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A66839 The compleat servant-maid; or, The young maidens tutor Directing them how they may fit, and qualifie themselves for any of these employments. Viz. Waiting woman, house-keeper, chamber-maid, cook-maid, under cook-maid, nursery-maid, dairy-maid, laundry-maid, house-maid, scullery-maid. Composed for the great benefit and advantage of all young maidens. Woolley, Hannah, fl. 1670. 1677 (1677) Wing W3273A; ESTC R221142 53,634 187

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Lignum Al●es Spikenard Iuncus Odora●us of each a dram Sage Bourage Bugloss Violets and Rosemary flowers of each half an handful bruise them and steep them in a pottle of Sack twelve hours and distil it as the rest To make Mint-Water Take two parts of Mint and one part of Worm-wood and two parts of Carduus put these into as much new Milk as will soak them Let them infuse five or six hours then distil it as you do Rose-Water but you must often take off the head and stir the Water well with a stick Drink of this Water a Wine-glass full at a time sweetned with white Sugar to your taste To make a very good Cordial-Water without stilling Take two quarts of Brandy and keep it in a great glass with a narrow mouth put into it of Cloves Nutmegs Cinamon Ginger Cardamum seeds Coriander seeds Anis-seeds Liquorish of each of these half an ounce bruised Long Pepper and Grains of each one dram bruised Elecampane one quarter of an ounce bruised Let all these steep in the Brandy a fortnight then pour it out into a long glass softly so long as it will run clear then put more Brandy into the glass where the Ingredients are and let that stand three weeks and so long as you find there is any strength in the Ingredients still put in more Brandy and let it stand every time longer and longer Then take your first two quarts of Brandy which you poured of and put in it four ounces of white Sugar-candy and so much Syrup of Clove-Gilliflowers as will colour it with store of Leaf Gold Give two spoonfuls at a time It is good in case of any Illness or Swouning to drive out any infection and venomous humours To make Poppy Water Take of Red Poppies four pound put to them a quart of White Wine then distil 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 it according to your taste To make rose-Rose-Water Stamp the Leaves and first distil the Juice afterwards distil the leaves and so you may dispatch more with one Still than others with three or four and this Water is every way as Medicinable as the other serving well in all Decoctions and Syrups though it be not altogether so pleasing to the smell To make Spirit of Roses Bruise the Rose in his own juice adding thereto being temperately warmed 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 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 juice of Roses only and after distil the same To make a most Excellent Wa●er Which comforteth the Vital Spirits and helpeth the inward Diseases which come of Cold as the Palsie Contraction of Sinnews also it killeth worms and comforteth the Stomach it cureth the Dropsie helpeth the Stone and Stinking Breath and maketh one seem young To make this take a Gallon of G●scoin Wine Ginger Galingal Nutmegs Gran●s Cloves Annis-seeds Fenil-seeds Carraway-seeds of each one dram Then take Sugar Mint Red Roses Tyme Pellitory Rosemary Wild Tyme Cammomile and Lavender then beat the Herbs and Spices small and put it all together into the Wine and let it stand so twelve hours stirring it divers times then distil it with a Limbick and keep the first Water for it is best Of a gallon of Wine you must not take above a quart Directions for the making of some of the choicest Receipts in Physick and Chyrurgery A Receipt 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 to drink luke warm an hour before the fit cometh To cure a Quartan● Ague Take a white Flint-stone and let it lie in a quick fire until it be red hot then take some Small Beer and quench it therein When the fit is coming let the Diseased drink a good draught thereof and another in the midst of the fit let this be done ●our several days both in the fit and when the fit is coming This is accounted an excellent Receipt A very good Receipt to comfort the Stomach Take two ounces of old Conserve of Red Roses and of Mithridate two drams mingle them together and when you are going to bed eat thereof the quantity of an Hasle-nut This will expel all flatulency and windiness of the Stomach drives away raw Humours and venomous Vapours helpeth digestion and dryeth up Rheum and strengtheneth the Sight and Memory To cure Corns Take Beans and chew them in your mouth and then tie them fast to your Corns and it will help Do this at night For the Yellow Iaundis Take a green white Onion and make a hole where the blade goeth out to the bigness of a Chesnut then fill the hole with Treacle being beaten with half an ounce of English Honey and a little Saffron and set the honey against the fire and roast it well that the Onion do not burn and when it is roasted strain it through a cloth and give the juice thereof to the Sick three days together and it shall help them For the Black Iaundies Take Fenil seed Sage Parsly Gromwel of each a like quantity and make Pottage thereof with a piece of good Pork and eat no other meat that day For Inf●ction of the Plague Take a spoonful of Running Water a good quantity of Treacle to the bigness of an Hasle-nut Temper all these together and heat it luke-warm and drink it every four and twenty hours For all Feavers or Agues in Sucking Children Take Powder of Crystal and steep it in Wine and give it the Nurse to drink also take the Root of Devil's Bit with the Herb and hang it about the Child's neck 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 Pot-sheard and lay it to the nape of the Neck to Bedward An excellent Dyet Drink for the Spring to purge and cleanse the Blood Take o● Scurvygrass half a peck brook-lime Watercresses Agrimony Maiden-hair Liverwort Burrage Bugloss Betony Sage sweet-Marjarum Sea-worm wood tops of green Hops Fumitory of each a good handful of Ivory Hartshorn and yellow Saunders of each one ounce Red-dock roots two ounces Purslain Fennel Asparagus roots of each an ounce Raisins half a pound boyl these very well in a Gallon of Beer then stamp and strain them and put into it three Gallons of new Beer to work together A good Receipt for the Dropsie either Ho●
Plumbs Peaches and Apricocks if you take them green To preserve Black Cherries Take them fresh or as they come from the Tree and out of the Stalk take one pound of Sugar for two pounds of Cherries seeth and clarifie them and when they are half boyl'd put in your other Cherries and let them seeth softly together until the Sugar may be drawn between the fingers like small Threads when it is almost cold put the Cherries in the Pots with the Stalks downwards To Preserve Mulb●rries Take Mulberries and add to them their weight in Sugar having wet your Sugar with some juice of Mulberries then stir your Sugar together and put in your Mulberries and boyl them till they are enough then take them out and boyl the Syrup a while then put in the Mulberries and let them stand till they be cold To Prese●ve Oranges and Lemmons Take the fairest you can get and lay them in water three days and three nights to take away their bitterness then boyl them in fair water till they be tender make as much Syrup as will make them swim about the Pan let them not boyl long for then the skin will be tough let them lye all night in the Syrup that they may soak themselves therein In the morning boyl the Syrup to a convenient thickness then with it and the Oranges and Lemmons fill your Gallipots and keep them all the year In this manner you may preserve Citrons To Preserve Gooseberries Let the Gooseberries be gathered with their stalks on cut off their heads and stone them then put them in scalding water and let them stand therein a little while then take their weight of Sugar finely beaten and lay first a Layer of Sugar then of gooseberries in your preserving Pot or Skillet till all be in put in for every pound of Gooseberries a spoonful of fair water set them on the Embers till the Sugar be melted then boyl them as fast as you can till the Syrup be thick enough when cold put them up In this manner you may preserve Raspices and Mulberries To Preserve Roses Take one pound of Roses three pound of Sugar one pint and a little more of rose-Rose-water make your Syrup first and let it stand till it be cold then take your Rose leaves having first clip'd off all the white put them in the cold Syrup and cover them let your fire be very soft that they may only simmer two or three hours then whilst they are hot put them out into pots or glasses for your use To Preserve Cherries Take Cherries fully ripe and newly gathered put them to the bottom of the preserving pan let the Cherries and Sugar be of equal weight throw some Sugar on the Cherries and set them on a quick fire and as they boyl throw on the Sugar till the Syrup be thick enough then take ●hem out and put them into a G●llipot whilst they are warm it will not be amiss to add two or three Spoon●uls of Rose-water to them To preserve Ripe Apricocks Let the weigh● of your Sugar equal the weight of your Apricocks what quantity soever you have a mind to use pare and stone your Apricocks and lay them in the Sugar in the preserving pan all night and in the morning set them on the embers all night till the Sugar be melted and then let them stand and scald an hour then take them off the fire and let them stand in that Syrup two days and then boyl them so●tly till they be tender and well coloured and after that when they are coloured put them up in glasses or pots which you please To Preserve green Walnuts Take Walnuts and boyl them till the water tasts bitter then take them off and put them in cold water and peel off their rind and put to them as much Sugar as their weight and a little more water than will wet the Sugar set them on a fire and when they boyl up take them off and let them stand two days then boyl them again once more To Preserve Eringo Roots Take Eringo Roots fair and knotty one pound and wash them clean then set them on the fire and boyl them very tender peel off their outermost skin but break them not a● you pare them then let them lye a while in cold water a●ter this you must take to every ●ound of Roots three qu●rte●s of a pound of clarified Sugar and boyl it almost ●o the height of a Syrrup and then put in your Roots but look that they boyl but gently together and stir them as little as may be for fear of br●aking when they are cold put them up and keep them To Preserve Ennula-C●mpana Roots Wash them and scrape them very clean and cut them thin to the Pith the length of your lit●le finger and as you cut them put them in water and let them lye there thirty days shifting them twice every day to take away the bitterness Then weigh them and to every pound of Roots add twelve ounces of Sugar clarified first boyling ●he Roots very tender then put them into the Sugar and let them boyl upon a gentle fire until they be enough having stood a good while on the fire pot them up between hot and cold To make Conserve of Roses Take red Ros●buds clip all ●he white either bruised or wi●hered ●rom them then add to every pound of Roses three pound of Sugar stamp the Ros●s very small putting to them a little juice of Lemons or Rosewater as they become dry When you think your Roses small enough then put your Sugar to them so beat them together till they be well mingled then pot it up in Gallipots or Glasses In this manner is made the conserves of Flowers of Violets which doth cool and open in a burning fever or Ague being dissolved in Almond milk and so taken and excellent good for any inflammation in children Thus yon may also make the conserve of Cowslips Marigolds Sage and Scabious and the like How to Candy all sorts of Flowers as they grow wi●h their Stalk on Take the Flowers and cut the Stalks somwhat short then take one pound of the whitest and hardest Sugar you can get put to it eight spoon●uls of Rosewater and boyl it till it will roul between your little finger and your Thumb then take it from the fi●e and cool it with a stick and as it waxeth cold dip all your flowers and taking them out again lay them one by one on the bo●●tom of a Sieve then turn a Joynt-stool 〈◊〉 the feet upward set the sieve on 〈◊〉 ●eet thereof then cover it with a fa●● linnen cloth and set a chafing dish of ●●●●s in the midst of the stool underneath 〈◊〉 sieve and the heat thereof will dry yo●●●andy speedily which will look very pl 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 y and keep the whole year To C●ndy Eringo Roots Take of your Eringo Roots ready to be preserved and w●igh th●m and to every pound of Roots you must take of the purest
Sugar you can get two pound and clarifie it with the whites of eggs exceeding well that it may be as clear as Crystal It b●ing clarified you must boyl it to the height of Manus Christi and then dip in your Roots two or three at once till th●y are all candied put them in a stove and so keep them all the year The best w●y to dry Plumbs Take Plumbs when they are fully grown with the Stalks to them however let them be green split them on the one side and put them in hot water but not too hot and so let them stand three or four hours then to a pound of them take three quarters of a pound of Sugar beaten very fine and eight spoon●uls o● water to every pound set them on hot embers till the Sugar be melted and ●●●er that boyl them till they be very tender 〈…〉 them stand in their Syrup two or 〈◊〉 ●●ys to plump them then take them out and wash the Syrup from them with warm w●●●● and wipe them dry in a fair Linnen clot● then set them on pla●es and let them dry ●n a stove dry them not in an Oven for then they will be tough Colours for Fruit. If you would colour fruit yellow you must make use of saffron for the best green colour take sap green and for the best red Indian lake c. You must be sure to mix the colours with Gum Arabick dissolved in Rosewater To make Marmelade of Quinces Take of the fairest Quinces wash them very clean and stamp them very small and wring out as much juice as you can then take other Quinces and cut them in six pieces put them in a pot and let them be evaporated with hot water until they be thorowly mellow then take half a pot ●ull of the former juice and pour it upon the former stewed and cut to pieces break it well together and put the rest of the juice among it then wring it thorow a clean thin cloth seeth no more of this juice at once ●han will fill a box therewith and put white Sugar to it as much as you please How ●o ma●e Sy●up ●f Violets Boyl fair water and scum it and to every ounce so scum'd and boyl'd take six quarters o● the blew of Violets only shi●t them as before nine times and the last time take nine ounces of Violets let them stand between times of shi●ting twelve hours keeping the Liquor still on hot emb●rs that it may be but milk warm after the first shifting you must stamp and strain the last nine ounces of Violets and put in only the juice of them then take to every pint of this Liquor thus prepared one pound of Sugar finely beaten● boyl it and keep it stirred till all ●he Sugar be melted which you must do if you can before it boyl afterwards boyl it up with a quick fire To make Syrup of Roses Take Damas● Roses and clip off the white of them for every pint of water take six ounces of Roses boyl your wa●er first and scum it then let th●m stand twelve ●●urs w●inging out the Roses and putting in new eight times then wringing out the last put in the juice of four ounces only and so make it up as b●fore To make Syrup of Coltsfoot Take the leav●s of Coltsfoot and wash them very clean then wipe them wi●h a clean cloth leaf by l●a● then dry them well with a cloth then beat them in a morter and put them in a strainer and wring all ●●e juice ou● of them and put it into glasses ●nd let it stand in them to settle all Night ●he next day pour out the clearest of the ●uice from the grounds into a clear bason and take for every pint thereof a pound of Suga● finely beaten boyl the juice of Colts●foot softly on a Charcole fire and when you have well scum'd it put in the Sugar according to its proportion and so let ther● boyl together keeping it with due scummin● until it will stand on a stiff purl dropping it on a plate Then take it from the fire and pour it thorow a Jelly bag into a fair Bason putting first a branch or two of Ros●mary into the bags bottom then keep it stirring with a spoon until it be lukewarm otherwise it will have a Cream upon it so letting it stand all night put it in what vessels you think fit to keep it in for your future use and service By the foresaid rules and directions you may now make most sorts of Syrups now in use as Syrup of Wormwood Betony Burrage Bugloss Carduus Cammomil Succory Endive Strawber●ies Fumitory Pu●slain Sage S●abious Scordium Housleek and the like Thus having given you some short directions for Preferving Conservi●g and Candying I shall in the next place give yo● some rules and directions how you may attain to write a good legible Hand Directions for Writing the most Vsual and Legible Hands for Women as Mixt Hand Roman Hand and Italian Hand Before I come to give you full directions ●or the writing of the a●oresaid Hands I shall give you some instructions how to make a pen hold a pen how to sit to write together with some other necessaries for writing How to make a Pen. Having a pe●knife with a smooth thin sharp edge take the first or second quill of a Goose wing and s●rape it then hold it in your l●ft hand with the feather end from you beginning even in the back cut a small piece off sloping then to make a slit ente● the knife in the mid●t of ●he first cut● put in a quill and forc● it up so 〈◊〉 as you desire the slit should be in l●ng●h which done cut a piece sloping a way ●rom the other side above th● slit and fashion the mo by 〈◊〉 off both the sides equally down then place ●he nib on the nail of your left hand thumb ●nd to end it draw the edge into it sl●nting ●nd being half thorow turn the edge almost ●ownright and cut it off How to hold your Pen. Hold the pen in the right hand with the ●ollow side downward on the left side place your Thumb rising in joynt on the left side you● middle finger near half an inch from the end of the Nib and your forefinger on the top a small distance from your Thumb How to sit to write Chose a foreright light or one that comes on the left hand hold your head up ●he distance of a span from the paper when you are writing hold not your head one way nor other but look right forward Draw in your right elbow turn your hand outward and bear it lightly gripe not the pen too hard with your left hand stay the paper Necessaries for Writing Let your Ink be thin such as may freely run from the pen let the paper which you write on be white fine and well gumm'd for dispatch procure a round ruler for certainty a flat one at your first writing rule double lines with a
or Cold. Take of tops of red Mint of Archange or Blind Nettles and red Sage of either ● small quantity stamp them together and strain the juice of them into some stale Ale so much as will serve to drink morning an● evening do this for ten days together an● God willing it will effect the cure Another most excellent for the Dropsie Take green broom and burn it in some clean place that you may take the ashes o● it take ten or twelve spoonfuls of the same ashes and boyl them in a pint of Whitewine till ●he virtue thereof be in the Wine then ●ool it and drein the Wine from the dregs and make three draughts of the Wine one fasting in the morning the other at three in the afternoon and the other when you go to bed This seldom fails of the desired effect How to Prevent the Tooth-ach Wash your mouth once a week in White-wine in which Spurge hath been ●oyled ●nd you shall never be troubled with the ●ooth-ach A Present Remedy for the Tooth-ach If your Tooth be hollow and paineth you much take of the herb called Spurge and ●queeze it and mingle wheat flower with ●he milk that issueth from it with this make ● paste and fill the Cavity of your Tooth ●herewith and leaving it there a while you must change it every two hours and the Tooth will drop out of it self A good Receipt for the S●one and Gravel Take a hard row of a red herring and dry it upon a Tile in an Oven then beat it to powder and take as much as will lye upon sixpence every morning fasting in a glass of Rhenish wine For the Griping of ●he Guts Take Anniseeds Fennelseeds Bayberries Juniper berri●s Tormentil Bistort Balaustins Pomgranate Pills each one ounce Rose leaves a handful boyl th●m in milk strain it and add the yolk of an egg 〈◊〉 grains of Laudanum dissolved in ●he Spirit o● Mint prepare it for a glister and give 〈◊〉 warm The Plaister of Plaisters Take of Roses beaten to powder two pound and an half Heifers tallow two pound and a quarter try it with a gentle fire and cleanse it when it is cold scrape away the dross from the bottom and melt it in a brass vessel then strew in the Rosi● by handfuls and stir it with a willow Spatula continually stirring it until it be all stirred and melted then have ready a bason of pewter and in it of water of Camomil of english Briony root and o● Damask Rosewater of each eight ounces with powder of salt of wormwood salt of tartar salt of Scurvygrass Vitriol Camphonete of each one ounce and an half then pour in the melted body and stir it with the Spatula round continually until the body have seemingly swallowed up all the salt and waters continue it stirring until the water appear and thus work i● till the body b● as white as snow then let it stand a month in the water covered from dust and when you use it let it not come near any fire but work a little at a time until it be as white as snow on the brawn of your hand over against your little finger spread it on a linnen cloth or leather for the best plaister in the world for the Reins in all Accidents and for all bruises and great conclusions c. For the Falling Sickness or Convulsion Fits 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 For the Worms in Children Take Wormseed and boyl it in beer or ale and sweeten it with a little clarified ●●●ey and then let them drink it For a dry Cough Take Aniseeds 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 thereof morning and evening For the I●ch Take the juice of Penny-royal the juice of Savine Scabious the juice of Sage the juice of Pellitory with some Barrow● grease and black Sope temper all these and make a salve and with it anoint all your joynts For Deafness Take wild mint mortifie it and sque●● it in the hand till it rendreth juice then take it with its juice and put it into the ear change it often this will help the deafness if the person ever heard before To make Oyl of St. Iohns Wort good for any Ach or Pain Take a Quart of Sallet Oyl and put thereto a quart of the flowers of St. John● wort well picked let them lye therein al● the Summer till the seeds o● that herb b● ripe the glass must be kept warm eithe● in the Sun or in the water all the summe●●ill the seeds be ripe then put in a quart o● St. Johns wort seed and so let it stand twelve hours the glass being kept open then must you boyl the oyl eight hours the water in the pot full as high as the Oyl in the Glass when it is cold strain i● that the seed r●m●in not in it and so keep it for your use To make an Oin●ment for any Wound or Sore Take two pound of Sheep suet or rather D●er suet a pint of Candy-oyl a quarter of a pound of the newest and best beeswax melting them altogether and stirring them well and put to them one ounce of the oyl of Spike and hal● an ounce or the Goldsmiths Burras then heat them again and stir them all together put it up in a Gallipot and k●ep it close stopped till you have cause to use it this is an approved ointment ●or any wound or sore new or old A Searcloth for all Ach●s Take Rosin one pound Perresin a quarter of a pound as much Mastick D●er suet the like Turpentine two ounces Cloves bruised one ounce Mace bruised two ounces Saffron two drachms boyl all these ●ogether in oyl o● Cammomil and preserve it for your use this hath done many good when nothing else would A m●st exc●llent Balsom for Wounds and other things Take of Venice Turpentine one pound of Oyl Olive three pints yellow Wax half a pound of Natural Balsom one ounce Oyl of St. Iohn's Wort one ounce of Red Saunders one ounce six spoon●uls of Sack cut the Wax and melt it on the fire then let it catch the fire take it off and put in the Turpentine to it having first w●shed the Venice-Turpentine thrice with damask-rose-Damask-Rose-Water and having mingled your S●llet-Oyl with the Sack put also the Oly to ●hem and put them all on the fire and stir it till it begin to boil for if it boil much it will run over speedily then suffer it to cool for a night or more until the Water and Wine be sunk all to the bottom then make some holes in the Stuff ●hat the Water may run out of it which being done put it over the fire again putting to it the Balsom and
too much soiled Directions to Wash and Starch Points TAke your points and put them into a Tent then make a strong Ladder with the best soap you can get then dip a brush in that ladder and soundly rub your points on both sides so do till you have washed it in four Ladders then wash it in fair water alone then wash it in blew water and when you have so done take starch made thin with water and with your brush on the wrong side wash it over with it so let it dry then lay your Tent upon a table and with an ivory bodkin made for the purpose run into every close and narrow part of it to open it betwixt the gimp or overcast likewise into every Ilet hole to open them For the Laces after you have pulled them out well with your hands you must iron them on the wrong side let the water be warm wherewith you make your Ladder when you take them out of the tent iron them on the wrong side let not the water be too blew with which you wash them To make Clean Gold and Silver Lace Take the lace off from your garment and lay it upon a table and with a brush rub it all over very well with burnt Allum beaten fine till you find it to become of the right colour then shake it very well and wipe it very well with a clean linnen cloth oftentimes over To get Spots of Ink out of Linne● Cloth Before that you suffer it to be washed lay it all night in urine the next day rub all the spots in the urine as i● you were washing-in water then lay it in more urine another night and then rub it again and so do till you find they be quite out To get the Stains of Fruits out of any Linnen Ctoth Take them before they are washed and with a little butter rub every spot well then let the cloth lye in scalding hot milk a while and when it is a little cooled rub the spotted places in the milk till you see they are quite out and then wash it in water and soap To take out any greasie Spots out of Silk Stuff or Cloth Take a linnen rag and wet it very well in fair water then with a pair of Tongs put a live sea cole or wood cole upon the rag and hastily close the rest of the rag about the cole and presently lay it upon the greasie spot whilst it is smoking hot and when you perceive it to cool do so again and so do till you find the spots are quite taken out How to make clean Plaie Wash your plate first in soap suds and dry it then if there be any spots rub them out with salt and vinegar then anoint your plate all over with vinegar and chalk then lay it in the Sun or before the fire to dry then rub it off with warm linnen clothes very well and it will look like new How to keep the Hair Clean and Preserve it Take two handfuls of Rosemary and boyl it softly in a quart of Spring water till it comes to a pint and let it be covered all the while then strain it out and keep it every morning when you comb your head dip a spunge in the water and rub up your hair and it will keep it clean and preserve it for it is very good for the brain and will dry up Rheum To Wash the Face There i● no better thing to wash the face with to keep it smooth and to scowr it clean than to wash it every Night with brandy wherein you have steeped a little flower of Brimstone and the next day wipe it only with a cloth To make a Salve for the Lips Take two ounces of white Bees wax and slice it thin then melt it over the fire with two ounces or more of Sallet Oyl and a little white sugar candy and when you see it is well incorporated take it off the fire and let it stand till it be cold then set the skillet on the fire again till the bottom is warm and so turn it out anoint your lips or sore nose or sore nipples with this and it will heal them To keep the Teeth clean and sound Take common white salt one ounce as much cuttle bone beat them together and rub your Teeth with them every morning and then wash them wi●h fair water To make the Hands White and Soft Take Daffadil in clean water till it grow thick and put thereto powder of Cantarium and stir them together then put thereto two eggs and stir them well together and with this ointment anoint your hands and within three or four days using thereof they will be white clear and soft To Smooth the Skin and take away Morphew and Freckles Anoint your face with the blood of a Hare or Bull and this will take away morphew and freckles and smooth the skin Directions for making of Custards Cheesecakes Raising of Paste and making of Tarts end Pyes To make Custards Take a quart of Cream and boyl it well 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 all toge●her or else into several small China cups or dishes like Coffee dishes and bake them then if you please you may serve them in with French Comfits strowd on them or without To make Cheesecakes Take two Gallons of new milk put into it two spoonfuls and a half of Runnet heat the milk little less than blood warm and cover it close with a cloth till you see the Cheese be gathered then with a scumming dish gently take out the whey when you have drained the curd as clean as you can put it into a Sieve and let it drain very well there then to two quarts of Curds take a quart of thick Cream a pound of sweet butter twelve eggs a pound and an half of Currants a penny worth of Cloves Nutmeg and mace beaten half a pound of good Sugar a quarter of a pint of Rosewater mingle it well together and put it into Puff-paste How 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 into five pieces that you may lay it on at five several times roul your paste very broad and break one part of the said 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 rowling pin and so roul it out again thus do five times and then make it up How to make Paste for all manner of Tarts and Pyes Take very sweet butter and put it into fair water and make it boyl on the fire then take the finest flower you
large mace and then bake it then take off the Lid and fill it up with more butter putting some of the Liquor of the Oisters also thereunto ●hen season it well with Sugar and serve it up To make a Goose Pye Break the bones of your Goose then perboyl him then season him with pepper and salt and a little cloves and m●ce if you please you may bake a Rabbet or two in it because your stubble Geese are very fat and your Rabbets d●y you need not Lard either bake it in good hot butter paste To make a Veal Pye When your paste is raised cut your Leg o● Veal into pieces and season it with pepper nu●meg and salt with some whole large mace and so lay it into your prepared coffin with good store of raisins of the Sun and Curran●s and fill it up with sweet butter then close it and set it in the Oven and when baked serve it in To make an Eel Pye Wash flea and cut your Eels in pieces put to them a handful of sweet herbs parsly minced with an Onion season them with pepper salt cloves mace and nutmeg and having your Coffin made of good paste put them in and strew over them two handfuls of Currants and Lemon cut in slices ●hen put on butter and close ●he Pye when it is baked put in at the funnel a little sweet butter whitewine and vinegar beat up with a couple of yolks of eggs 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 by a quarter of an hour when they are cold make an high Coffin and put them in whole adding to them some Cloves whole Cinamon and Sugar with some of the Liquor in the pot so bake th●m To make a Codling Tart. Take green Codlings from the Tree and codle them in scalding water without breaking them peel the skin from them and so d●vide them into halves and cut out the cores and lay them into the Co●fin then put in a good handful of Quinces sliced a little oringado and a good quantity of sugar a little Rosewater then close it up and bake it well To make a Gooseberry Tart. When your Gooseberries are picked and washed then boyl them in wat●r till they will break in a spoon then strain them and beat h●lf a dosen Eggs and stir them together upon a chafing dish of Coals with some Rosewater then sweeten it very well with Sugar and always serve it cold To make an excellent Minc'd Pye Perboyl Neats Tongues then peel and hash them with as much as they weigh of beef suet and stoned raisins and picked currants chop all exceeding small that it be like pap then mingle a very little Sugar with them and a little wine and thrust it up and throw in some thin slices of candied 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 To make a Pidgeon Pye Truss your pidgeons to bake and set them and Lard one half of them with bacon mince a sew sweet herbs and parsly with a little suet the yolks of hard eggs and an onion or two season it with salt beaten pepper cloves mace nutmegs 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 Lamb-stones seasoned as before with six collops of bacon the salt drawn out then make a large Coffin and put in your Pidgeons and ●● you will put in Lamb-stones and sweet-breads and some Ar●ichoke bottoms or other dry meat to soak up the juice because the Pye will be very sweet and full of ●t then when it comes out of the Oven put in a lit●le Whitewine beat up with the yolk of an egg To make a Pippin Tart or Pye Pare your Pippins and cut out the cores then make your Coffin of good crust take a good handful of Quinces sliced and lay at the bottom then lay your Pippins a top and fill the holes where the cores were taken out with syrup os Quinces then put in Sugar and so close it up let it be very well baked for it will ask much soaking especially the Quinces Directions for making of Spoon Meat as Caudles Broths and Iellies TAke a Pint and a half of the strongest Ale may be gotten twenty Jordan Almonds clean wiped but neither washed nor blanched 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 of it and stamp it with the almonds and dates then strain them all together into the Ale boyl it till it be a little thick give it the party in a morning fasting to drink six spoonfuls and as much when they go to bed To make an Almond Caudle Take three pints of Ale and 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 Whitewine and thicken the Ale with it sweeten it if you please but be sure to scum it well when it boyls To make a Cordi●l strengthening broth Take a Red Cock strip off the feathers from the skin then break the bones to shivers with a rowling pin set it over the fire and just cover it with water put in some salt and wash the scumming and boyling off it Put in a handful of hartshorn a quarter of a pound of blew currants and as many raisins of the Sun stoned and as many Prunes four blades of large Mace a bottom crust of whiteloaf half an ounce of China root sliced being steeped three hours before in warm water boyl in it three or four pieces of gold strain it and put in a little fine Sugar and juice of Orange and so use it To make China Broth. Take an ounce of China root clipp'd thin and steep it in three pints of water all night or embers covered the next day take a good Chicken clean picked and the guts taken out put in his belly Agrimony and M●iden-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 To make a Flummery Ca●dle When Flummery is made and cold you may make a pleasant and wholesome Caudle with it by taking some lumps and spoonfuls of it● and boyl it with Ale and Whitewine then sweeten it to your taste with Sugar there will remain in the Caudle
some Lumps of congealed flummery which are not ungrateful To make Ielly of Hartshorn Take four ounces of the shaving of Harts-horn of the inside and two quarts of water put this into a P●pkin and boyl it very gently till it come to a quart the hartshorn must be steeped three or four hours first afterwards put a little into a sawcer till it be cold and if it be cold and jellyeth it is boyled enough then being warm take it off the fire and strain it hard thorow a cloth and set it a cooling till it be a hard Jelly then take two whites of eggs and beat them very well with a sprig of Rosemary or Birch but not with a spoon till a water come at the bottom then put these beaten eggs and the water thereof in●o a skillet and all the jelly upon it with three spoonfuls of damask Rose-water and ● quarter of a pound of Sugar and when it boyls stir and layth it pretty well then strain it thorow a cloth and let it cool and of this take four spoonfuls in a morning fasting and at four a clock in ●he af●ernoon and this is very good for the weakness in the back To make a Cock broth very good for weak people Take a good Cock pluck draw and wash him very well and bruise his Legs boyl him in a little water and salt very well for one hour then add some water wherein Mutton hath been boyled and put in a quarter of a pound of French Barley or Rice which you please with some Time Winter Savory and a little Lemon peel a little Large Mace and sliced Nutmeg with a clove or two when it is clean scum'd let it only stew till it be enough then take up the Cock for a while and boyl the broth very well then put him in again and heat him thorowly then serve him into the Table and Garnish your d●sh with Lemon and Barberries To make White Broth of Chicken or Capon First boyl the Capon or Chicken in water and salt then take three pints of strong broth and a quart of Whitewine and stew it in a Pipkin with a quarter of a pound of Dates half a pound of fine Sugar four or five blades of large mace the marrow of three marrow bones a handful of white endive s●ew these in a Pipkin very leisurely that it may but only simper then being finely stewed and the broth well tasted strain the yolks of Ten eggs with some of the broth before you dish up the Capons or Chickens put the eggs into the broth and keep it stirring that it may not curdle give it a warm and set it from the fire the Fowls being dished up put on the broth and garnish the meat with dates marrow large mace endive preserved barberries oranges boyled skerrets pomegranates and kernels make a leaf of Almond paste and Grape verjuice Directions for making of Pickles and Sawces How 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 wit● water and salt and boyl it a little let it be cold then put some brine in a deep earthen pot and put some bags in them and lay the weight on them let it lye there till it look black and shift it again s●ill as long as it looks black boyl them in a little Caldron and put them in vinegar a week or two and they will be fit to eat To Pickle Cucumbers Wash your Cucumbers clean and dry them in a cloth then take some water vinegar salt fennel tops and some dill tops and a little mace make it salt enough and sharp enough to the taste then boyl it a while and then take it off and let it stand till it be 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 To Pickle Artichoke Bottoms Take the best bottoms of Artichokes and parboyl them and when they are cold and well drained from the wa●●r and dryed in a cloth to take away all the moisture then put them into pots and pour your brine on them which must be as strong as you can make it which is done by putting in so much salt to it as it will receive no more so that the salt sinks whole to the bottom cover over your Artichokes with this water and pour upon it some sweet butter melted to the thickness of two fingers that no Air may come in when your Butter is cold set up your Pot in some warm place cover it close from Vermin before you put the bottoms in the Pot you should pull off all the Leaves and choak as they are served at Table the best time to do this is in Autumn when your Plants produce those which are young and tender for these you should pickle before they come to open and flower but not before the heads are round when you would eat them you must lay them in water shifting the water several times then boyl them once again and so serve them To Pickle Cornelians Gather the fairest and biggest Cornelians when they first begin to grow red and after they have lain a while put them up in a Pot or Barrel filling them up with brine as for Artichokes and put to them a little green Fennel and a few Bay Leaves to make them smell w●ll then stop them up very close and let them stand for a Month if you find them too salt make the Pickle weaker before you serve them to Table To Pickle Red and White Currants Take Vinegar and Whitewine with so much Sugar as will make it sweet then take your red and white currants being not fully ripe and give them one walm so cover them over in the same pickle keeping them always under Liquor To Pickle Artichokes Take Artichokes before they are too fully grown or two full of strings and when they are pared round then nothing is left but the Bottom boyl them till they be indifferent tender but not full boyled take them up and let them be cold then take good stale Beer and Whitewine with a great quantity of whole Pepper so put them up in a barrel with a small quantity of salt keep them close and it will not be sowr it will serve for baked and boyled meats all the Winter To Pickle Flowers of all Sorts Put them into a Gallipot or Glass with as much Sugar as they weigh fill them up with Wine-Vinegar to a Pint of Vinegar a pound of Sugar and a pound of flowers so keep them for Sallads and boyl'd Meats To Pickle Oisters Take eight quarts of Oisters and Parboyl them in their own Liquor then take them out and cleanse them in warm water then wipe them dry then take the Liquor they were parboyl'd in and clear it from the grounds into a large Pipkin or Skillet put to it a Pottle of good
put in a Lemon minced with the peel 4. Onions sliced and boyled with fair water and a little salt a few Bread crumbs beaten Pepper Nutmeg three spoonfuls of Whitewine and some Lemon peel finely minced and boyled all togethet being almost boyled put in the Juice of an Orange beaten Butter and the Gravy of a Fowl 5. Stamp small Nuts to a pa●te with Bread Nutmeg Pepper Saffron Cloves and the Juice of Orange and strong Broth strain and boyl them together pretty thick 6. Quinces Prunes Currants and Raisins boyled Muskified Bisquet boyled stampt and strained with Whitewine Rofe-Vinegar Nutmeg Cinnamon Cloves Juice of Oranges and Sugar boyl it not too thick 7. Boyl Carrots and Quinces strain them with Rose-Vinegar and Verjuice Sugar Cinamon Pepper Nutmeg boyled with a few whole Cloves and a little Mace 8. Take a Manchet pare off the Crust and slice it then boyl it in fair Water and being boyled fomething thick put in some Whitewine Wine-Vinegar Rose or Elder-Vinegar some Sugar and Butter 9. Almond paste and Crumbs of Manchet stamp them together with some Sugar Vinegar and salt strain them with Grape Verjuice and juice of Oranges boyl it pretty thick To make S●wce for a Stubble or Fat Goose. 1. Take sowr Apples slice them and boyl them in Beer all to Mash then put to them Sugar and beaten Butter sometimes for variety add Barberries and the Gravy of ●he ●owl 2. Roast sowr Apples or Pippins strain 〈…〉 grated Bread beaten Cinnamon Mustard and boyl●d Onions strained and put to it Sawce for a young Stubble Goose. Take the Liver and Gizzard mince it ●●ry small with some beaten Spinage sweet herbs Sage Salt and some minced Lard fill the Belly of the Goose and so sow up the Rump or vent as also the Neck Roast it and then take out the farsing and put it in a dish● then add to it the Gravy of the Goose Verjuice and Pepper give it a warm on the fire and serve it with this sawce in a clean dish The French Sawce for a Goose is Butter Mustard Sugar Vinegar and Barberries To make Sawces for a Duck or Mallard 1. Onions sliced and Carrots cut square like Dice boyled in Whitewine strong broth some Gravy minced Parsly Savory chop'd Mace and Butter being stewed together it will serve for divers wild fowl but most proper for Water fowl 2. Vinegar and Sugar boyled to a Syrup with two or three Cloves and Cinnamon or Cloves only 3. Oyster Liquor Gravy of the Fowl whole Onions boyled in it Nutmeg and an Anchovy If the Fowl be lean ●arse and Lard them To make Sawces for any kind of Roast Sea Fowl MAke a Gallendine with some grated Bread beaten Cinnamon and Ginger a quartern of Sugar a quart of Claret Wine a pint of Wine-Vinegar strain the foresaid materials and boyl ●hem in a Skillet with a few whole Cloves in the boyling stir it with a sprig of Rosemary add a a little Red Saunders and boyl it as thick as Water Grewel To make Green Sawce for Pork Goslings Chickens Lamb or Kid. Stamp Sorrel with white Bread and pared Pippins in a ●tone or wooden Morter put Sugar to it and Wine Vinegar then strain it thorow a fine cloth pretty thick dish it in Sawcers and scrape Sugar on it To make Sawces for Roast or Boyled Salmon 1. Take the Gravy of the Salmon or Oyster Liquor boyled up thick with beaten Butter Claret Wine Nutmeg and some slices of Orange 2. Gravy of the Salmon Butter Juice of Orange or Lemon Sugar and Cinnamon beat up the same with Butter pretty thick dish up the Salmon pour on the sawce and lay on it slices of Lemon 3. Beaten Butter with slices of Orange or Lemon or the Juice of them or Grape Verjuice and Nutmeg 4. Gravy of the Salmon two or three Cloves dissolved in it grated Nu●meg and grated Bread beat up thick with Butter the yolk of an Egg or slices of Orange wi●h the juice of it I should give you now some directions for dressing of Flesh and Fish but you will find that more properly set down in my directions to Cook-Maids● Directions for such who desire to be Nursery-Maids to Person● of Honour or Quality or else to Gentlewomen either in City or Country IF you intend to fit your self for this employment you must naturally encline your self to love young Children otherwise you will soon discover your unfitness to manage that charge you must be very neat and cleanly about them and careful to keep good hours for them both to a●ise and go to bed likewise to get their Breakfasts and Suppers at good and convenient time Let them not sit too long but walk them often up and down especially those who cannot go well of themselves you must also be extraordinary careful and vigilant tha● they get not any falls through your neglect ●or by such falls many the cause at first being unperceivable have grown irrecoverably Lame or Crooked Therefore i● any such thing should happen be sure you conceal it not but acquaint your Lord or Lady Master or Mistress thereof with all convenient speed that so means may be used for the Childs recovery before it be too late you must be extraordinary careful that you be not churlish or dogged to the Children but be always merry and pleasant and contrive and invent pretty sports and pastimes as will be most ●uitable and agreeable to the Childrens Age keep their Linnen and other things always mended and suffer them not to run too fast to decay Do not let the Children see that you love any one child above the other for that will be a means of dejecting and casting down the other Be careful to hear them read if it be imposed upon you and be not too hasty with them have a special care how you behave your sel● before them neither speaking nor acting mis-becomingly lest your bad example prove the subject of their imitation Consider the cha●ge you ●ake in hand and do not desire this employment as too many do because it is an easie kind os Life and void of labour and pains taking thinking also that children are easily pleased with any thing you will find the contrary and that it is a troublesome employment and the charge of a greater weight than such vainly imagine Directions for such as desire to be Cook-Maids in Noble or Gentlemens Families IF you would fit your self for this employment and so consequently gain great wages good Vales and the reputation of an accomplished Cook You must learn to be skilful in dr●ssing all sorts of Flesh Fowl and Fish to make variety of sawces proper for each of them to raise all manner of Pastes and Kickshaws to be curious in garnishing your dishes and making all manner of Pickles c. And as you must ●now how to dress Meat well so must you know how to save what is left of that you have dress●d of which you may make both handsome and