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Updated: May 18, 2025
Take four pounds of Beef, Veal or Neats-Tongues, and eight pounds of Suet; and mince both the meat and Suet very small, befor you put them together. Then mingle them well together and mince it very small, and put to it six pounds of Currants washed and picked very clean. Then take the Peel of two Limons, and half a score of Pippins, and mince them very small.
The old scoundrel is a philanthropist. I would wager an orchard of pippins on that, but there is no one to take me up except this policeman. "Officer," he resumed aloud. "Behold a stranger in a strange land. By any miracle, is there a taxi-stand nearby?" Then presently Jones was directing a driver. "The Tombs!" In a dirty cell Lennox sat on a dirty cot.
After recess Thomas apologised." "What did the brute say?" "He is not a brute. He said he was sorry he'd thrown the pippin so hard." Next day I happened to meet Tom Eubanks. He had a basket of Newtown pippins for the schoolmarm. He was very red when he told me that Miss Buchanan liked apples. Apples at that time did not grow in the brush- hills. Tom had bought them at the village store.
The rosy-boys had the brightest and most beautiful color, but then the pippins looked so rich and mellow, that he could not choose very easily; and so Georgie laughed, find told him he would settle the difficulty by giving him one of each. “So come here,” said he, “Rollo, and let me lean on you, while I knock them down.”
And a dish of pippins and cheese," continued the Governor, meditatively, "and a rasher of bacon." "There was a fine comb taken from the hive this morning. Will your Excellency choose a bit? And there are dates, sent my father by the captain of the Barbary vessel, and a quince tart "
You may call me a mass of filth-what you please!" "Never mind; I am your friend, Tom," interrupts the brusque old jailer, stooping down and taking him gently by the arm. "Good may come of the worst filth of nature-evil may come of what seemeth the best; and trees bearing sound pippins may have come of rotten cores. Cheer up!"
Seven times I failed and in the end the sheets went into the waste basket, possibly to the confusion of Annie our cook, who may have mistaken them for a reiterated admonishment towards the governance of her kitchen at the least, a hint of my desires and appetite for cheese and pippins. "The Closet of Sir Kenelm Digby Opened" is a cook book.
Your Apricoks and Peaches must be stoned & pared, but the Pear-Plums must not be stoned nor pared. Then take a little more Sugar than they weigh, then take as much Apple water and Sugar as will make a Syrup for them, then boil them as you do your Pippins, and Pot them as you do the Pippins likewise, &c. To preserve Pippins, Apricocks, Pear-Plums, or Peaches green.
If in summer, codlins are best: in autumn, golden rennets or winter pippins. Red apples in jelly are a different preparation. These must be pared and cored, and thrown into water; then put them in a preserving pan, and let them coddle with as little water as will only half cover them. Observe that they do not lie too close when first put in; and when the under side is done, turn them.
I love to look at our east woods very well; and the hill pasture; and the orchard in blossom is a charming sight, and more charming still when tossing the yellow pippins to the sun, as in this pleasant breeze." "You think the old farm is pretty near the centre of the world, I suppose," said Fabens. "It holds my heart as if balanced on the world's centre," replied Mrs. Fabens.
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