Put the wasted lemon and spice into the wine; stir it up well, and let it stand near the fire ten minutes. Rub a few knobs of sugar on the rind of a lemon, put the sugar into a bowl or jug, with the juice of half a lemon (not roasted), pour the wine into it...

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Page 33 ... cloves and cinnamon, half a pint of brandy, and one quart of good strong ale; stir it well together, put a couple of slices of toasted bread into it, grate some nutmeg and ginger on the toast, and it is fit for use. Ice it well and it will prove a good summer, warm it and it will become a pleasant winter, beverage. Appears in 8 books from 1827-2007

Page 19 From famed Barbadoes on the Western Main Fetch sugar half a pound ; fetch sack from Spain A pint ; and from the Eastern Indian Coast Nutmeg, the glory of our Northern toast. Appears in 22 books from 1827-2006

Page 31 Lisbon sugar; pour on it one pint of warm beer; grate a nutmeg and some ginger into it: add four glasses of sherry and five additional pints of beer; stir it well; sweeten it to your taste: let it stand covered up two or three hours, then put three or four slices of bread cut thin and toasted brown into it, and it is fit for use. Appears in 9 books from 1826-2007

Page 27 ... and a bottle of mountain wine; grate a nutmeg into it; sweeten it to your taste; stir it till the sugar is dissolved, and then add three or four slices of bread toasted brown. Let it stand two hours, and then strain it off into the Grace Cup. Appears in 8 books from 1827-1971

Page 20 To see the untimely end of ten fine Chicken ; From shining shelf take down the brazen skillet,— A quart of milk from gentle cow will fill it. When boil'd and coltl, put milk and Sack to Eggs, Unite them firmly like the triple league, And on the fire let them together dwell Till Miss sing twice— you must not kiss and tell — Each lad and lass take up a silver spoon, And fall on fiercely like a starved Dragoon. Appears in 16 books from 1823-2007

Page 3 Make several incisions in the rind of a lemon, stick cloves in the incisions, and roast the lemon by a slow fire. Put small but equal quantities of cinnamon, cloves, mace, and all-spice... Appears in 19 books from 1826-2007

Page 8 Sanscrit pancha, ie ßvc, is the etymon of its title, and denotes the number of ingredients of which it is composed. Addison's foxhunter, who testified so much surprise when he found that of the materials of which this Appears in 9 books from 1826-2007

Page 8 WHENE'ER a bowl of punch we make, Four striking opposites we take ; The strong, the small, the sharp, the sweet Together mix'd, most kindly meet ; And, when they happily unite, The bowl Appears in 16 books from 1796-2007

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