingled with minced Beef-suet day the Caul over and roast it in that manner when it is enough serve it up with Vinegar Bread Claret-wine Ginger and Cloves boiled up with a few sprigs of Rosemary Neats-Tongues roasted Take a large Tongue boiled tender blanched and cold make a hole at the large end and take out a great part of the Meat mince it and put it in again with sweet Herbs hard yolks of Eggs Pippins Ginger Beef-suet all minced small and stop up the hole with a Caul of Veal Lard it and being roasted serve it up with Butter Gravy and Juyce of Oranges garnishing the dish with Barberries and slices of Lemon Neats-Tongue and Udder how to boil Let both of these be fair and young indifferently seasoned boil them in Water a little seasoned with Salt and Pepper and when you find they are sufficiently done blanch the Tongue slice it in half lay it on each side the Udder serve 'em up with carved Sipits run over with Butter and Vinegar garnish your dish with Parsley Barberries and Marigold-leaves How to boil Land or Sea-Fowl Take the larger sort half roast 'em put them after that into a Pipkin with Claret-wine the Gravy and as much strong Broth as will cover them add Pepper Cloves Mace Ginger a slice or two of Onion and a little Salt all being well stewed together serve them up with Sipits and green Garnish as Violet or Marigold-leaves c. The smaller sort of Wild-fowl as Blackbirds Plovers Quails Rails Thrushes Snites Larks cut off the heads and legs truss and boil them scum your boyler and add White-wine Currans Dates Marrow Pepper and Salt being all well boyled or stewed dish them on carved Sipits sawce them with rose-Rose-water Sugar and beaten Almonds garnish the dish with Almonds beaten small rose-Rose-water and Sugar To roast a Hare Observe when she is cased not to cut off ●er hinder Legs nor Ears but thrust one Leg ●hrough the Ham of the other and making 〈◊〉 slit do the like by the Ears and so roast her as you do a Rabit The proper sawce is Marjorum Thyme Winter-savory Beef-●uet hard yolks of Eggs sweet Butter Sugar Nutmeg Water and Vinegar minced and boil up to a sawce serving your Hare up whole To roast a Shoulder of Mutton the best way Take Oysters parboiled mince Winter-savory the yolks of hard Eggs grated Bread mingle them together all but the Oyster being small and then making holes in convenient places stuff them in as you see convenient about five or six and twenty Oysters being sufficient and the other Oysters with the like Ingredients put into half a pint of Claret add three or four slices of Onion and a couple of Anchoveys to them put the Gravy with the yolks of two beaten Eggs and a sufficient quantity of Nutmeg and sweet Butter garnish your dish with Lemon-peel and Barberries To boil Pigeons with Rice Observe to stuff their Bellies with sweet Herbs then put them into your boiler with Mutton-broth boil a small quantity of Rice in Cream with a blade or two of Mace which being seasoned with Sugar lay them in the dish with their Breasts upward and lay it thick upon them squeese in the Juyce of two Lemons garnish the dish with Marigold-flowers and serve it up To roast an Udder First let the Udder be boiled and stuck full of Cloves spit it when cold and baste it with sweet Butter being sufficiently browned draw it back make sawce of grated Bread Butter Vinegar and Cinamon lay it in the dish with Sugar as a garnishment and serve it up To Stew a Carp. Take the largest well-trimmed Carp gut it wash it and lay it in a Pewter-dish take half a pint of White-wine with a piece of Butter Mace Parsley Thyme and Winter-savory minced small put them into the fishes belly and let it stew a quarter of an hour mince then the hard yolks of two Eggs lay it with the Herbs about it and sprinkling on Sugar serve it up To bake Steaks in the French fashion With Pepper Nutmeg and Salt season your ●eaks lightly take the lean part of a Leg 〈◊〉 Mutton mince it small with some Beef-●et and sweet Herbs as Thyme Peneroyal ●d Marjorum take grated Bread yolks of ●ggs Raisins of the Sun of each a like quan●y work them into rolls and put them ●n the Steaks in a deep round Pye sprinkle ●em with Verjuyce and close them up li●uoring it with the Juyce of two or three ranges To boil a Fore-Loin of Pork the best way Season it indifferently and boil it well ●en have in readiness Sorrel stripped a con●derable quantity beat it and put to it ●me crumbs of Bread and hard yolks of ●ggs with Mustard and Salt and so serve it 〈◊〉 the dish being garnished with green ●aves 〈◊〉 dress a Leg of Mutton to the best advantage In salt and water boil it for the space of an ●our then cut it into thin slices set it in a ●sh over the fire adding a little Salt grated ●utmeg Shalot Thyme and Winter-savo● placing another dish upon it and stew●g it adding a piece of Butter serve it up ●e dish garnished with Pickled Oysters and ●rberries To boil a Brisket Surloin Chine Rump Flan● Fillet or Buttock of Beef to the best advantag● After a week or ten days powdering it left to your discretion whether or not yo● will stuff them which if you do it must 〈◊〉 done with such sweet Herbs as are sutabl● mingling minced Suet and Nutmeg with 〈◊〉 and thrust them in at convenient place● and being well boiled serve them in on Brui● with roots boiled in Milk. To Stew a Leg of Lamb the best way Take the Meat slice it and put it into yo● Stewing-pan season it well with Salt a●● Nutmeg add Butter Raisins in the Su● Currans and Gooseberries it being w● stewed take the yolks of four Eggs a qua●ter of a pint of Wine-vinegar two ounc● of Sugar beat them well together over gentle fire place it in the sawce strew S●gar over it and serve it up To boil a Leg of Veal and Bacon the best way Take and Lard the former with Bacon
a● a small quantity of Lemon-peel take a c●●venient piece of Bacon and boil with it a●● when your Bacon is boiled cut it in piec● and season it with dried Sage and Pep● small beaten lay the Bacon about the Ve● and serve it with Sawcers of green saw● ●arnished with Marigold-flowers Barberries ●●d Parsley A Rump of Beef to Stew the best way Let your Beef be seasoned with Salt Pep●er and Nutmeg lay the fat side downward 〈◊〉 an Earthen-pan then put in an equal po●on of Water and Elder-vinegar to the quan●y of three quarts add two Onions and ●alf a handfull of the tops of Rosemary and ●●ewing it three hours over a soft fire take it 〈◊〉 and dish it with Sipits garnishing with ●emon-peel and sawcing with the Gravy ●●e fat being scummed off To bake a Hare the best way Take a large Hare minced and well sea●●ed with beaten Mace Salt and Pepper ●aking a proportion of the head and shoul●rs and lay in a layer of Flesh and Lard ●●d Butter above and beneath and serve it with Gallentine sawce in Sawcers To roast a Rabit with Oysters the best way Take a large fat Rabit wash it and dry 〈◊〉 then half a pint of Oysters after the same ●●nner put them into the Belly of the Ra●● with a couple of shread Onions large ●●ce whole Pepper and sprigs of Thyme 〈◊〉 'em up and when the Rabit is roasted ●●ce them with Butter and the yolks of hard Eggs and dish the Rabit up garnishing th● dish with red Beet-roots and Orange-peel To Carbanado Hens or Pullets the best way Take half a dozen hard yolks of Egg● half a pint of White-wine and the Gravy mince the Eggs and boil them up with On●on or some Shalots add grated Nutmeg with a Ladle or two full of drawn Butter dish your Fowl pour the sawce on them garnishing your dish with Lemon-peel an● Violet-leaves To set off a dish of Marrow c. Take a pound of fine Paste rowl it ve●● thin and the Marrow taken whole out 〈◊〉 four bones cleave it in quarters season with Pepper Salt and Dates all minced la●ing one piece in your Paste framing it peacodwise and so use the rest then fry the● in Butter and Sugar and serve them up ga●nished with Borage-flowers To stew a Pheasant the best fashion or way Take a large Pheasant roast him till ●nough then boil it gently in Mutton-bro● adding whole Pepper Mace the slice or t● of an Onion Pruins Currans and Vinega● sufficient to make it sharp then colour 〈◊〉 Broth with bruised Pruins and serve up Pheasant in it To Carbinade Mutton the best way Broil a breast or shoulder of Mutton scot●hing it with your knife strow on them minced Thyme grated Nutmeg and a little Salt with Claret-wine Capers Gravy and a shread Shalot garnishing with a Lemon-peel To roast a Pig. Take a fat one cleanse his belly put into it minced Sage Currans Mace and gra●ed Nutmeg roast him indifferently by a soaking fire then make up a brisk fire to crackle him and serve him up with Currans Bread Sage Butter and Nutmeg made into a thin sawce with rose-Rose-water To stew Venison the best way Take fat Venison either raw or potted slice it and put it into your stewing-pan with Claret-wine Rosemary-tops Cloves Sugar Vinegar and grated Bread being well stewed add grated Nutmeg and serve it up garnished with Luke-Olives To make a Fricacy of Chickens the best way Take four or five Chickens about two months old scald and flea them put them in Water and White-wine then take a large Onion ten or twelve blades of Mace and the quantitity of a Nutmeg grated tye them up in a cloth with a bundle of sw●● Herbs and Salt put them into an Earthe●-pan and let them simper a while then ta●● three or four Anchoveys five or six Egg half a pound of the best Butter dissolved 〈◊〉 a pint of Mutton-broth shread the Spic● small with a quarter of a pound of Caper● mix them with the other sawce and layin● the Chickens upon it serve them up with S●pits garnished with sliced Lemon Thus yo● may dress and dish up Partridges or Pigeon● with only the abatement of the Eggs. To Stew a Fillet of Beef the newest way Take the tenderest and remove the Ski● and Sinews steep it in White-wine scattering on it a small quantity of Pepper and Salt then covering it with Wine add more Pepper and keeping it close down with 〈◊〉 waight suffer it to steep two nights an● a day when taking it out put it into a● Earthen-pot with Beef-broth cover it on 〈◊〉 gentle fire adding a few Cloves and Mace● and standing over the fire till it is tender i● will be of an admirable taste serve it u● with the Broth. The newest way to boil a Wild-Duck The Duck being half roasted take her of the Spit put her into a Pan with a pint o● Claret and as much Mutton-broth three Onions cut and a bundle of sweet Herbs ●ee or four slices of Bacon and some whole ●pper cover the Pan with another and ●hen it is stewed or boiled sufficiently ●●ve it up with the Broth. To bake a Pig the best way Take a Pig and dress him well as for roast●g mould him up in a coffin of Clay but●ed a little within put him into an Oven ●ght hours so that the Clay being dried the ●g will be very crisp then serve him up ●th sawce as for roasting 〈◊〉 boil a Pullet Capon or Chicken the best way Truss them and put them into Mutton-●oth with Mace Spinage and Endive Ma●●gold-flowers Bugloss Borage Sorrel and ●●rsley and when they are enough garnish ●●e dish with Borage and Marigold-flowers ●●d serve them up in Sipits To boil a Capon or Chicken with Sugar-pease Take the Pease when young and dry ●●em in the cods taking them from thence 〈◊〉 the quantity of two or three handfulls ●●t them into an Earthen-vessel with about ●●lf a pound of fresh Butter and near half a ●at of fair Water add whole Pepper Mace ●●d Olive-oyl of each a small quantity and ●ur Capon and Chicken being well boiled strain the Pease and other Ingredients a●● serve them up as sawce with the yolks of t●● or three Eggs and half a quartern of Sack. To hash a Capon or Pullet the best way Take either of them cold after havi●● been roasted take out the brains and min● them small with the flesh of the wings th● take off the legs and rump intire then a●● strong Broth and Gravy sliced Nutmeg Onion and Salt and stew the divided par● in a large Pipkin and when they are w● stewed add some Oysters Juyce of Orang● and a yolk of an Egg and serve them up 〈◊〉 Sipits garnished with Oranges sliced a● Flowers And thus any Fowl of this or t● like kind may be hashed To boil a Pullet or Capon with Asparagrass Boil the Fowl in fair water put bruis● Mace chopped Parsley and sweet Butter in its
belly tying up the vent being boile● take out the Parsley and Mace garnishi●● the dish with it in which have Asparagra● ready boiled place it in good order To fry a Rabit with sweet Sawce Cut it in pieces orderly and wash it wel● then dry it in a coth and fry it with swe● Butter being half fryed slice some of it v●ry small put it into a quarter of a pint 〈◊〉 Cream the yolks of two Eggs some grated Nutmeg and Salt when the Rabit is thoroughly fryed pour them upon it and keep 'em stirring adding Verjuyce fresh Butter and Sugar a like quantity and serve them up with Sipits garnishing the dish with any green thing To Stew a Mallard First let it be half roasted then cut it into small pieces putting it into a dish with Gravy fresh Butter and a handfull of minced Parsley with two or three Onions and a hard Lettice let them stand an hour then add Pepper Salt and Lemon-juyce and serve it up with Sipits and a garnish of Lemon-peel To fry a Neats-Tongue the best way The Tongue being boiled and blanched cut it season it with Cinamon grated Nutmeg and Sugar then add yolks of Eggs and Lemons cut in small pieces frying them in spoonfulls with sweet Butter then heat it hot pour on your Tongue the sawce and sugar and serve it up To boil a Haunch of Venison in the best manner Stuff it with sweet Herbs Parsley and Beef-suet minced small as likewise with the yolk of hard Eggs the stuffing materials being seasoned with Salt Nutmeg and Ginger and the Venison being powdered boil it in strong Broth and in another pot two or three Colleflowers adding to them a quart of new Milk and they being taken up boil in the same liquor a handfull or two of Sorrel o● Spinage then part of the Broth being taken away put in Vinegar sweet Butter grated Bread and Nutmeg then lay the Spinage upon sipits round the dish laying the Venison in the middle and Colliflowers in order garnishing the dish with Parsley Spinage and Marigold-flowers To roast a Goose in the newest fashion Draw your Goose and put her on a Spit laying her to a gentle fire which you must increase by degrees then take nine or ten soft Apples or Pippins for want of them boi● them in a pint of White-wine sweeten them with Sugar and then add a small quantity o● Mustard when they are come to a pulp and a spoonfull of rose-Rose-water stir them well and put it in Sawcers apart though for gree● Geese the sawce is generally the Juyce o● Sorrel scalded Gooseberries Butter and Sugar To boil a Pike the best way Wash and gut it bring the head and ta● together in a circle scotching the back t● make it pliable boil it in Water Salt an● Vinegar putting it in when the water boils it being enough take it out and serve it up with Ginger grated Bread Butter White-wine Oysters Dates and the Juyce of Lemons garnished with green Leaves or Flowers To Stew a Pike the best way Wash out the blood flat it and lay it in a dish cover it with White-wine add when it boils whole Cinamon Mace Salt and sweet Butter and dish it up on sipits To boil a Salmon the best way Cover it with Water add Rosemary and Thyme-tops Winter-savory and Salt then add more a pint of Vinegar and serve it up with Butter the Juyce of Lemons and Anchoveys made into sawce To roast an Eel the best way Take one pretty large Eel take out the ●ntrails after it is skinned then fill the belly with sweet Herbs and Butter beaten together ●n a Mortar after that draw the skin over again and fasten the Eel with strings to the Spit and moderately roast it then with the Herbs Anchovey-sawce and Butter together with the Gravy serve it up To roast a Lobster the best way Take a large one whilst alive bind up th● claws and fasten it to the Spit before a gentle fire baisting it first with Water and Salt then with Butter and Claret-wine and whe● it is enough break the shell take out the Meat and serve it up with Anchovey-sawce and stewed Oysters To roast a Pound of Butter Lay your Butter in water till it be ver● stiff then fix it upon a small Spit lay i● down before a gentle fire and as soon as i● begins to drop dredg Bread on it and so continue to do adding a little beaten Cinamon and Sugar till the Bread has soaked up all the Butter which done make the out-side brown and serve it up in the nature of a Quaking pudding with Verjuyce Butter Rose-wate● and Sugar To make Sauseages the best way Take a Leg of Pork divide the fat fro● the lean and chop the latter small with Ma●jorum Peny-royal Thyme and Winter savory adding Salt Pepper and a little Ginge● together with half the quantity of Meat 〈◊〉 Beef-suet and being very small fill it i● Sheeps-guts with a Whalebone-fescue an● dry them in a Chimney for your use To dress a dish of Anchoveys the hest way Take the best Leghorn Fish about a year ●ld not being rusty wash them and smooth ●ff the white and scales divide them equally 〈◊〉 four quarters at length lay one laying wa●ing in and out and between them another ●rait in the figure of a Star making of the ●ones the figure of a Crown and placing it 〈◊〉 the center of the dish garnish it with L●●ois Olives Sampher Pickled Barberries Pickled Broom-buds Mushroons Capers and slices of Pickle Cucumbers in what form ●ou please adding a sufficient quantity of Oyl and Vinegar How to dress a dish of Caveer the best way Take that which is not rusty nor over●ried steep it in the best Florence-Oyl for ●he space of an hour then take it out and work it with a little Vinegar and Pepper into 〈◊〉 form or figure as best fancies you and then garnish it with Olives and Barberries ser●ing it up with Oyl The best way to dress a dish of Pickle-Herrings Take new Herrings or the best you can get take off the skins and take out the bones ●●ice the Herrings and mince them very small ●hen shread Pickle-Cucumbers Shalots or Onions Lemon-peel Codlings Pippins or Pome-waters mix the whole matter with Capers Barberries and Broom-buds garnish the dish with Olives French-beans and Mushroons make it into a figure add Oyl Vinegar and Pepper and serve it up or if you please you may garnish it with Pickled-Oysters To set out a dish of Pickles Place in the midst your Cucumber then your large Olives then French-Beans at length and small Olives between them then Mushroons and Capers and on the edges of the dish Pickled Grapes Pickled Gilli-flowers and Broom-buds and so serve them up How to Pot Fowl in order to their keeping by Sea or Land c. Roast Ducks Mallards Teals Widgeons Pigeons or Chickens drain them from the Gravy and put into the bellies of them a little Pepper and Salt
beyond what I have mentioned in other matters and chiefly in these Observations 1. Observe your Flower be fine and free from Bran or any defect and having laid it on a smooth Table or in a Kneading-Trough 2. Heat your Liquor suffering it to simper scumming off what arises and if it be for Tarts Custards or the like let it be fair water with a small Ingredient of Rose-water and Malaga-wine so that it taste of either But for larger Pyes made with Meat or the like add Butter a pound to two quarts of liquor ●nd to either of them in moulding Eggs or New-Ale-yest according as you would have ●our Paste light or solid which I leave to your discretion 3. As for those that are to be raised very ●hin work them up cold but those of largeness that will admit a good substance for the more ease and pliableness let the Paste be warm working them into a form with your Hands Roaler Nippers Spur-iron Knife and Plate Mark the Garnishing or flourish on ●he lid or sides I leave likewise to your discretion But that you may the better understand the form of the most curious thing of this nature I have caused them to be incerted in the following Pages and so proceed to the filling them c. To make an Oyster-Pye Let the Oysters be parboiled in their own liquor wash and dry them season them with Nutmeg Pepper Salt and the hard yolks of Eggs and the Pye being made Oval put into it Currans and sliced Dates and on them lay the Oysters add large Mace Barberries sliced Lemon and Butter and when it is baked put into it White-wine Sugar and Butter To make a Veal-Pye the best way Raise your Paste well cut a Leg of Vea● in slices season it with Salt Pepper and Nutmeg adding some large Mace laying the Meat with Raisins of the Sun and Currans in the Pye and fill it with Butter and when baked serve it up hot The best way to make a Carp-Pye Draw scald and wash a large Carp or two season him or them with Salt Pepper and Nutmeg then fill the Pye with them good store of Butter Raisins of the Sun slices of Orange and Juyce of Lemon close it up and bake it The best way to make a Chicken-Pye Truss your Chickens and flat the Breast-bones and having raised your Paste lay them in order filling their bodies with Butter laying above and beneath Raisins Currans Pruins Cinamon Sugar Mace and Salt with a convenient quantity of Butter and when it is baked pour in rose-Rose-water White-wine beaten Cinamon Sugar and Verjuyce with the which serve it up c. To make a Warden-Pye the best way First bake your Wardens gently in a little Water and Claret adding a pound of Sugar covering your Pot or Pan with a lid of dough ●d when they are cold lay them into your ●ye with Cloves Cinamon Sugar and a ●art of the liquor and bake it gently ●o make a Pye with Sweet-breads and Lamb-stones Slit your Lamb-stones skin and wash them ●ke the Liver of a Lamb shread it small ●nd slice an Udder-part of a Leg of Veal ●hich being seasoned with Mace Cloves Salt ●nd Nutmeg made small as also Pepper ●read into it three or four Pippins and the ●ke quantity of the peels of candied Lemons ●nd Oranges five or six Dates cut in the mid●le and stoned with Currans Carraway-●eeds white Sugar and half a pint of rose-Rose-water and Verjuyce add more a couple of Eggs make it into balls and with the Juyce ●f Sorrel green it laying a Sweet-bread and 〈◊〉 Lamb-stone till it is nearfull covering them with Citron-peel Dates and slices of Lemon ●nd being baked enough pour in Butter White-wine Sugar and the beaten yolks of ●ggs scraping Sugar on the lid to set it off To bake a Turkey the best way When your Turkey is parboiled Lard ●im season him with Pepper Salt Cloves ●nd Mace flat the Breast and put him into ●our Coffin or Pye and fill it with Butter when it is baked and cold and so serve it up To make an Artichoak-Pye the best way Take the bottoms of half a dozen Art● choaks boil them tender season them wit● Ginger Mace Salt and Sugar lay Marrow at the bottom of your Pye and them upon it cover them with Marrow sliced Dates Raisins of the Sun and being half baked put in a quarter of a pint of Canary wherein Orange-peel has been boiled then bake it well To make a Marrow-Pudding the best way Blanch a pound of Almonds beat them small with rose-Rose-water take a pound of fin● Sugar grate a penny white Loaf and a Nutmeg add a pint of Cream the Marrow o● two or three bones and a grain or two o● Amber-grease mingle them with a littl● salt fill the skin you intend it shall be in and boil it moderately The best way to make a Custard Take and boil a quart of Cream wit● whole Spice beat the yolks of ten Eggs and five Whites with a little Cream put them into the Cream when cold then put it into Paste strew Comfits on it and bake it To make an Umble-Pye the best way as has bee● Approved Take Beef-suet mince it and lay it in you● Coffin or if you please slices of Larded Ba●on then take your Umbles and cut them ●to small pieces as big as Hazle-nuts and ●our Bacon about the same bigness then ●ake grated Nutmeg Pepper and Salt strew ●hem on the top then lay a laying of Bacon ●nd on that another of Butter and so close it ●p and being baked liquor it with stripped ●hyme Claret and Butter well beaten together A Venison-Pasty the best way to make Having well powdered your Haunch or ●ide and cleared it from sinews bones and ●kin season it with Pepper and Salt and beat 〈◊〉 with your Roaler making it proportionable for a Pasty then make your Paste with ●●ne Flower allowing to a peck three pound ●f Butter and twelve Eggs work it with ●old water to a convenient stiffness suffering ●t to be as thick as your thumb then take it ●pon your Roaler and open it again upon a ●ouple of sheets or so much as will serve of ●ap-paper and having your White minced ●nd beaten with water lay it proportionably ●pon the Pasty to the breadth and length of ●he Venison then in the White lay the Veni●on and wash it round with a feather put on ●he border season the top of the Venison and ●urn over the other leaf and so close your ●asty then drive out another border for garnishing the Pasty from the sides to th● top the device of which is left to your di●cretion then vent it at the top set it into 〈◊〉 well-heated Oven and suffer it to soak as i● ought viz. four or five hours then draw it and pour Butter well melted in at the top To make an Excellent Minced-Pye Take Neats-Tongues parboil them till they may be peel'd then mince them with a like quantity of
Beef-suet stoned Raisins and picked Currans make them in a manner like pap then mingle a little fine Sugar with a glass or two of old Mallaga then add slices of candied Citron-peel and put the whole being well mingled into a coffin the form o● which is left to your discretion and strew on it a few Caraway-comfits and so bake it moderately To make an Eel-Pye the best way Take the best silver Eels indifferent large strip gut and wash them cut them to pieces at about a fingers length shread a handfull of sweet Herbs with some Parsley and an Onion season them with Pepper Salt beaten Cloves Mace and grated Nutmeg when the coffin or crust being reared and fashioned to your mind put them in and strew over them some Currans and a few slices of Lemon over that put a laying of Butter and ●lose your coffin with the lid and when the Pye is baked put in Butter melted with a ●ittle Vinegar and beaten up with the White of an Egg. The best way to make a Gooseberry-Tart Take your Gooseberries before they are ●ipe being well picked scald them till they will break in a Spoon then strain out the ●ulp and beat it up with half a dozen Eggs and stir them well together on a chafing-dish of coles adding rose-Rose-water and sweetning ●hem with Sugar and when it is cold you may put it into your coffin and moderately ●ake it or serve it up in Plates without baking To make a Pippin or Codling-Tart or of any such like Fruit. Take your Pippins gather'd before they are over ripe pare them and take the core clear off strew some Sugar and rose-Rose-water on them and each Pippin being cut in four quarters lay them in order between every ●aying place thin slices of Quince then add syrup of Quinces or of the same fruit after that strow over the Sugar mixed with a little Cinamon and closing all up in the coffin bake them gently that they may be well soaked To make a Paste of Marrow c. Take the Marrow of six bones shrea● them with a considerable quantity of Apple● well pared and cored then add a sufficien● quantity of Sugar and put them into a Puff● paste and having fryed them in a Pan wit● sweet Butter serve them up with Sugar an● Cinamon To make a Pye of Calves-feet the best way Having boiled your Calves-feet well tak● out the bones and grissles as many as are convenient shread them as small as you can an● season them with Cloves and Mace add t● them a good quantity of Currans Raisins and Dates the latter well stoned then with a sufficient quantity of sweet Butter put the● into your coffin breaking on them som● whole Cinamon and sliced Nutmeg the scatter over them some Salt and close the● up leaving a vent to pour in when the Pye i● baked a quantity of Verjuyce beaten Cinamon and fresh Butter well beaten together To make the best Cakes Take a sufficient quantity of fine Flower a quarter the weight of it in picked and washed Currans a pound of Carraway-comfits half a pound of Marmalade of Oranges th● ●olks of a dozen Eggs half a pint of Malm●y or Mallaga a quarter of a pint of rose-Rose-water Mould them together with a little New-Ale-yest and as much Milk as will ●ake them up into Cakes then Ice them ●ver with Sugar or wash them over with ●anary well beat with the yolk of an Egg ●nd bake them in a gentle Oven To make the best Cheese-cakes Take new Milk and put as much Runnet ●o it as will well bring it to a Curd then ●rain out the Whey in a cloth between two ●atts which done beat up the Curd with ●he yolk of Eggs White-wine rose-Rose-water ●nd Sugar after that add as many Currans ●s you see convenient then having made ●our Puff-paste of fine Flower Eggs Milk ●nd New-Ale-yest put it into a fashion and ●eing well knit at the corners and rowled ●ith a Pastry-spur put in the Curd and wash 〈◊〉 over with the yolk of an Egg using a fea●er for that purpose CHAP. XV. How to make several Sawces for Roast or Boile on all occasions AND now since many have been des●rous to have an account of Sawces i● General I think it not amiss to place it as a Appendix to Cookery and further to give th● Reader an account of the seasonable Bills o● Fare much observed by the Curious for every Month in the Year But of these in the● order The general Sawce for green Geese 〈◊〉 Gooseberries scalded and coloured agai● with the Juyce of Sorrel strewed over wit● Butter and Sugar and served up on Sipits and for most Land-fowl the pulp of stewe● Pruins the Gravy Cinamon Ginger and S●gar boiled up to a thickness and served 〈◊〉 in Sawcers For roasted Mutton the general Sawc● are Capers Sampher the Gravy a sliced Sh●lot and a little Pepper stewed together 〈◊〉 Claret-wine Ginger the Gravy and an On●on For boiled Mutton Take Verjuyce Bu●ter Currans Sugar and a little Cinamon mix them well over a fire and serve the● up with Sipits or White-broth made of gr●ted Bread Currans rose-Rose-water and Sugar with the yolks of two Eggs. The general Sawce for roast Veal is Juyce of Orange Butter Verjuyce grated Nutmeg and Claret-wine or sweet Herbs chopped small with the yolks of two or three Eggs boiled hard in Vinegar Butter and grated Bread Currans beaten Cinamon and whole Cloves for boil'd Veal Green-sawce For red Deer sweet Herbs chopped small the Gravy with the Juyce of an Orange or Lemon and grated Bread or Vinegar Claret-wine Ginger Cinamon and Sugar boiled up with a sprig of Rosemary some whole Cloves and grated Bread and if you stuff or farce your Venison let it be with whole Cloves sweet Herbs and Beef-suet the two latter cut very small For roast Pork Apples quartered boiled in fair water and the pulp mixed with Butter Sugar and a little Verjuyce or Sugar Mustard Pepper and the Gravy For boiled Pork chopped Sage boiled Onions Pepper Mustard and grated Bread or Mustard Vinegar and Pepper For Rabits Sage Parsley Butter Vinegar and the Gravy or beaten Butter Vinegar and Pepper For a boiled Rabit Onions sweet Herbs Pepper grated Bread and Sugar served on Sipits For Hens roasted the Gravy Claret-wine Pepper and an Onion boiled with the Head Neck or Gizard or beaten Butter the Juyc● of a Lemon Pepper and the yolks of hard Eggs For a Hen boiled white Broth and Sipits with Lemon-peel and the yolk of a● Egg minced small For roast Chickens Butter Verjuyce th● Gravy or Butter Vinegar boiled up with Sugar and the substance of an Anchovey served up on thin slices of Bread For boiled Chickens strong Mutton-broth grated Bread chopped Parsley and the Juyce of a Lemon with a good piece of Butter wel● mixed and served up on Sipits in order For roasted Pigeons Verjuyce Butter and boiled Parsley shread into it and beate● thick or Claret-wine stewed Onion Gravy and
Pepper seasoned a little with Salt Fo● boiled Pigeons strong Mutton-broth the Juyce of Sorrel the yolks of Eggs beaten i● raw and a sprig of Rosemary or Sprout and Bacon For a Peacock Turkey Partridge Pheasant or the like roasted Boiled Shalots Pepper Salt grated Bread and Gravy or On●on grated Nutmeg Manchet the yolk o● Eggs Salt and the Juyce of Oranges boile● up to the thickness of Water-grewel o● bruise the kernels of small Nuts with grate● Bread Nutmeg Saffron Cloves the Juyc● of Oranges and strong Broth boil them up to a thickness For a stubble Goose slice pome-Pome-waters boil them soft Mash them in White-wine and add to the pulp Butter Sugar Verjuyce and the Gravy For a Mallard or Duck roasted Take Oyster-liquor the Gravy of the Fowl divided Onions Nutmeg and an Anchovey stew them together and serve it up in the liquid part or Vinegar Cloves and Sugar a blade of Mace and a Shalot If boiled take slices of Carrot shread Parsley and Winter-savory Mace Verjuyce and grated Bread. For any kind of Sea-fowl roasted Take grated Bread Cinamon Ginger and Sugar Claret and Wine-Vinegar boil them with Rosemary and Cloves to a convenient thickness strain them and serve them up as a very good sawce or Gravy Claret-wine an Onion and Pepper with a small piece of Butter For roasted Salmon Take Oyster-liquor a slice of Nutmeg the Gravy and the Juyce of Oranges and Butter beat them up to a thickness or beaten Cloves the Gravy grated Nutmeg and grated Bread beat up with Butter the yolk of an Egg and Vinegar For boiled Salmon Butter Vinegar Nutmeg and the Intrails of the Salmon To make an Excellent Green-Sawce to serve o● any occasion wherein it is requisite Take large Sorrel white Bread grated pared and cored Pippins some sprigs o● Mint a quantity of Verjuyce sufficient t● moisten it and being stamped very small scrape Sugar on it and mix it well together and so serve it up with Pork Veal Chickens Kid Lamb Gosling or the like the● being boiled For all sorts of small Birds roasted Take the Gravy Pepper Butter an● their Livers and Gizards minced with Parsley or the Gravy of a Capon Ginger an● the yolk of an Egg beaten together wit● a little Butter and Vinegar And thus muc● may suffize for Sawces so necessary to b● known by all that pretend to Cookery CHAP. XVI Directions to know what is in Season throughout the Twelve Months of the Year and what ought to be served up as the first and second Courses c. March. NEats-Tongues and Udders 2. Boiled Chickens 3. A dish of stewed Oysters with Anchovey-sawce 4. A dish of young Rabits 5. A grand Sallad Second Course 1. A dish of Soles or Smelts 2. A dish of Marinate-Flounders 3. A Pye of Lamb-●ones 4. Asparagrass if to be gotten 5. A Warden-Pye April 1. Green-Geese or Veal and Bacon 2. A ●oasted Haunch of Venison 3. A Lumber-Pye 4. Rabits 5. Tarts Second Course 1. Cold Lamb. 2. A cold Neats-Tongue Pye. 3. Salmon Lobsters and Prawns 4. A dish of Asgaragrass May. 1. Boiled Chickens 2. Roast Veal 3. Roast Capons 4. Roast Rabits Second Course 1. Artichoke-Pye just out of the Oven 2. Westphalia-ham 3. Tarts 4. Sturgeon Salmon Lobsters 5. A dish of Asparagrass 6. A Tansey Iune 1. Boiled Neats-Tongues or a Leg of Mutton and Colli-flowers 2. A Steak-Pye 3. A Shoulder of Mutton 4. A Fore-quarter of Lamb. Second Course 1. A Sweet-bread Pye. 2. A Capon roasted 3. A Gooseberry-Tart 4. Strawberries and Cream or Strawberries with rose-Rose-water White-wine and Sugar Iuly 1. A Westphalia-ham and Pigeons 2. A Loin of Veal 3. A Venison-Pasty 4. A Capon Second Course 1. Green-pease or French-beans 2. A Codling-Tart 3. Artichokes or an Artichoke-Pye 4. Roasted Chickens with Summer-sawce August 1. A Calves-head and Bacon 2. An Olio or grand-boiled savory Meat 3. A Haunch of Venison 4. A fat Pig well roasted with good sawce Second Course 1. Marinate Smelts 2. A Pigeon-Pye 3. A dish of roasted Chickens 4. A Pippin-Tart 5. Codlins and Cream September 1. Boiled Hens and white Broth. 2. Neats-Tongues and Udders roasted 3. A Powdered Goose 4. A roasted Turky Second Course 1. Potato-Pye 2. Roasted Partridges 3. A dish of Larks 4. A dish of Cream and seasonable Fruit. October 1. A Fillet of Veal 2. Two roasted Brand-geese 3. A grand Sallad 4. A roasted Capon Second Course 1. Pheasants Pigeons and Pouts 2. A dish of Quails and small Birds 3. A Warden-Pye 4. Tarts and Custards November 1. A shoulder of Mutton stuffed with Oysters 2. A Loin of Veal 3. A roasted Goose 4. A Venison-Pasty Second Course 1. A Larded Her● and another not Larded 2. A sowced Tarbet 3. Two Pheasants the one Larded and the other not 4. A Collar of Beef 5. A sowced Mullet and Base 6. Gellies and Tarts of Fruits in season December 1. Stewed Broth of Mutton and Marrow-bones 2. Lambs-head and White-broth 3. A roasted Chine of Beef 4. Minced Pyes 5. A Turky stuck with Cloves roasted 6. Two roasted Capons the one Larded the other not Second Course 1. A young Kid or Lamb roasted whole 2. A dish of Partridges 3. Polonian Sausages and a dish of Anchoveys garnished with Mushroons 4. A dish of Caveer and Pickled Oysters 5. A Quince-Pye 6. A dish of Woodcocks Ianuary 1. A Collar of Brawn and Mustard 2. A couple of Pullets boiled with White-broth 3. A roasted Turky 4. A hashed shoulder of Mutton 5. Two Geese 6. A Surloin of Beef 7. Minced Pyes 8. A Loin of Veal 9. A Venison Pasty 10. A Marrow Pye. 11. A couple of Capons roasted 12. A Lamb roasted 13. Woodcocks Partridges and small Birds dished up with sawce Second Course 1. A soused Pig. 2. A Warden Pye. 3. A cold Neats-Tongue 4. A soused Capon 5. A dish of Pickled Oysters and Mushroons 6. A Jole of Sturgeon 7. A Goose or Turky-Pye February 1. A Bacon-chine 2. A Loin of Veal or Beef roasted 3. A Lamb-pye or Minced-pye 4. A couple of Wild-Ducks roasted 5. A dish of fryed Oysters 6. A couple of Rabits roasted 7. A Skirret-pye Second Course 1. A roasted-Lamb 2. A dish of Pigeons 3. A Pippin-Tart 4. A Jole of Sturgeon 5. A cold Turky-pye And thus having in all its Material parts or what is most requisite given such Directions to an Ingenious Cook-Maid as may qualifie her if duly observed for the Service of Persons of Worth. I might say likewise something of the under Cook-Maid and Scullery-Maid but they being both dependants upon the former and their business consisting in helping the Cook-Maid the greatest matter beside is to keep themselves and the Kitchin-Materials neat and clean And so I take my leave of them and proceed to the Dairy-Maid CHAP. XVII The Accomplished Dairy-Maid or Directions to make all manner of Junkets and pleasant things wherein Milk Cream c. is an Ingredient the Modish and Experienced way plain easie and exceeding necessary THE
Raspices a pint and a quart of Canary-wine with two pounds of Sugar beating them and stirring them together till they froth and become of a pleasing colour The Dutch way to make Orange-Butter Take new Cream two gallons beat it up to a thickness then add half a pint of Orange-flower Water and as much Red-wine and so being become the thickness of Butter it retains both the colour and scent of an Orange And thus have I performed my promise in this kind from whence I shall proceed to the Second Part. THE SECOND PART OR Appendix to the foregoing Work. Containing Directions for Behaviour as to what relates to the Female Sex on all occasions c. The Author's Admonition to Parents or such as have the Tuition of Children c. AMong all the Temporal Blessings God out of the abundance of his Bounty and Goodness has bestowed upon Mankind Parents in dutifull and obedient Children have the greatest Great indeed it is to have Children and so it was held and acknowledged by the Fathers and Wise-men of Old insomuch that Barrenness was not only looked upon as a Reproach but a more immediate Mark of Heavenly displeasure Sarah's heaviness was turned into joy when Isaac was born Rachel was so impatient that she desired Jacob as not considering they were the immediate Gift of the Almighty to give her Children or she should dye The Motber of Sampson when the Angel told her who had it seems been a long time Barren that she should conceive a Son greatly rejoyce Hannah praying before the Lord with an uprig●● Heart and pouring out her Supplications to hi● to take away the Reproach of her Barrenness had her Petition answered in bringing forth S●muel Great was the joy of Elizabeth the Wi● of Zacharias and Mother of John the Baptis● when she found she had conceived insomuch th● she cryed as in a Rapture Thus hath the Lor● dealt with me in the days wherein he looke● on me to take away my Reproach among men And one of the chief Blessings the King Prophet pronounceth to the just and upright Ma● is That his Children shall be like Olive branches round his Table If the having Children creates such joy how ought it to multipl● in the Hearts of Parents who are appointed by God to watch over them for their good whe● through their incouragement and industry they se● them arrive in some measure to a perfection in the knowledge and practice of Divine and Mora● Virtues whereby they are rendered not only capable of an Immortal state but of gaining a good Repute and lasting Memory amongst Men The consideration of which doubtless made Solomon deliver it as a Maxim That A wise Son made a glad Father And in this case Children are more bound to their Parents for their Education than for their Bearing them Nor is it a Duty less incumbent on Parents in the discharge of their Duty towards God to see to their utmost those Children has intrusted them with as pledges of his kind●●ss brought up in his fear by a timely seasoning ●m in the ways of Virtue than it is on the Chil●●ens to make gratefull returns and acknowledg●●nts for the care and cost they have bestowed on ●●m in nurturing and bringing them up imagi●●ng that upon the receiving of every such Blessing ●●ey hear the Almighty Donor speaking as Pha●●ah's Daughter did to the Mother of Moses ●ake this Child and Nurse it for me c. ●hese things rightly weighed and considered may ●duce those Parents who would be happy in their ●osterity to be more than ordinarily diligent in ●ying a good foundation for Virtue to build upon ●●eir own good Example being ever the Corner●●one of such a Structure for nothing sooner makes 〈◊〉 impression in tender years than Precedents in●mcy like Wax taking and retaining the figure of ●hat Seal which first impress'd it unless it be rude●● defac'd by another or purposely destroyed On this occasion much more may be said but Parents naturally inclining to do what may turn ●o the advantage of their Children I shall in this place press it no farther but proceed to lay down Rules and Directions for the Carriage and Conduct of Young Gentlewomen c. That climb●ng by degrees to the Summit of Internal Adornment they may raise themselves a lasting Monument seeing Virtue survives Time and shakes Hands with Eternity Yours to serve you J. S. CHAP. I. Admonitions to Young Gentlewomen i● the first place to observe their Dut● towards God. TO be inflam●d with the Love of Sacre● Things is undoubtedly a foundatio● for early Virtue to build on and i● frequently an Introduction to whatever w● can justly or truly term Good or Great Therefore as you first owe your Duty to Go● who made you and on whom depends you● Being and Well-being not only here but here after you must above all things conside● his Glory and indeavour as much as in yo●● lyes to render him tribute of Praise and Thanksgiving imploring the assistance of his divine Grace to instruct and inable you to supply your defects and increase your knowledge and in so Remembring your Creator in the days of your Youth That God who loves the early Sacrifice of the Heart will not be wanting to over-shadow you with the Wings of his Providence and keep you from falling into those snares Satan lays to intrap you To induce you to holy desires and confirm you in the way of Truth as you increase in strength As soon as you are capable to read well which ought to be in the sixth year of our Age at farthest for otherwise you or our Parents will be subject to a censure of ●nowledge you must apply your self to the reading of good Books and strive the more ●●u read the more to conceive a delight and ●leasure therein that growing up you may ●●y with Holy David From my Youth have I ●ved thy Law. And in seriously considering ●hat you read it will be very profitable for ●ou to retain in your memory such comfortable Sentences as being repeated raise in ●ou a holy joy or more than ordinary desire ●o meditate and enter upon a Contemplation ●f those things that are thereby expressed ●nd these must be chiefly taken from Holy Writ But above all things be not remiss ●n the duty of Morning and Evening Prayer and that you may be the better prepared for such holy Exercise get by heart and retain in your memory the Pater-Noster or the Lord's Prayer the Belief or the Apostle's Creed and other good Prayers sutable to your capacity Get by heart likewise the Churches Catechism but especially the Ten Commandments that you may the better understand the Will of that God that made you and the World and be cautious to offend him in breaking any of his Laws by thought word or deed considering that from him who is the searcher of hearts nothing can be hid for to him Darkness is as Light and before him all the secre● of our hearts