The marrow of physicke, or, A learned discourse of the severall parts of mans body being a medicamentary, teaching the manner and way of making and compounding all such oyles, unguents ... &c. as shall be usefull and necessary in any private house ... : and also an addition of divers experimented medicines which may serve against any disease that shall happen to the body : together with some rare receipts for beauties ... / collected and experimented by the industry of T.B.

About this Item

Title
The marrow of physicke, or, A learned discourse of the severall parts of mans body being a medicamentary, teaching the manner and way of making and compounding all such oyles, unguents ... &c. as shall be usefull and necessary in any private house ... : and also an addition of divers experimented medicines which may serve against any disease that shall happen to the body : together with some rare receipts for beauties ... / collected and experimented by the industry of T.B.
Author
Brugis, Thomas, fl. 1640?
Publication
London :: Printed by T.H. and M.H., and are to be sold by Thomas Whittaker,
1648.
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Subject terms
Medicine -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A29919.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The marrow of physicke, or, A learned discourse of the severall parts of mans body being a medicamentary, teaching the manner and way of making and compounding all such oyles, unguents ... &c. as shall be usefull and necessary in any private house ... : and also an addition of divers experimented medicines which may serve against any disease that shall happen to the body : together with some rare receipts for beauties ... / collected and experimented by the industry of T.B." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A29919.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2024.

Pages

Page 151

To Candy Flowers after another fashion used in Spaine.

28 Take what Flowers you will, and picke off the leaves from the Flower, and make a Sirrup of Sugar, and put in the Blossomes of your Flowers, as many as will goe into the Sirrup; boyle them with stirring untill it be turned to Sugar againe, set them off the fire, and with the backe of a Spoone, stirre them, and bruise the Sugar from them, and they will be Candied, and no Sugar seene upon them.

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