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A96812 The Accomplish'd ladies delight in preserving, physick, beautifying, and cookery. Containing I. The art of preserving, and candying fruits and flowers, and the making of all sorts of conserves, syrups, and jellies. II. The physical cabinet, or excellent re[c]eipts in physick and chirurgery, together with s[o]me rare beautifying waters, to adorn and add l[ov]eliness to the face and body: and also some n[e]w and excellent secrets and experiments in the art of angling. III. The compl[e]at cook's guide, or, directions fo[r] dressing all sorts of flesh, fowl and fish [...] English and French mode, [...]; and the making pyes, [...] with the forms and [...] Woolley, Hannah, fl. 1670.; T. P.; Midgley, Robert, 1655?-1723. 1686 (1686) Wing W3272A; ESTC R186799 134,243 229

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Fennel Carraways of each one dram herbs of Time Mother of Time Mint Sage Penny royal Pellitory of the Wall Rosemary Flowers of Red Roses Camomile Origanum Lavender of each one handfuls infuse them twelve hours in twelve pints of Gascoign Wine then with an Alembick draw three pints of strong water from it 29. To make good Cherry wine Take the Syrup of Cherries and when it hath stood a while bottle it up and tye down the Cork and in a short time it will be very good pleasant Wine 30. To make Wafers Take a pint of flower a little Cream the yolks of two Eggs a little Rose-water with some searced Cinamon and Sugar work them together and bake them upon hot Irons 31. To preserve Grapes Stamp and strain them let it settle a while before you wet a pound of Sugar or Grapes with the Juyce stone the Grapes save the Liquor in the stoning take them off and put them up 32. To pickle Purslain Take the Purslain and pick it into little pieces and put it into a pot or Barrel then take a little water vinegar and salt to your tast it must be pretty strong of the vinegar and salt and a little Mace and boyl all these together and pour this Liquor boyling hot into the Purslain and when it is cold tye it close but lay a little board on the top to keep it down and within a week or two it is fit to eat 33. To preserve green Walnuts Boyl your Walnuts till the water tast bitter then take them off and put them in cold water and peel off the bark and weigh as much Sugar as they weigh and a little more water than will wet the Sugar set them on the fire and when they boyl up take them off and let them stand two days and then boyl them again once more 34. To Preserve Currans Part them in the tops and lay a laying of Currans and a laying of Sugar and so boyl them as fast as you do Rasberries do not put them in the Spoon but scum them boyl them till the Syrup be pretty thick then take them off and let them stand till they be cold and put them in a Glass 35. To make Goose-berry Cakes Pick as many Goose-berries as you please and put them into an earthen Pitcher and set it into a Kettle of water till they be soft and then put them into a sieve and let them stand till all the juyce be out and weigh the juyce and as much sugar as syrup first boyl the Sugar to a Candy and take it off and put in the juyce and set them in the press till they be dry then they are ready 26. To make excellent broth Take a Chicken and set it on the fire and when it boyls scum it then put in a Mace and a very little Oatmeal and such herbs as the party requires and boyl it well down and bruise the Chicken and put it in again and it is good broth And to alter it you may put in 6 Prunes and leave out the herbs or put them in as you please and when it is well boyled strain it and season it 37. To make Angellets Take a quart of new Milk and a pint of Cream and put them together in a little Runnel when it is come well take it up with a spoon and put it into the Vate softly and let it stand two days till it be pretty stiff then slip it out and salt it a little at both ends and when you think it is salt enough set it a drying and wipe them and within a quarter of a year they will be ready to eat 38. To make Jelly of Harts-horn Take four ounces of shavings of Harts-horn of the inside and two Ale-quarts of Water put this in a pipkin and boyl it very gently till it come to a quart the Harts-horn must be steeped 3 or 4 hours first afterwards put a little into a saucer till it be cold and if it be cold and jellieth it is boyled enough then being warm take it off the fire and strain it hard through a cloath and set it a cooling till it be a hard Jelly then take two whites of Eggs and beat them very well or with a sprigg of Rosemary or Birch but not with a spoon till a water come in the bottom then put these beaten Eggs and the water thereof into a skillet and all the Jelly upon it with three spoonfuls of damask Rose-water and a quarter of a pound of sugar and when it boyls stir and lay it pretty well then strain it through a cloath and let it cool and of this take four spoonfuls in the morning fasting and four a Clock in the Afternoon and this is excellent good for the weakness in the back 39. To preserve Damsons Red or Black Plumbs Take their weight in Sugar and water enough to make a Syrup to cover them so boyl them a little therein being close covered turning them for spoting let them stand all night in their own Syrup then set them upon a pot of seething water and suffer your Plumbs to boyl no faster than the water under them and when they are both sweet and tender take them up and boyl the Syrup again till they be thick then put up your Plumbs and it together in your Preserving Glasses 40. To make Rosemary-water Take the Rosemary and the flowers in the midst of May before the Sun rise strip the leaves and flowers from the stalks then take 4 or 5 Elecampane Roots and a handful or two of Sage then beat the Rosemary Sage and roots together till they be very small then take three ounces of Cloves and as much Mace and half a pound of Anniseeds and beat these Spices every one by themselves then take the herbs and the Spices and put thereto 4 or 5 Gallons of good White-wine then put in all these herbs Spices and Wine into an earthen pot and put the Pot into the ground about sixteen days then take it up and distill it with a very soft fire 41. To make Pomatum Take fresh Hogs suet cleansed from the films and washt in White-wine one pound and as much sheeps suet washt in White-wine then take about sixteen Pomwater apples cleansed and boyled in Rose-water add to these Rose-wood Sassafras Roots of Orrice Florentine of each six drams of Benzoin Storax Calamita half an ounce of each and so make it into an Oyntment 43. To make Oyl of sweet Almonds Take dryed sweet Almonds as many as you please beat them very small and put them into a rough hempen cloath and without fire by degrees press out the Oyl 44. An Excellent Water against fits of the Mother Take Briony-roots Elder-berries ripe and drest at a gentle heat in a Furnace and cleans'd from their stalks of each two ounces leaves of Mugwort Dittany Featherfew Nep Basil Penny-royal Rue Sabine all dryed in the Sun of each half an ounce peels of Oranges the out-side dry'd an ounce
of White-wine Vinegar for three days and then distill them in a leaden Still till they be dry 79. To make Treacle Water Take of the juyce of green Walnuts four pound juyce of Rue three pound juyce of Carduus Marigolds and Balm of each two pound green Petasitis Roots one pound and half the Roots of Burs one pound Angelica and Masterwort of each half a pound the leaves of Scordium four handfuls old Venice-Treacle and Mithridate of each eight ounces Canary wine six quarts Vinegar three quarts juice of Lemons one quart digest them 2 days either in horse-dung or in a Bath the Vessel being close shut then distil them in sand in the distillation you may make a Theriacal extraction 80. To make Syrup of Cinamon Take of Cinamon grosly bruised four ounces steep it in White-wine and small Cinamon water of each half a pound three days in a glass by a gentle fire strain it and with a pound and half of sugar boyl it gently to a Syrup This syrup refreshes the Vital Spirits and cherisheth the Heart and Stomach helps Digestion and cherisheth the whole Body exceedingly 81. To make Syrup of Citron peels Take of fresh yellow Citron Peels five ounces the berries of Cherms or the juyce of them brought over to us two drams spring-Spring-water two quarts steep them all night boyl them till half be consumed take off the scum strain it and with two pound and a half of the whitest sugar boyl it into a syrup let half of it be without Musk but perfume the other half with three Grains of Musk tyed up in a rag 82. To make Syrup of Harts-horn Take of Harts-tongue three handfuls Polypodium of the Oak the roots of both sorts of Bugloss barks of the roots of Capers and Tamaris of each two ounces Hops Dodder Maiden-hair Balm of each 2 handfuls boyl them in five quarts of Spring-water till it comes to four strain it and with four pound of sugar make it into syrup according to Art 83. An Oyl Perfume for Gloves that shall never out Take Benjamin two ounces Storax and Calamint each one ounce but the two first must be finely beaten by themselves then take a pound of sweet Almonds and mingle it with the Storax and Benjamin upon a Marble stone and then put it into an earthen pot with more Oyl then put in your Gloves powdered and so let it stand very close covered and when you will perfume a pair of Gloves take a little fair water in a spoon and wipe your Gloves very fine with it take another spoon and dip it in your Oyl and rub it on your Gloves and let them dry this is excellent 84. An excellent water for one that is in a Consumption Take three pints of Milk and one pint of red Wine twenty four yolks of Eggs beat them very well together then add so much white-bread as will drink up the wine and put to it some Cowslip flowers and distil them Take a spoonful of this Morning and Evening in Chicken or Mutton broth and in the Month it will cure any Consumption 85. To make Barley water Take a penny-worth of Barley a penny-worth of Raisins of the Sun a penny-worth of Anniseeds an half penny-worth of Liquorish about two quarts of water boyl all together till half be consumed then strain it when it is cold drink it your Liquorish must be sliced into small pieces 86. Dr. Deodates Drink for the Scurvy Take Roman Wormwood Carduus Benedictus Scurvy-grass Brooklime Water-creases Water-trifoil of each one handful Dodder Cetrach Scolopendria Burrage Buglos Sorrel Vervain or Speedwel of each half a handful Elicampane-root one ounce Raisins of the Sun three ounces slices of Oranges and Lemmons of each fifteen boyl or rather infuse these in a double glass with so much White-wine as will make a pint and a half of the liquor when it is done 87. A Conserve for to strengthen the back Take Eringo-roots and conserve them as you do damask white and red Roses in every respect the pith being taken out one pound and a half of Sugar is enough for every pound of Roots with three pints of water stew them closely at first as you do your Roses if you add to them five or six grains of Amber-grease beaten to fine powder it will be much more Cordial 88. To make an excellent Aqua Composita for a Surfeit or cold Stomach Take a handful of Rosemary a root of Enula-campane a handful of Hysop half a handful of Thyme six handfuls of Sage as much Mint and as much Pennyroyal half a handful of Hore-hound two ounces of liquorish well bruised and as much Anniseeds then take two gallons of the best strong Ale and take all the herbs aforesaid and wring them asunder and put them into an earthen pot well covered and let them stand a day and a night from thence put all into a brass pot and set it on the fire and let it stand till it boyl then take it from the fire and set your Limbeck on the pot and stop it close with paste that there come no air out of it and still it out with a soft fire you may add to it a handful of Red Fennel 89. To make Balm-water Take four gallons of strong stale Ale half a pound of Liquorish two pound of Balm two ounces of Figgs half a pound of Anniseeds one ounce of Nutmegs shred the Balm and figgs very small let them stand steeping 4 and twenty hours and then put it in a Still as you use Aquavitae 90. To pickle Broom-buds Take as many Broom-buds as you please make linnen bags and put them in and tye them close then make some brine with water and Salt and boyl it a little let it be cold then put some brine in a deep earthen pot and put the bags in it and lay some weight on them let it lye there till it look black boyl them in a little Cauldron and put them in Vinegar a week or two and they will be fit to eat 91. To make good Rasberry Wine Take a Gallon of Sack in which let two gallons of Rasberries stand steeping the space of twenty four hours then strain them and put to the Liquor 3 pound of Raisins of the Sun stoned let them stand together 4 or 5 days being sometime stirred together then pour of the clearest and put it up in Bottles and set it in a cold place if it be not sweet enough you may put sugar to it 92. To make excellent Hippocras in an instant Take of Cinamon two ounces Nutmegs Ginger of each half an ounce Cloves 2 drams bruise these small then mix them with as much Spirit of wine as will make them into a paste let them stand covered in glass the space of 6 days in a cold place then press out the Liquor and keep it in a glass A few drops of this Liquor put into any wine giveth it a gallant relish and Odour and maketh it as good
contrary Ear to the pain and lye still half an hour after 48. For a Wen. Take black soap and mix with unslaked lime made into powder and lay it on the Wen or Kernel 47. For the Wind. Take the juyce of Red Fennel and make a Posset of Ale therewith and drink thereof 50. An Excellent Medicine for the Dropsie Take two Gallons of New Ale then take Set-wel Calamus Aromaticus and Galingale of each two penny-worth of Spikenard four penny-worth stamp all together and put them into a Bag and hang it in the Vessel and when it is four days old drink it Morning and Evening 51. For a Scald Head Wash thy Head with Vinegar and camomile stampt and mingled together there is no better help for the Scald or grind white Hellebore with swines grease and apply it to the Head 52. To make the Plague-water Take a handful of Sage and a handful of Rue and boyl them in three pints of Malmsey or Muscadine till one pint be wasted then take it off the Fire and strain the Wine from the Herbs then put into the Wine two penny-worth of long-pepper half an ounce of Ginger and a quarter of an ounce of Nutmegs all grosly bruised and let it boyl a little again Then take it off the Fire and dissolve it in half an Ounce of good Venice-Treacle and a quarter of an ounce of Mithridate and put to it a quarter of a pint of strong Angelica-water so keep it in a Glass close stopped for your use This water cureth Small-pox Measles Surfeits and Pestilential Feavers 53. A precious Eye-water for any diseases of the Eye often proved Take of the best White-wine half a pint of white-rose-water as much of the water of celendine Fennel Eye-bright and Rue of each two ounces of prepared Tutia 6 ounces of Cloves as much sugar Rosate a dram of Camphire and Aloes each half a dram wash the Eyes therewith 54. A Cordial Julep Take water of Endive Purslain and Roses of each two ounces sorrel-Sorrel-water half a pint Juice of Pomegranats and for lack thereof Vinegar four ounces Camphire three drams sugar one pound boyl all these together in the form of a Julep and give 3 or 4 ounces thereof at a time 55. To make the green Oyntment Take a pound of Swines grease one Ounce of Verdigrease half a scruple of Sal Gemmae this ointment may be kept 40 years it is good against cancers and Running Sores it fretteth away dead flesh and bringeth new and healeth old Wounds put it within the wound that it fester not 56. For fits of the Mother Take a brown Toast of four Bread of the nether Crust and wash it with Vinegar and put thereto black soap like as you would butter a Toast and lay it under the Navil 57. For the Rickets in Children Take of fennel-seeds and dillseeds but most of the last boyl them in Beer and strain it and sweeten it with sugar and let the Child drink often Probatum 58. For the Skingles Take the green leaves of Colts-foot stamped and mingled with Honey and apply it and it will help 50. To heal a Fistula or Vlcer Take figgs and stamp them with shoo-makers wax and spread it upon Leather and lay it on the sore and it will heal 60. For a Woman in Travel Take seven or eight leaves of Bettony a pretty quantity of Germander a branch or two of Penny-royal three Marygolds a branch or two of Hyssop boyl them all in a pint of White-wine or Ale then put into it sugar and Saffron and boyl it in a quarter of an hour more and give it to drink warm 61. To make a Woman be soon delivered the Child being dead or alive Take a good quantity of the best Amber and beat it exceeding small to powder then searce it through a fine piece of Lawn and so drink it in some Broth or Caudle and it will by Gods help cause the Patient to be presently delivered 62. For Infants troubled with Wind and Phlegm Give them a little pure Sugar-candy-finely bruised in Saxifrage-water or Scabious-water in a spoon well mingled together 63. A most excellent Medicine to cause Children to breed their Teeth easily Take of pure Capons grease very well clarifi'd the quantity of a Nutmeg and twice as much of pure honey mingle and incorporate them well together and anoint the childs gums therewith three or four times a day when it is Teething and they will easily break the Flesh and prevent Torments and Agues and other Griefs which usually accompany their coming forth 64. For Agues in Children Take a spoonful of good Oyl of Populeon and put thereto two spoonfuls of good Oyl of Roses mingle them well together and then warm it before the Fire anoint the Childs Joynts and Back also his Forehead and Temples twice a day Chafing the Oyntment well in 65. To cause a young Child to go to stool Chafe the Childs Navel with May Butter before the fire then take some black Wool and dip it in the Butter and lay it to the Navel and it will procure a Stool this is also good for one in years that can take no other medicine 66. For Worms in Children Take of myrrh and Aloes very finely powdered of each a penny-worth and put thereto a few drops of Chymical Oyl of Wormwood or Savine and a little Turpentine make these up into a Plaister and lay it to the Childs Navel 67. To help one that is blasted Take the white of an Egg and beat it in a mortar put to it a quarter of an Ounce of Coperas and grind them well together till it come to an Oyntment and therewith anoint the sore Face and it will ease the pain and take away the swelling and when it is well nigh whole anoint the place with a little Populeon and that will make the skin fair and well again 68. An excellent Salve Take half a pound of Bees-wax a pint of Sallet-Oyl three ounces of Red Lead boyl all together in a new earthen Pipkin keeping it stirring all the while till it grows of a darkish Colour then keep it for use or make Sear-cloaths of it while it is hot It is most approved against any pain Sore Scald Cut Burn to strengthen the Back or remove any old Ach whatsoever 69. A Julep of Dr. Trench for the fits of the Mother In the time of the year distil black-Cherry-water Piony-flower-water Cowslip-water Rue or Herb-grace-water then take of the waters of Cowslip Black-Cherries Piony Rue of each an ounce and add to them water of Castor half an ounce Cinamon-water one dram Syrup of Clove-gilly-flowers three drams mix all these together and take two spoonfuls at a time of it as often as you please 70. For a Tympany Take a handful of the blossoms of Mary-golds stamp them and strain them and give the juyce thereof to the patient in a draught of Ale fasting 71. To provoke Terms a good Medicine Take Wormwood and Rue of each one
take litharge of Silver half a pound beat it fine and searse it then boyl it with one pint of White-wine Vinegar till one third be consumed ever stirring it with a stick while it boyleth then distil it by a Philter or let it run through a Jelly-bag then keep it in a Glass-Vial and when you will use those waters take a drop of the one and a drop of the other in your hand and it will be like Milk which is called Lac Virginis wash your face or any part of your body therewith it is most precious for the same 16. To take away Sun-burn Take the juice of a Lemmon and a little bay-salt and wash your Face or hands with it and let them dry of themselves and wash them again and you shall find all the Sun-burn gone 17. To make the face very fair Boyl the flowers of Rosemary in White-Wine with the which wash your face also if you drink thereof it will make you have a sweet breath Also to make the face white make Powder of the Root of Serpentine and of Powder of Sepia and mingle them with Rosewater and let it dry and then let it be put to the same water again and dry again do this four or five times and then use to anoint the face therewith 13. To clear the Skin and make it white Take fresh Boars grease and the white of an Egg and stamp them together with a little powder of bayes and therewith anoint the Skin and it will clear the Visage and make it white 16. To take away freckles in the face Anoint your Face with Oyl of Almonds and drink Plantain water or anoint your Visage well and often with hares blood 20. To smooth the Skin Mix Capons grease with a quantity of Sugar and let it stand for a few days close covered and it will turn to a clear Oyl with which anoint your Face 21. To blanch the Face Take the pulp of Lemons and take out the Kernels and put to them a quantity of fine Sugar Distill these and keep the water to wash your Face every Night 22. For Morphew or Scurf of the Face or Skin Take of Brimstone beaten into powder two Ounces mix it with as much black Soap that stinketh and tye the same in linnen cloath and let it hang in a pint of strong wine-Wine-Vinegar or Red-Rose-Vinegar for the space of eight or nine days and therewith wash any kind of Scurf or Morphew either in Face or Body dipping a Cloath in the Vinegar and rubbing it therewith and let it dry of it self Also drink the water of Strawberries distilled or Tincture of Strawberries it certainly killeth Morphew or scurf 23. For taking away Spots in the face after the Small-Fox Mix the juice of Lemons with a little Bay-salt and touch the Spots therewith often-times in a day for it is excellent good 24 A good Ointment for the same Take Oyl of sweet Almonds Oyl of white Lillies of either one ounce Capons grease Goats Tallow of each four drams Litharge of Gold one dram and half Roots of Briony and of Ireos of either one scruple Sugar-Candy white one dram make Powder of all those that may be brought into powder and searse them then put them all in a Mortar together beat them together and in the working put thereto Roses Bean-flower and white lilly-Lilly-water of each a good spoonful put in by little and little and so work them together till they become an Oyntment anoint your face and hands with it every Evening and in the Morning wash it away in water boyled with Barley Wheaten-bran and with the seed of Mallows 25. To take away the holes or Pits in the Face by reason of the Small-Pox For helping of this Accident I have tryed many things and the best means I have found is to wash the Face one day with the distilled water of strong Vinegar and the next day with the water wherein Bran and Mallows have been boyled and continue this twenty days or a Month together 26. For the Redness of the Hands or Face after the small-Pox Take Barley Beans Lupines of each one handful bruise them all in a Mortar grosly and boyl them in three pints of water till it grow thick like a Jelly then strain it and anoint the Face and hands 3 or 4 times a day for three or four days together and then wet the Face and hands as often with this water following 27. Another Take Vine-leaves two handfuls Bean-flower dragon Wild Tansie of either one handful Camphire three drams two Calves Feet the pulp of three Lemons a pint of raw Cream shred the Herbs small as also the Lemons and break and cut the Calves Feet small then mix them together and distil it in a Glass still and use it Also the water of May-dew is excellent good for any high Colour or redness in the Face 28. For Pimples in the Face Wash your Face with warm water when you go to bed and let it dry in then take the white of an Egg and put it into a Saucer and set it upon a Chafing-dish of Coals and put it into a piece of Allom beat it together with a spoon till it become thick then make a round Ball and therewith anoint the Face where the Pimples are 29. For Heat and swelling in the Face Boyl the leaves or blossoms of rosemary either in White-wine or fair water and use to wash thy hands and face therewith and it will preserve thee from all such inconveniences and also make both thy face and hands very smooth 30. For a Red Face Take Brimstone that is whole and cinamon of either of them an even proportion by weight beat them into small powder and searse it through a fine cloath upon a sheet of white paper to the quantity of an ounce or more and so by even proportions in weight mingle them together in clean clarified Capons grease and temper them well together till they be well mollified and put to it a little Camphire to the quantity of a Bean and so put the whole Confection in a Glass and use it 31. To take away Pimples Take Wheat-flower mingled with Honey and Vinegar and lay it upon them 32. An Excellent Ointment for an inflamed Face Take an Ounce of the Oyl of Bayes and an Ounce of Quick-Silver and put them in a bladder together with a spoonful of fasting spittle and then rub them well together that none of the Quick-silver be seen take of this Ointment when it is made and anoint the face therewith and it will heal it well and fair Proved true 33. For a rich Face Take three yolks of Eggs raw as much in quantity of fresh butter or Capons grease without salt camphire two penny-worth Red-Rose-water half a pint two Grains of Civet and boyl all these together in a Dish then strain them through a clean Cloath and set it to cool and take the uppermost and use it 34. To make the Skin white and clear Boyl
two ounces of French Barley in three pints of Conduit-water change the water and put in the barley again and do this till your barley do not discolour the Water then boyl the last three pints to a quart then mix half a pint of White-wine therein and when it is cold wring the juyce of two or three good Lemons therein and use it for the Morphew heat of the face and to clear the skin 35. An Excellent Pomatum to clear the Skin Wash Barrows grease or Lard often times in May-dew that hath been clarified in the Sun till it be exceeding white then take Marsh-Mallow-Roots scraping of the out-sides make thin slices of them and mix them set them to macerate in a Balneo and scum it well till it be clarified and will come to rope then strain it and put now and then a spoonful of May-dew therein beating it till it be through cold in often change of May-dew then throw away that dew and put it in a Glass covering it with May-dew and so keep it for your use 36. To take away Spots and Freckles from the Face and Hands The Sap that issueth out of a Birch-Tree in great abundance being opened in March or April and a glass Receiver set under it to receive it This cleanseth the Skin excellently and maketh it very clear being washed therewith This Sap will dissolve Pearl a Secret not known to many 37. To take away Freckles and Morphew Wash your Face in the wane of the Moon with a Sponge Morning and Evening with the distilled water of Elder-Leaves letting it dry in the skin you must Distil your Water in May This I had from a Traveller who hath cured himself thereby 38. To make the Teeth white and Sound Take a quart of Honey and as much Vinegar and half so much White-wine boyl them together and wash your Teeth therewith now and then 39. A Dentifrice to whiten the Teeth Take of Harts-horn and horses Teeth of each 2 ounces Sea-shells common Salt Cypress-Nuts each one ounce burn them together in an Oven and make a powder and work it up with the Mucilage of Gum Tragacanth and rub the Teeth therewith 40. To make the Teeth as white as Ivory Take Rosemary Sage and a little Allom and Honey and boyl them together in fair Running-water and when it is well boyled strain out the fair water and keep it in a Glass and use it sometimes to wash your Mouth and Teeth therewith and it will make them clean Also wash your Teeth with the Decoction of Lady Thistle-Root and it will cleanse and fasten the Teeth and the sore Gums made whole also the Root of Hore-hound drunk or chewed Fasting doth quickly heal the Gums and maketh the Teeth clean Strawberry-leaves also cleanseth the Teeth and gums a sure and tryed Experiment 41. To make the Teeth white Take one drop of the Oyl of Vitriol and wet the Teeth with it and rub them afterward with a course Cloath although this medicine be strong fear it not 42. For a stinking Breath Take two handfuls of Cummin and stamp it to powder and boyl it in Wine and drink the Syrup thereof Morning and Evening for fifteen days and it well help Proved 43. To make Breath sweet Wash your Mouth with the water that the shells of Citrons have been boyled in and you will have a sweet breath 44. To Sweeten the breath Take Butter and the juice of Featherfew and temper them with Honey and take every day a spoonful Also these things sweeten the Breath the Electuary of Aromaticks and the Peel of Citrons 45. To cleanse the Mouth It is good to cleanse the Mouth every Morning by rubbing the Teeth with a Sage-leaf Citron-peels or with powder made with Cloves and Nutmegs forbear all Meats of ill digestion and raw fruits 46. For Running in the Ears Take the juice of Elder and drop it into the Ear of the Party grieved and it cleanseth the matter and the Filth thereof also the juice of Violets used is very good for the Running of the ears 47. For Eyes that are blood-shoot Take the Roots of red Fennel stamp them and wring out the juyce then temper it with Clarified honey and make an Oyntment thereof and anoint the Eyes therewith and it will take away the Redness 48. To make the Hands white Take the Flower of Beans of Lupines of starch-Corn Rice Orice of each six ounces mix them and make a powder with which wash your hands in water 49. A delicate washing-ball Take three ounces of Orice half an ounce of Cypress two ounces of Calamus Aromaticus one ounce of Rose-leaves two ounces of Lavender flowers beat all these together in a Mortar searsing them through a fine searse then scrape some Castle-soap and dissolve it in rose-water mix your powders therewith and beat them in a Mortar then make them up in balls 50. For the Lips chopt Rub them with the Sweat behind yours Ears and this will make them smooth and well coloured 51. To prevent marks of the Small Pox. Boyl Cream to an Oyl and with that anoint the whales with a Feather as soon as they begin to dry and keep the Scabs always moist therewith let your Face be anointed almost every half hour 52. To take away Child-Blains in the hands or feet Boyl half a peck of Oats in a quart of water till it grow dry then anoint your Hands with Pomatum and after they are well Chafed hold them within the Oats as hot as you can endure them covering the Bowl wherein you do your hands with a double cloath to keep in the steam of the Oats do this three or 4 times and it will do You may boyl the same Oats with fresh water 3 or 4 times 53. To take away Pock holes or any Spots in the Face Wet a Cloath in White-Rose-water and set it all Night to freeze in the winter then lay it upon your Face till it be dry also take two or three poppies the reddest you can get and quarter them taking out the Kernel then distil them in a quart of red Cows-Milk and with the water thereof wash your Face 54. An excellent Beauty Water used by the D. of C. Take of white Tartar two drams Camphire one dram Coperas half a dram the whites of three or four Eggs the juice of a couple of Lemons Oyl of Tartar four ounces and as much plantain-Plantain-water white Mercury a penny-worth two ounces of bitter Almonds beat all these to powder and mix them with the Oyl and some water and then boyl it upon a gentle fire strain it and so keep it when you use it you must first rub your Face with a Scarlet cloath and at Night wash your Face with it and in the Morning wash it off with Bran and White-wine 55. Against a stinking breath Take a handful of Wood-bine and as much Plantain bruise them very well then take a pint of Eye-salt and as much water with a little Honey and
of Violet-flowers fresh and pick a pound clear water boyling one quart shut them up close together in a new glazed pot a whole day then press them hard out and in two pound of the Liquor dissolve four pound and three ounces of white Sugar take away the scum and so make it into a Syrup without boyling 13. To make Marmalade of Quinces Take a bottle of water and four pound of Sugar and let them boyl together and when they boyl scum them as clean as you can then take the whites of two or three Eggs and beat them to Froth put the froth into the pan to make the scum rise then scum it as clean as you can take off the Kettle and put in the Quinces and let them boyl a good while and stir them and when they are boyled enough put them into boxes 14. To make Hippocras Take a Gallon of White-wine two pound of Sugar and of Cinamon Ginger long Pepper Mace not bruised Grains Galingal Cloves not bruised of each two penny worth bruise every kind of Spice a little and put them together into an earthen pot for a day then cast them through your bags two or three times as you see cause and so drink it 15. To make Almond-Butter Take your Almonds and blaunch them and beat them in a morter very small and in beating put a little water then when they are beaten pour in water into two pots and put half into one and half into another put Sugar to them and stir them and let them boyl a good while then strain it through a strainer and so dish it up 16. To preserve Quinces red Pare your Quinces and core them then take as much Sugar as they weigh putting to every pound of Sugar one quart of water boyl your Quinces therein very leasurely being close covered turn them to keep them from spotting and when they are so tender that you may prick a hole through them with a rush and that they are well coloured then boyl the Syrup till it will button on a dish and so put your syrup and them together 17. To pickle Cucumbers Wash your Cucumbers clean and dry them in a cloath then take some Water Vinegar Salt Fennel-tops and some Dill-tops and a little Mace make it sharp enough to the taste then boyl it a while and then take it off and let it stand till it is cold then put in the Cucumbers and lay a board on the top to keep them down and tye them up close and within a week they will be fit to eat 18. To Candy Pears Plumbs and Apricocks to look as clear as Amber Take your Apricocks or Plumbs and give every one a cut to the stone in the notch then cast sugar on them and bake them in an Oven as hot as for Maunchet close stopt bake them in an earthen Platter and let them stand half an hour then take them out of the dish and lay them one by one upon Glass plates and so dry them if you can get Glasses made like Marmalet boxes to lay over them they will be the sooner Candyed In this manner you may Candy any other Fruit. 19. To preserve Oranges Take a pound of Oranges and a pound of Sugar peel the outward rind and inward white skin off then take juyce of Oranges and put them into the juyce boyl them half an hour and take them off 20. To make Oyl of Violets Set the Violets in sallet Oyl and strain them then put in other fresh Violets and let them lye twenty days then strain them again and put in other fresh Violets and let them stand all the year 21. To make Cream of Quinces Take a roasted Quince pare it and cut it into thin slices to the core boyl it in a pint of Cream with a little whole Ginger till it taste of the Quinces to your liking then put in a little Sugar and strain it and always serve it cold to the Table 22. To make a March-Pane Steep two pound of pickled Almonds one day and two nights in fair water and blaunch them out of it then beat them well in a Morter and bedew them with Rose-water put to your Almonds so many pound of Sugar and beat your sugar with your almonds then make very fine crust either of Paste or Water and sprinkle it with Rose-water and Sugar then spread the stuff on it and bake it at a very soft fire always bedewing it with Damask water Civet and Sugar and lastly with a gut of Dates gilt or long Comfits gilt or with Cinamon-sticks gilt or the Kernels of the Pine-apple and so set it forth 23. To make Almond milk Boyl French Barley and as you boyl it cast away the water wherein it was boyled till you see the water leave to change Colour as you put in more fresh water then put in a bundle of Strawberry leaves and as much Cullumbine leaves and boyl it a good while then put in beaten Almonds and strain them and then strain it with Sugar and Rosemary then strew some Sugar about the dish and send it to the Table 24. To Preserve Apricocks or Pear-plumbs when they are green You may take any of these fruits and scald them in water and peel them and scrape the spungy substance of the Apricocks or Quinces so boyl them very tender taking their weight in sugar and as much water as to cover them and boyl them very leasurely then take them up and boyl the Syrup till it be thick and when they are cold put them up with your Syrup into your preserving Glasses 25. To pickle French Beans You must take your Beans and string them boyl them tender then take them off and let them stand till they are cold put them into the pickle of Beer Vinegar Pepper and Salt Cloves and Mace with a little Ginger 26. To make an Excellent Jelly Take three Gallons of fair Water and boyl in it a knuckle of Veal and two Calves feet slit in two with all the fat clean taken from between the claws so let them boyl to a very tender Jelly keeping it clean scum'd and the edges of the pot always wiped with a clean Cloath that none of the scum may boyl in strain it from the meat and let it stand all night and the next morning take away the top and the bottom and take a quart of this Jelly half a pint of Sherry Sack half an ounce of Cinnamon and as much Sugar as will season it six Whites of Eggs very well beaten mingle all these together then boyl it half an hour and let it run through your Jelly-bag 27. To make Aqua Mirabilis Take of Cloves Galanga Cubebs Mace Cardamums Nutmegs Ginger of each one dram juyce of Celandine half a pound Spirit of Wine one pint White-wine three pints infuse them twenty four hours and draw off a quart with an Alembick 28. Dr. Stevens water Take of Cinnamon Ginger Galanga Cloves Nutmegs Grains of Paradise seeds of Annis
Oranges or Lemmons after they are preserved Take them out of the Syrup and drain them well then boyl some Sugar to a candy height and lay your Peels in the bottom of a sieve and pour your hot Sugar over them and then dry them in a stove or warm Oven 64. To preserve Oranges after the Portugal Fashion Open your Oranges at the end and take out all the meat then boyl them in several waters till a straw may go through them then take their weight and half in fine Sugar and put to every pound of Sugar a pint of water boyl it and scum it then put in your Oranges and boyl them a little more then take them up and fill them with preserved Pippins and boyl them again till you think they are enough but if you will have them jelly make a new Syrup with the water wherein some sliced Pippins have been boyled and some fine Sugar and that will be a stiff Jelly 65. To make good Vsquebah Take two Gallons of good Aquavitae 4 ounces of the best Liquorice bruised four ounces of Anniseeds bruised put them into a wooden Glass or Stone Vessel and cover them close and so let them stand a week then draw off the clearest and sweetest with Molosso's and keep it in another Vessel and put in some Dates and Raisons ston'd keep it very close from the Air. 66. To make Italian Bisket Take serced Sugar and a little of the white of an Egg with some Ambergreece and Musk beat them all to a paste in an Alabaster Morter and mould it into a little Anniseed finely dusted then make it up in Loaves and cut them about like Maunchet then bake them in an oven as hot as for Maunchet and when they are risen somewhat high upon the Plates take them forth and remove them not off the Plates till they be cold for they will be very apt to break 67. To make French Bisket Take half a peck of flower with four Eggs half a pint of Ale-yeast one ounce and half of Anniseed a little sweet Cream and a little cold water make all into a loaf and fashion it something long then cut it into thick slices like Toasts after it hath stood two days and rub them over with powdred Sugar and lay them in a warm Sun and so dry them and Sugar them as you dry them three or 4 times then put them into Boxes for use 68. To make Sugar plate Take serced Sugar and make it up in a past with Gum-dragon steeped in Rose-water and when you have brought it into a perfect paste rowl it as thin as ere you can and then Print it in Moulds of what fashion you please and so let them dry as they lye 69. To make Pomander Take half an ounce of Benjamin and as much Storax and as much Labdanum with six grains of Musk and as much Civet and two grains of Amber-grease and one dram of sweet Balsom then roul it up in beads as big or as little as you please and whilst they are hot make holes in them to serve for your use 70. To make Conserve of Damsons Take ripe Damsons and put them into scalding water and half an hour after set them over the fire till they break then strain them through a Cullender and let them cool therein then strain them through a piece of Canvas from their stones and skins and then set them over the fire again then put them to a good quantity of red wine and so boyl it often stirring it till it be thick and when it is almost boyled enough put in a convenient proportion of Sugar and stir it very well together and then put it into your Gally-Pots 71. To bake Oranges Peel all the bark off and boyl them in Rose-water and Sugar till they are tender then make your Pye and set them whole in it and put the Liquor they are boyled in into the Pye and season it with Sugar Cinamon and Ginger 72. To preserve Peaches Take a pound of your fairest and best coloured Peaches and with a wet linnen cloth wipe off the white hoar of them then parboyl them in half a pint of White-wine and a pint and a half of running water and being parboil'd peel off the white skin of them and then weigh them take to your pound of Peaches three quarters of a pound of refined Sugar and dissolve it in a quarter of a pint of White-wine and boyl it almost to the height of a syrup then put in your Peaches and let them boyl in the Syrup a quarter of an hour or more if need require then put them up and keep them all the year 73. To Preserve Gooseberries Take Goose-berries or Grapes or Barberries and take somewhat more than their weight in sugar beaten very fine and to lay one laying of Fruits and another of sugar till all are laid in your preserving pan then take six spoonfuls of fair water and boyl your Fruits therein as fast as you can until they be very clear then take them up and boyl the syrup by it self till it be thick when they are cold put them into Gally-pots 74. To preserve Pippins white Pare your Pippins and cut them the cross way and weigh them add to a pound of sugar a pint of water then put the sugar to the water and let it boyl a while and then put in your Pippins and let them boyl till they be clear at the core then take them off and put them up 75. To preserve Grapes Stamp them and strain them and then let it settle a while then wet a pound of sugar or Grapes with the juyce stone the Grapes save the Liquor in the stoning take off the stalks give them a boyling take them off and put them up 76. To preserve Angelica Roots Wash the Roots and slice them very thin and lay them in water three or four days change the water every day then put the Roots into a pot of water and set them in the embers all night in the morning put away the water then take a pound of Roots four pints of water and two pound of Sugar let it boyl and scum it clean then put in the roots which will be boyled before the syrup then take them up and boyl the syrup after they will ask a whole days work very softly at St. Andrews time is the best time to do them in all the year 77. To make Syrup of Quinces Take of the juyce of Quinces clarifyed three quarts boyl it over a gentle fire till half of it be consumed scum it and add to it three pints of red wine with four pound of white sugar boyl it into a syrup and perfume it with a dram and a half of Cinnamon and of Cloves and Ginger of each two scruples 78. To make walnut-Walnut-Water Take of green Walnuts a pound and half Garden Radishroots one pound green Asarabacca 6 ounces Radish-seeds four ounces let all of them being bruised be steeped in three pints
as any Hippocras whatsoever in an instant 93. To make Artificial Malmsey Take two gallons of English Honey put into it eight Gallons of the best Spring water set these in a Vessel over a gentle fire when they have boyl'd gently an hour take them off and when they be cold put them into a small Barrel or Runlet hanging in the Vessel a bag of spices and set it in the Cellar and in half a year you may drink thereof 94. To make Artificial Claret-wine Take six Gallons of water two gallons of the best Cyder put thereto eight pound of the best Malaga-raisins bruised in a Morter let them stand close covered in a warm place the space of a Fortnight every two days stirring them well together Then press out the Raisins and put the Liquor into the said Vessel again to which add a quart of the juyce of rasberries and a pint of the juyce of black Cherries cover this Liquor with bread spread thick with strong Mustard the Mustardseed being downward and so let it work by the fire-side three or four days then turn it up let it stand a week and then bottle it up and it will taste as quick as Bottle Beer and become a very pleasant drink and indeed far better and wholsomer than our common Claret 95. To make Spirit of Amber-grease Take of Amber-grease two drams of Musk a dram cut them small and put them into a pint of wine close up the Glass Hermetically and digest them in a very gentle heat till you perceive they are dissolved then you may use it two or three drops or more if you please of this spirit put into a pint of wine gives it a rich Odour or if you put two or 3 drops round the brims of the glass it will do as well half a spoonful of it taken either of it self or mixt with some specifical liquor is a most rich Cordial 96. An Excellent sweet water Take a quart of Orange-flower water as much Rose water with four ounces of Musk Willow seeds grosly bruised of Benjamin two ounces of Storax an ounce or Labdanum 6 drams of Lavender flowers two pugils of sweet Marjoram as much of Calamus Aromaticus a dram distill all these in a Glass Still in Balneo the Vessel being very well closed that no vapour breathe forth Note that you may make a sweet water in an instant by putting in a few drops of some distilled Oyls together into some Rose-water and brew them all together 97. Dr. Burges's Plague water Take three pints of Muscadine and boyl in it Sage and Rue of each a handful till a pint be wasted then strain it and set it over the fire again put thereto a dram of long Pepper Ginger and Nutmeg of each half an ounce being all bruised together then boyl them a little and put thereto half an ounce of Andramachus Treacle three drams of Mithridate and a quarter of a pint of Angelica water Take a spoonful or 2 of this Morning and Evening 98. To dry Cherries or Plumbs in the Sun If it be small fruit you must dry them whole by laying them abroad in the hot Sun in stone or pewter dishes or tin pans turning them as you see cause but if your Plumbs be large slit them in the middle and lay them abroad in the Sun and if they be very large then give each Plum a slit on each side and if the sun do not shine sufficiently then dry them in an Oven that is temperately warm 99. To preserve Pippins green Take Pippins when they be small and green off the Trees and pare three or four of the worst and cut them all to pieces then boyl them in a quart of fair water till they be Pap then let the Liquor come from them as they do from your Quiddany into a bason then put into them one pound of Sugar clarified and put into it as many green Pippins unpar'd as that liquor will cover and so let them boyl softly and when you see they be boyled as tender as a Codling then take them up and peel off the outermost white skin and then they will be green then boyl them again in the Syrup till it be thick and you may keep them all the year 100. To make Syrup of Hysop Take of Hysop one handful of Figgs Raisins Dates of each an ounce boyl these in three pints of water to a quart then strain and clarifie it with the whites of two Eggs and two pound of Sugar and so boyl them to a Syrup and being boyled enough keep them all the year 101. To make Rosa-Solis Take Liquorish 8 ounces Anniseeds and Carraway of each an ounce Raisins ston'd and Dates of each 3 ounces Nutmegs Ginger Mace of each half an ounce Galingal a quarter of an ounce Cubebs one dram Figgs 2 ounces sugar 4 ounces bruise these and distil them with a Gallon of Aqua-vitae as the rest when it is distilled you must colour it with the Herb Rosa Solis or Alkanet Root 102. To make Muscadine Comfits Take half a pound of Musk Sugar beaten and searced then take Gumdragagant steeped in Rose-water and two grains of Musk and so beat them in an Alabaster Morter till it come to a perfect Paste then roul it very thin and cut it in small diamond pieces and then bake them and so keep them all the year 103. To make Conserve of Burrage-Flowers Let your flowers be well coloured and pick the blacks from them then weigh them and to every ounce of flowers you must take three ounces of sugar and beat them together in a stone Morter with a wooden Pestle till they be very fine then take them out and put the Conserve into a Pipkin and heat it thorow hot put them up and keep them all the year 104. To Candy Ginger Take very fair and large Ginger and pare it and lay it in water a day and a night then take double refined Sugar and boyl it to the height of sugar again and when your Sugar begins to be cold take your Ginger and stir it well about while your sugar is hard to the Pan then take it out Piece by piece and lay it by the Fire 4 hours then take a pot and warm it and put the Ginger in it tye it up close and every other morning stir it about throughly and it will be Rock-Candyed in a little time 105. To make Manus Christi Take half a pound of refined Sugar and some Rose-water boyl them together till it come to Sugar again then stir it about till it be somewhat cold then take leaf Gold and mingle with it then cast it according to Art in round Gobbets and so keep them 106. To make Conserve of Strawberries First boyl them in Water and then cast away the water and strain them then boyl them in White-wine and work as in Prunes or else strain them being ripe then boyl them in White-wine and sugar till they be stiff 107. To make
it a quarter of a pint of Rose-water and one pound of fine sugar and so let it boyl till it come to be of a deep colour then take a drop and drop it into the bottom of a saucer and if it stand take it off then let it run through a Jelly bag into a Bason then set it over a Chafing-dish of Coals to keep it warm then take a spoon and fill your Boxes as full as you please when they be cold cover them and if you please to print it in moulds wetting your moulds with Rose-water and so let it run in and when it is cold turn it into Boxes 121. To make Sweet Cakes without either Spice or Sugar Take Parsneps and scrape or wash them clean slice them thin and dry them well beat them to powder mixing one third part thereof with 2 thirds of fine Wheat flower make up your paste into cakes and you will find them very sweet and delicate 122. To make Wormwood Wine Take small Rochel or Camahe-Wine put a few drops of the extracted Oyl of Wormwood therein brew it together out of one pot into another and you shall have a more neat and wholsome wine for your body than that which is sold for right wormwood-wine 123. To make sweet bags to lye among Linnen Fill your bags only with Lignum and Rhodium finely beaten and it will give an excellent scent to your Linnen 124. To make Spirit of Honey Put one part of Honey to five parts of water when the water boyleth dissolve your Honey therein scum it and having boyled an hour or two put it into a wooden Vessel and when it is blood-warm set it on the fire with Yeast after the usual manner of Beer and Ale tun it and when it hath lain some time it will yield a Spirit by distillation as Wine and Ale will do 125. To preserve Artichoaks Cut off the stalks of your Artichoaks within two Inches of the Choak and make a strong Decoction of the rest of the stalks slicing them into thin small pieces and let the Artichoaks lye in this Decoction and when you use them you must put them first in warm water and then in cold and so take away the bitterness of them 126. To make a Syrup for a Cough of the Lungs Take a Pottle of fair running water in a new Pipkin and put into it half an ounce of Sydrack half an ounce of Maiden-hair and a good handful of Elecampane Roots sliced boyl all together until half be boyled away even to Syrup then put into it the whites of Eggs and let it boyl two or three walms and give the Patient a spoonful Morning and Evening 127. To make Banbury Cakes Take four pound of Currants wash and pick them very clean and dry them in a Cloath then take three Eggs and put away one Yolk and beat them and strain them with Yeast putting thereto Cloves Mace Cinamon and Nutmegs then take a pint of Cream and as much Mornings Milk and let it warm then take Flower and put in good store of cold Butter and sugar then put in your Eggs Yeast and Meal and work them all together an hour or more then save a piece of the paste and break the rest in pieces and work in your Currants then make your Cake what quantity you please and cover it very thin with the paste wherein were no Currants and so bake it according to the bigness 128. To make Ginger-bread Take a quart of Honey and set it on the coals and refine it then take Ginger Pepper and Licorise of each a penny-worth a quarter of a pound of Anniseeds and a penny-worth of Saunders beat all these and searce them and put them into the Honey add a quarter of a pint of Claret-Wine or old Ale then take three penny Maunchets finely grated and strew it amongst the rest and stir it till it come to a stiff paste make them into Cakes and dry them gently 129. To make Wormwood-Water Take two Gallons of good Ale a pound of Anniseeds half a pound of Liquorise and beat them very fine then take two good handfuls of the crops of Wormwood and put them into Ale and let them stand all night and let them stand in a Limbeck with a moderate Fire 130. To make Paste of Quinces First boyl your Quinces whole and when they are Soft pare them and cut the Quince from the core then take the finest Sugar you can get finely beaten or searced and put it in a little Rose-water and boyl it together till it be stiff enough to mould and when it is cold roul and print it A pound of Quinces will require a pound of sugar or thereabout 131. To make thin Quince Cakes Take your Quince when it is boyled soft as before and dry it upon a Pewter Plate with a soft heat and stir it with a slice till it be hard then take searced sugar to the same weight and strew it upon the Quinces as you beat it in a wooden or Stone Morter and so roul them thin and print them 132. To make fine Cakes Take a pottle of fine flower and a pound of Sugar a little meal and good store of water to mingle the Flower into a stiff Paste with a little Salt and so knead it and roul out the Cakes thin and bake them on Paper 133. To make Suckets Take Curds and the paring of Lemons Oranges or Pome Citrons or indeed any half ripe green fruit and boyl them till they be tender in sweet wort then take three pound of Sugar the whites of four Eggs and a Gallon of water beat the water and Eggs together and then put in your Sugar and set it on the Fire and let it have a gentle fire and let it boyl six or seven walms then strain it through a cloath and set it on again till it fall from the Spoon and then put it into the Rinds or Fruits 134. To make Leach Lombard Take half a pound of blanched Almonds two ounces of Cinamon beaten and searced half a pound of Sugar beat your Almonds and strew on your Cinamon and Sugar till it come to a paste then roul it and print it as aforesaid 135. To make a rare Damask Water Take a quart of Malmsey Lees or Malmsey one handful of Marjoram as much Basil four handfuls of Lavender one handful of Bay leaves four handfuls of Damask Rose-Leaves as many Red Roses the peels of six Oranges or else one handful of the tender Leaves of Walnut-Trees half an ounce of Benjamin Calamus Aromaticus as much of Camphire four drams of Cloves an ounce of Bildamum half an ounce then take a pottle of running-Running-Water and put in all these Spices bruised into your Water and Malmsey together in a pot close stopped with a good handful of Rosemary and let them stand for the space of six days then distil it with a soft fire and set it in the Sun sixteen days with four grains of Musk bruised
handful with five or six Pepper-corns boyl them all together in a quart of White-wine or Malmsey strain it and drink thereof 72. For the bloody-Flux or scouring Take a great Apple and cat out the Core and put therein pure Virgins wax then wet a paper and lap it therein then rake it up in the Embers and let it roast till it be soft then eat of it as your stomach will give leave 73. For a Rheumatick Cough or Cold. Take a pint of hysop-Hysop-water Syrup of Gilly-flowers Syrup of Vinegar Syrup of Maiden-hair Syrup of Colts-foot of each one Ounce mingle them all together and drink it when you please 74. To kill a Fellon Take an Egg and roast it hard and take out the Yolk thereof then roast an Onion soft and beat the Yolk and the Onion together and lay it to the sore and it will kill the Fellon 75. For the white Flux Take the powder of the Flower of Pomegranats and drink it in red Wine 76. For the red Flux Take Sperma Ceti and drink it and truss up your self with a piece of black Cotton 77. For the Cancer in a womans breast Take the Dung of a Goose and the juice of Celandine and bray them well in a Mortar together and lay it to the sore and this will stay the Cancer and heal it 78. For an Ague in the Breast Take Grounsel Dasie-leaves and roots and course Wheat sifted make a Poultess thereof with the parties own water and lay it warm to the breast 79. For bleeding at the Nose Take Betony and stamp it with as much Salt as you can hold betwixt your two fingers and put it into your Nose 80. For spitting of blood Take Smallage Rue Mints and Betony and boyl them well in good Milk and drink it warm 81. To staunch the bleeding of a Wound or at the Nose There is no better thing than the powder of Bole-Armoniack to stanch the bleeding of a Wound the powder being laid upon it or for the Nose to be blown in with a Quist Or take the shavings of parchment and lay it to the wound and it stancheth and healeth 82. To make the Gascoign Powder Take of Pearls white Amber Harts-horn Eyes of Crabs and white Coral of each half an Ounce of black thighs of Crabs calcined two ounces to every ounce of this powder put in a dram of Oriental Bezoar reduce them all into a very fine powder and searse them then with Harts-horn Jelly and a little Saffron put therein make it up into paste and make therewith Lozenges or Torchises for your use Get your Crabs for this powder about May or in September before they be boyled dry your Lozenges in the Air not by fire nor Sun 83. For the Megrim or Imposthume in the Head Take four penny-weight of the Root of Pellitory of Spain a farthing weight of Spikenard and boyl them in good Vinegar and when it is cold put thereto a spoonful of Honey and a Saucer-ful of Mustard and mingle them well together and hold thereof in your mouth a spoonful at once and use this eight or nine times spitting it out continually 84. For Pain in the Ears Take the juice of wild Cucumbers and put it into the Ears and it asswageth the pain Also put the Wood of green Ash in the fire and save the liquor that cometh out at the end and put it into the Ears it causeth the pain to cease and amendeth the Hearing Also beat the juice of Wormwood and drop it into the Ears 85. A precious Water for the Eye-sight made by K. Edward the sixth Take Smalledge red Fennel Rue Vervain Betony Agrimony Pimpernel Eufrane Sage Celendine of each a like quantity first wash them clean then stamp them and put them in a fair Brazen pan with the Powder of fourteen or fifteen Pepper-corns fair searsed into a pint of good White-wine put them into the Herbs with three spoonfuls of Honey and five spoonfuls of the water of a Man-Child that is sound mingle all together and boyl them over the fire and when it is boyled strain it through a fine Linnen Cloath and put it into a Glass and stop it well and close till you use it and when you need it put a little thereof into the sore eyes with a feather but if it be dry temper it with White-wine and it profiteth much all manner of sore eyes This water was used by K. Edward the sixth 86. My Lord Dennies Medicine for the Gout Take Burdock-leaves and stalks cut them small and stamp them very small then strain them and cleanse them and when you have so done put them into Glasses and put pure Oyl of Olives on the top of them and stop it close from the Air and when you would use it for the Gout pour it into a porringer and warm it and wet Linnen Cloaths in it and apply it warm to the grieved place warming your Cloaths one after another as they grow cold that are on 87. Dr. Stephen's Soveraign Water Take a Gallon of good Gascoign Wine then take Ginger Galingale Cancel Nutmeg Grains Cloves Anni-seeds Carraway-seeds of each a dram then take Sage Mints red Roses Thyme Pellitory Rosemary wild Thyme Camomile Lavender of each a handful then bray both Spices and Herbs and put them all into the Wine and let them stand for twelve hours divers times stirring them then distil in an Alimbeck but keep that which you distil first by it self for that is the best but the other is good also but not so good as the first This water comforteth the Vital Spirits and helpeth inward Diseases which come from cold it helpeth Conception in Women that are barren and killeth Worms in the body it cureth the old Cough and helpeth the Tooth-ach it comforteth the Stomach and cureth a stinking breath it preserveth the body in good liking and makes them look young 88. The Water called Aqua Mirabilis Pretiosa made by Dr. Willoughby Take of Galingales Cloves Mace Cucubes Ginger Cardamum Nutmegs Mellilot Saffron four ounces and beat all these into powder Agrimony-water the quantity of a dram and somewhat more then take of the juyce of Celandine half a pint and mingle all these together with a pint of good Aqua-Vitae and three pints of good White-wine put all these together in a still of Glass and let it stand so all Night and on the Morrow distil it with an easie fire as may be This water dissolveth the swelling of the Lungs without any Grievance and helpeth and comforteth them being wounded and suffereth not the blood to putrifie he shall never need to be let blood that useth this water it suffers not the Heat to burn nor Melancholy nor Rheum to have Dominion above Nature it also expelleth Rheum and purifieth the Stomach 89. To make Allom-water Take a pound of Allom and beat it to powder then take a Gallon of clean water and set it on the fire letting it boyl till all the Allom be
a Thorn Take of Violet-Leaves one handful stamp them together and take a quantity of Boars greafe and of Wheat-bran one handful set it on the fire in clean water and make a Plaister thereof and lay it to the Grief 108. To make Oyl of St. John's Wort good for any Ach or Pain Take a quart of sallet-Oyl and put thereto a quart of Flowers of St. John's-wort well picked let them lye therein all the summer till the seeds of the herb be ripe the Glass must be kept warm either in the sun or the water all the summer till the seeds be ripe then put in a quarter of St. John's-wort-seeds whole and so let it stand twelve hours the glass being kept open then you must boyl the oyl 8 hours the water in the Pot full as high as the Oyl in the Glass when it is cold strain it that the seed remain not in it and so keep it for your use 109. For the Tissick Take two ounces of Licorice scraped and bruised of figs three ounces of Agrimony Hore-hound Enula Campana of each a handful boyl them all together in a Gallon of water till half be wasted then strain the herbs from the juice and use it early and late Also for the dry Tissick stamp Fennel-Roots and drink the juice thereof with White-wine 110. To make Oyl of Fennel Put a quantity of Fennel between two Tile-stones or plates of Iron make them very hot and press out the Liquor and this Oyl will keep a great while for it is good for the Tissick dry Scab Burning and Scalding 111. To make the Black Plaister for all manner of Griefs Take a quantity of Oyl-Olive a quantity of Red Lead boyl these together and stir them with a slice of wood continually till it be black and somewhat thick then take it off the fire and put in it a penny-worth of red wax and a pound of Rosin and set it to the fire again but do not blaze it and stir it then take it off and let it stand till it be cold and make it in a lump It is good for a new Wound or to stanch blood pour a little of it into a dish and if it stick fast to the Dishes side then it is enough keep it for your use as need requireth FINIS Beautifying Waters Oyls Oyntments and Powders to Adorn and add Loveliness to the Face and Body 1. To make the Hair very Fair. VVAsh your Hair very clean and then take some Allom-water warm and with a Sponge moisten your Hair therewith and it will make it fair Or you may make a Decoction of Turmerick Rubarb or the Bark of the Barbary-Tree and so it will receive a most fair and beautiful Colour 2. Another Take the last water that is drawn from Honey and wash your head therewith and it will make the Hair of an excellent fair Colour but because it is of a strong smell you must perfume it with some sweet spirit 3. To make the Hair grow thick Make a strong Lye then take a good quantity of Hyssop-Roots and burn them to Ashes and mingle the Ashes and the Lye together and therewith wash your head and it will make the Hair grow also the Ashes of Froggs burnt do encrease Hair as also the Ashes of Goats-dung mingled with Oyl 4. To make the Hair grow Take Marsh-Mallows and boyl them Roots and all and wash the head therewith and it will grow in a short time also take a good quantity of Bees and dry them in a sieve by the fire and make powder of them and temper it with Oyl Olive and anoint the place where the Hair should grow also take the Oyl of Tartar and warm it and anoint any bald Head therewith and it will restore the Hair again in a short time 5. To make the Hair fair Take the Ashes of a Vine burnt of the knots of Barley-straw and Licorice and Sow-bread and distil them together in fair water and wash the Head with it also sprinkle the Hair while it is Combing with the Powder of Cloves Roses Nutmegs Cardamum and Galingale with Rose-water also the Head being often washed with the Decoction of Beech-Nut-Trees the Hair will become fair 6. To make the Hair grow Take Hasle-Nuts with husks and all and burn them to powder then take Beech-mast and the leaves of Enula Campana and stamp the Herb and the Mast together then seethe them together with honey and anoint the place therewith and strew the Powder thereon and this will make the Hair grow 7. To take away Hair Take the juyce of Fumitory mix it with Gum Arabick then lay it on the place the Hairs first plucked out by the Roots and it will never permit any more Hair to grow on the place Also anoint your Head with the juice of a Gloworm stamped and it hath the same Virtue 8. For the Falling of Hair Take the Ashes of Pigeons-dung in Lye and wash the Head therewith also Walnut-leaves beaten with Bears-suet restoreth the Hair that is plucked away Also the Leaves and middle Rind of an Oak sodden in water and the head washed therewith is very good for this purpose 9. To make the Face fair Take the flower of Beans and Distil them and wash the face with the water some say that the Urine of the party is very good to wash the face withal to make it fair 10. For cleansing the face and skin If the face be washed with the water that Rice is sodden in it cleanseth the face and taketh away Pimples 11. A Water to adorn the Face Take Eggs cut in pieces Orange-peels the roots of Melons each as much as is sufficient in a large Vessel with a long neck distil by an Alembick with a strong and careful fire 12. To Beautifie the face Take of Cuckow-pintle a pretty quantity bruise the thick parts with Rose-water dry them by the Sun three or four days then pouring more Rose-water on it use it 13. To make the face look youthful Take two ounces of Aqua-vitae Bean-flower-water and Rose-water each four ounces water of Water-Lillies six ounces mix them all and add to them one dram of the whitest Tragacanth set it in the Sun six days then strain it through a fine linnen-Cloath wash your face with it in the Morning and do not wipe it off 14. A Water to take away Wrinkles in the face Take of the Decoction of Briony and Figgs each a like quantity and wash the face with it 15. An excellent water called Lac Virginis or Virgins Milk to make the face Neck or any part of the body fair and white Take of Alumen Plumosi half an ounce of Camphire one ounce of Roch-Allom one ounce and a Dram Sal Gemmi half an ounce of white Frankincense two ounces Oyl of Tartar one ounce and a half make all these into most fine Powder and mix it with one quart of Rosewater then set it in the Sun and let it stand nine days often stirring it then
sowre Dock Oyl of Tarter of each 3 Drams make a Liniment 9. For Beautifying the Face an approved Oyntment Take of Citron Oyntment fresh made three ounces sweet Almonds very well bruised flower of beans of each one dram the bone of the fish Sepia Harts-horn Barley-flower each 2 drams incorporate them all with Honey 10. Another Excellent Beautifyer Take of Pomatum two ounces Citron Oyntment four ounces mix and anoint the Face therewith Night and Morning and afterwards wash your face with bean-flower-Bean-flower-water 11. An Oyntment to illustrate the Face Take the Oyl of the Marrow of a Hart two ounces Oyl of Goard-Seeds one ounce Goats fat washt Turpentine each half an ounce new wax three drams melt them by the fire then add Mastick Borax burnt each two drams mix them and make an Unguent with which anoint the face at night and in the morning wash it off with bran-bran-water 12. To curl the Hair Take a quantity of Pine Kernels burnt and beat to powder mix them with Oyl of Myrtles make an Oyntment therewith and anoint the Head 13. To make the Hair black Take the juice of red Poppy the juice of green Nuts Oyl of Myrtles Oyl of Costomary each one part boyl it a while and anoint the Hair therewith 14. An excellent Beautifyer for the face used by the Venetian Ladies Take of burnt Tartar half a pound powder it and dry it as they do Salt then take that Salt and put it within the whites of Eggs boyled 15. To cure a red Face Take four ounces of Peach Kernels Goard-seed two ounces bruise them and make an Oyl to anoint the face Morning and Evening 16. To increase the Hair Take the Seeds of Marsh-Mallows a sufficient quantity boyl them in common Oyl with which anoint the Hair Also the Oyl of Earth-worms doth increase the Hair 17. To make the Breasts small Take of Roch-Allom powdered and Oyl of Roses of each a like quantity mix them together and anoint the breasts therewith 18. To take away the Wrinkles of the Face Take Oyl of Turky-millet and the decoction of the Berry of the same and it will distend mollifie and consolidate Wrinkles also Oyl of Nuts is very good for the same 19. To cleanse the Body and make it comely Take of Sage Lavender-flowers Rose-flowers each two handfuls a little Salt boyl them in water or in Lye and make a Bath not too hot in which bathe the body two hours before meat 26. A sweet scented Bathe for Ladies Take of Roses Citron-peels Citron-flowers Orange-flowers Jasmine Bayes Rosemary Lavender Mint Penny-royal each a sufficient quantity boyl them together gently and make a Bath to which add Oyl of Spike six drops Musk five Grains Amber-grease three grains sweet Asa one ounce let her go into the Bath two hours before Meat 21. To make the Body fat and comely Take of Milk and Spring-water each one pint boyl them together till the water be consumed then add Sugar of Penedies fresh Butter each one ounce oyl of sweet Almonds newly drawn half an ounce give them one boyling more and so let it be taken betimes in a Morning fasting and sleep upon it FINIS New and Excellent Experiments and Secrets in the Art of Angling Being directions for the whole Art To make the Lines TAke Care that your Hair be round and free from Galls Scabs or Frets for a well chosen even clear round Hair of a kind of a glass-colour will prove as strong as three uneven scabby Hairs that are ill chose Let your Hair be clean washed before you go about to twist it and then not only choose the clearest Hair but Hairs that are all of an equal bigness for such do usually stretch all together and not break singly one by one but altogether When you have twisted your Links lay them in water for a quarter of an hour at the least and then twist them over again before you tye them into a Line for those that do not so shall usually find their links to have a Hair or two shrunk and be shorter than all the rest at the first fishing with it which is so much of the strength of the Line lost for want of wetting it at first and then re-twisting it and this is most visible in a seven Hair Line which hath always a black hair in the middle called by Anglers the Herring bone Those Hairs that are taken from an Iron-gray or a Sorrel Stone-Horse and the middle of the tayl are best A Cement for Floats to fish withal Take black Rozin beaten Chalk scraped Bees-wax bruised of each a like quantity melt all these over a gentle small coal fire in an earthen Vessel well leaded and so warming the two quills fix them with a little of it it cools immediately and being cold is so hard strong and tite that you can hardly pull the two Quills asunder with both your hands without breaking them in pieces To sight your Caps for the float aright Let the uppermost be at the distance from the top of the quill and the lower Cap near to the end of the quill as in the description of it To dye Bones or Quills red for ever Take some Urine and put into it as much Powder of Brazil as will make it very red which you shall know by dropping some with a Feather upon a piece of white Paper and put therein bones or Quills being first well scraped and laid a while in a water made of Argol and let them lye in it ten or twelve days then take them out and hang them up till they are dry and rub them with a dry Linnen Cloath and they will be of a transparent Colour Observations A Pike is called The first Year a Shotterel The second a Pickerel The third Year a Pike The fourth Year a Luce. Fish are fattest about August All Fish are in season a Month or six Weeks after they have spawn'd To cleanse Worms Take a piece of a Hop-sack because that is not so close struck in the Weaving as other Cloath is and wash it clean and let it dry then take some of the Liquor wherein a piece of fresh Beef hath been boyled but be sure you take not the Liquor of Salt Beef for that will kill all the worms dip the piece of Hop-sack in the Liquor and wring it out but not hard so that some of the Liquor abide in the Cloath put the worms into this Cloath and lay them in an earthen Pot the Worms will run in and out through the Cloath and scour themselves let them stand from Morning to Night then take out the Worms from the Cloath and wash the Cloath as before but not dry it and wet it again in some of the Liquor thus do once a day and thus you will not only preserve your worms alive for three Weeks or a Month but also make them red and tough Probatum The Secrets of J. D. Would'st thou catch Fish Then here 's thy wish Take this Receipt
and dish it upon the Chines and garnish it with Lemons 64. To make a Fresh Cheese Take some New Milk or Cream and a Race of Cinamon scald it then take it off the Fire sweeten it with fine Sugar then take a Spoonful of Runnet to two quarts of Milk set it by and keep it close covered and so let it stand when the Cheese comes strew a little fine Sugar and grated Nutmeg and serve it in with sippets sops in Sack or Muskadine 65. To make an Artichoak-Pye Take the bottoms of six Artichoaks boyled very tender put them in a dish and some Vinegar over them season them with Ginger and Sugar a little Mace whole and put them in a coffin of paste when you lay them in lay some Marrow and Dates sliced and a few Raisins of the Sun in the bottom with good store of butter when it is half baked take a Gill of Sack being boyled first with sugar and a peel of Orange Put it into the Pye and set it in the Oven again till you use it 66. To make Marrow-Pasties Shred the Marrow and Apples together and put a little sugar to them put them into puff-paste and fry them in a pan with fresh butter and serve them up to the Table with a little white sugar strewed on it 67. To make green Sauce Take a good handful of Sorrel beat it in a Mortar with pippins pared and quartered with a little Vinegar and Sugar put it into saucers Or take Sorrel beat it and stamp it well in a Mortar squeeze out the juice of it and put thereto a little Vinegar Sugar and two hard Eggs minced small a litle Nutmeg grated and Butter set this upon the coals till it is hot and pour it into the dish on the sippets This is sauce for Hen and Veal and Bacon 78. To pickle Oysters Take a quart of the largest great Oysters with the Liquor wash them clean and wipe them add to them a pint of fair water and half a pint of White-wine Vinegar half an ounce of whole Pepper an handful of Salt a quarter of an Ounce of large Mace with the Liquor of the Oysters strained put all together in a pipkin over a soft fire let them simper together a quarter of an hour when the Oysters are enough take them up and put them up into a little fair water and Vinegar till they be cold the pickle boyling a quarter of an hour after the Oysters are taken up both being cold put them up together When you use them garnish the dish with Barberries and Lemons and a little Mace and Pepper and pour in some of the pickle 69. To make Scotch Collops of Veal Cut out your Fillet into very broad slices fat and lean not too thick Take eight Eggs beat them very well with a little Salt grate a whole Nutmeg take a handful of Thyme and strip it then take a pound of Sausages half a pint of stewing Oysters of the largest wash and cleanse them from the Gravel then half fry your Veal with sweet butter then put in your Sausages and Oysters then take a quarter of a pound of Capers shred them very small with three Anchovies dissolved in White-wine and fair water so put in your Eggs shred Capers and Anchovies Butter and Spice and mingle them and strew them in the pan upon the Veal and Oysters serve it with sippets with a little fresh Butter and Vinegar with Lemons sliced and Barberries with a little Salt You must have a care to keep the meat stirring lest the Eggs curdle with the heat of the fire 70. To make a rare White pot Take three pints of Cream whole Cinamon a little sliced Nutmeg set on the Cream and Spice and scald it take a penny-loaf and slice it very thin take a couple of Marrow-bones lay the Marrow sliced on the bottom of the dish upon the Marrow lay the Bread then lay Raisins of the Sun over the Bread and lay Marrow again as before To the three pints of scalded Cream add nine yolks of Eggs well beaten with Rose-water sweeten the Cream with white Sugar and take out the whole Cinamon and beat the Cream and Eggs well fill up a broad shallow bason and bake it when it is enough scrape fine sugar on it and stick it with red and white Muscadoes and so serve it 71. To make a very fine Custard Take a quart of Cream and boyl it with whole Spice then beat the Yolks of ten Eggs and five whites mingle them with a little Cream and when your Cream is almost cold put your Eggs into it and stir them very well then sweeten it and put out your Custard into a deep dish and bake it then serve it in with french Comfits strewed on it 72. To make Minc'd Pyes of an Eel Take a fresh Eel flea it and cut off the Fish from the bones mince it small then pare two or three Wardens or Pears mince of them as much as of the Eel temper them together and season them with Ginger Pepper Cloves Mace Salt a little Sanders some Currans Raisins Pruans Dates Verjuice Butter and Rose-water 73. To bake Rabbits to be eaten cold When your Rabbits are parboyled take out all the bones you can well take out and lard them then season them with Pepper Salt Cloves Mace and Nutmegs with a good quantity of Savoury and forc'd Meat then put them into your prepared coffin put in butter and close your Pye bake it and when it is cold fill it with clarified Butter 74. To bake a Joll of Ling in a Pye Let your Ling be almost boyled and then season it with Pepper only the skin being first taken off strew the bottom of your prepared coffin with an Onion or two minced small close your Pye and bake it then take the Yolks and Whites of about a dozen Eggs not boyled altogether hard mince them small with your Knife and put them into drawn Butter toss them together then draw your Pye and pour in this Lear of Eggs all over and shake it together so put on your Lid and Dish your Pye 75. To bake a Turkey Boyl and Lard your Turkey when it is parboyled season it with Pepper Salt and a little Cloves and Mace then put him into your prepared Coffin lay on butter and close it put the Head on the top with your garnish then bake it and fill it with Clarified Butter when it is cold 76. To Roast Calves feet First boyl them tender and blanch them and being cold Lard them thick with small Lard then spit them on a small spit and Roast them serve them with sauce made of Vinegar Cinamon Sugar and Butter 77. To bake a Goose Break the bones of your Goose and parboyl him then season him with Pepper and Salt and a little Cloves and Mace if you please you may bake a Rabbit or two with it because your stubble-Geese are very fat and your Rabbits dry you need not lard either
your Rabbits with a Nutmeg Pepper and Salt then take two Eggs and Verjuice beaten together then throw it in the pan stick it and dish it up in sippets 159. To make Cracknels Take 5 or 6 pints of the finest Wheat flower you can get to which put in a spoonful and not more of good Yeast then mingle it well with Butter Cream and Rose-water and Sugar finely beaten and working it well into paste make it into what form you please and bake it 160. To make Pancakes Put eight Eggs to two quarts of Flowre casting by four whites season it with Cinamon Nutmeg Ginger Cloves Mace and Salt then make it up into a strong Batter with Milk beat it well together and put in half a pint of Sack make it so thin that it may run in your pan how you please put your pan on the fire with a little butter or suet when it is very hot take a cloath and wipe it out so make your pan very clean then put in your Butter and run it very thin supply it with little bits of Butter and so toss it often and bake it crisp and brown 161. To make a Junket Take Ewes or Goats-Milk or for want of these Cows-Milk and put it over the Fire to warm then put in a little Runnet then pour it out into a dish and let it cool then strew on some Cinamon and Sugar and take some of your Cream and lay on it scrape on sugar and serve it 162. To make Excellent Marrow-Spinage-Pasties Take Spinage and chop it a little then boyl it till it be tender then make the best rich light crust you can and roul it out and put a little of your Spinage into it and Currans and Sugar and store of lumps of Marrow clap the Paste over this to make little Pasties deep within and fry them with Clarified butter 163. To make a Pine-Apple-tart Beat two handfuls of Pine-Apples with a prick'd Quince and the pulp of two or three pippins when they are well beaten put to them half a pint of Cream a little Rosewater the yolks of six Eggs with a handful of sugar if it be thick add a little more Cream to it so having your thin low Coffins for it dryed fill them up and bake them you may garnish them with Oringado or Lozenges of Sugar plate or what else you please 164. To dry Neats-tongues Take Bay-salt beaten very fine and Salt-petre of each alike and rub over your Tongues very well with that and cover all over with it and as it wasts put on more and when they are very hard and stiff they are enough then roul them in bran and dry them before a soft Fire and before you boyl them let them lye one night in Pump-water and boyl them in the same water 165. To stew Birds the Lady Butlers way Take small Birds pick them and cut off their Legs fry them in sweet butter lay them in a cloath to dry up the butter then take Oysters and mince them and put them in a dish put to them White-wine and Cinamon put in the birds with Cloves Mace and Pepper let all these stew together covered till they be enough then put into it some Sugar and some toasted Manchet and put it in the dish and so serve it up to the Table 166. To make a sweet Pye with Lamb-stones and Sweet-breads and sugar Slit the Lamb-stones in the middle and skin them wash the Sweet-breads both of Veal and Lamb and wipe them very dry take the Lambs Liver and shred it very small take the Udder of a Leg of Veal and slice it season all with a little Salt Nutmeg Mace and Cloves beaten and some whole Pepper then shred two or three pippins and Candied Lemon and Orange-peel half a dozen Dates sliced with Currans white Sugar a few Carraway-seeds a quarter of a pint of Verjuice and as much Rose-water a couple of Eggs roul up all these together in little puddings or balls made green with the juice of Spinage and lay a Pudding then a Sweat-bread then a Lamb-stone till you have filled up the Pye and cover them with dates and sliced Citron and Lemon When it is drawn take two or three yolks of Eggs beat them and put to them a little fresh butter White-wine and Sugar and pour it into the Tunnel scrape some loaf sugar upon the Lid and so serve it 167. To roast Eels When they are flea'd cut them to pieces about three or four Inches long dry them and put them into a dish mince a little Thyme two Onions a piece of Lemon-peel a little pepper beaten small Nutmeg Mace and Salt when it is cut exceeding small strew it on the Eels with the Yolks of two or three Eggs then having a small Spit or else a couple of square sticks made for that purpose spit through the Eels cross-ways and put a bay-leaf between every piece of Eel and tying the sticks on a spit let them Roast you need not turn them constantly but let them stand till they hiss or are brown and so do them on the other side and put the Dish in which the Eel was with the seasoning underneath to save the Gravy baste it over with sweet butter The Sauce must be a little Claret-wine some minced Oysters with their Liquor a grated Nutmeg and an Onion with sweet butter and so serve it 168. To boyl Cocks or Larks Boyl them with the Guts in them in strong broath or fair water and three or four whole Onions large Mace and salt the Cocks being boyled make sauce with some thin slices of manchet or grated bread in another Pipkin and some of the broath where the Fowl or the Cocks boyl then put to it some butter and the Guts and Liver minced then take some yolks of Eggs dissolved with Vinegar and some grated Nutmeg put it to the other ingredients stir them together and Dish the Fowl in fine sippets pour on the sauce with some sliced Lemon Grapes or Barberries and run it over with beaten butter 169. To broyl Oysters Take the biggest Oysters you can get then take a little minced Thyme grated Nutmeg grated bread and a little Salt put this to the Oysters then get some of the largest bottom-shells and place them on the Grid-Iron and put two or three Oysters in each shell then put some butter to them and let them simper on the Fire till the Liquor bubbles low supplying it still with butter when they are crisp feed them with White-wine and a little of their own Liquor with a little grated Bread Nutmeg and minced Thyme put as much only as to relish it so let it boyl up again then add some drawn butter to thicken them and Dish them 170. To pickle Oysters Take a quart of the largest great Oysters with the Liquor wash them clean and wipe them add to them a pint of fair water and half a pint of White-wine Vinegar half an ounce of whole Pepper an handful
and a half Myrrh Castoreum of each three drams Saffron one dram powder them and steep them eight days in two quarts of the Spirit of Wine then strain them through a very quick Hair-strainer keep the strained liquor in a Glass very well stopt 45. To make Syrup of wormwood Take Roman Wormwood or Pontick Wormwood half a pound of Red Roses two ounces Indian spike three drams old rich White-wine and juice of Quinces of each two pints and a half bruise them in an earthen Vessel twenty four hours then boyl them till half be wasted strain it and put to the straining two pounds of Sugar and boil it to a syrup 46. To make Conserve of Quinces Take three quarters of the juice of Quinces clarified boyl it until two parts be wasted then put to it two pounds of white Sugar then boyl them to the thickness of Honey 47. To make Syrup of Poppies Take the heads and seeds of white Poppy and black of each fifty drams Venus hair fifteen Licorice 5 drams Jujubes thirty drams Lettice seeds forty drams and of the seeds of Mallows and Quinces tyed up in a fine rag of each one dram and a half boyl them in eight pints of water until half be wasted strain it and to every three pound of liquor put thereto Perrides and Sugar of each one pound boyl them to a Syrup 41. To make Honey of Roses Take of pure white Honey despumed fresh juyce of red Roses one pound put them into a skillet and when they begin to boyl throw into them of fresh red Rose-leaves picked four pounds and boyl them until the juyce be wasted always stirring it then strain it and put it up in an Earthen pot 49. To make Syrup of Lemons Take of the Juyce of Lemons purified by going through a Woolen strainer with crushing three quarts and a half and of white Sugar 5 pound boyl them with a soft fire to a Syrup 50. To make Spirit of Wine Take of good Claret or white-wine or Sack enough to fill the Vessel wherein you make your distillation to a third part then put on the Head furnished with Nose or pipe and so make your distillation first in ashes drawing about a third part from the whole as for Example six or eight pints out of four and twenty then still it again in B. M. drawing another third part which is two pints so that the oftner you distil it the less Liquor you have but the more strong some use to rectifie it seven times 51. To make Syrup of Maiden-hair Take of the herb Maiden hair fresh gathered and cut a little five ounces of roots of Licorish-scraped two ounces steep them twenty four hours in a sufficient quantity of Hot water then boyl them according to Art Add four pound of Sugar to five pints of the clarified liquor and then boyl them to a Syrup 52. To make Syrup of Licorish Take of the Roots of Licorish scraped two ounces of Colts-foot four handfuls of Maiden-hair one ounce of Hysop half an ounce infuse them twenty four hours in a sufficient quantity of water then boyl them till one half be wasted add to the strained liquor a pound of the best clarified Honey and as much white Sugar boyl them to a syrup 53. To make the Kings perfume Take 6 spoonfuls of Rose-water and as much amber grease as weigheth two Barley Corns and as much Civet with as much Sugar as weigheth two pence beaten in fine powder all these boyled together in a Perfuming pan is an excellent perfume 54. The Queens perfume Take 4 spoonfuls of spike-water and four spoonfuls of Damask water thirty Cloves and eight Bay-leaves shred as much Sugar as weigheth two pence all these boyled make a good perfume 55. King Edwards Perfume to make your house smell like Rosemary Take three spoonfuls of perfect Rosemary and as much sugar as half a walnut beaten in small powder all these boyling together in a perfuming Pan upon hot Embers with a few Coals is a very sweet Perfume 56. To make Conserve of Rosemary Take your Flowers of Rosemary which you may gather either in March or September when you have beaten them to pap take three times their weight in Sugar pound them altogether and set them in the Sun and so use them 57. To make Syrup of Cowslips Take the distilled water of Cowslips and put there to your flowers of Cowslips clean pickt and the green knobs in the bottom cut off and boyl them up into a syrup take it in Almond Milk or some other warm thing it is good against the Palsie and frenzy and to procure sleep to the sick 58. To make Marmalade of Lemons and Oranges You may boyl eight or nine Lemons or Oranges with 4 or 3 Pippins and draw them through a strainer then take the weight of the pulp altogether in Sugar and boyl it as you do Marmalade of Quinces and so box it up 59. To make Angelica Water Take a handful of Carduus benedictus and dry it then take three ounces of Angelica-roots one dram of Myrrh half an ounce of Nutmegs Cinamon and Ginger four Ounces of each one dram and a half of Saffron of Cardamons Cubebs Galingal and Pepper of each a quarter of an ounce two drams of Mace one dram of Grains of Lignum Aloes Spikenard Junius Odoratus of each a dram Sage Borage Buglos Violets and Rosemary flowers of each half a handful bruise them and steep them in a pottle of Sack twelve hours and distil is as the rest 60. To make Quiddany of Cherries When your Cherries are fully ripe and red to the stone take them and pull out the stones and boyl your cherries till they be all broken then strain them and take the Liquor strained out and boyl it over again and put as much Sugar to it as you think convenient and when it is boyled that you think it is thick enough put it into your boxes 61. To dry Cherries Take six pound of Cherries and stone them then take a pound of Sugar and wet it with the juyce of the cherries and boyl it a little then put in your Cherries and boyl them till they are clear let them lye in the syrup a week then drain them from the Syrup and lay them on thin boards or sheets of Glass to dry in a stove turn them twice a day and when they are dry wash off the clamminess with warm water and dry them a little longer 62. To make brown Metheglin Take strong Ale-wort and put as much Honey to it as will make it strong enough to bear an Egg boyl them very well together then set it a cooling and when it is almost cold put in some Ale yeast then put it in a strong Vessel and when it hath done working put a bag of Spices into the Vessel and some Lemmon peel and stop it up close and in a few days it will be fit to drink but the longer you keep it the better 63. To Candy
this Quantity will make three quarts of Water 136. To make Washing Balls Take Storax of both kinds Benjamin Calamus Aromaticus Lapdanum of each alike and bray them to powder with Cloves and Orris then beat them all with a sufficient quantity of Soap till it be stiff then with your hand work it like paste and make round balls thereof 137. To make a musk ball Take Nutmegs Mace Cloves Saffron and Cinamon of each the weight of two pence and beat it to fine powder add as much Mastick of Storax the weight of six pence of Lapdanum the weight of ten pence of Amber grease the weight of six pence and of Musk four grains dissolve and work all these in hard sweet Soap till it come to a stiff paste and then make balls thereof 138. To make Imperial water Take a Gallon of Gascoign Wine Ginger Galingal Nutmegs Grains Cloves Anniseeds Fennel-seeds Caraway-seeds of each one dram then take Sage Mint Red Roses Time Pellitory Rosemary wild Thyme Camomile and Lavender of eace a handful then beat the spices small and the herbs also and put all together in the Wine and let it stand so twelve hours stirring it divers times then distil it with a Limbeck and keep the first water for it is best of a Gallon of Wine you must not take above a quart of water This water comforteth the Vital spirits and helpeth the inward diseases that come of cold as the Palsie and Contraction of sinews it also killeth worms and comforts the stomach it Cureth the cold Dropsie helpeth the stone and stinking breath and maketh one seem young 139. To make Verjuyce Gather your Crabs as soon as the Kernels turn black and lay them a while in a heap to sweat then pick them from the stalks blacks and rottenness then crush and beat them all to pieces in a tub then make a bag of course hair-cloath as big as your press and fill it with the crusht Crabs then put it into the press and press it as long as any moisture will drop out having a clean Vessel underneath to receive the Liquor then Tun it up in sweet Hogsheads and to every Hogshead put half a dozen handfuls of Damask Rose Leaves then bring it up and spend it as you have occasion 140. To make dry Sugar Leach Blanch your Almonds and beat them with a little Rose-water and the white of one Egg and then beat it with a good quantity of Sugar and work it as you would work a piece of paste then roul it and print it only be sure to strew sugar in the print for fear of cleaving to 141. To make fine Jumbals Beat a pound of sugar fine then take the same quantity of fine Wheat Flower and mix them together than take two whites and one yolk of an Egg half a quarter of a pound of Blanched Almonds then beat them very fine all together with half a pound of sweet Butter and a spoonful of rose-Rose-water and so work it with a little Cream till it come to a stiff paste then roul them forth as you please you may add a few fine dryed Anniseeds finely rub'd and strewed into the paste with Coriander seeds 142. To make dry Vinegar To make dry Vinegar which you may carry in your pocket you must take the blacks of green Corn either Wheat or Rye and beat it in a Morter with the strongest Vinegar you can get till it come to paste then roul it into little Balls and dry it in the Sun till it be very hard and when you have occasion to use it cut a little piece thereof and dissolve it in wine and it will make a strong Vinegar 143. To make excellent Date Leach Take Dates and take out the stones and the white rinde and beat them with Sugar Cinamon and Ginger very finely then work it as you would work a piece of paste and then print them as you please 144. To make white Jelly of Almonds Take Rose-water Gum dragant or Isingglass dissolved and some Cinamon grosly beaten boyl them all together then take a pound of Almonds blanch them and beat them fine with a little fair water dry them in a fine Cloath and put your Rose-water and the rest into the Almonds boyl them together and stir them continually then take them from the fire and when it is boyled enough take it off 145. To Candy Orange Peels Take your Orange-Peels after they are preserved then take fine sugar and Rose-water and boyl it to the height of Manus Christi that is till it is sugar again then draw through your sugar lay them on the bottom of a sieve and dry them in an Oven after you have drawn Bread and they will be Candied 146. To make Paste of Violets You must take Violets ready pickt and bruise them in a Marble Morter and wring the Juice from them into a Porringer and put as much hard sugar in fine powder as the Juyce will cover dry it and then powder it again then take as much Gum-dragant steeped in Rose-water as will bring this sugar into a perfect paste then take it up and print it with your Moulds and so dry it in your stove 147. To preserve Pippins Red. Take your best coloured Pippins and pare them then take a piercer and bore a hole through them then make Syrup of them as much as will cover them and so let them boyl in a broad preserving pan put to them a piece of Cinamon and let them boil leisurely close covered turning them very often or else they will spot and one side will not be like the other and let them boyl till they begin to Jelly then take them up and you may keep them all the year 148. To make Spirit of Roses Bruise the Rose in his own juyce adding thereto being temperately warm a convenient proportion either of Yeast or Ferment leave them a few days to ferment till they get a strong and heady smell near like to Vinegar then distil them and draw so long as you can find any scent of the Rose to come then distil again so often till you have purchased a perfect Spirit of the Rose You may also Ferment the juyce of Roses only and after Distill the same 149. To make Syrup of Elder Take Elder Berries when they are red bruise them in a stone Mortar strain the Juice and boyl it away to almost half scum it very clean take it off the Fire whilst it is hot put in Sugar to the thickness of a Syrup put it no more on the fire when it is cold put it into Glasses not filling them to the top for it will work like Beer 150. To make Orange water Take two quarts of the best Malaga-Sack and put in as many of the peels of Oranges as will go in cut the white clean off steep them twenty four hours then still them in a Glass-still and let the water run into the Receiver upon fine sugar-Candy you may still it in
an ordinary Still 151. To make a Cordial of great virtue Take a pint and a half of the strongest Ale may be gotten twenty Jordan Almonds clean wiped but neither wash'd nor blaunched with two Dates minced very small and stamped then take the pith of young Beef the length of twelve Inches lay it in water till the blood be out of it then strip the skin off it and stamp it with the Almonds and Dates then strain them altogether into the Ale boyl it till it be a little thick give the party in the Morning six spoonfuls and as much when he goeth to Bed 152. An excellent Surfeit-Water Take Cellandine Rosemary Rue Pellitory of Spain Scabious Angelica Pimpernel Wormwood Mugwort Bettony Agrimony Balm Dragon and Tormentile of each half a pound shred them somewhat small and put them into a narrow mouthed pot and put to them five quarts of White-wine stop it close and let it stand three Days and Nights stirring it Morning and Evening then take the herbs from the Wine and distil them in an ordinary Still and when you have distilled the Herbs distil the Wine also wherein is virtue for a weak stomach Take three or four spoonfuls at any time 153. To make a Syrup for one short-winded Take a good handful of Hyssop and a handful of Horehound and boyl them in a quart of Spring-water to a pint then strain it through a clean Cloth and put in Sugar to make it pleasant Stir it Morning and Evening with a Licorise stick and take about three spoonfuls at a time 154. To make Syrup of Sugar-Candyed Take Sugar-Candied and put it into a clear bladder and tie it but so that it may have some vent then put it into a bason of water so that the water come not over the top of the bladder and cover it with a Pewter-Dish and let it stand all Night and in the Morning take of it with a Licorise-stick 155. To make an excellent Syrup against the Scurvy Take of the juyce of Garden Scurvy-grass Brook-lime and Water-cresses of each six ounces and after it hath stood till it is clear take sixteen ounces of the clearest and put to it four ounces of the juyce of Oranges and Lemons make it a clear Syrup with so much fine sugar as will serve the turn 156. To make Syrup of Roses When your Liquor is ready to boyl put as many Roses as will be well steept into it cover it close and when the Roses are throughly white then strain it and set it on the fire again and so use it thirteen times and to every pint of your water or Liquor you must put a pound of Sugar and let it stand together steeping for the space of one night then scum it clean and seethe it over a quick Fire a quarter of an hour then take some whites of Eggs and beat them well together take off your pot and put in the whites and then set it on the fire again and let it boyl a good while then let it run through a Jelly bag till it will stand still upon your Nail 157. To make a Comfortable Syrup Take a handful of Agrimony and boyl it in a pint of water till half be consumed then take out the Agrimony and put in a good handful of Currans and boyl them till they are ready to break then strain them and make a Syrup of them then set it on a Chafing dish of Coals and add thereto a little white Saunders and drink it either hot or cold 158. To make an Almond-Caudle Take three pints of Ale boyl it with Cloves and Mace and slice bread in it then have ready beaten a pound of Almonds blanched and strain them out with a pint of White-wine and thick the Ale with it sweeten it if you please but be sure scum the Ale when it boyls 159. To Candy Cherries Take your Cherries before they be full Ripe take out the stones put Clarified Sugar boyled to a height and then pour it on them 160. To make Rose-water Take a pint of Endive-water two ounces of Saffron finely beaten then steep it therein all night the next day boyl it and strain out the Saffron then with Sugar boyl it up to a Syrup 161. To make Syrup of Saffron Stamp the Leaves and first distil the juyce being squeezed out and after distil the leaves and so you may dispatch more with one Still than others will do with three or four and this water is every way as Medicinable as the other serving very well in decoctions and Syrups c. Though it be not altogether so pleasing to the smell 162. To wake Suckets of Green Walnuts Take Walnuts when they are no bigger than the largest Hasel Nut pare away the uppermost green but not too deep then boyl them in a pottle of water till the water be boyled away then take so much more fresh water and when it is boyled to the half put thereto a quart of Vinegar and a pottle of Clarified Honey 163. To make white Leach of Cream Take a pint of sweet Cream and six spoonfuls of Rose-water two grains of Musk two drops of Oyl of Mace and so let it boyl with four ounces of Ising-Glass then let it run through a Jelly-bag when it is cold slice it like brawn and so serve it out This is the best way to make Leach 164. To preserve Pome-citrons You must take a pound and a half of Pome-Citrons and cut them in halves and quarters take the Meat out of them and boyl them tender in fair water then take two pound of Sugar clarified and make Syrup for them and let them boyl therein a quarter of an hour very gently then take them up and let your Syrup boyl till it be thick then put in your Pome-Citrons and you may keep them all the Year 165. To pickle Clove-Gilly-Flowers for Sallets Take the fairest Clove-Gilly-Flowers clip off the whites from them put them into a wide-mouth'd Glass and strew a good deal of Sugar finely beaten among them then put as much wine Vinegar to them as will throughly wet them tye them up close and set them in the Sun and in a little while they will be fit for use 166. To make Leach of Almonds Take half a pound of sweet Almonds and beat them in a Morter then strain them with a pint of sweet Milk from the Cow then put to it one grain of Musk two spoonfuls of Rose-water two ounces of fine Sugar the weight of three Shillings in Isin-glass that is very white boyl them together and let it all run through a strainer then still it out and serve it 167. To Candy Marigolds in wedges the Spanish Fashion Take of the fairest Marigold Flowers two ounces and shred them small and dry them before the Fire then take four ounces of Sugar and boyl it to a height then pour it upon a wet Pye-plate and between hot and cold cut it into wedges lay them on a sheet of
the hardest Rinded Lemon and stir it into your Sugar put it into your Coffins and a paper and when they be cold take them off 186. To make Artifical Walnuts Take some Sugar plate and print it in a mould made for a Walnut-kernel and then yellow it all over with a little saffron water with a Feather then take Cinamon searced and Sugar a like quantity working it in a Paste with Gum-dragon steeped in Rose-water and print it in a mould made like a Walnut-shell and when the Kernel and shell be dry close them together with Gum-dragon 187. To make Black Cherry wine Take a Gallon of the juice of Black-Cherries keep it in a vessel close stopped till it begin to work then filter it and an ounce of Sugar being added to every pint and a Gallon of White-wine and keep it close stopped for use 188. To make Rose Vinegar Take of Red-Rosebuds gathered in a dry time the whites cut off then dry them in the shade three or four days one pound of Vinegar eight sextaries set them in the Sun forty days then strain out the Roses and put in fresh and so repeat it three or 4 times 189. To make Syrup of Vinegar Take of the Roots of Smalledg Fennel Endive of each three ounces Anniseeds Smalledg Fennel of each one ounce Endive half an ounce clear water three quarts boyl it gently in an Earthen Vessel till half the water be consumed then strain and clarifie it and with three pound of Sugar and a pint and a half of White-wine Vinegar boyl it into a Syrup This is a gallant Syrup for such whose Bodies are stuffed either with phlegm or rough Humours for it opens obstructions or stopping both of the stomach Liver Spleen and Reins it cuts and brings away tough Flegm and Choler 190. To make Syrup of Apples Take two quarts of the juice of sweet-scented Apples and the juyce of Bugloss Garden and Wild of Violet leaves and Rose-water of each a pound boyl them together Clarifie them and with six pound of very fine Sugar boyl them into a Syrup according to Art 191. To make the Capon water against a Consumption Take a Capon the Guts being pul'd out cut it in pieces and take away the Fat boyl it in a close Vessel in a sufficient quantity of Spring water Take of this Broth three pints of Burrage and Violet-water a pint and half White wine one pint Red-Rose leaves two drams and a half Burrage flowers Violets and Bugloss of each one dram pieces of bread out of the Oven half a pound Cinamon bruised half an ounce Still it in a Glass Still according to Art This is a Sovereign Remedy against Hectick feavers and Consumption let such as are subject to those Diseases hold it as a Jewel 192. To make Elder Vinegar Gather the Flowers of Elder pick them very clean dry them in the Sun on a gentle heat and to every quart of Vinegar take a good handful of flowers and let it stand in the Sun a fortnight then strain the Vinegar from the flowers and put it into the Barrel again and when you draw a quart of Vinegar draw a quart of Water and put it into the Barrel luke-warm 193. To make China Broth. Take an ounce of China Root clipped thin and steep it in three pints of Water all night on Embers covered the next day take a Cock Chicken clean pickt and the Guts taken out put in its belly Agrimony and Maiden hair of each half a handful Raisins of the Sun stoned one good handful and as much French Barley boyl all these in a Pipkin close covered on a Gentle Fire for six or seven hours let it stand till it be cold strain it and keep it for your Use Take a good draught in the Morning and at four in the Afternoon 194. To make paste of tender Plumbs Put your Plumbs into an Earthen Pot and set it into a Pot of boyling water and when the Plumbs are dissolved then strain the thin Liquor from them through a Cloath and reserve that Liquor to make Quiddany then strain the pulp through a piece of Canvas and take as much Sugar as the pulp in weight and as much water as will wet the same and so boyl it to a Candy height then dry the pulp upon a Chafing-dish of Coals then put your Syrup and the pulp so hot together and boyl it always stirring it till it will lye upon a Pye-plate as you lay it and that it run not abroad and when it is somewhat dry then use it but put to it the pulp of Apples 195. To make Cream of Codlings First scald your Codlings and so peel off the skin then scrape the pulp from the Cores and strain them with a little Sugar and Rose-water then lay your pulp of Codlings in the middle of the Dish and so much raw Cream round it as you please and so serve it 196. To make Sugar of Roses Take of Red-Rose-leaves the whites being cut off an Ounce dry them in the Sun speedily put to it a pound of white Sugar melt the sugar in Rose-water and Juyce of Roses of each two Ounces which being consumed by degrees put in the Rose-leaves in powder mix them put it upon a Marble and make it into Lozenges according to Art 197. To make a Cream Tart. Cut the Crust of a Manchet and grate it small and mix it with thick Cream and some sweet butter then take twenty four Yolks of Eggs and strain them with a little Cream putting thereto a good quantity of Sugar mix these very well and set it upon a small fire and so let it boyl till it be thick then make two sheets of Paste as thin as you can and raise the sides of one of them the height of one of your fingers in breadth and then fill it and cover it with the other sheet then bake it half a quarter of an hour then put Sugar on it and so serve it 198. To make Artificial Oranges Take Alabaster Moulds made in three pieces bind two of the pieces together and water them an hour or two then take as much Sugar as you think will fill your Moulds and so boyl it to a height then pour it into your Moulds one by one very quick Then put on the Lid of the Mould and so turn it round with your hand as quick as you can and when it is cold take it out of the Mould and they will be both whole and hollow within and so it will appear and resemble the Mould wherein it is put whether Oranges Lemons Cucumbers or the like 199. To make Poppy-water Take of Red Poppies four pound put to them a quart of White-wine then distill them in a common Still then let the distilled water be poured upon fresh flowers and repeated three times to which add two Nutmegs sliced Red Poppy flowers a pugil white Sugar two ounces set it to the Fire to give it a pleasing sharpness and Order
off their heads then put to them one penny-worth of Saffron and beat them together and spread it on a woolly side of a piece of Sheeps Leather and apply it to the soles of the Feet anointing the sore place with the Marrow of a Stone-Horse 4. For Griping of the Guts Take Anniseeds Fennel Bay-berrie Juniper-berries Tormentil Bistort Balaustins Pomegranate-pills each one ounce Rose-leaves a handful boyl them in Milk strain it and add the Yolk of an Egg six grains of Laudanum dissolved in the Spirit of Mint prepare it for a Glister and give it warm 5. A Soveraign Medicine for any Ach or Pain Take Barrows grease a Lap full of Arch-Angel-leaves flowers Stalks and all and put it into an Earthen pot and stop it close and paste it then put it in an horse-dung-hill nine days in the latter end of May and nine days in the beginning of June then take it forth and strain it and use it 6. For the Sciatica and Pains in the Joynts Take Balm and Cinquefoyl but most of all Betony Nep and Featherfew stamp them and drink the juyce with Ale and Wine Probatum 7. For an Ague Take the Root of a blew Lilly scrape it clean and slice it and lay it in soak all night in Ale and in the Morning stamp it and strain it and give it the Patient Luke-warm to drink an hour before the fit cometh 8. For all Feavers and Agues in sucking Children Take Powder of Crystal and steep it in Wine and give it to the Nurse to drink also take the Root of Devils-bit with the Herb and hang it about the Childs Neck 9. A good Medicine to strengthen the Back Take Comfrey Knot-grass and flowers of Arch-Angel boyl them in a little Milk and drink it off every Morning 10. For the Head-ach Take Rose Cakes and stamp them very small in a Morter with a little Ale and let them be dryed by the Fire on a Tile-sheard and lay it to the Nape of the Neck to Bed-ward Proved 11. For the yellow Jaundice Take a great white Onion and make a hole where the blade goeth out to the bigness of a Chestnut then fill the hole with treacle being beaten with half an ounce of English Honey and a little Saffron and set the Onion against the Fire and Roast it well that it do not burn and when it is Roasted strain it through a Cloath and give the juyce thereof to the sick three days together and it shall help them 12. For the black Jaundice Take Fennel Sage Parsley Gromwell of each much a like and make Pottage thereof with a piece of good Pork and eat no other Meat that day 13. For Infection of the Plague Take a spoonful of running-Running-water a spoonful of Vinegar a good quantity of treacle to the bigness of a Hasel-Nut temper all these together and heat it luke-warm and drink it every four and twenty hours 14. For the Cramp Take Oyl of Camomile and Fenugreek and anoint the place where the Cramp is and it helpeth 15. For the Ach of the joynts Take Marshmallows and sweet Milk Linseed Powder of Cummin and the whites of Eggs Saffron and white grease and fry all these together and lay it to the aking joynt 16. For an Ague Take a pottle of thin Ale and put thereto a handful of Parsley as much red Fennel as much Centory as much Pimpernel and let the Ale be half consumed away and then take and drink thereof 17. To make the Countess of Kents Powder Take of the Magistery of Pearls of Crabs-Eyes prepared Harts-horn Magistery of white Coral of Lapis contra Yarvam of each a like quantity to these Powders infused cut off the black tops of the great Claws of Crabs the full weight of the rest Beat these all into a fine powder and searce them through a fine Lawn searce To every ounce of this powder add a Dram of Oriental Bezoar make all these up in a lump or Mass with Jelly of Harts-Horn and colour it with Saffron putting thereto a scruple of Amber-grease and a little Musk finely powderd and dry it in the Air after they are made up into small quantities you may give to a man twenty Grains and to a Child twelve Grains It is excellent against all Malignant and Pestilent Diseases French Pox Small-Pox Measles Plague Pestilence Malignant or Scarlet-Feavers and Melancholly twenty or thirty Grains thereof being exhibited in a little warm sack or harts-horn Jelly to a Man and half as much or twelve Grains to a child 18. For the falling sickness or Convulsions Take the dung of a Peacock make it into Powder and give so much of it to the Patient as will lye upon a shilling in a little succory-water fasting 19. For the Pleurisie Take the round Balls of Horse-dung and boyl them in a pint of White-wine till half be consumed then strain it out and sweeten it with a little sugar let the Patient drink of this and then lye warm 20. To prevent Miscarrying Take Venice Turpentine spread it on black brown Paper the breadth and length of an hand and lay it to the small of her back and let her drink a Caudle made of Muscadine putting into it the husks of about twenty sweet Almonds dryed and finely powdered 21. For the Worms in Children Take Wormseed boyled in Beer and Ale and sweetned with Clarified Honey and then let them drink it 22. For the Whites Take white washed Turpentine and make up in Balls like Pills then take Cinamon and Ginger and roul the balls in it and take them as you would do Pills Morning and Evening Proved 23. For a dry Cough Take anniseed Ash-seeds and Violets and beat them to powder and stamp them of each a like quantity then boyl them together in fair water till it grows thick then put it up and let the Patient take of it morning and evening 24. To make Unguentum Album Take a pint of Oyl-Olive and half a pound of Diaculum Anniseeds a pretty quantity and put them together and put thereto a pound of Ceruse small grounded boyl them together a little and stir them always till it be cold and it is done 25. To destroy the Piles Take Oyl of Roses Frankincense and Honey and make an Oyntment of them and put it into the Fundament and put Myrrh unto the same and use often to anoint the Fundament therewith and let the fume thereof go into the Fundament 26. For the Canker Take a handful of unset Leeks with the Roots and a small quantity of Yarrow and boyl them in White-wine till they be all very soft then strain and Clarifie them and let the Patient drink thereof Morning and Evening blood-warm 27. For the Itch. Take the Juyce of Penny-royal the juice of Savin the juice of Scabious the juice of Sage the juice of Pellitory with some Barrows grease and black-soap temper all these together and make a Salve for the Itch. 28. For the Kings-Evil Take two ounces of
handful of Salt split it down the back take out the Chine-bone season the Eel with Nutmeg Pepper Salt and sweet Herbs minc'd then lay a pack thread at each end and the middle roul up like a Collar of Brawn then boyl it in water salt and vinegar a blade or two of Mace and half a slice of Lemon boyl it half an hour keep it in the same liquor two or three days then cut it out in round pieces and lay six or seven in a dish with Parsley and Barberries and serve it with vinegar in saucers 24. To make a Bacon tart Take a quarter of a pound of the best Jordan-Almonds and put them in a little warm water to blanch them then beat them together in a Mortar with three or four spoonfuls of Rose-water then sweeten them with fine sugar then take Bacon that is clear and white and hold it upon the point of a Knife against the fire till it hath dropt a sufficient quantity then stir it well together and put it into the paste and bake it 25. To make an Vmble-pye Lay Beef-suet minc'd in the bottom of the Pye or slices of Inter-larded Bacon and cut the Umbles as big as a small Dice cut your Bacon in the same Form and season it with Nutmeg Pepper and Salt fill your pyes with it with slices of Bacon and butter close it up and bake it Liquor it with Claret Butter and stripped Thyme and so serve it 26. To keep Asparagus Parboyl your Asparagus very little and put them into clarified Butter cover them with it and when the Butter is cold cover them with Leather and about a Month after refresh the Buttter melt it and put it on them again then set them under ground being covered with Leather 27. To roast a Haunch of Venison If your Venison be seasoned you must water it and stick it with short sprigs of Rosemary let your sauce be Claret wine a handful of grated Bread Cinamon Ginger sugar a little vinegar boyl these up so thick as it may only run like batter it ought to be sharp and sweet Dish up your Meat on your Sauce 28. To Carbonado Hens Let your Sauce be a little White-wine and Gravy half a dozen of the yolks of hard Eggs minced boyled up with an Onion add to it grated Nutmeg thicken it up with the yolk of an Egg or two with a ladlefull of drawn butter Dish up your Hens and pour over your sauce strew on yolks of Eggs minced and garnish it with Lemon 29. To fry Artichoaks When they are boyled and sliced fitting for that purpose you must have your yolks of Eggs beaten with a grated Nutmeg or two when your pan is hot you must dip them into the Yolks of Eggs and charge your pan when they are fryed on both sides pour on drawn butter And if you will fry Spanish Potato's then the Sauce is Butter Vinegar Sugar and Rosewater these for a need may serve for second Course Dishes 30. To make a Hedge-Hog-Pudding Put some Raisins of the Sun into a deep wooden Dish and then take some grated bread and one pint of sweet Cream three yolks of Eggs with two of the whites and some Beef suet grated Nutmeg and Salt then sweeten it with Sugar and temper all well together and so lay it into the dish upon the Raisins then tye a Cloath about the dish and boyl it in Beef-broth and when you take it up lay it in a pewter Dish with the Raisins upper-most and then stick blanched Almonds very thick into the pudding then melt some Butter and pour it upon the pudding then strew some sugar about the dish and serve it 31. To stew a Leg of Lamb. Cut it into pieces and put it into your stewing-pan being first seasoned with Salt and Nutmeg and as much Butter as will stew it with Raisins of the Sun Currans and Goosberries when it is stewed make a Caudle with the Yolks of two or three Eggs and some Wine-vinegar and sugar beaten together and put it into your Meat and strew all a little longer together then dish it strew sugar on the brims and serve it hot 32. To bake a Pickerel Boyl your Pickerel and pull out the ribs and bones then put into your Paste and season it with pepper and salt and put in some butter and raisins of the Sun and so bake it 33. To make a Haggess-Pudding Take a fat Haggess parboyl it well take out the kernels shred it small and temper it with a handful or two of grated Manchet then take three or four Eggs well beaten Rose-water Sugar Cloves Nutmeg Cinamon and Mace finely beaten Currans and Marrow good store temper them alltogether with a quantity of Cream being first moderately seasoned with Salt 34. Te make a dish of Meat with Herbs Take Sives Parsly Thyme Marjoram and roast three or four Eggs hard and a quantity of mutton suet beef or lamb chop them fine alltogether and season it with Cloves Mace Ginger sugar and Cinamon and a little Salt then fry them with a little sweet butter 35. To make Cream of Eggs. Take one quart of Cream and boyl it then beat four whites of eggs very well with two spoonfuls of Rose-water when the Cream is boyled enough take it off the fire and when it is cool stir in the eggs with a little salt then garnish your dish with fine sugar scraped thereon and serve it always cold for a closing dish 36. To make a fine Pudding in a dish Take a penny white-loaf and pare off all the crust and slice it thin into a dish with a quart of Cream and let it boyl over a Chafing-dish of coals till the bread be almost dry then put in a piece of sweet butter and take it off and let it stand in the dish till it be cold then take the yolks of three Eggs and the quantity of one with some Rose-water and Sugar and stirring them all together put it into another dish well butter'd and bake it 37. To boyl Scollops First boyl the Scollops then take them out of the shells and wash them then slice them and season them with Nutmeg Ginger and Cinamon and put them into the bottom of your shells again with a liittle Butter White-wine Vinegar and grated bread let them be broyled on both sides if they are sharp they must have Sugar added to them for the Fish is luscious and sweet naturally therefore you may broyl them with Oyster-Liquor and Gravy with dissolved Anchovies minced Onions and Thyme with the juice of Lemon in it 38. To boyl Wild-Ducks First half Roast them then take them off and put them in a shallow broad pan that will contain them with a pint of Claret-wine and a pint of strong broth a dozen of Onions cut in halves a Faggot or two of sweet Herbs with a little whole Pepper and some slices of Bacon cover your pan and let them stove up add gravy to part of the Liquor at
least so much as will serve to Dish them Garnish them with Bacon and Onions if you please 39. To make a Venison-Pasty When you have powdered your Haunch of Venison or the sides of it by taking away all the bones and sinews and the skin or fat season it with Pepper and Salt only beat it with your Rolling-pin and proportion it for the Pasty by taking away from one part and adding to another your paste being made with a peck of fine Flower and about three pound of butter and twelve Eggs work it up with cold water into a stiff paste as you can drive it forth for your Pasty let it be as thick as a Mans Thumb roul it up upon a rouling-pin and put under it a couple of sheets of Cap-Paper well flowered then your white being already minced and beaten with water proportion it upon the pasty to the breadth and length of the Venison then lay your Venison in the said white wash it round with your Feather and put on a border season your Venison on the top and turn over your other leaf of paste so close up your Pasty then drive out another border for garnishing the sides up to the top of the pasty so close it together by the rolling-pin by rolling it up and down by the sides and ends and when you have flourish'd your garnishing and edg'd your pasty vent it at the top set it in the Oven and let it have 4 or 5 hours baking at the least and then draw it 49. To make a Damson-tart Take Damsons and seethe them in Wine and strain them with a little Cream then boyl your stuff over the fire till it be thick and put thereto sugar cinamon and ginger but set it not in the Oven after but let your paste be baked before 41. To roast a Rabbet with Oysters Wash your Rabbet and dry it well then take half a pint of Oysters wash them and wipe them clean one by one and put them into the Rabbets belly a couple of Onions shred whole Pepper large Mace two or three spriggs of Thyme sow up the belly and for the sauce as usual the liver and parsly and a hard Egg shred them together and beat some butter thick put into the dish and serve it 42. To stew Collops of Beef Take of the buttock of beef thin slices cross the grain of the meat then hack them and fry them in sweet butter and being fryed fine and brown put them in a pipkin with some strong broth a little Claret-wine and some Nutmeg stew it very tender and half an hour before you dish it put to it some good Gravy Elder-vinegar and a Clove or 2 when you serve it put some juice of Orange and three or four slices on it stew down the Gravy somewhat thick and put unto it when you dish it some beaten butter 43. To make a Beef-pasty like red Deer Take fresh Beef of the finest without sinews or suet and mince it as small as you can and season it with Salt and Pepper and put in two spoonfuls of Malmsey then take Lard and cut it into small pieces and lay a layer of Lard and a layer of Beef and lay a shin of Beef upon it like Venison and so close it up 44. To bake a Hare Take the best of the Hare minced and seasoned with Pepper Salt and Mace then make a proportion of the head or shoulders as you make for an Hare-pasty and lay in a layer of Flesh and a layer of Lard and butter aloft and beneath and make a Gallentine for it in a Saucer 45. To boyl a Salmon Take as much water as will cover it then take Rosemary Thyme and Winter-Savoury and Salt boyl all these very well and then put in some wine-Wine-Vinegar and when your Salmon is boyled let him remain in the same water always until you have occasion to eat of it 46. To make an Oyster-pye First dry your Oysters and then put them into your Coffin with some butter and whole large Mace and so bake it then take off the Lid and fill it up with more butter putting some of the Liquor of the Oysters also thereunto then season it well with Sugar and serve it hot to the Table at the first Course 47. To butter Eggs upon toasts Take twenty Eggs beat them in a dish with some Salt and put butter to them then have two large Rolls or fine Manchets cut them in Toasts and toast them against the fire with a pound of fine sweet butter being finely butter'd in a fair clean Dish put the Eggs on the Toasts and Garnish your Dish with Pepper and Salt otherwise half boyl them in the shells then butter them and serve them on Toasts or Toasts about them 48. To make a Fricacie of Chickens Scald three or four Chickens and flea off the Skin and Feathers together put them in a little water take half a pint of White-wine and two or three whole Onions some large Mace and Nutmeg tyed up in a cloath a bundle of sweet herbs and a little Salt and put them all in a Pipkin close covered let them simper a quarter of an hour then take six yolks of Eggs half a pound of sweet butter four Anchovies dissolved in a little broath shred your boyled Spice small take a quarter of a pound of Capers and shred them very small put the Anchovies dissolved into the Eggs and Butter and Capers and so stir it altogether over a Chafing-dish of coals till it begin to thicken then take the Chickens out of the broth and put lear upon them serve them with sippets and Lemon sliced 49. To make an Eel-pye with Oysters Wash your Eels and gut them and dry them well in a cloath to four good Eels allow a pint of Oysters well washed season them with Pepper Salt and Nutmeg and large Mace put half a pound of butter into the Pye and half a Lemon sliced so bake it when it is drawn take the Yolks of two Eggs a couple of Anchovies dissolved in a little White-wine with a quarter of a pound of fresh butter melt it and mix it altogether and make a lear of it and put it into the pye 50. To make Puff-paste Break two Eggs in three pints of Flower make it with cold water then roul it out pretty thick and square then take so much butter as paste and divide your butter in five pieces that you may lay it on at five several times roul your paste very broad and break one part of the same butter in little pieces all over your paste then throw a handful of Flower slightly on then fold up your paste and beat it with a Rolling-pin so roul it out again thus do several times and then make it up 51. To make Barley-broth Put your Barley into fair water give it three qualms over the fire separate the waters and put it into a Cullender boyl it in a fourth water with a blade of Mace and a
Clove and when it is boyled away put in some Raisins and Currans and when the Fruit is boyled enough take it off and season it with White-wine Rose-water Butter and Sugar and a couple of Yolks of Eggs beaten with it 52. To bake a Pig Take a good quantity of Clay and having moulded it stick your Pig and blood him well and when he is warm put him in your prepared Coffin of Clay thick every where with his Hair Skin and all his Entrails drawn and Belly sowed up again then throw him into the Oven or below the Stock-hole under the Furnace and there let him soak turn him now and then when the clay is hardened for 12 hours and he is then sufficiently baked then take him and break off the Clay which easily parts and he will have a fine crispy coat and all the juice of the Pigg in your dish remember but to gut a few leaves of Sage and a little Salt in his belly and you need no other sauce 53. A grand Sallet Take a quarter of a pound of Raisins of the Sun as many blanched Almonds as many Capers as many Olives as much Samphire as many pickled Cucumbers a Lemon shred some pickled French-beans a wax Tree set in the middle of the Dish pasted to the dish lay all their quarters round the Dish you may also mince the Flesh of a Roasted Hen with Sturgeon and Shrimps and garnish the dish with cut Beans and Turneps in several Figures 54. To make a Sallet of a cold Hen or Pullet Take a Hen and roast it let it be cold Carve up the Legs take the Flesh and mince it small shred a Lemon a little Parsley and Onions an Apple a little Pepper and Salt with Oyl and Vinegar garnish the dish with the bones and Lemon-peel and so serve it 55. To boyl a Capon Pullet or Chicken Boyl them in good Mutton-broath with Mace a Faggot of sweet Herbs Sage Spinage Marygold leaves and flowers white or green Endive Burrage Bugloss Parsley and Sorrel and serve it on sippets 56. To stew Ducks the French fashion Take the Duck and half Roast it put half a score of Onions in the belly whole some whole Pepper a bundle of Thyme and a little Salt when it is half Roasted take it up and slash it into pieces put it between two dishes and pierce the Gravy mix some Claret-Wine with that Gravy and a little sliced Nutmeg a couple of Anchovies wash them and slit them slice the Onions in the Ducks belly cover the Dishes close so let them stew while enough take some butter beat it thick and shred a Lemon in it and serve it Garnish your dish with the Lemon-peel and your Onions 57. To make a Florentine Take the Kidney of a Loin of Veal or the Wing of a Canon or the leg of a Rabbit mince any of these small with the Kidney of a Loin of Mutton if it be not fat enough then season it with Cloves Mace Nutmegs and Sugar Cream Currans Eggs and Rosewater mingle these four together and put them into a dish between two sheets of paste then close it and cut the paste round by the brim of the dish then cut it round about like Virginal keys turn up one and let the other lye prick it bake it scrape on sugar and serve it 58. To make Curd Cakes Take a pint of Curds four Eggs take out 2 of the whites put in some Sugar a little Nutmeg and a little Flower stir them well together and drop them in and fry them with a little butter 59. To roast a Leg of Mutton the French way Take half a pound of Mutton and a quarter of a pound of Suet season it with sweet Herbs and a little Nutmeg and two or three shallots slice these very small and stuff the Mutton round then take some of the best Hackney Turneps and boyl them in Beef-broth very tender then squeeze the water from them a little set them in the dish under the Leg of Mutton when it is half roasted and so let the gravy drop into them and when the Meat is roasted serve them in the dish with it with a little fresh Butter and Vinegar Garnish your dish with sliced Onions and Parsley and some of the Turneps slic'd 60. To stew a Carp Take a living Carp and knock him on the head open him in the belly take heed you break not the gill pour in a little Vinegar and wash out all the blood stir it about with your hand and keep the blood safe then put as much White-wine into a pan or skillet as will almost cover and set it on the fire put to it an Onion cut in the middle a Clove or less of Garlick a Race of Ginger shred a Nutmeg quartered a Faggot or bundle of sweet herbs and three or four Anchovies your Carp being cut out and rubbed all over with salt when the Wine into which you may put in a little water doth boyl put the Carp in and cover him close and let him stew up about a quarter of an hour then put in the blood and Vinegar with a little Butter so dish up the Carp and let the Spawn Milt and Revet be laid upon it the Liquor that boyled him with the butter is the best sauce and is to be eaten as broth Garnish the dish with Lemons and grated bread 61. To make Marrow-Puddings Take a pound of the best Jordan-Almonds blanch them beat them fine in a stone or wooden Mortar not in brass with a little Rose-water take a pound of fine powder-sugar a penny-loaf grated Nutmeg grated a pint of Cream the Marrow of 2 Marrow-bones 2 grains of Amber-greece mingle them all together with a little salt fill the skins and boyl them gently as before 62. To make a Sack-Posset Set a Gallon of Milk on the Fire with whole Cinamon and large Mace when it boyls stir in a half or whole pound of Naples-bisket grated very small keeping it stirring till it boyls then beat eight Eggs together casting of the whites away beat them well with a Ladle-ful of Milk then take the Milk off the fire and stir in the Eggs then put it on again but keep it stirring for fear of curdling then make ready a pint of Sack warming it upon the coals with a little Rose-water season your Milk with sugar and pour it into the Sack in a large bason and stir it a pace then throw on a good deal of beaten Cinamon and so serve it up 63. To hash a Rabbit When your Rabbit is wash'd you must take the Flesh from the bones and mince it small then put to it a little strong broth and Vinegar a'n Onion or two with a grated Nutmeg and let it stew up together then mince a handful of boyled parsley green with a Lemon cut like Dice and a few Barberries put it into the Hash and toast it altogether and when it is enough put a ladle full of sweet butter to it
bake it in good hot butter paste 78. To make Apple-Pyes to fry Take about twelve Pippins pare them cut them and almost cover them with water and almost a pound of sugar let them boyl on a Gentle Fire close covered with a stick of Cinamon minced Orange-peel a little Dill seed beaten and Rose-water when this is cold and stiff make them into little Pasties with rich Paste and so fry them 79. To make a Rare Dutch Pudding Take a pound and a half of Fresh Beef all lean with a pound and a quarter of Beef-Suet both sliced very small then take a stale half-penny loaf and grate it a handful of Sage a little Winter-savoury and a little Thyme shred all these very small take four eggs half a pint of Cream a few Cloves Nutmeg Mace and Pepper finely beaten mingle them all together very well with a little Salt roul it all up together in a green Colwort-Leaf and then tye it up hard in a Linnen Cloath Garnish your Dish with grated bread and serve it up with Mustard in saucers 80. To make Sausages Take Pork more lean than fat mince it exceeding small together then take part of the Fleak of Pork which is the suet in pieces about the bigness of the top of your finger season each a part with Sage minced good store of Pepper and Salt with some Cloves and Mace mixt in the seasoning each of them then take small sheeps-guts and cleanse them some use Capons-guts and fill them with your Funnel always putting some of the fleak between the minced if you have it ready you may sprinkle a little sack on the top of the sausage-meat and it will make it fill the better 81. To Stew Beef in Gobbets the French Fashion Take a Flank of Beef or any part but the Leg cut it into slices or Gobbets as big as Pullets Eggs with some Gobbets of fat and boyl it in a pot or pipkin with some fair spring-water scum it clean and after it hath boyled an hour put to it Carrots Parsnips Turnips great Onions some Salt Cloves Mace and whole Pepper cover it close and stew it till it be very tender and half an hour before it's ready put into it some pick'd Thyme Parsley Winter-savoury sweet Marjoram Sorrel and Spinage being a little bruised with the back of a Ladle with some Claret-wine Then dish it on fine sippets and serve it to the Table hot Garnish it with Grapes Barberries or Goosberries Or else use Spices the bottoms of boyled Artichoaks put into beaten Butter and grated Nutmeg garnished with Barberries 82. To boyl a Capon or Chicken with Sugar-Pease When the Cods be but young string them and pick off the Husks then take two or three handfuls and put them into a Pipkin with half a pound of sweet butter a quarter of a pint of fair water gross Pepper Salt Mace and some Sallet-Oyl stew them till they be very tender and strain to them three or four Yolks of Eggs with six spoonfuls of Sack 83. To boyl Perches Let your Liquor boyl and your pan be seasoned with a little White-wine a couple of Onions cut in halves a bunch of sweet Herbs and a little white Pepper boyl them up very quick and flea them on both sides and dish them upon sippets Then take a little White-wine Gravy and Vinegar with a grated Nutmeg and almost boyl it over a Chafing dish then pour sweet butter over it Garnish it with Barberries and sliced Lemons 84. To boyl Eels Cut the Eels and stew them when they are half done beat a little Ale with Vinegar and put into the Liquor with some Parsley and sweet Herbs Dish them and serve them up in their Broth with a little salt 85. A Turkish Dish of meat Take an inter-larded piece of Beef cut it into thin slices and put it into a pot with a close cover or stewing pan then put into it a good quantity of clean pick'd Rice skin it very well and put into it a quantity of whole pepper 2 or 3 whole Onions and let it boyl very well and take out the Onions and dish it on sippets the thicker it is the better 86. To boyl a Chine of Beef powdered Take either a Chine Rump Surloin Brisket Rib Flank Buttock or Fillet of Beef and give them in Summer a weeks powdering in Winter a Fortnight you may stuff them or let them be plain if you stuff them do it with all manner of sweet Herbs with fat Beef minced and some Nutmeg serve them on brewis with Roots or Cabbage boyled in Milk with beaten butter 87. To make a Hash of a Capon or Pullet Take a Capon or Partridge or Hen and Roast them and being cold mince the brains and wings very fine and tear the Legs and Rumps whole to be Carbonaded then put some strong Mutton-broth or good Gravy grated Nutmeg a great Onion and Salt then stew them in a large Earthen Pipkin or sauce-pan stew the Rumps and Legs in the same strong broth in another pipkin then take some light French bread chipt and cover the bottom of the dish steep the bread in the same broath or good mutton Gravy then pour the Hash on the steeped bread lay the Legs and the Rump on the Hash with some fryed oysters sliced Lemon and lemon peel the juice of an Orange and yolks of Eggs strained and beaten butter Garnish the dish with carved Oranges Lemons c. Thus you may hash any kind of fowl 88. To dress a Cods head Cut off the Cods-Head beyond the Gills that you may have part of the body with it boyl it in water and salt to which you may add half a pint of Vinegar the Head must be little more than covered before you put it into the Cauldron take a quart of the biggest cleanest Oysters and a bunch of sweet Herbs and Onions and put them into the mouth of the Head and with a pack thread bind the Jaws fast you must be sure to pick it and wash it very clean When it is boyled enough take it up and ●…t it a drying over a Chafing-dish of Coals then take the oyster Liquor four Anchovies and a sliced Onion put to them a quarter of a pint of White-wine and sweet-butter and melt them together and pour it on the Gods-head stick all or most of the oysters upon the Head or where they will enter and garnish it over with them grate on a little Nutmeg and send it smoaking up Garnish the brims of the dish with Lemon and sliced Bay-leaves 89. To boyl Widgeons or Teal Parboyl your Widgeons or Teal and then stick whole Cloves in their breasts put into their bellies a little Winter-savory or parsley boyl them in a pipkin by themselves thicken it with Toasts season it with Verjuice Sugar and a little Pepper Garnish your Dish with Barberries and Pruans and so serve them 90. To make a Veal-Pye When your Paste is raised then cut your Leg of Veal into pieces
take it up and put a little White-wine Sugar and sliced Nutmeg into a Pewter-dish and put your pudding into it then scrape some Sugar on the brims and serve it 103. To make Clouted Cream Take new Milk and set it on the fire from Morning till Evening but let it not boyl And this is called my Lady Youngs Clouted Cream 104. To Souce a young Pig Scald a young Pig boyl it in fair water and white-wine put thereto some Bay-leaves whole Ginger and Nutmegs quartered and a few whole Cloves boyl it throughly and let it lye in the same broth in an Earthen pot 105. To make Polonian Sausages Take the Fillets of a Hog chop them very small with a handful of red Sage season it hot with Ginger and Pepper then put it into a great Sheeps gut let it lye three nights in Brine then boyl it and hang it up in a Chimney where Fire is usually kept These Sausages will keep a whole Year and are good for Sallets or to garnish boyl'd Meats or to relish a Glass of Wine 106. To keep Salmon fresh a whole Month. First boyl your Salmon as usually then put it into an earthen pot and cover it in good Whitewine Vinegar putting thereto a branch of Rosemary and keep it very close covered and so you may keep it that it will retain its perfect taste and delicacy for a Month or more 107. To make tender and delicate brawn Put a Collar of Brawn in a Kettle of water and set it into an Oven as for Houshold-bread cover it close and let it stand as long as you would do bread and it will be very excellent Brawn 108. To keep powdered Beef after it is boyled sweet five or six Weeks When your Beef hath been powdered about a fortnight then boyl it well and dry it with a cloath and wrap it in dry cloaths and put it into some pot or Vessel and keep it close from the air and it will keep sound two or three Months 109. To dress Neats-tongues and Vdders When they are boyled enough in Beef-broath and scumm'd you must have your Turneps ready boyled cut in pieces and soak'd in butter or else Colliflowers and Carrots or all of them then put the Turneps all over the bottom of a large Dish then slice out the Tongues and lay the sides one against another slice the Udders and lay them between opposite to one another Garnish the Colliflowers all over them and the Carrots up and down between the Colliflowers with Barberries and Parsly on the brim of the dish 110. To make Pannado Take a quart of Running-water and put it on the Fire in a skillet then cut a little Roul of bread in slices about the bigness of a groat and as thin as Wafers lay it on a dish on a few Coals then put it into the water with two handfuls of Currans pick'd and wash'd a little large Mace when it is enough season it with Sugar and Rose-water 111. To make Liver Puddings Take the Guts of a young Hog wash them very clean and lay them two or three dayes in water take the Liver of the same Hog and boyl it till it will grate then grate it very small and fine take to the weight of the Liver almost the weight of Beef-suet season it with Salt Cloves Mace and Nutmeg finely beaten a penny loaf grated a pound of the best white Sugar two pound of good Currans a pint of good Cream a quarter of a pint of Rose-water three Eggs mix all together to such a thickness that you may fill the Guts then prick them and put them into boyling water and keep an even Fire for half a quarter of an hour then take them up and lay them upon straw you must have a care not to tye them too hard nor too slack lest they break in boyling 112. To make a rare Citron-Pudding Take a penny loaf and grate it a pint and half of Cream half a dozen of Eggs one Nutmeg sliced a little salt an Ounce of Candyed Citron sliced small a little Candied Orange-peel sliced three Ounces of Sugar put these into a wooden dish well flowered and cover it with a Cloath and when the water boyleth put it in boyl it well and serve it up with Rose-water and Sugar and stick it with Wafers or blanched Almonds 113. To bake a Gammon of Bacon Water it fresh enough and seeth it as tender as you may to handle it then pull off the skin and stuff it with Parsley Penny-royal Thyme Marjoram Marygolds Camomile and Sage chop them small and season them with Salt and Pepper Cloves small Raisins yolks of Eggs hard roasted then stuff your Bacon and cut of the lean of the Bacon and mince it small and take a handful of your stuffing and mingle it with three or four yolks of raw Eggs and then put it upon the gammon then close on the skin again and close it in past 114. To boyl Woodcocks or Snites Boyl them either in strong broath or in water and salt and being boyled take out the Guts and chop them small with the Liver put to it some Crumbs of grated White-bread a little Cock-broth and some large Mace stew them together with some Gravy then dissolve the Yolks of two Eggs in some wine-Wine-Vinegar and a little grated Nutmeg and when you are ready to dish it put in the Eggs and stir it among the Sauce with a little butter dish them on sippets and run the Sauce over them with some beaten butter and capers a Lemon minced small Barberries or whole pickled Grapes 115. To make a made dish of Apples Put on your Skillet of water with some Currans a boyling then pare about a dozen of Pippins and cut them from the core into the said water when they are boyled tender pour them into a Cullender when the water is drained from them put them into a Dish and season them but stay till they are cold left it melt your Sugar with Sugar Rose-water Cinamon and Caraway-seeds then roul out two sheets of paste put one into the dish bottom and all over the brims then lay the Apples in the bottom round and high wet it round and cover it with the other sheet close it and carve it about the brims of the dish as you please prick it and bake it scrape Sugar upon it and serve it up 116. To make a Fool. Set two quarts of Cream over the Fire let it boyl then take the Yolks of twelve Eggs and beat them very well with three or four spoonfuls of cold Cream and then strain the Eggs in the Skillet of hot cream stirring it all the time to keep it from burning then set it on the fire and let it boyl a little while but keep it still stirring for fear of burning then take it off and let it stand and cool then take two or three spoonfuls of Sack and put it in the Dish with four or five sippets set the dish and Sippets a
Oven again and then serve it up 130. To make a Cherry-tart Take the fairest Cherries you can get and pick them clean from Leaves and stalks then spread out your coffin as for your Pippin-tart and cover the bottom with Sugar then cover the Sugar all over with Cherries then cover these Cherries with Sugar some sticks of Cinamon and a few Cloves then lay in more Cherries Sugar Cinamon and Cloves till the coffin be filled up then cover it and bake it in all points as the Codling and Pippin Tarts and so serve it In the same manner you may make Tarts of Gooseberries Strawberries Rasberries Bilberries or any other Berry whatsoever 131. To make a Mince-Pye Take a Leg of Mutton or a neats-Tongue and parboyl it well the Mutton being cut from the bone then put to it three pound of the best Mutton-Suet shred very small then spread it abroad and season it with Salt Cloves and Mace then put in good store of Currans great Raisins and Pruans clean washed and picked a few Dates sliced and some Orange-peels sliced then being all well mixt together put it into a Coffin or many coffins and so bake them and when they are served up open the Lids and strew store of Sugar on the Top of the Meat and upon the Lid. 132. To make a Calves-Foot-Pye Boyl your Calves-Feet very well and then pick all the meat from the bones when it is cold shred it as small as you can and season it with Cloves and mace and put in good store of Currans Raisins and Pruans then put it into the coffin with good store of sweet butter then break in whole sticks of Cinamon and a Nutmeg sliced and season it with Salt then close up the coffin and only leave a vent-hole put in some Liquor made of Verjuice Sugar Cinamon and butter boyled together and so serve it 133. To make a Tansie Take a certain number of Eggs according to the bigness of your Frying-pan and break them into a dish taking away the white of every third Egg then with a spoon take away the little white Chicken-knots that stick upon the yolks then with a little cream beat them very well together then take of green Wheat blades Violet leaves Strawberry leaves Spinage and Succory of each a like quantity and a few Walnut-Tree-buds chop and beat all these very well and then strain out the juice mix it then with a little more cream put to it the Eggs and stir all well together then put in a few crumbs of fine grated bread Cinamon Nutmeg and Salt then put some sweet butter into a Frying-pan and as soon as it is melted put in the Tansey and fry it brown without burning and with a dish turn it in the pan as occasion shall serve strew good store of Sugar on it and serve it up 134. To stew a Pike After your Pike is drest and opened in the back and laid flat as if it were to Fry then lay it in a large Dish put to it White-wine to cover it set it on the coals and let it boyl gently if scum arise take it off then put to it Currans Sugar Cinamon Barberries as many Pruans as will garnish the Dish then cover it close with another Dish and let it stew till the Fruit be soft and the Pike enough then put to it a good piece of sweet butter with your Scummer take up the fish and lay it in a dish with sippets then take a couple of Yolks of Eggs only and beat them together well with a spoonful of cream and as soon as the Pike is taken out put it into the broath and stir it exceedingly to keep it from curdling then pour the broath upon the Pike and trim the sides of the Dish with sugar pruans and barberries with slices of Oranges and Lemons and so serve it up 135. To Roast Venison If you will Roast any Venison after you have washed it and cleansed all the blood from it you must stick it with cloves all over on the out-side and if it be lean lard it either with Mutton or Pork-lard but Mutton is best then spit it and Roast it by a soaking Fire then take Vinegar crums of Bread and some of the Gravy that comes from the Venison and boyl them well in a Dish then season it with Sugar Cinamon Ginger and Salt and serve the Venison upon the sauce when it is Roasted enough 136. To Roast a piece of fresh Sturgeon Stop your Sturgeon with Cloves then spit it and let it Roast very leasurely basting it continually which will take away the hardness when it is enough serve it upon the Venison sauce with salt only thrown upon it 137. To boyl a Gurnet or Roach First draw your Fish and then either split it or Joynt it open in the back and truss it round then wash it clean and boyl it in water and Salt with a Bunch of sweet herbs then take it up into a large Dish and pour into it Verjuice Nutmeg Butter and Pepper after it hath stewed a little thicken it with the Yolks of Eggs then remove it hot into another dish and garnish it with slices of Oranges and Lemons Barberries Pruans and Sugar and so serve it up 138. To make a Carp Pye After you have drawn and wash'd and scalded a fair large Carp season it with pepper salt and nutmeg and then put it into a coffin with good store of sweet Butter and then cast on Raisins of the Sun the juice of Lemons and some slices of orange-peels and then sprinkling on a little vinegar close it up and bake it 139. To make a Chicken-pye After you have truss'd your Chickens then break their Legs and Breast-bones and raise your crust of the best Paste lay them in a coffin close together with their Bodies full of Butter then lay upon them and underneath them currans great Raisins Pruans Cinamon Sugar whole Mace and Sugar whole Mace and Salt then cover all with good store of butter and so bake it then pour into it white-wine rose-rose-water sugar Cinamon and vinegar mixt together with the Yolks of two or 3 Eggs beaten amongst it and so serve it 140. To make Almond-water Take blanched Almonds beaten in a Mortar very small putting in now and then one spoonful of cream to keep them from oyling then boyl as much cream as you please with your beaten Almonds together with a blade of Mace and season it with Sugar then strain it and stir it till it be almost cold and then let it stand till you serve it and then garnish your dish with fine sugar scraped thereon 141. To make an Almond-Pudding Take two pound of blanched Almonds and beat them small put thereto some Rose-water and Amber-greece often thereinto as you beat them then season it with Nutmeg and sugar and mix them with grated bread beef-suet and two Eggs and so put it into a dish tying a cloath round about and so boyl it 142. To
of Salt a quarter of an Ounce of large Mace with the Liquor of the Oysters strained put all together in a Pipkin over a soft Fire let them simper together a quarter of an hour when the Oysters are enough take them up and put them into a little fair water and vinegar till they be cold let the pickle boyl a quarter of an hour after the Oysters are taken up both being cold put them up together When you use them Garnish the dish with Barberries and Lemon and a little of the Mace and Pepper and pour in some of the Pickle 171. To make English Pottage Make it with Beef Mutton and Veal putting in some Oatmeal and good Pot-herbs as Parsley Sorrel Violet-leaves and a very little Thyme and sweet Marjoram scarce to be tasted and some Marygold leaves at last you may begin to boyl it over Night and let it stand warm all night and make an end of boyling it next morning it is good to put into the pot at first twenty or thirty corns of whole Pepper 172. To stew Beef Take very good Beef and slice it very thin beat it with the back of a knife put to it the Gravy of some Meat and some Wine and strong broath sweet Herbs a quantity let it stew till it be very tender season it to your liking and garnish your Dish with Mary-gold Flowers or Barberries 173. To make excellent Minc'd-Pyes Parboyl Neats-Tongues then peel and hash them with as much as they weigh of Beef-suet and stoned Raisins and pickt Currans chop all exceeding small that it be like Pap employ therein at least an hour more than ordinarily is used then mingle a very little Sugar with them and a little Wine and thrust it up and down some thin slices of green Candyed Citron-peel and put this into Coffins of fine light well reared crust half an hours baking will be enough If you strew a few Carraway-Comfits on the top it will not be amiss 174. To pickle Roast Beef Chine or Surloin Stuff any of the aforesaid Beef with Penny-royal or other sweet Herbs or Parsley minced small and some Salt prick in here and there a few whole cloves and Roast it then take Claret-wine Wine-Vinegar whole Pepper Rosemary Bays and Thyme bound up close in a bundle and boyled in some Claret-wine and Wine-Vinegar make the pickle and put some Salt to it and pack it up in a barrel that will but just hold it put the pickle to it close it on the Head and keep it for your use 175. To make a double Tart. Peel Codlings tenderly boyled cut them in halves and fill your Tart put into it a quarter of an hundred of Codlings a pound and a half of sugar a few Cloves and little Cinamon close up the Coffin and bake it When it comes out cut off the lid and having a lid cut in flowers ready lay it on and garnish it with Preserves of Damsons Raspberries Apricocks and Cherries and place a preserved Quince in the middle and strew it with Sugar-biskets 176. To make a Warden or Pear-Pye Bake your Wardens or Pears in an Oven with a little water and a good quantity of Sugar let your pot be covered with a piece of Dough let them not be fully baked for a quarter of an hour when they are cold make a high Coffin and put them in whole adding to them some Cloves whole Cinamon Sugar with some of the Liquor they were baked in so bake it 177. To bake a Pig Court-Fashion Flea a small young Pig cut it in quarters or in smaller pieces season it with Pepper Ginger and Salt lay it into a fit coffin strip and mince small a handfull of Parsley six sprigs of Winter-savoury strew it on the Meat in the pye and strew upon that the yolks of three or four hard Eggs minced and lay upon them five or six blades of Mace a handful of Clusters of Barberries a handful of currans well washt and pickt a little Sugar half a pound of sweet butter or more close your pye and set it in an Oven as hot as for Manchet and in three hours it will be well baked draw it forth and put in half a pound of Sugar being warmed upon the Fire pour it all over the Meat and put on the pye-lid again scrape on Sugar and serve it hot to the Table 178. To make a Pudding of Hogs Liver Boyl your Liver and grate it put to it more grated bread th●… 〈◊〉 with as much fine flower as of either pu●●welve Eggs to the value of a Gallon of this mixture with about two pound of Beef-suet minced small and a pound and half of Currans half a quarter of a pint of Rose-water a good quantity of Cloves and Mace Nutmeg Cinamon and Ginger all minced very small mix all these with sweet Milk and Cream and let it be no thicker than Fritter-batter to fill your Hogs-guts you make it with the Maw fit to be eaten hot at Table in your knitting or tying the Guts you must remember to give them three or four Inches scope In your putting them into boyling-water you must handle them round to bring the meat equal to all parts of the Gut they will ask about half an hours boyling the boyling must be sober if the Wind rise in them you must be ready to prick them or else they will flye and burst in pieces 179. Olives of Beef stewed and Roasted Take a Buttock of Beef and cut some of it into thin slices as broad as your hand then hack them with the back of a knife Lard them with small Lard and season them with pepper Salt and nutmeg then make a farsing with some sweet herbs Thyme Onions the yolks of hard Eggs Beef-suet or Lard all minced some Salt Barberries Grapes or Gooseberries season it with the former Spices lightly and work it up together then lay it on the slices and roul them up round with some Caul of Veal Beef or Mutton bake them in a Dish in the Oven or Roast them then put them in a Pipkin with some Butter and Saffron or none blow off the Fat from the Gravy and put it to them with some Artichoaks Potatoes Skirrets blanched being first boyled a little Claret-wine and serve them on sippets with some sliced Orange Lemon Barberries Capers or Gooseberries 180. To make French-barly Posset Put two quarts of Milk to half a pound of French-Barley boyl it small till it is enough when the Milk is almost boyled away put to it three pints of good Cream let it boyl together a quarter of an hour then sweeten it and put in Mace and Cinamon in the beginning when you first put in your Cream when you have done so take White-wine a pint or Sack and White wine together of each half a pint sweeten it as you love it with Sugar pour in all the Cream but leave your Barley behind in the skillet this will make an excellent posset nothing else but a tender
curd to the bottom let it stand on the coals half a quarter of an hour 181. To bake Chucks of Veal Parboyl two pound of the lean flesh of a Leg of Veal mince it as small as grated bread with four pound of Beef-suet then season it with bisket Dates and Carrawayes and some Rose-water sugar Raisins of the sun and Currans cloves mace nutmegs and Cinamon mingle them all together fill your pyes and bake them 182. How to stew a Mallard Roast your Mallard half enough then take it up and cut it in little pieces then put it into a Dish with the Gravy and a piece of fresh butter and a handful of parsley chopt small with two or three Onions and a Cabbage-Lettuce let them stew one hour then season it with pepper and salt and a little Verjuice and so serve it 183. To stew a Rabbit Half Roast it then take it off the Spit and cut it into little pieces and put it into a Dish with the Gravy and as much Liquor as will cover it then put in a piece of fresh butter and some powder and Ginger pepper and salt two or three pippins minced small let these stew an hour and dish them upon sippets and serve it 184. To make a Pigeon Pye Truss your Pigeons to bake and set them and Lard the one half of them with Bacon mince a few sweet herbs and parsley with a little Beef-suet the Yolks of hard Eggs and an Onion or two season it with Salt beaten Pepper Cloves Mace and Nutmeg work it up with a piece of butter and stuff the bellies of the Pidgeons season them with Salt and Pepper as before Take also as many Lambstones seasoned as before with six Collops of Bacon the Salt drawn out then make a round Coffin and put in your Pigeons and if you will put in Lambstones and Sweetbreads and some Artichoak-bottoms or other dry Meat to soak up the Juice because the pye will be very sweet and full of it then put a little White-wine beaten up with the yolk of an Egg when it comes out of the Oven and so serve it 185. To stew a Fillet of Beef the Italian Fashion Take a young tender Fillet of Beef and take away all the skins and sinews clean from it put to it some good White-wine in a bowl wash it and crush it well in the Wine then strew it upon a little pepper and as much Salt as will season it mingle them very well and put to it as much Wine as will cover it lay a Trencher upon it to keep it down in a close pan with a weight on it out and let it steep two Nights and a Day then take it out and put it into a pipkin with some good Beef-broath put none of the pickle to it put only Beef-broath and that sweet and not salt cover it close and set it on the Embers then put to it a few whole Cloves and Mace and let it stew till it be enough it will be very tender and of an excellent Taste Serve it with the same broath as much as will cover it 186. To boyl a Capon or Chicken with several Compositions You must take of the skin whole but leave on the Legs Wings and Head mince the body with some Beef-suet or Lard put to it some sweet herbs minced and season it with Cloves Mace Pepper Salt two or three Eggs Grapes Gooseberries or Barberries bits of Potato or Mushromes in the Winter with Sugar Currans and Pruans Fill the skin prick it up and stew it between two Dishes with large Mace and strong broth pieces of Artichoaks Cardones or Asparagus and Marrow being finely stewed serve it on carved sippets and run it over with beaten butter Lemon sliced and scrape on Sugar 187. To boyl a Leg of Pork Cut your pork into slices very thin having first taken off the skinny part of the Fillet then hack it with the back of your Knife then mince some Thyme and Sage exceeding small and mingle it with Pepper and Salt and therewith season your Collops and then lay them on the Gridiron when they are enough make sauce for them with Butter Vinegar Mustard and Sugar and so serve them 188. To make a Fricacie of Partridges After you have Trussed your Partridges Roast them till they are almost enough and then cut them to pieces then having chopped an Onion very small fry them therewith then put to them half a pint of Gravy 2 or 3 Anchovies a little bread grated some drawn butter and the Yolks of 2 or 3 Eggs beaten up with a little White-wine let them boyl till they come to be pretty thick and so Dish them up 189. To bake Calves-Feet You must season them with pepper Salt and currans and then bake them in a pye when they are boked take the yolks of three or four Eggs and beat them with Verjuice or Vinegar Sugar and grated Nutmeg put it into your pye then scrape on Sugar and so serve it 190. To fry Neats-tongues First boyl them and after blanch them and then cut them into thin slices season them with Nutmeg Sugar Cinamon put to them the Yolks of raw eggs and a Lemon cut into little square pieces then fry them in spoonfuls with sweet butter make your sauce with White-Wine Sugar and butter heat it hot and pour on your tongues scrape sugar on it and serve it 191. To rost a Hare When you Case your Hare do not cut off his hinder Legs or Ears but hack one Leg through another and so also cut a hole through one Ear and put it through the other and so Roast him make your Sauce with the Liver of the Hare boyled and minced small with a little Marjoram Thyme and Winter-savoury and the yolks of 3 or 4 hard eggs with a little Bacon and Beef-suet boyl this all up with water and Vinegar and then grate a little Nutmeg and put to it some sweet butter and a little Sugar dish your Hare and serve it This may also serve for Rabbits 192. To roast a Shoulder of Mutton with Oysters Parboyl your Oysters then mince Winter-savoury Thyme parsley and the yolks of five or six hard Eggs hard boyled add to these a half-penny loaf of grated bread and three or four yolks of Eggs mingle all these together with your hands when you have spitted your Mutton make holes in it as big as you think convenient put in your Oysters with the other ingredients about twenty five or thirty Oysters will be enough let it Roast indifferent long then take the remainder of a quart of Oysters for you must have so many in all and put them into a deep dish with Claret-wine two or three Onions cut in halves and two or three Anchovies put all this in the Dripping-pan under your Mutton and save your Gravy and when the Meat is enough put your sauce upon the Coals and put to it the yolk of an Egg beaten grated Nutmeg and sweet butter Dish your
force them where you cut forth the meat and what remains make into a forc'd then make your paste into the Fashion of a Neats-Tongue and lay them in with puddings and little balls then put to them Lemon and Dates shred and buttter on the top and close it when it is baked put in a lear of the Venison-sauce which is Claret-wine vinegar grated bread Cinamon Ginger Sugar boyl it up thick that it may run like butter and let it be sharp and sweet and so serve it 204. To stew a breast or loyn of Mutton Joynt either your Loyn or Breast of mutton well draw it and stuff it with sweet Herbs and Parsley minced then put it in a deep stewing-dish with the right side downward put to it so much White-wine and strong broth as will stew it set it on the Coals put to it two or three Onions a bundle of sweet Herbs and a little large Mace when it is almost stewed take a handful of Spinage Parsley and Endive and put into it or else some Gooseberries and Grapes in the Winter-time Samphire and Capers add these at any time dish up your Mutton and put by the Liquor you do not use and thicken the other with yolks of Eggs and sweet Butter put on the sauce and the Herbs over the Meat Garnish your dish with Lemon and Barberries 205. To make a Sallet of green Pease Cut up as many green Pease as you think will make a Sallet when they are newly come up about half a foot high then set your Liquor over the Fire and let it boyl and then put them in when they are boyled tender put them out and drain them very well then mince them and put in some good sweet butter salt it and stir it well together and so serve it 206. To make a Sallet of Fennel Cut your Fennel while it is young and about 4 fingers high tye it up in bunches like Asparagus gather enough for your Sallet and put it in when your water is boyling hot boyl it soft drain it dish it up with butter as the green Pease 127. To make a Tansie of Spinage Take a quart of Cream and about twenty Eggs without the Whites add to it Sugar and grated Nutmeg and colour it green with the juice of Spinage then put in your dish and squeeze a Lemon or two on it Garnish it with slices of Orange then strew on sugar and so serve it 208. To make a Hash of Ducks When your Ducks are roasted take all the flesh from the bones and hash it very thin then put it into your stewing-pan with a little Gravy strong broath and Claret-wine put to it an Onion or two minced very small and a little-small Pepper let all this boyl together with a little salt then put to them about a pound of Sausages when you think they are ready stir them with a little butter drawn Garnish it with Lemon and serve it 209. To make French Puffs with green Herbs Take a quantity of Endive Parsley and Spinage and a little Winter-savoury and when you have minced them exceeding small season them with sugar Ginger and Nutmeg beat as many Eggs as you think will wet your Herbs and so make it up then pare a Lemon and cut in thin slices and to every slice of Lemon put a slice of your prepared stuff then fry it in sweet butter and serve them in sippets after you have put to them either a Glass of Canary or White-wine 210. To make excellent stewed broath Take a Leg of Beef boyl it well and scum it clean then take your bread and slice it and lay it to soak in your Broath then run it through a strainer and put as much into your Broath as will thicken it when it hath boyled a pretty while put in your Pruans Raisins and Currans with Cinamon Cloves and Mace beaten when your Pruans are boyled take them up and run them also through a strainer as you did the bread then put in half a pint of Claret then let it boyl very well and when it is ready put to it Rose-water and Sugar and so serve it 211. To stew a dish of Breams Take your Breams and dress them and dry them well and salt them then make a Charcoal Fire and lay them on the Grid-iron over the Fire being very hot let them be indifferent brown on both sides then put a Glass of Claret into a Pewter dish and set it over the fire to boyl put into it two or three Anchovies as many Onions and about half a pint of Gravy a pint of Oysters with a little Thyme minced small when it hath boyled a while put to it a little melted Butter and Nutmeg Then dish your Bream and pour all this upon it and then set it again on the Fire putting some yolks of Eggs over it 212. To boyl a Mullet Having scalded your Mullet you must save their Livers and Roes then put them in water boyling hot put to them a Glass of Claret a bundle of sweet Herbs with a little Salt and Vinegar two or three whole Onions and a Lemon sliced then take some whole Nutmegs and quarter them and some large Mace and some butter drawn with Claret wherein dissolve two or three Anchovies dish up your Fish and put on your sauce being first seasoned with Salt Garnish your dishes with fryed Oysters and Bay-leaves and thus you may season your Liquor for boyling most other fish 213. To Farce or stuff a fillet of Veal Take a large Leg of Veal and cut off a couple of Fillets from it then mince a handful of sweet Herbs and Parsley and the yolks of two or three hard Eggs let all these be minced very small then season it with a couple of grated Nutmegs and a little Salt and so Farce or stuff your Veal with it then lard it with Bacon and Thyme very well then let it be Roasted and when it is almost enough take some of your stuffing about a handfull and as many Currans and put these to a little strong broth a Glass of Claret and a little Vinegar a little Sugar and some Mace when your Meat is almost ready take it up and put it into this and let it stew putting to it a little butter melted put your Meat in your dish and pour your sauce upon it and serve it 214. To make a Pudding of Oatmeal Take a quart of milk and boyl it in a Skillet put to it a good handful of Oatmeal beat very small with a stick or 2 of Cinamon and Mace put in this Oatmeal as much as will thicken it before the milk be hot then keep it stirring and let it boyl for about half an hour putting into it a handful of Beef suet minced very small then take it off and pour it into a dish and let it stand to cool if it be too thick put to more milk then put in a Nutmeg grated a handful of sugar with three or four Eggs
Quinces 5 Cream Tarts 47 Cornelians to Pickle 64 Cordial water of Clove-gilliflowers 50 Cucumbers to pickle 3 Cucumbers preserved green 43 Cullice to make 42 Currans preserved 8 Currans Wine 61 D. Damask water 33 Damsons preserved 10 44 Dr. Deodates drink for the Scurvy 20 Date Leach 35 Dry Vinegar to make 35 E. Elder Vinegar 46 Ellecampane roots candyed 41 Eringo Roots Candyed 40 Excellent Broth 8 Excellent Hippocras presently 22 Excellent Jelly 6 Excellent surfeit water 37 Excellent sweet water 25 F. Fine cakes 32 Flymery Caudle 52 French Beans to pickle 6 French Bisket to make 16 Fruits dryed 29 Fruits preserved all the Year 52 G. Ginger to candy 25 Gingerbread to make 31 Gooseberrie cakes 8 Gooseberries preserved 17 Gooseberry Paste 55 Grapes to Candy 43 Grapes preserved 17 H. Hartichoaks preserved 30 Hippocras to make 22 4 Honey of Mulberries 57 Honey of Raisins 57 Hony of Roses 11 Hydromel to make 51 I. Jelly of Almonds white 35 Jelly of Apples 64 To make Crystal Jelly 26 Jelly of Currans 56 Jelly of Hartshorn 9 Jelly of Quinces 56 Jelly of Strawberries and Mulberries 26 Jelly of Gooseberries 65 Jelly of Raspices 59 Imperial water 33 Italian Bisket 15 Italian Marmalade 65 Jumbels to make 34 K. Kings perfume 12 K. Edw. perfume 13 L. Leach of Almonds 40 Leach Lambard 32 Leach to make 29 Lemon and Orange-peel pickled 55 Lozenges of Roses 54 M. Manus Christi to make 25 Marmalade of Cherries 52 Marmalade of Currans 48 Marmalade of Grapes 63 Marmalade of Oranges 62 Marmalade of Oranges and Lemons 13 Marmalade of Quinces 3 Mackroons to make 2 Marchpanes to make 5 Marygolds candyed 40 Mathiolus Bezoar water 48 Mead or Metheglin 94 12 Mead pleasant to make 49 Medlers preserv'd 53 Mint water 57 Muscadine Comfits 25 Musk balls to make 33 Musk Sugar 55 Mulberries preserved 57 N. Naples bisket to make 54 Nutmegs to candy 61 O. Oranges and Lemons candyed 15 Oranges to bake 17 Orange peels candyed 35 Oranges preserved 5 Oranges preserved Portugal way 15 Orange water 36 Oyl of sweet Almonds 10 Oyl of Violets 35 5 P. Paste of Apricocks 62 Paste of Cherries 62 Paste of Genua 28 Paste of Quinces 32 Paste Royal 27 Paste of tender plums 46 Paste of Violets 35 Peaches preserved 17 Pears or plums to Candy 6 Perfume for Gloves 19 Pippins dryed 28 Pippins preserv'd green 24 Pippins preserv'd red 36 Pippins preserv'd white 17 Plague water 58 23 Pomecitrons preserved 39 Pomander to make 16 Pomatum to make 10 Poppy water 47 Prince bisket 55 Purslain to pickle 8 Q Quiddany of Cherries 14 Quiddany of Plums 41 Quiddany of Quinces 29 Queens perfume 13 Quince cakes 1 Quince cakes clear 59 Quince cakes red 59 Quince cakes white 58 Quince cakes thin 32 Quince cream 42 Quinces preserved red 4 Quinces preserved white 2 Quinces to pickle 58 R Rasberry cream 51 Rasberry wine 21 Raspices preserved 2 Red currans cream 53 Red and white Currans Pickled 53 Rich cordial 53 Rose leaves candyed 56 Rosemary water 10 Rosemary Flowers candyed 26 Roses preserved whole 56 Rosa Solis to make 24 Rose Vinegar 44 Rosewater 39 S Snow cream 51 Spirit of Ambergreece 23 Spirit of honey 30 Spirit of roses 36 Dr. Stephens water 7 Steppony to make 49 Strawberry wine 50 Spots out of Cloaths 43 Suckets to make 32 Suckets of green Walnuts 39 Suckets of Lettice stalks 55 Sugar cakes to make 43 Sugar Leach 34 Sugar of Roses 47 Sugar plate to make 16 Surfeit water 37 Sweet cakes without Sugar 29 Sweet meat of Apples 61 Sweet bags for linnen 30 Syllabub to make 48 Symbals to make 3 Syrup of Apples 45 Syrup of Citron peels 19 Syrup of Cinamon 19 Syrup of Comfrey 58 Syrup of Cowslips 13 Syrup of Clove-gilly-flowers 3 Syrup of elder 36 Syrup of hartshorn 19 Sprup of hysop 24 Syrup of licorice 12 Syrup of Lemons 12 Syrup of the lungs 30 Syrup of Maiden hair 12 Syrup of Mints 57 Syrup of Poppies 11 Syrup of Purslain 57 Syrup of Quinces 18 Syrup of Roses 38 Syrup of Saffron 39 Sprup for short wind 37 Syrup of of sugar candy 37 Syrup against scurvy 38 Syrup of Violets 3 Syrup of Wormwood 11 Syrup of Vinegar 45 Syder to make 49 Spirit of Wine 12 T. Trifle to make 41 Treacle water to make 18 V. Verjuice to make 34 Vsquebah to make 15 W. Walnuts preserved 88 Walnut water 18 Washing balls to make 33 Wafers to make 7 Waters against consumption 22 Water against fits of the Mother 10 Wormwood Wine 30 Wormwood water 31 White Damsons preserved green 76 White leach of Cream 39 White Mead 54 Whipt Syllabub 52 The Table to Physick and Chirurgery Beautifying Waters and Secrets of Angling A. ACh of the joynts 68 Ach or pain 67 Ad Capiendum Pisces 69 Agues in the breast 79 Agues in children 77 67 Agues to cure 68 67 Medicine for an Ague 72 Another ibid Another ibid Allom water to make 82 B. Back to strengthen 67 Baits for Barbels 122 Baits for Bream 123 Baits for Carp or Tench 114 Baits for Chub and Pike 144 Baits for Eels 122 Baits for Fish all the year 149 Baits for Gudgeons 121 Bait with Gentles 113 Bait for Perch 119 Bait for Roch c. Bait for Salmon 123 Bait for Trouts 121 Beauty water for the face 98 99 Beautifying Oyntment 103 Beauty water approved 102 99 Beauty water called Lac Virginis 90 Bath for Ladies 105 Body to make fat and comly 105 Body to cleanse 105 Breasts to make small 105 Blasting to cure 77 Biting of a mad dog 71 Bleeding at the nose 79 Bleeding of a wound 79 Bloody-Flux c. 78 Black Plaister for all grief 87 Bone or Quills dyed Red for Fishing 108 Breath to make sweet 96 98 Breath to sweeten another 96 Heal a sore Breast when broken 74 C. Cancer to cure 79 70 Cancer in a womans breast 79 Caps to sight for Fishing 108 Cement for floats to fish 16 Childblains in Hands or Feet 97 Conception to procure 73 Consumption to cure 74 Cough dry to cure 69 Cordial Julep 75 Corns to cure 84 Cramp to cure 68 D. Drink for Scurvy 73 Deafness to cure 71 Deafness another 72 Delicate washing ball 95 Dentifrice for the teeth 95 Drink to heal wounds 86 Dropsie to cure 74 71 Dropsie another 76 E. Ears running to help 96 Ears pain'd to cure 80 Electuary of life 82 Excellent Beautifyer 104 Excellent Beauty water 99 Excellent salve 78 Eyes blood-shot 97 71 Eye-water 71 75 F. Face and skin to cleanse 92 Face to make youthful 90 102 Face fresh and ruddy 102 Face to beautifie 91 90 Face to make fair 90 Face very fair 91 Face pitted by small Pox ib. 93 94 Face to whiten 91 90 Face to Illustrate 98 Falling off Hair 89 Falling sickness or convulsions 74 9 Falling sickness another 77 Feavers or Agues in children 74 Fellon to kill 79 Fishing lines to make 107 Fishing lines to unloose 109 Fits of