Healths improvement: or, Rules comprizing and discovering the nature, method, and manner of preparing all sorts of food used in this nation. Written by that ever famous Thomas Muffett, Doctor in Physick: corrected and enlarged by Christopher Bennet, Doctor in Physick, and fellow of the Colledg of Physitians in London.

About this Item

Title
Healths improvement: or, Rules comprizing and discovering the nature, method, and manner of preparing all sorts of food used in this nation. Written by that ever famous Thomas Muffett, Doctor in Physick: corrected and enlarged by Christopher Bennet, Doctor in Physick, and fellow of the Colledg of Physitians in London.
Author
Moffett, Thomas, 1553-1604.
Publication
London, :: Printed by Tho: Newcomb for Samuel Thomson, at the sign of the white Horse in Pauls Churchyard,
1655.
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Subject terms
Diet -- Early works to 1800.
Food -- Early works to 1800.
Nutrition -- England -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A89219.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Healths improvement: or, Rules comprizing and discovering the nature, method, and manner of preparing all sorts of food used in this nation. Written by that ever famous Thomas Muffett, Doctor in Physick: corrected and enlarged by Christopher Bennet, Doctor in Physick, and fellow of the Colledg of Physitians in London." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A89219.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 2, 2024.

Pages

Lingulacae Soleae.

Soles or Tongue fishes, are counted the Partridges of the sea, and the fittest meat of all other for sick folks; for they are of a good smell, a pleasant taste, neither of too hard nor too soft a flesh, engendring neither too thick nor too thin blood; of easie concoction, leaving none or few excrements after they be digested. Platina fried them (as we do) with persly, butter, and verjuce, and sawced them with butter and juce of orenges; but for sick persons they are best sodden in water, butter, and verjuce with a little falt; it is a fish impatient of winter, and there∣fore then it lurketh in deep holes, but in summer it

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sporteth it self abroad, and offereth it self to be seen when it is most seasonable.

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