Page:Housekeeper and butler's guide, or, A system of cookery, and making of wines.pdf/19

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pour it into an earthen vessel; squeeze in the juice of four lemons; and the rinds pared exceedingly thin; put to it a tea-cupful of ale-yeast; let it work for a day and a night; then tun it into a cask; hung it up; and in a fortnight, you may bottle it off.

lemon wine.

Take eight large lemons, pare them thin, and squeeze out the juice; put to it two pints of brandy, and fling in the rinds of the lemons; let it remain in a earthen vessel close covered, for three days; in the mean time, squeeze out the juice of half a dozen more lemons into two quarts of spring water, and three pounds of loafsugar; boil them together; and, when it is cold, put to it the brandy and lemons you have prepared, with a bottle of wine; mix them together, and strain it through a linen bag into a cask; stop it close; and, in a quarter of a year, bottle it off; mind to cork and wire your bottles tight down; keep it in sand eight weeks, and it will be fit for use.

usquebaugh.

To make two gallons, take of mace and cloves six penny-weights each, and of cinnamon three quarters of an ounce, and eight penny-weights of ginger, and the same of coriander-seed, and ten penny-weights of either apricot or peach kernels, the same of dates; six ounces of liquorice root, two pounds of lumpsugar, and three quarters of a pound of Malaga Raisins. Prepare your ingredients as follows; bruise the seeds and kernals in a mortar, and put them in the spirits you are going to use, and steep them for ten days; stone the dates and raisins, and boil them with the liquorice in three pints of water,