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Etymologies
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Examples
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Manchet, and being dry boil the Sugar to a Candy height, and so cast your Oranges into the hot Sugar, and take them out again suddenly, and then lay them upon a lattice of Wyer or the bottom of a Sieve in a warm
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Take of these fruits, and strew fine sifted sugar on them, as you do flower on frying fish, lay them on a lattice of wier in a deep earthen pan, and put them into an Oven as hot as for Manchet; then take them out, and turn them and sugar them again, and sprinkle a little
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Mace, and the quantity of a fine Manchet slic't together.
The accomplisht cook or, The art & mystery of cookery Robert May
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Take two pound of Manchet paste, sweet _Butter_ halfe a pound,
A Book of Fruits and Flowers Anonymous
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Take three pints of new milk, of stale Manchet crums two handfulls, or so much as shall make the milk somewhat thick, and thereto put two handfulls of dryed red _Rose_ leaves, and three ounces of
A Book of Fruits and Flowers Anonymous
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_Sheeps_ Blood, _Cheese_, fine _Manchet_ and clarified _Honey_ tempered as before.
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At Five a Clock take him out, and lick his Head and Eyes with your Tongue, then Pen him, and fill his _Trough_ with _Manchet_ (as above) and hot _Urine_.
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_Manchet_ cut into square bits, thrice a day, and with the Coldest, and
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_Cherries_, _Sheeps_ Blood, _Saffron_ and fine _Manchet_ made into a
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_Currants_ halfe a pound, _sugar_ a quarter, and a little _Mace_, if you will put in any, and make it in a loafe, and bake it in an Oven, no hotter then for Manchet.
A Book of Fruits and Flowers Anonymous
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