A daily exercise for ladies and gentlewomen. Whereby they may learne and practice the whole art of making pastes, preserues, marmalades, conserues, tartstuffes, gellies, breads, sucket candies, cordiall vvaters, conceits in sugar-vvorkes of seuerall kindes. As also to dry lemonds, orenges, or other fruits. Newly set forth, according to the now approued receipts, vsed both by honourable and vvorshipfull personages. By Iohn Murrell, professour thereof.

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Title
A daily exercise for ladies and gentlewomen. Whereby they may learne and practice the whole art of making pastes, preserues, marmalades, conserues, tartstuffes, gellies, breads, sucket candies, cordiall vvaters, conceits in sugar-vvorkes of seuerall kindes. As also to dry lemonds, orenges, or other fruits. Newly set forth, according to the now approued receipts, vsed both by honourable and vvorshipfull personages. By Iohn Murrell, professour thereof.
Author
Murrell, John, 17th cent.
Publication
London :: Printed [by T. Snodham] for the vvidow Helme, and are to be sould at her shop in S. Dunstans church-yard in Fleetstreet,
1617.
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Subject terms
Cookery -- Early works to 1800.
Canning and preserving -- Early works to 1800.
Cite this Item
"A daily exercise for ladies and gentlewomen. Whereby they may learne and practice the whole art of making pastes, preserues, marmalades, conserues, tartstuffes, gellies, breads, sucket candies, cordiall vvaters, conceits in sugar-vvorkes of seuerall kindes. As also to dry lemonds, orenges, or other fruits. Newly set forth, according to the now approued receipts, vsed both by honourable and vvorshipfull personages. By Iohn Murrell, professour thereof." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A07931.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 17, 2024.

Pages

To make March-pane Paste.

73 CEarse the finest and the whitest refined Sugar, to euery third spoonfull thereof take a blauncht Iordane Al∣mond, stampe them in a smooth morter, and now and then put in two or three drops of Rose-water. It must be extreamely much beaten before it wil be a perfect past, at the least an houre.

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