Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !

Updated: June 20, 2025


To make Syrup of Rasberries. Take nine quarts of Rasberries, clean pickt, and gathered in a dry day, and put to them four quarts of good Sack, into an earthen pot, then paste it up very close, and set it in a Cellar for ten days, then distill it in a Glass or Rosestill, then take more Sack and put in Rasberries to it, then when it hath taken out all the colour of the Raspis, strain it out and put in some fine Sugar to your taste, and set it on the fire, keeping it continually stirring till the scum doth rise; then take it off the fire, let it not boil, skim it very clean, and when it is cold put it to your distilled Raspis; colour it no more than to make it a pale Claret Wine.

To make CREAM of any preserved Fruit. Take half a pound of the pulp of any preserved fruit, put it in a large pan, put to it the whites of two or three eggs, beat them well together for an hour, then with a spoon take off, and lay it heaped up high on the dish and salver without cream, or put it in the middle bason. Rasberries will not do this way. To dry PEARS or PIPPENS without Sugar.

To make BREAKFAST CAKES. To make MACCAROONS. To make WHIGGS. To make RASBERRY CREAM. Take rasberries, bruise them, put 'em in a pan on a quick fire whilst the juice be dried up, then take the same weight of sugar as you have rasberries, and set them on a slow fire, let them boil whilst they are pretty stiff; make them into cakes, and dry them near the fire or in the sun. To make QUEEN CAKES.

Word Of The Day

vine-capital

Others Looking