p-books.com
Domestic Cookery, Useful Receipts, and Hints to Young Housekeepers
by Elizabeth E. Lea
Previous Part     1  2  3  4  5
Home - Random Browse

A tea-cup of flaxseed boiled till soft, requires no addition to make a good poultice.

Hop Poultice, and its Uses.

Boil a handful of hops in a pint of water till very soft; when thicken it with corn meal. This is very good for a sore throat, tooth-ache, or swelled face.

Onion Poultice.

Slice the onions and boil them in water till very soft; then mash and boil them with milk and some crumbs of bread. This will draw a bile or gathering to a head very soon.

Lily Root Poultice.

Pound the roots of the sweet white lily, and put them on to boil in rich milk; when soft, thicken it with crumbs of bread. This is a most valuable poultice for a gathering, and has given relief in many instances where the suffering was great.

Cream Poultice.

Put to boil a tea-cup of cream; mix two spoonsful of flour in milk, and stir in when it boils.

Ley Poultice.

Tie a spoonful of ashes in a rag, and boil it in a pint of water for fifteen minutes, with some catnip or life-everlasting; when the herbs are soft, take out the ashes, and thicken it with corn meal; spread some grease over as you apply it.

Adhesive Plaster.

Take three pounds of resin, one-quarter of a pound of beeswax, one-quarter of a pound of mutton tallow, melt together in an iron pan; then pour out about one-third into a bucket of water, turn up the edges until you can take hold with the hands and pull it as you would shoemakers' wax: grease papers and put the plaster on them for use; you may then pour out the rest and treat it in the same way.

A Valuable Salve for Burns and other Sores.

Take of high mallows, heal-all, night shade, and elder bark, a large handful, and about half the quantity of Jamestown weed; boil them for several hours; strain off the liquid, and add to it one pound of beeswax, one pound of mutton tallow, one pound of resin, half a pound of lard; boil them slowly for about two hours, and let it cool on the liquid. This salve will do to apply immediately to a burn or scald, or after other remedies have been used; it is also good to heal old sores or gatherings.

Deshler's Salve for Gatherings or Sores.

Take half a pound of sheep's suet, the same of resin and beeswax, a quarter of a pound of thick turpentine, and half a pint of linseed oil; pound the resin, and cut the beeswax and suet; put them over the fire with the other ingredients, and keep stirring till they are mixed, but do not let them boil; put it in a jar, and tie it up. It is good for burns, biles, gathered breasts, &c.

Salve for Corns, or Bunions.

Take a pint of sweet oil, half a pound of red lead, two ounces of Venice turpentine, two of beeswax, and one of white turpentine; boil the oil and red lead in brass or bell-metal till they turn brown, stirring it constantly; have the wax and white turpentine sliced, and put them in by degrees; take it off the fire, and stir till all is melted; then add the Venice turpentine, and continue to stir till it is cold; when dip your hands in cold water, and make it out in rolls about two inches long; wrap each roll up in paper, and keep them in a box. After soaking and scraping the corn, bind it on, spread on a soft rag. To warm a small piece of common adhesive plaster and apply it, gives almost immediate relief.

Sassafras Poultice.

Take the bark of the root and mash, or pound it; boil it in a little water, and take out the bark, and thicken it with crumbs of bread, and milk.

Balsam Apple in Spirits.

Cut a ripe balsam apple in small pieces, and fill a bottle with it; pour Holland gin on it.

This retains its strength for years, and is useful to take a few drops at a time for the colic; it is also valuable to apply with sugar to a cut or wound.

Cure for Bites.

Use equal quantities of resin soap, brown sugar, and powdered resin, worked well together, with a few drops of molasses. A poultice of onions, sassafras, or bread and milk may be used with advantage. For mosquito bites, apply spirits of hartshorn and camphor.

For Scurvy of the Gums.

Take a quarter of an ounce of bark, and a piece of new lime the size of a hazle-nut; put them in a bottle with half a pint of water; wash the mouth with this three times a day.

For an Infant's Sore Mouth.

Make a strong sage tea; put in a little bark and borax or alum, with honey to sweeten it; cork it up in a vial, and wash the child's gums with it three times a day, using a fresh rag every time.

For Affection of the Kidneys.

Boil some onions soft, mash, and apply them where the pain is seated. This has given great relief.

For a Gathering on a Finger.

Mix together equal parts of castile soap and chalk; wet it with camphor, and bind it on, or dip the finger in honey and camphorated spirits, as hot as you can bear. A little burnt alum put on lint is good; also a bread and milk poultice, with pounded sassafras root stewed in it, and renewed frequently. Honey and camphor mixed is useful for gatherings that have been of long standing.

Take of the following ingredients a tea-spoonful each: black pepper powdered finely, ginger, spirits of camphor, laudanum, and honey; beat them well with the yelk of an egg, and thicken with rye flour, or if you cannot obtain rye, corn and wheat flour mixed will answer; this will form a soft poultice, and should be applied in sufficient quantity to keep moist, and changed once a day. I have known this to cure several gatherings that threatened to be severe.

Huxham's Bark Tincture.

Take two ounces of bark, three drachms of Virginia snake root, one ounce of orange peel, and one quart of good spirits; set it in a warm place, and shake it daily for two weeks; then pour it off, and add a pint more spirits to the ingredients.

This is very useful to take, when recovering from the ague or bilious fever, or in the fall of the year; when these are apprehended, take two tea-spoonsful a day, before breakfast and dinner.

Wine Bitters for Debility, &c.

Take two ounces of chamomile flowers, two of centaury flowers, one of iron filings, and an ounce and a half of Jesuit's bark; put these in two quarts of good wine, and set it in the sun three days, shaking; it frequently. Half a wine-glass of this taken, twice a day, with water, is useful in cases of debility, where there is no fever.

Chamomile, and wormwood teas, are both excellent tonics, as is also wild cherry tree bark, made in strong tea, and taken cold.

Spice Wood Berries.

Boil in a pint of new milk, a table-spoonful of bruised spice wood berries. This has a very healing effect in cases of dysentery, and summer disease in children.

Spiced Rhubarb.

Take two ounces of rhubarb, half an ounce of cloves, the same of cinnamon, and quarter of an ounce of mace; stew them in a pint and a half of water till one half is evaporated; then strain it and add half a pint of good spirits. Two tea-spoonsful is a dose for a child a year old, with the summer disease, and two table-spoonsful for a grown person.

For Chapped Lips.

Put a tea-cupful of rich cream over some coals to stew with three table-spoonsful of powdered loaf-sugar. This has a healing effect.

Another remedy, equally good, is to a tea-cupful of honey, add half the quantity of mutton tallow, and stew together till well mixed; pour it out in a cup, and keep stirring till cold.

For chapped hands, mix together equal quantities of rich cream and strong vinegar, and rub it over every time you wash your hands.

Bathing.

Almost every family, even if their circumstances be moderate, can have a shower bath; they may save the expense, by improved health and strength; one bucket full of cold water is sufficient. You should wear on the head an oil-cloth cap. For a person in strong health, the bath may be taken on first rising in the morning; but for one disposed to be delicate, two or three hours after breakfast is the most proper time. To produce warmth, rub the person with a crash towel, or horse hair glove. You should be careful to take some exercise after the bath, or you will be more liable to take cold. Never take a bath soon after a meal, as that is injurious. Persons subject to colds, sore throat, rheumatism, sick head-ache, nervous disease, or general debility, have been greatly benefited by the daily use of the shower bath. Children that are oppressed with heat are much refreshed, and will rest well after a bath; the water should be moderated for them. Infants should be bathed every morning in a tub of water about milk warm, and may be very early accustomed to its use; they will become fond of it, and are less liable to take cold from exposure to the air. They generally take a refreshing nap after coming out of the bath. They should not be allowed to remain in more than five or ten minutes; should be well wiped with a soft towel, and then rubbed with flannel and dressed; their clothes being warmed to prevent a chill.

Elderberry Jam for Colds, &c.

A quart of nicely picked elderberries, to a pound of loaf-sugar and a tea-cup of water; let them boil slowly for an hour. If you prefer it without the seeds, strain the berries after boiling them for a few minutes, before you add the sugar. This is useful and agreeable for colds, taken through the day, or at night, when the cough is troublesome. It is said also to purify the blood, and is taken to prevent erysipelas.

Black Currant Jelly, a Remedy for Sore Throat.

Take ripe black currants, mash and strain them, and to every pint of the juice, add a pound of loaf-sugar; boil it until it becomes a jelly. It is valuable for sore throats.

Quince seeds dried, and boiling water poured on them, make a useful gargle for sore throat.

Lavender Compound.

Pick the lavender blossoms, and put them in a bottle, with a few blades of mace, and some cloves; fill up the bottle with good spirits, and let it stand corked up, till all the strength is extracted; when strain it off, and color it with a little cochineal.



FOOD FOR THE SICK.

Remarks on Preparing Food for the Sick.

Few young persons understand cooking for the sick. It is very important to know how to prepare their food in an inviting manner; every thing should be perfectly clean and nice. Avoid giving an invalid any thing out of a cup that has been used before; even if it is medicine, it will not be so hard to take out of a clean cup. It is well to have a stand or small table by the bed-side, that you can set any thing on. A small silver strainer that will just fit over a tumbler or tea-cup, is very useful to strain lemonade, panada or herb tea.

If you want any thing to use through the night, you should prepare it, if possible, beforehand; as a person that is sick, can sometimes fall asleep without knowing it, if the room is kept perfectly still.

Boiled Custard.

Beat an egg with a heaped tea-spoonful of sugar; stir it into a tea-cupful of boiling milk, and stir till it is thick; pour it in a bowl on a slice of toast cut up, and grate a little nutmeg over.

Panada.

Put some crackers, crusts of dry bread or dried rusk, in a sauce-pan with cold water, and a few raisins; after it has boiled half an hour, put in sugar, nutmeg, and half a glass of wine, if the patient has no fever.

If you have dried rusk, it is a quicker way to put the rusk in a bowl with some sugar, and pour boiling water on it out of the tea-kettle. If the patient can take nothing but liquids, this makes a good drink when strained.

Egg Panada.

Boil a handful of good raisins in a quart of water; toast a slice of bread and cut it up; beat two eggs with a spoonful of sugar, and mix it with the bread; when the raisins are done, pour them on the toast and eggs, stirring all the time; season to your taste with wine, nutmeg and butter.

Oat-meal Gruel.

Mix two spoonsful of oat-meal, with as much water as will mix it easily, and stir it in a pint of boiling water in a sauce-pan until perfectly smooth; let it boil a few minutes; season it with sugar and nutmeg, and pour it out on a slice of bread toasted and cut up, or some dried rusk. If the patient should like them, you can put in a few raisins, stoned and cut up. This will keep good a day, and if nicely warmed over, is as good as when fresh.

Corn Gruel.

Mix two spoonsful of sifted corn-meal in some water; have a clean skillet with a pint of boiling water in it; stir it in, and when done, season it with salt to your taste, or sugar, if you prefer it;

Arrow-root.

Moisten two tea-spoonsful of powdered arrow-root with water, and rub it smooth with a spoon; then pour on half a pint of boiling water; season it with lemon juice, or wine and nutmeg. In cooking arrow-root for children, it is a very good way to make it very thick, and thin it afterwards with milk.

Sago.

Wash, the sago, (allowing two table-spoonsful to a quart of water,) and soak it an hour; boil it slowly till it thickens; sweeten it with loaf-sugar, and season it with wine or lemon juice.

Tapioca Jelly.

Wash the tapioca well, and let it soak for several hours in cold water; put it in a sauce-pan with the same water, and let it boil slowly till it is clear and thick; then season it with wine and loaf-sugar. The pearl tapioca will require less time to soak, and no washing. Allow three table-spoonsful of tapioca to a quart of water.

Milk Porridge.

Put half a pint of milk, and the same of water, in a sauce-pan to boil; mix two spoonsful of wheat flour in milk till very smooth, and stir in when it boils; keep stirring it five minutes, when pour it in a bowl and season with salt.

Barley Water.

Boil two table-spoonsful of barley in a quart of water; it is a cooling drink in fevers. If the weather is cold, you can make a larger quantity. Some boil whole raisins with barley; take it with or without seasoning.

To Poach Eggs.

Put a pint of water in a clean skillet, with a little butter and salt; when it boils, break two eggs in a plate, and put them in; in about a minute, take them up on a plate, in which there is a slice of bread toasted and buttered. This is a very delicate way of cooking eggs.

Barley Panada.

Boil a small tea-cup of barley in water till it is soft, with a tea-cup of raisins; put in nutmeg and sugar, and break in it toast or dried rusk.

Calf's Foot Blancmange.

Put a set of nicely cleaned feet in four quarts of water, and let it boil more than half away; strain through a colander, and when it is cold, scrape off all the fat, and take out that which settles at the bottom; put it in a sauce-pan, with a quart of new milk, sugar to your taste, lemon peel and juice, and cinnamon or mace; let it boil ten minutes and strain it; wet your moulds, and when it is nearly cold put it in them; when it is cold and stiff it can be turned out on a plate, and eaten with or without cream. This is very nice for a sick person, and is easily made.

Cream Toast.

Cut a slice of stale bread, and wet it with cream; toast it slowly and butter it; this is very nice for an invalid, and an agreeable change.

Milk Toast &c.

Boil a tea-cup of milk, and put in a spoonful of butter; toast a slice of bread and moisten it with water, then pour on the boiling milk. This is very good for sick persons, and can be eaten without much exertion. In making water-toast, the butter should be melted in boiling water, and put on while hot.

To Stew Dried Beef.

Chip some beef very thin, pour hot water on it, and let it stand a minute or two, then drain it off, and stew it in a skillet with a little cream and butter. If it is preferred dry, it may be fried in butter alone.

To Stew Ham, &c.

Cut a slice of ham into small pieces, and pour boiling water on it; let it soak a few minutes to extract the salt, and stew it in a little water; just before it is done, put in some cream and parsley.

If you broil ham that is uncooked, it should always be soaked in water a few minutes.

To Stew Chickens or Birds.

When sick persons are tired of broiled chickens, or birds, it is well to stew them for a change; the wing, with part of the breast of a chicken, will make a meal; stew it in a little water, and put in parsley, cream, pepper and salt, just as it is done.

Chicken Water.

If you have a small chicken, it will take half of it to make a pint of chicken water. Cut it up and put it to boil in a covered skillet with a quart of water; when it has boiled down to a pint, take it up, and put in a little salt and slice of toasted bread. This is valuable in cases of dysentery and cholera morbus, particularly when made of old fowls.

Beef Feet.

Soak the feet and have them nicely cleaned; boil them slowly, and take off the scum as it rises; when they are soft and tender, take them up, and separate the bones from the glutinous part, which is very nice for a sick person, and conveys nutriment in a form that will hardly disagree with the most delicate stomach, and has been, taken when nearly all other food was rejected; a few drops of vinegar, and a little salt, renders it more palatable.

Beef Tea, &c.

Take a piece of juicy beef, without any fat, cut it in small pieces, bruise it till tender, put it in a wide-mouthed bottle, and cork it tight; put this in a pot of cold water, set it over the fire, and let it boil an hour or more.

When a person can take but a small quantity of nourishment, this is very good. Mutton may be done in the same way.

Mutton and Veal Broth.

Boil a piece of mutton till it comes to pieces; then strain the broth, and let it get cold, so that the fat will rise, which must be taken off; then warm it, and put in a little salt. Veal broth may be made in the same way, and is more delicate for sick persons.

Wine Whey.

Boil a pint of milk, and put to it a glass of white wine; set it over the fire till it just boils again, then set it off till the curd has settled, when strain it, and sweeten to your taste.

Rennet Whey.

Warm a pint of milk, but do not let it get too hot, or it will spoil the taste of the whey. Wash the salt from a piece of rennet the size of a dollar, and put it in the milk; when it turns, take out the rennet; wash and put it in a cup of water, and it will do to use again to make whey. If you have rennet in a bottle of wine, two tea-spoonsful of it will make a quart of whey; but if the person has fever, it is best to make it without wine.

Mulled Jelly.

Take a table-spoonful of currant or grape jelly, and beat with it the white of an egg, and a little loaf-sugar; pour on it half a pint of boiling water, and break in a slice of dry toast, or two crackers.

Mulled Wine.

Beat together an egg, a glass of wine, and a spoonful of sugar; pour on it half a pint of hot water; stir all the time to keep it from curdling, and when you pour it in a tumbler, grate a little nutmeg over it.

Toast Water.

Cut slices of bread very thin, and toast dry, but do not let it burn; put it in a pitcher, and pour boiling water on it. Toast water will allay thirst better than almost any thing else. If it is wanted to drink through the night, it should always be made early in the evening.

Apple Water, &c.

Roast two apples, mash them and pour a pint of water on them; or slice raw apples, and pour boiling water on them.

Tamarinds, currant or grape jelly, cranberries, or dried fruit of any kind, make a good drink.

Coffee.

Sick persons should have their coffee made separate from the family, as standing in the tin pot spoils the flavor. Put two tea-spoonsful of ground coffee in a small mug, and pour boiling water on it; let it set by the fire to settle, and pour it off in a cup, with sugar and cream. Care should be taken that there are no burnt grains.

Chocolate.

To make a cup of chocolate, grate a large tea-spoonful in a mug, and pour a tea-cup of boiling water on it; let it stand covered by the fire a few minutes, when you can put in sugar and cream.

Black Tea.

Black tea is much more suitable than green for sick persons, as it does not affect the nerves. Pat a tea-spoonful in a pot that will hold about two cups, and pour boiling water on it. Let it set by the fire to draw five or ten minutes.

Rye Mush.

This is a nourishing and light diet for the sick, and is by some preferred to mush made of Indian meal. Four large spoonsful of rye flour mixed smooth in a little water, and stirred in a pint of boiling water; let it boil twenty minutes, stirring frequently. Nervous persons who sleep badly, rest much better after a supper of corn, or rye mush, than if they take tea or coffee.



DOMESTICS.

Hints on the Management of Domestics, &c.

Some families are always changing their domestics, and weary their friends with complaints of those they have, and inquiries for others.

Deliberate before you make a change; if servants are honest, speak the truth, and have an obliging disposition, it is better to bear with a few defects, than to discharge them; these are qualifications for the foundation of a good servant; and some of the most valuable I have had, were such as could hardly be put up with at first. By being patient, and speaking to them in a kind manner, they become attached and fearful of doing any thing to offend.

When they break any thing, or an accident occurs, accustom them to inform you of it immediately. Few mistresses, of well regulated minds, will be offended when openly told of accidents; but if they are left to be found out, you always feel more disposed to blame and reprove them. By speaking to them in a mild and forgiving manner, careless servants will become more careful.

A considerate mistress may, without loss of dignity, make them feel that she regards it as her duty to be their friend, and that she feels herself under an obligation to advise them in difficulties and promote their comfort.

We should reflect that theirs is a life of servitude, and if they over-exert themselves, or are too much exposed in early life, it will bring on disease that will shorten their days, or render old age a burden.

Some young persons are too indolent to wait on themselves, and ring for the servants on the most trifling occasions; when if they were accustomed to perform these little offices, their health would be much better, and we should not hear of so many complaints, the result of want of exercise. All female servants should have time to attend to their clothing; many have to work so hard through the day that their only leisure is at night, and then they hurry over their things in a careless manner.

Where your circumstances permit, a good man-servant is a valuable acquisition; and they are sometimes more easily governed than females.

If mistresses were better informed, they would not complain so much of the ignorance and awkwardness of their domestics. Always give them their orders in time. If a new dish is to be cooked, superintend its preparation yourself.

If you are capable of directing, a cook will soon learn to do without your constant attention.

If they are slow in their movements, insist on their beginning early to prepare a meal, so that there will be time sufficient for every thing to be done properly.

If you expect company, have every thing prepared, that can be done with safety, the day previous. In summer there are but few things that can be done without risk of spoiling: a ham or tongue may he washed ready to boil; castors and salt-stands put in order, and pastry or dessert prepared, that will not spoil by being kept a day.

In winter, many things can be kept for days in a state of preparation for cooking; and it greatly assists the work of the family, to have every thing done beforehand.

Do with as few domestics as possible; assist with the work yourself, rather than keep one too many. Those that take orphan children to bring up, are often rewarded for their trouble; as sometimes a girl of fifteen will be more useful than one much older: and where a family is small it does very well, but in large families, a little girl is so often called from her work, that it has a tendency to unsettle and make her careless.

Never allow your children to call on or interrupt servants when at their work or meals, to do any thing which a child could do for itself; children that treat domestics with respect, will generally find them willing to render any assistance in their power. I have known a few housekeepers, who have kept the same servants for years, who have assisted in rearing the children, until they almost viewed them as their own, and these were not faultless. If they had been discharged for trifles, they might have wandered, from one family to another, without being attached to any, until they became so indifferent, as not to be worthy of employ, but by the kindness and patience of their employer, they became so grateful and attached, as to be a treasure to her family. When they become weary of such constant servitude, would it not be better, instead of discharging, to give them time for rest and recreation in visiting their friends? I have known them to return, renewed in health and spirits.

Encourage them to lay by as much of their wages as they can possibly spare, in such institutions as are thought the most safe, that they may have something to look to in case of sickness, or any event which would require its use.

Promote their reading in such books as are suited to their capacities; they sometimes have a little leisure, that could be well filled up in this way. I have found it to increase the happiness of those under my care, to encourage a fondness for reading, and improving their minds; it tends to keep them from unprofitable company, and too much visiting, to which so many are addicted.

Young girls should make and mend their own clothes, and keep them in good order, and they should be taught to knit. The material of which stockings are composed costs but little, and they wear much better than those that are bought. Knitting fills up leisure moments, and promotes industrious habits; and when age comes on, they will have a resource, although it appears so simple, yet if it is not learned while young it is hard to acquire when old.

When servants are guilty of faults that cannot be looked over, instead of publicly reproving them, take an opportunity when alone, and talk coolly; tell them of your sorrow at being obliged to notice their conduct, encourage them to pursue a different course, and that you will forgive them if they will strive to do better. I have known them much improved by this mode of treatment.

By inspecting every department, not only will waste be prevented, but dishonesty. In cities many persons find it necessary to lock up nearly every thing; and it is a lamentable state of things that so few are to be trusted.

Sometimes treating servants with confidence will have a good effect; but let them be aware that you have a knowledge of every thing that is going on.

Some young persons are completely at the mercy of their domestics. I have known great uneasiness to be experienced, and much loss; but by showing a little moral courage, and discharging those that are irreclaimable, an ascendancy was gained. Never suffer them to treat you with disrespect or impertinence. If it is known that they will be discharged for these faults, they will be on their guard.

If you have taken a boy or girl, to bring up as a domestic, endeavour to teach them, at least to spell and read; they are sometimes very fond of their books, and if you once get them to reading, it will become to them a favorite evening amusement; I have known them take up their books on every occasion of leisure, I have seen boys that worked hard through the day, spend all the evening with their books, slate, and occasionally a little writing. Sometimes, I have in the evening felt fatigued and listless, and would much rather read, and amuse myself, than go out to teach two or three in the kitchen; but in attending to this, (which I consider a duty,) have felt a sweet reward—indeed, their grateful thanks expressed by words, have encouraged me to keep on. I have thought a little instruction in this way, arouses their faculties, and tends to make them more industrious. When I have been prevented from teaching them for some time, by indisposition, or other causes, I have observed they were not so cheerful in the performance of their work. If they are reading any thing they do not fully understand, take a little time to explain it to them. It will be, my young friends, like sowing the good seed, and you, as well as they, will receive the reward.

I wish to encourage you in the most affectionate manner to attend to this duty; you will find it will strengthen you in the performance of others. "The more we exert our faculties, the more we can accomplish. He that does nothing, renders himself incapable of doing any thing. While we are executing one work, we are preparing ourselves to undertake another."



REMARKS.

Remarks on Carving, &c.

I do not think it necessary to say much on the subject of carving, as those who are accustomed to sit at a well ordered table, and who observe the manner of the host and hostess, can soon acquire the art, both of carving and helping with ease. And when placed at the head of their own table, the knowledge thus gained will be found a great assistance.

The proper time for children to acquire good habits at meals, is not when there is company; it should be an every day lesson. As when parents are engaged with their friends or guests, they have no time to devote to the manners of their children, and to reprove them at table is very unpleasant, as well as mortifying.

Young children will soon acquire the manner of sitting quietly till they are helped, if they are made to understand that they will not be permitted to eat with their parents and friends, unless they behave with propriety.

I have thought it a great assistance to the good order of a large family, for every member to be punctual in their attendance at meals, and all to sit down together, with a short pause before the carving and helping commences. In those moments of quiet, the heart is sometimes awakened to a feeling of gratitude to the Almighty dispenser of our blessings.

At the table, different members of the family meet; and where affection and kindness, those aids to true politeness, preside, it is truly a delightful treat to be the guest of such a family.

Every symptom of selfishness should be discouraged, for if suffered to take root in a child, it lays the foundation of much that is disagreeable to themselves and others.

Inculcate this excellent rule, "of doing unto others, what you wish others to do unto you," and always preferring others to yourself.

It is the custom in some well regulated families, to permit the younger members, (as they arrive at a suitable age,) to take turns in presiding, not only at breakfast and tea, but at the dinner table. I have known quite young girls that had been taught in this way, carve a fowl or joint of meat with ease and grace. In helping, they should be taught not to over-load the plate, as it takes away the appetite of some persons to be helped too largely.

The gravy should be stirred so that all may be helped alike, and a small quantity put on the meat or fowl, to which it belongs, and not on vegetables unless it is particularly desired.

If there should be a rare dish on the table, it is best to hand it round and let every one help himself, after it has been nicely cut up. Ham is much nicer to be cut in very thin slices. So is salt beef and tongue.

Young housekeepers in selecting their dishes for dinner, (if they have not an experienced cook,) should avoid those that are difficult to prepare. Never try a new dish when you expect company. Your guests will be more gratified with a neat and moderate table, with a few plain and well cooked dishes, accompanied with the smiling countenance of the hostess, than with a great variety of ill cooked and badly arranged viands.

Economy the Source of Charity.

If your circumstances will not admit of giving away much, you can, by economy, give a little, and a blessing will attend it. There are few of the very poor, that know how to repair old clothing to advantage; a garment will be of much more service, that is well mended before it is given to them.

It has been remarked, that the poor are ungrateful, and forget the favors conferred upon them.

I have seldom found them deficient in this respect; and when they are, if we would reflect, that if some of us received no more than we deserve, we should be but poorly off.

We know in our own families, how acceptable is a nice present of something that a sick member can eat; and it is sometimes the means of restoring the appetite, when any thing cooked in the house is rejected. The feeling of love with which it is presented, is as a cordial to a sick person.

How much more acceptable will something nourishing be to one oppressed with poverty, as well as sickness.

When the rich are diseased, the physician often finds it necessary to enjoin strict abstinence; but very different is it with the poor, who frequently suffer for want of nourishment.

When the mother of a poor family is ill, how greatly are her sufferings augmented by the knowledge that her children are deprived of her services; and how acceptable to such a family would be a loaf of bread, or a large bowl of soup, which could be made of materials that would hardly be missed.

Dried beans or peas, and onions, are a cheap and valuable addition to soup; also cold vegetables. The liquor that fresh meat is boiled in, should be carefully saved for that purpose, if there are those near you that need it.

It may seem at first troublesome to a young housekeeper, to take the necessary care to save for the poor. It is certainly much easier to let the cook have her own way, and waste or not, as she pleases; but for your encouragement my young friends, permit me to say, you will be sweetly rewarded for your attention to them.

One eminent for his charities, near the close of life, made this remark: "What I spent I lost, but what I gave away remains with me."

To Encourage Children in Acts of Kindness to the Aged and Afflicted.

Young children may early be taught to administer to the wants of the aged and infirm.

Some mothers are in the practice of giving a small sum of money to their children, as a reward for some little service or piece of work that they have done. The money thus obtained, to be laid out for a sick or old poor person. This method has an excellent effect on the minds of children; it incites them to industry, teaches self-denial, and the feelings of love and charity which are thus early instilled into their tender minds, make a lasting impression.

If they spent their little fund in trifles for their own use, they would acquire a habit of selfishness; which, when once formed, it is most difficult to eradicate. I have remarked the pleasure with which children will relate the incidents of a visit, which they have been permitted to make to a poor family; and it is a refreshment to persons advanced in life, to see a young family thus trained.

As soon as little girls can sew, they should be encouraged to make garments for the poor, or repair their own old ones as a present to a child of their own size, or make patchwork out of old dresses for a bed covering for poor people. Their being permitted to do these things, should be as a reward for good behavior and attention to their lessons or other duties.

When they are old enough to make a loaf of bread, a pie, or a little plain cake, allow them to do it, and take as a present to, or make broth or panada for a sick person. This teaches them to prepare these things while young, and may be useful to them in after life.

How cheering it must be to the aged or afflicted, to see smiling young faces enter their dwellings, bearing their little offerings of food or clothing, the work of their own hands.

Be encouraged my dear young mothers; if you thus train your children to works of charity, you will be doubly blessed.

Early Rising Promotes Punctuality.

It is an old and true saying, "that if you waste an hour in the morning, it is seldom recovered all that day." This dispirits you, and the next day there is still something left undone.

A late riser is rarely punctual in her engagements, and more of the happiness of married life depends on forming a habit of strict punctuality, than young persons are generally aware of.

If you are distressed at having acquired habits of late rising, and want of punctuality, remember by perseverance, they can be overcome. Fix an hour for rising, and let nothing but illness prevent your being up at that time. While forming this useful habit, you should retire to rest early.

Many things can be better attended to at an early, than a late hour in the morning.

Where families rise before the sun, the day seems much longer; all the active employments of the early riser are accomplished before her later neighbors have finished their breakfast.

The duties of the bath and toilet being performed, her chamber well aired and arranged—and her parlor in order, she is ready for the more quiet employments of reading and sewing.

In a well regulated household, servants perform their duties with life and energy. Determine on an hour for your meals, and if all the members of the family adhere to it, scrupulous exactness will soon be established.

Hints to Young Wives.

The authoress is well aware of the difficulties which surround a young wife on her first setting out, particularly if situated at a distance from the kind mother who has hitherto directed her, with servants who watch every movement, and who will soon discover whether the new mistress is qualified for the task she has undertaken.

Accustom yourself to rise early; fix a certain hour, and let nothing but indisposition prevent your being up at the appointed time. By this means your affairs will all be arranged in good season, and you will have time for recreation, in walking, riding, or in reading such authors as will tend to strengthen and improve your mind.

Young persons removed from large families often suffer greatly from loneliness, whereas, if they were occupied with household affairs, they would not feel so severely the absence of their husbands while attending to business.

Be punctual to the hour that has been fixed on for your meals, and let good order prevail in every department of which you have the command. A mistress of a family is much happier, who knows how every thing is going on from the garret to the cellar. By inspecting every thing you soon become interested, and we all know when that is the case, the most difficult pursuits become easy and pleasant.

And with what pleasure will a young wife welcome her husband to his meals, when her conscience assures her that she has done her best, and that nothing is neglected; and how will it lighten his labors to reflect, when absent, that the partner he has chosen, is performing her duty at home.

I am fully persuaded that the formation of domestic happiness, is generally laid the first year of marriage: therefore, my young friends, act well your part; if you desire to be treated with confidence you must merit it. If you keep an exact account of all your expenses, there will be less danger of living beyond your income, of which there have been so many lamentable instances.

Never buy any thing because it is recommended as being cheap; many cheap things amount in time to a large sum. In selecting furniture, let utility, not fashion, govern your choice; some young persons furnish their parlors so extravagantly, that necessary and useful articles are neglected, for want of means to purchase them. Be persuaded that happiness does not consist so much in having splendid furniture, as in attending to the every day comforts of those around you. If you marry without the useful knowledge necessary for governing your family, lose no time in acquiring it.

There is a time when most young girls show a fondness for domestic affairs before they are old enough to go into company, when it would be an agreeable change to be absent from school and assisting their mothers; the knowledge thus acquired would never be lost.

Many a young man who commenced with fair prospects, has been ruined through his wife's ignorance of domestic duties, and she has suffered from the consequent diminution of his esteem and love.

I once knew a lovely and accomplished young lady, accustomed to every indulgence, who, on her marriage, removed several hundred miles from her parents, to reside in the country, where servants were difficult to procure. This delicate and sensitive young creature was much distressed by her ignorance of almost every thing connected with housekeeping; and after suffering repeated mortifications, concluded to learn to do the work herself; and when this dearly bought knowledge was acquired, she was able to teach her ignorant servants; and resolved, if ever she had daughters, to use every means in her power to teach them.

When a prudent wife is made acquainted with the circumstances of her husband, she will endeavor strictly to keep within their bounds; always remembering that losses and events, over which he has no control, may occur and greatly reduce his income. And how will it assist her to bear a reverse of fortune, if she has acted with discretion; it will strengthen the wife to encourage and cheer her partner, and enable him to struggle through difficulties which were thought insurmountable. Happiness will not forsake such a family though they lose almost every thing, the peace which is the result of a good conscience will remain; this will strengthen them to begin anew, and the Divine blessing will attend such efforts.

A few Remarks to Encourage Young Housekeepers in their First Attempts.

As bread is the most important article of food, one of your first attempts should be to make a few loaves of good bread and rolls, of the most simple kind. Bread rolls are very easily made. If you succeed tolerably, it will encourage you to try again. When you make cakes, begin with the simple kinds; plain jumbles or cakes that you can roll out, or crisp ginger-bread. Sponge cake is easier than those that have butter in them; I have known young persons succeed very well with it. Bread rusk is also easily made, or a few plain pies. Do not trust the baking to an ignorant person, but superintend it yourself. Sometimes baking in a stove, is protracted by the dampness of the wood. Before you bake, have dry wood prepared. Watch the time; it is a good plan to have a clock near the kitchen. Do not have too many things on hand at once; but perfect yourself in the knowledge of a few important dishes. If you make good yeast you will be more certain of good bread, light cakes and rolls. To cook a steak nicely, is also important; and with a dish of potatoes well cooked, a dish of cold slaw and an apple pie, or a little stewed fruit, will make a good plain dinner.

When your family is small, you can have something nice every day, without cooking much. Veal cutlets, and mutton chops, are easy to cook, and may be prepared in a short time. If you have a fowl, and boil it, you can save the soup, and warm it over for the next day. A cold roast fowl may be hashed. On days that you have cold meat, a batter pudding, or plain rice pudding, is easily prepared.

If you wish to have an early breakfast, make every preparation that you can, over night; set the table, have the relish cut, ready to cook, or to warm over—and cold bread may be sliced, and wrapped in a cloth to keep it moist. Coffee should be ground, and dry fuel, and water at hand. With these preparations, breakfast may be ready in half an hour from the time the fire is made. If you have warm corn bread, or rolls, it will require more time; but if you have them made up over night, and put in a cool place, they will not sour, and can soon be baked. Maryland biscuit are very convenient, as they are always ready, and will keep good a week. I have found it a great advantage to set the table over night, particularly if you have a separate room to eat in; although it takes but a short time, every minute is important in the morning.

Where the mistress washes the breakfast things, and puts them in their proper places, and counts the spoons, and other articles, she can see when any thing is missing. A mop is useful for glass and china; keep a pan, or a small tub, for the purpose of holding the water, which should not be too hot. If tea things are put in very hot water, it will be apt to crack them or they will look smeared. Put a little soap in the water, wash the glass first, then the silver, then the cups and saucers, and lastly, the plates and knives and forks. If spoons have been used with eggs, put them to soak immediately, to prevent their turning dark. Have a common waiter for the pan to stand in and on it drain your tea things. Spoons when used with care, require polishing but seldom, as it wears the silver away. Dinner dishes should be washed first in moderately warm water and soap, rinsed in hot water, and drained before wiping. Put every thing in its proper place, and inspect your pantry and cellar frequently. Sometimes things are forgotten, for want of attention, until they are spoiled. Air the cellar frequently; do not let refuse vegetables accumulate, or any thing that would be likely to cause sickness.

You should provide coarse towels of different kinds, for china and glass, and for the dinner dishes, also knife cloths, have them marked and kept in their proper places. Some persons have their towels washed out every day, but it is better to save them for the weekly wash. If towels are thrown aside damp, they are liable to mildew. You should keep dusters of several kinds. Old silk handkerchiefs, are best for highly polished furniture, or an old barege veil answers a good purpose. For common purposes, a square of coarse muslin, or check is suitable. You should keep one floor cloth for chambers, and one for the kitchen. Keep brooms for different purposes; always use a soft one for carpets, as soon as they wear stiff, they will do for the kitchen, or pavements. Pouring a little hot water on a broom, softens it for carpets. You may save tea leaves, to sprinkle over your carpet, when you give a thorough sweeping, this will brighten it, and occasionally to wipe it over, with a cloth, that has been wrung out of hot water cleanses it, of course, this is only required for carpets in constant use.

It is of great importance to health, that sleeping apartments should be well aired and swept. If you sleep in an apartment, where there has been fire during the day, it should be well aired before going to bed, or if the room is close, have a little air admitted, so as not to blow on persons that are asleep. A window that will lower from the top is an advantage. Beds should be well aired before they are made, take the clothes off, and leave them at least an hour. In pleasant weather, you may keep chamber windows hoisted, for several hours, and even in cold weather, the windows may be kept up a short time, and if on any occasion, you may be obliged to have the beds made without airing, turn the clothes half way down, and leave them for several hours. Some persons have cheap calico covers, to spread over beds, while the room is swept, this is a good plan, on account of the dust. Bolster and pillow tucks wear better, if you have a check case basted on, this should be changed, washed and starched occasionally. It is a good plan also to have check covers for matresses and feather beds, but the covers should not be kept on beds that are not in use, lest they should be liable to moth. In winter a blanket should be put next a bed that is not often slept in, or for a delicate person, and be particularly careful, that sheets are dry before they are put away.

In summer it is most healthy to have your chamber floor bare, and have it washed occasionally. It is important to examine your clothes, after they come from the wash, and see that they are perfectly dry before they are put away.



CULTIVATION OF FLOWERS.

A few flowers and plants, when properly taken care of, are ornamental to the windows of a parlor, or sitting room; and will repay the care that is bestowed on them. Begin with a few that are easy to cultivate, and you will probably succeed. Persons that are fond of flowers, and have collected a number, are generally willing to give their young friends a few plants; and where we succeed in raising a fine plant from a slip, or cutting, we value it more than one that has been purchased at a green-house. Geraniums, cactus', wax plants, cape and catalonian jessamines, and some others, are easily cultivated in a parlor. Roses, camelias, and azaleas bloom best in a moderate temperature, as the heat of a parlor (unless very large) dries the buds, and prevents their coming to perfection. I have known these to bloom beautifully in a room that was very slightly heated—either over one in which there was fire, or in an apartment next a stove room. If the weather is very cold, they should be removed to a warmer room, until it moderates. The windows that are open to the south are best. When the blossoms have matured, you can bring them to the parlor; but if there is much heat, they will not remain perfect so long as in a moderate room.

Roses are sometimes troubled with insects, which should be brushed off with a feather, and the plants washed with a decoction of tobacco, (not too strong,) they will not bloom when thus infested. There is another insect that fastens itself to the bark of lemon trees, and other plants; frequent washing with soap suds and brushing the sterns, removes it, and some times wash the leaves with a sponge, when the weather is too cold to put them out of doors. Setting them out in a warm rain, or watering them well all over the foliage, is very reviving to plants. Be careful to have pieces of old broken earthen-ware at the bottom of each pot, to drain them, or the plants will not thrive. The earth should be sometimes removed, and an occasional re-potting, is an advantage; being careful not to disturb the roots. A mixture of charcoal and sand, and rich earth of more than one kind is thought best. Earth fresh from the woods is good for pot-plants, as well as borders, but should always be mixed with a stronger soil. Roses that are planted round a house, should have a deep and rich soil made for them, and they will then bloom beautifully all the season.

Pot plants should in summer be placed in a situation where they wilt not be exposed to intense heat. Some persons place their pots in the earth on the north side of the house; others keep them in a porch where they can get some sun. They require much more water in summer. The wax plant blooms beautifully in summer, and should be kept in a sheltered situation, not exposed to the wind; it should have a strong frame of wood and wire to run on, well secured in a tub or box. Hyacinths and crocuses should be planted in pots, boxes, or small tubs, in rich earth, in October or November; a small painted tub is very suitable, and will hold a dozen hyacinths, and as many crocus roots. The most beautiful I ever saw in a window, were planted in this way, by keeping some in the sun, and others in the shade you can have a succession of blooms, they are also pretty in root glasses, but this plan will exhaust the roots. After blooming in the house, they should be planted in the garden. The same roots will not answer the next year for parlor culture, they increase very fast in the garden by proper care.

There is something refining to the mind in the cultivation of flowers, either in a garden or in pots. Many hours that would be weary or lonely, are thus pleasantly occupied, and the mind refreshed.



I now take leave of the reader, with a sincere desire, that these remarks may be of use, and that the receipts which I have been at some pains in compiling and arranging, may be acceptable.



INDEX

A.

Accidents—poisons taken by mistake, remedies for, Acid, to restore Colors, &c., Acts of Kindness, to Encourage Children in, Adhesive Plaster, Ague, Cure for, Alamode, Beef, Almond Cake, Almond Cream, Almonds, to Blanch. Apple Butter, Apples, Baked, Apple and Bread Pudding, Apples, Crab, to Preserve, Apple Custard, Apple Dumplings, Apple Float, Apple Fritters, Apple Jelly, Apple Marmalade, Apples, Pine, Apples, to Preserve, Apples, Pine, Syrup, Apple Pudding, Apples, to Stew for Pies, Apple Water, Apricots, preserved, Arrow-root, Arrow root Pudding, Asparagus,

B.

Bacon—to Cure, Bacon, Dumplings, Bacon Fraise, Baking in a Brick-oven, Baking in a Dutch-oven, Baking in a Stove, Balloon Pudding, Balls, Force Meat, Balsam-apple, &c., Bannock, Corn, Bark Tincture, Bath, Mustard, Bathing, Batter Pudding, Barley Panada, Barley Water, Batter Bread with Yeast, Batter, a Loaf of Muffin, Beans, Green, for Winter use, Beans, Lima, Beans, String, Bean Soup, Beds, Feather, Bedsteads, Cleaning, Bee, Sting of a, Beef Alamode, Beef, Curing, Beef, Dried, Beef Kidney, to Fry, Beef Pudding, Baked, Beef Shin Soup, Beef Spiced in Irish style, Beef Steak Pie, Beef Steak Pudding, Beef Steak, Beef Tea, Beef, Fried, Beef, Roasted, Beef, Pickle for two Rounds, Beef, Pork, or Mutton Cured, Beef, Stewed, for the Sick, Beef, Stuffed, Round of, Beef's Feet, Beef's Heart, Baked, Beef's Tongue, to Boil, Beer, Harvest, Beer, Molasses, Beer, Porter, Beer, Spruce, Beer, to make two Gallons, Beets, Berries, Spice Wood, Biles, Cure for, Bilious Colic, Birds' West Pudding, Biscuit, Dyspepsy, Biscuit, Light, Biscuit, Maryland, Biscuit, Naples, Biscuit, Quick, Biscuit, Salaeratus, Biscuit, Tea, Bitters, Wine, Brittania Ware, Black Cake, Black Currant Jelly, Black Walnuts, to Pickle, Blackberries, to Preserve, Blackberry Cordial, Blackberry Flummery, Blackberry Wine, Blacking for Boots and Shoes, Blacking for Morocco Shoes, Blancmange of Jelly, Blancmange of Moss, Blancmange, Blancmange, Calf's Foot, for the Sick, Blankets, Blister Ointment, Blue, to Color Cotton, Boiling Fresh Meat, Boiling Puddings, Bologna Sausage, Boots and Shoes, to make Water-proof, Brain Cakes, Brains and Tongue, Brandy, Lemon, Brandy, Peaches in, Brandy, Rose, Brass, to Clean, Brazil Wood Dye, Bread and Apple Pudding, Bread Batter Cakes, Bread of Indian Meal, remarks on making, Bread Pudding, Bread Rolls, Bread Rusk, Bread, Bread, Batter, with Yeast, Bread, Corn Meal, Bread, Dyspepsy, Bread, Graham, Bread, Indian, Bread, Light, Bread, Mixed, Brick Oven Directions, Brick Oven, to Bake in, Broth, Mutton and Veal, Brown Mixture for a Cough, Brown, to Color, Bruises, Buckwheat Cakes, Bunions, Bunns, Burns and Scalds, Butler, Butter for Winter Use, Butter, a Pickle for, Butter to Keep a Length of Time, Butter-milk, Batter Cakes, Butter, Drawn,

C.

Cabbage, to Boil, Cabbage, to pickle, Cake, Almond, Cake, Remarks on Making and Baking, Cake, Black, Cakes, Brain, Cakes, Bread Batter, Cakes, Butter milk, Cakes, Butter milk Batter, Cakes, Buckwheat, Cake, Composition, Cakes, Corn Batter, Cakes, Cheese, Cake, Cider, Cake, Crisp Ginger, Cake, Cup, Cake, Dover, Cake, Flannel, Cake, Fruit, Cheap, Cake, Fruit, Rich, Cake, Ginger Cup, Cake, Icing for, Cake, Indian Pound, Cake, Jelly, Cake, Journey, Cake, Lemon Sponge, Cake, Loaf, Cakes, Little Indian, Cakes, Maryland Corn, Cake, Madison, Cakes, Mush Flannel, Cake, New Year, Cakes, Pan, Cake, Pound, Cake, Plum or Fruit, Cake, Plum, raised, Cake, Queen, Cake, Rice, Sponge, Cake, Rice Pound Cakes, Rice Cake, Sponge, Cake, Sponge, in Small Pans, Cake, Salaeratus, Cake, Short, Cake, Virginia Hoe, Cake, Washington, Cakes, Wafer, Cake, White, Calf's Foot, Blancmange, Calf's Foot Jelly, Calf's Head to Boil, Calf's Head, to Brown, Calf's Head Soup, Candles, Candied Preserves, Candy, Hoarhound, Cantelopes, to Preserve, Calicoes, Washing, Carolina Corn Rolls, Carrageen or Irish Moss Blancmange, Carpets, Rag, Carpets, to put Straw under, Carrots, Catsup, Cucumber, Catsup, Mushroom, Catsup, Tomato, Catsup, Green Tomato, Catsup, Walnut, Cauliflowers, Carving, Remarks on, Cedar Dye, Celery Sauce, Cellars, Cleaning, Cement, Fire-proof, Cement for Bottles, Cement for mending iron, Cement, Weather proof, Chapped Lips, Charity, Economy the Source of, Charcoal, Magnesia and Salts, Cheese, Cheese Cakes, Cheese, Cottage, Cheese Curds, Cheese, Pennsylvania Cream, Cheese, Hogshead, Cheese, Walnut, Cherries, Dried, Cherries, to Pickle, Cherries and Peaches, to Pickle, Cherries to Preserve, Cherry Cordial, Cherry Sauce, Cherry Toast, Chickens, to Broil, Chickens, to Fry, Chickens, to Fry, in Batter, Chickens, Fricasseed, Chickens in Paste, Chicken, Cold, with Vinegar, Chicken Pie, Chicken Pudding, Chickens, to Roast, Chicken Salad, Chickens Stewed with Rice, Chickens Stewed with Corn, Chickens, to Stew, for the Sick, Chicken Soup, Chicken Water Chilblains, Remedy for, China, Mending, Chines, Chocolate, for the Sick, Chocolate, Racahaut, Chops, Mutton, Chloride of Lime, Cholera Morbus, Chrome Yellow Wash, Cider, to make, Cider Marmalade, Citron Melon, Clams, to Fry and Stew, Clear Starching Cleaning Bedsteads, Cleaning Cellars, Cleaning Floors, Cleaning Kid Gloves, Cleaning Paint, Cleaning Silver, Cleaning Stoves, Cloth, to take Lime out of, Cloth, to take Wax out of Cocoanut Pudding, Cod Fish, Salt, Coffee, to Boil and Roast, Coffee for the Sick, Cold Custard, Cold Slaw, Colds, Remedy for, Colic, Colic, Bilious, Colic, Infants, Cologne, Colors taken out by Acids, to Restore Coloring, Conserve, Peaches to, Conserve, Pears to Conserve of Roses, Cooking for the Sick, Cordial, Blackberry, Cordial, Cherry, Cordial, Peach, Cordial, Quince, Cordial, Warner's, Cordials, Wines. &c., Corn Bannock, Cora Beef, to Boil. Cora Gruel, Corn Batter Cakes, Corn Bread, Corn Dumplings, Corn Flour, Dry Yeast of, Corn Fritters, Corn Meal Porridge, Corn Meal Pudding, Corn Muffins, Corn Pudding in paste, Corn Starch, Corn, Green, for Winter use, Corn, Green, to Boil, Corn, to Fricassee, Corns, Salve for, Cottage Cheese, or, Smearcase, Cough, Brown Mixture for a, Cough, for a, Cough, Remarks on a, Cough, Whooping, Cough, Lemon Mixture for a, Crab Apples, to Preserve, Crackers, Soaked, Cracks in Stoves, to Mend, Cramp in the Stomach, Cramp, Cranberries, Cream Cheese, Cream Sauce, Cream, Almond, Cream, Custard, Cream, Ice, Freezing, Cream, Poultice, Cream, Snow, Cream, Toast, Crisp Ginger Bread, Croup, for the, Crullers, Cucumber Catsup, Cucumbers, Cut, to Pickle, Cucumbers, to Fry or Slice, Cucumbers, to Pickle, Cucumbers, to Pickle, Small, Cucumbers, to Preserve, Cultivation of Flowers, Cup Cake, Curds, Cheese, Curds, Skim, Curds, Whey Slam, Currant Jelly, Currant Jelly, Black, Currant Pie, Currant Syrup, Currant Wine, Currants, to Preserve, Curtains, Custard Baked in Cups, Custard Bread Pudding, Custard for the Sick, Custard Hasty Pudding, Custard, Apple, Custard, Boiled, Custard, Cold, Custard, Cream, Custard, Ice, Custard, to Boil in Water, Custard, with Raisins, Cutlets, Veal, Cuts and Wounds, Remedy for, Cutting Glass, Cymblings, or Squashes,

D.

Damson Sauce, Damsons for Pies, Damsons, to Preserve, Deafness, Debility, Bitters for, Decanter, to Remove a Stopper from, Diseases, Summer, Domestics, on the Management of, Dough-nuts, Drab, to Color, Drawn Butter, Dressing, or Stuffing, Dried Beef, Dried Beef, to Stew, Dropsy, Ducks, to Roast, Dumplings, Apple, and Peach, Dumplings, Bacon, Dumplings, Corn, Dumplings, Drop, Dumplings, Large, Dumplings, Light Bread, Dumplings, Rice, Dumplings, Stew, Dumplings, Suet, Dutch-ovens, to Bake in, Dyeing Black, Dyeing Brown, Dyeing Carpet Rags, Dyeing Cotton, blue, Dyeing Drab, Dyeing Lead Color, Dyeing Olive, Dyeing Orange, Dyeing Red, Dyeing Scarlet, Dyeing with Brazil Wood, Dyeing with Cedar boughs, Dyeing Yarn Green, Dyeing Yellow, Dysentery, Dyspepsy Biscuit, Dyspepsy Bread,

E.

Ear-Ache, Remedy For, Early Rising Promotes Punctuality, Ears, Wash for Sore, Earthen Vessels, Economy, the Source of Charity, Egg Panada, Egg Plant, to Bake, Egg Plant, to Fry, Egg Rolls, Egg Sauce, Eggs in Lime-water, Eggs to Grease, for Winter use, Eggs, to Boil, Eggs, to Clean Soiled, Eggs, to Fry, Eggs, to Poach, Elder Ointment, Elderberry Jam for Colds, Elderberry Wine, Elecampane and Hoarhound Syrup English Walnuts, Erysipelas, Eyes, Wash for Weak,

F.

Falls, Feather Beds, Felons, Figs, Tomato, Filtering Water, Fire, Precautions against, Fish, Fresh, to Boil, Fish, Fresh, to Fry, Fish, Oysters, &c., Fish, Rock, to Stew or Bake, Fish, Salt Cod, to Boil, Flannel Cakes, Flannels, to Wash, Flaxseed Poultice, Floating Island, Float, Apple, Floors, to Clean, Floors, to take Grease out of, Flour, to Brown for Gravy, Flowers, the Cultivation of, Flummery, Blackberry, Flummery, Rice, Food for the Sick, Force Meat Balls, Fowls to Bake, Fox Grape Jam, Fraise Bacon, Freezing Ice Cream French Honey, French Rolls, Fresh Meat, to Boil, Fresh Meat, to Keep, Fresh Meat, to Restore when kept too long, Fresh Shad, to Bake, Fricassee, Chickens to Fricassee, Cora, to Fricassee, Tomatoes to Fritters, Apple, Fritters, Corn, Fritters, Indian Meal, Fritters, Oysters, Fritters, Rice, Fritters, Snow, Fruit Cake, Fruit to Stew for Pies, Fruit, Frosted, Furniture, Linseed Oil for, Furs and Woollens, to Keep,

G.

Gardens and Yards, Gathering on a Finger, Geese, to Pick, General Remarks, &c. Giblet Pie and Soup, Ginger Cup-cake, Ginger Tea, Ginger Wine, Ginger, to Preserve Green, Ginger-bread Nuts, Ginger-bread, Crisp, Ginger-bread, Light, Glass, to Cut, Gloves, to Clean Kid, Goose, to Roast, Gooseberries, to Preserve, Gooseberry Wine, Gout, Graham Bread, Grapes for Pies, Grapes in Brandy, Grates and Stoves, to Clean, Gravy with Roast Turkey, Gravy, Hash, Gravy, to Brown Flour for, Grease, to take out of Floors, Greasers for Bake Irons, Green Beans for Winter use, Green Corn Pudding, Green Peppers, to Preserve, Green Tomato Catsup, Green Wash, Green, to Color, Greens, to Boil, Gruel, Corn, Gruel, Oat Meal, Gum Arabic Paste, Gumbo Soup, Gums, Scurvy of,

H.

Ham, to Bake, Ham, to Boil, Ham, to Fry, Ham, to Stew, for the Sick, Hams, to Cure, Hash made of Fowls, Hash, Veal, Hash Gravy, Hasty Custard Pudding, Hasty Pudding of Indian Meal, Head-ache, Remedy for, Hearths, a Wash for, Heating a Brick-oven, Herbs, Gardens and Yards, Herring and Shad, Herring, Harford, Herring, Trash, to Pot, Herring, to Boil, Hints to Young Wives, Hoarhound and Elecampane Syrup, Hoarhound Candy, Hoe Cake, Hogshead Cheese, Hominy to Boil or Fry, Honey and Lemon Juice for a Cough, Hop Ointment, Hop Poultice, Housekeepers, to Encourage in their First Attempts, House Linen, Care of, Huckleberry Pudding, Huckleberry Pudding, Elkridge, Huxham's Buck Tincture,

I.

Ice Cream Freezing, Ice Cream superior Receipt for Making, Ice Cream with Fruit, Ice Cream with Lemon, Ices, to Stain, Icing, for Cake, Ice Custard with Vanilla, Indian Bread with Butter milk, Indian Corn Remarks on the Use of, Indian Pound Cake, Infant's Colic, Infant's Sore Mouth, Irish Stew, Irish Moss Blancmange, Island, Floating, Isinglass Jelly,

J.

Jam, Elderberry, Jam, Green Fox Grape, Jam, Ripe Fox Grape, Jelly, Apple, Jelly, Blancmange of, Jelly, Black Currant, Jelly, Currant, Jelly, Calf's Foot, Jelly, Cake, Jelly, Green Grape, Jelly, Isinglass, Jelly, Mulled, Jellies Preserves &c., Jelly, Quince, Jelly, Tapioca, Jelly, Tomato, Journey Cake, Jumbles Common, Jumbles, Cup, Jumbles for Delicate Persons, Jumbles, Molasses, Jumbles, Jackson, Jumbles, Rich,

K.

Kettles, Preserving, to clean, Keeping Apples for Winter use, Kid Gloves, to clean, Kidney, to fry Beef with, Kidneys, Affections of the, Kisses, Knives and Forks, to clean,

L.

Labor Saving Soap, Lamb, to Roast, Lamb, to Stew or Fry, Lard, Rendering, Lavender, Compound, Lead Color, Lemon Brandy, Lemon Butter, Lemon Ice Cream, Lemon Juice, Syrup of, Lemon Marmalade, Lemon Mixture for a Cough, Lemon Pudding, Lemon Syrup, Lemon and Honey for a Cough, Lemon, Green, to Preserve, Lettuce, Ley Poultice, Ley and Soda, Preparation for Washing, Light Biscuit, Light Bread Dumplings, Lily Ointment, Lily Root Poultice, Lima Beans, Lime, Chloride of, Lime, to take, out of Cloth, Linen, House, Linen, to take Ink and Fruit Stains out of, Linseed Oil for Furniture, Liver Sausage, Liver, to Fry Veal's, Liver, to Fry, Liverwort Syrup, Loaf Cake, Locked Jaw,

M.

Macaroons, Mackerel, to Boil, Madison Cake, Magnesia, Charcoal and Salts, Mahogany Furniture, Mangoes with Oil and Vinegar, Pickling, Mangoes, Mangoes, Pepper, Mansfield Muffins, Marble, Marmalade of mixed Fruits.. Marmalade, Apple, Marmalade, Cider, Marmalade, Lemon, Marmalade, Peach, Marmalade, Quince, Maryland Biscuit, Maryland Com Cakes, Matresses, Directions for Making, Meat, Fresh, to Restore, Meat, Roasting, Meat, to Boil Fresh, Meat, to keep Fresh, Melon Citron, to Preserve, Mending China, Mending Clothes, Milk Porridge, Milk Rolls, Milk Toast, Milk Yeast, Mince Pies, Mince Pies, Farmers, Mince Pies, Pork, Mixture, Brown, for Cough, Molasses Beer, Molasses Candy, Molasses Jumbles, Molasses Posset, for a Cold, Molasses Sauce, Mortification, Ointment for, Muffin Batter, a Loaf of, Muffins, Muffins, Boiled Milk, Muffins, Cold Water, Muffins, Corn, Muffins, Cream, Muffins, Mansfield, Muffins, Rice, Mulled Jelly, Mulled Wine, Mush Cakes, Fried Mush, Mush Flannel cakes, Mush Muffins, Mush Rolls, Mush, Mush, Rye, Mushroom Catsup, Mushroom Sauce, Mushrooms, to Pickle, Mushrooms, to Stew and Fry, Mustard Bath, for the Feet, Mustard Whey, Mutton Chops, Mutton Soup, Mutton and Veal Broth,

N.

Naples Biscuit, Nasturtions, New Year Cake,

O.

Oat-meal Gruel, Ointment, Blister, Ointment, Elder, Ointment, Hop, Ointment, Lily, Ointment, Precipitate, Ointment, St. Johnswort, Ointment, Tar, Ointment, for Mortification, Olive, to Color, Omelet, Onion Poultice, Onions Pickled, Onions, to Boil, Orange, to Color, Oven, Baking in a Dutch, Oven, Brick, Directions for Heating, Oyster Fritters, Oyster Pie, Oyster Pie, Baltimore, Oyster Plant, or Salsify, Oyster Sauce, Oyster Soup, Oysters and Fish, Oysters, Pickled, Oysters, Scolloped, Oysters, to Brown, Oysters, to Fry,

P.

Paint, to Clean, Pan Cakes, Pan Cakes, Water, Panada, Panada, Barley, Panada, Egg, Papered Walls, Parsnips, Paste, Gum Arabic, Paste, for Puddings or Pies, Pea Soup, Peach Dumplings, Peach Marmalade, Peach Pie, Peaches in Brandy, Peaches in Cider, Peaches, Pickled, Peaches, Spiced, Peaches, to Conserve, Peaches, to Preserve, Pears, to Conserve, Pears, to Preserve, Peas, Pepper Mangoes, Peppers, Green, to Preserve, Picking Geese, Pickle for Butter, Pickle for Chines, Pickled Oysters, Pickled Pork, Pickles, Vinegar, &c., Pickles, Yellow, Pie Crust, to Make, Pie, Beef Steak, Pie, Chicken, Pie, Currant, Pie, Mince, Pie, Oyster, Pie, Peach, Pie, Pork Mince, Pie, Puddings, &c., Pie, Rhubarb, Pie, Sweet Potato, Pies, to Stew fruit for, Pies, to make Common, Pig, to Roast a, Pigeons, Pigs' Feet, Pigs' Head, Pine Apple Syrup, Pine Apples, Plaster, Adhesive, Plum Cake, Plum Cake, raised, Plums, Green Gage, Poached Eggs, Poison, Remedy for, Poke and Greens, Pokeberry Juice, to Stain Ices, Pone, Cold Water, Pone, Lightened, Pone, Virginia, Pork Stew Pie, Pork, or Mutton, to Corn, Pork, to Fry and Stew, Pork, to Pickle, Pork, to Roast, Porridge, Corn Meal, Porridge, Milk, Porter Beer, Pot Pie, Potash Soap, Potato Starch, Potato Yeast, Potato Yeast, with Sugar, Potatoes, Sweet, Potatoes, to Boil, Potatoes, to Fry, Potatoes, to Stew, Poultice, Bread and Milk, Poultice, Cream, Poultice, Flaxseed, Pound Cake, Poultice, Hop, Poultice, Onion, Poultice, Ley, Poultice, Lily, Poultice, Sassafras, Precautions against Fire, Precipitate Ointment, Preserves, Candied, Preserves, Jellies, &c., Pudding of Corn Meal. Pudding of whole Rice, Pudding, Apple, Pudding, Arrow Root, Pudding, Baked Beef, Pudding, Baked, Pudding, Balloon, Pudding, Beef Steak, Pudding, Bird's Nest, Pudding, Boiled Indian, Pudding, Boiling, Pudding, Bread, Pudding, Butter, Pudding, Chicken, Pudding, Coaco nut, Pudding, Custard Bread, Pudding, Custard Hasty, Pudding, Elkridge, Huckleberry, Pudding, Huckleberry, Pudding, Lemon, Pudding, New England Hasty, Pudding, Plain Rice, Pudding, Potato, Pudding, Preserve, Pudding, Pumpkin, Pudding, Quince, Pudding, Rice, Pudding, Richmond, Pudding, Suet, Pudding, Sweet Potato, Pudding, Switzerland, Pudding. Green Corn, Puddings, in little Pans, Puff Paste, Pumpkins, to Bake, Pumpkins, to Boil, Pumpkins, to Dry, Pumpkins, to Preserve, Putty, to Remove,

Q.

Queen Cake, Quick Biscuit, Quick Waffles, Quince Jelly,

R.

Rabbits and Squirrels, Racahaut Chocolate, Rag Carpet, to make a, Raisins in Syrup, Raspberries, to Preserve, Raspberry Vinegar, Raspberry Wine, Rats and Roaches, to destroy, Red Mixture, Red, to Color, Remarks on Carving, and the behavior of children at table, Remarks to Encourage Young Housekeepers in their first attempts, Remarks upon a Cough, Remedies, Simple, Rendering Lard and Tallow, Rennet Whey, Rennet Wine, Rennet, for Cheese, Rheumatism, Rhubarb Pies, Rhubarb, Spiced, Rica Pudding, Rice Cakes, Rice Dish with Fruit, Rice Dumplings. Rice Flour Pound Cake, Rice Flour Sponge Cake, Rice Flummery, Rice Fritters, Rice Milk, Rice Muffins, Rice Pudding, Plain, Rice Waffles, Rice, Stewed with Chicken, Rice, to Boil, Rich Fruit Cake, Richmond Pudding, Roasting Coffee, Roasting Meat, Rock Fish, to Stew or Bake, Rolls, Boiled Milk, Rolls, Bread. Rolls, Carolina Corn, Rolls, Egg. Rolls, French, Rolls, Mush, Rolls, Potato, Rolls, Soft, Rolls, Twist, Rolls, Water, Rose Brandy, Rose Conserve, Rose Water, Rusk for Drying, Rusk, Rusk, Bread, Rye, Mush,

S.

Sago, Salad, Chicken. Sally Lunn, Salsify or Oyster Plant, Salt Cod, Salt Salmon, to Boil, Salt Shad, to Boil, Salt Shad, to Broil, Salve for Burns, Salve for Corns, Salve, Dealer's, Salaeratus Biscuit, Salaeratus Cake, Sassafras Poultice, Sauce, Celery, Sauce, Cream, Sauce, Egg, Sauce, Molasses, Sauce, Mushroom, Sauce, Oyster, Sauce, Tomato, Sauce, White, Sauce, Wine, Sausage Meat, Sausage, Bologna, Sausage, Liver, Scalds and Burns, Scarlet, to Dye, Scolloped Oysters, Scrapple, Screw Dumplings, Scurvy of the Gums, Shad, to Broil, or Bake, Shad, to put up, and Herring, Short Cake, Silver, to Clean, Simple Remedies, Skim Curds of Whey, Skim Curds, Slaw, Cold, Smearcase, or Cottage Cheese, Snow Cream, Snow Fritters, Soap Stones, Soap, Soap, Hard, Soap, Later Saving, Soap, Potash, Soap, Volatile, Sore Mouth, Infants, Sore Throat, for a, Soup of Dried Beans, Soup, Beef Shin. Soup, Calf's Head, Soup, Chicken, Soup, Giblet, Soup, Gumbo, Soup, Mutton, Soup, Oyster, Soup, Pea, Soup, Shin, Soup, Vegetable, Soups, Souse, Spermaceti, to take out of cloth, Spice-wood Berries, Spiced Beef, Spiced Peaches, Spider, for the Bite of a, Sponge Cake, Sprained Ankle, Sprained Limb, Spruce Beer, Squashes, or Cymblings, Squirrels and Rabbits, St. Johnswort Ointment, Stains, to take out of Linen, Starch, Common, Starch, Corn, Starch, Potato, Starching Clear, Steak, Beef, Stew, Irish, Sting of a Bee, Stir-about, Stopper, to Remove from a Decanter, Stoves or Grates, to Clean, Stoves, to Mend, Straw under Carpets, Strawberries, String Beans, Stuffing, or Dressing, Suet Pudding, Suet, to keep Several Months, Sugar, to Clarify, Summer Diseases. Sweet Bread, Veal, Sweet Potato Pie, Sweet Potato Pudding, Sweet Potatoes, Switzerland Pudding, Syrup of Lemon Juice, Syrup, Currant, Syrup, Hoarhound, and Elecampane, Syrup, Lemon, Syrup, Liverwort, Syrup, Pine Apple, Syrup, Raisins in, Syrups and Ices,

T.

Table Cloths, Taffy, or Molasses Candy, Tallow, to Render, Tapioca, Tar Ointment, Tea, Tea, Beef, Tea, Black, Tea, Ginger, Teeth, Cleaning the, Terrapins, Tetter, Cure for the, Tetter, Warts, &c., Throat, Sore, Tin Kitchens, Roasting in, Tincture, Huxham's Bark, Toast Water, Toast for the Sick, Toast, Cream, Toast, Milk, Tomato Catsup, Tomato Figs, Tomato Jelly, Tomato Omelet, Tomato Sauce, Tomatoes for Winter Use, Tomatoes, Green, for Pies, Tomatoes, to Bake, Tomatoes, to Broil, Tomatoes, to Fry, Tomatoes, to Pickle, Tomatoes, to Preserve, Tomatoes, to Stew, Tongue and Brains, Tongue, to Boil, Tongues, to Cure a Dozen, Tooth-ache, Trifle, Turkey, to Boil, Turkey, to Roast, Turnips, Twist Rolls,

V.

Vanilla, Veal Cutlets, Veal Hash, Veal and Lamb, to Roast, Veal and Mutton Broth, Veal's Liver, to Fry, Veal, Stuffed Leg of, Veal, to Boil, Veal, to Fry and Stew, Vegetable Soup, Vegetables, Vegetables, to keep, in Winter, Vermicelli, Vials, to Clean, Vinegar, Raspberry, Vinegar, to Make, Virginia Hoe Cake, Virginia Pone, Virginia Yellow Pickles, Volatile Soap,

W.

Waffles, Wafer Cakes, Waffles, Quick, Waffles, Rice, Walls, Papered, to clean, Walnut Catsup, Walnut Cheese, Walnuts, Black, to Pickle, Walnuts, English, Walnuts, White, to Pickle, Warner's Cordial, Warts, Wash for Hearths, Wash for Sore Ears, Washes, White or Colored, Washing Calicoes, Washing Windows, Washington Cake, Water, Apple, Water, Filtering, Water, to Purify, Water, to keep Cool in Summer, Watermelon Rind, Wax and Spermaceti, to take out of cloth, Weather proof, Cement, Whey, Rennet, Whey, Skim Curds, Whey, Wine, Whips, White Beans, Dried, White Sauce, White wash, to Mix, Whooping Cough, for, Wine Sauce, Wine Whey, Wine, Blackberry, Wine, Currant, Wine, Elderberry, Wine, Ginger, Wine, Gooseberry, Wine, Mulled, Wine, Raspberry, Wine, Rennet, Wines, Cordials, &c., Woollens and Furs, to keep, Woollens, to Dye, Worms, Wounds and Cuts,

Y.

Yeast, Yeast Dry, Yeast, Corn, Yeast, Milk, Yeast, Potato, Yellow Ochre wash, Yellow Pickles, Yellow wash, Chrome, Yellow, to Dye,

THE END

Previous Part     1  2  3  4  5
Home - Random Browse