Cottage economy: containing information relative to the brewing of beer, making of bread [&c. Publ. in 7 pt.].1828 |
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... Plants of ENGLISH GRASS and GRAIN , for the purpose of making HATS and BONNETS ; and also Instructions for erecting and using Ice - houses , after the Virginian manner . BY WILLIAM COBBETT . A NEW EDITION . LONDON : PUBLISHED BY WILLIAM ...
... Plants of ENGLISH GRASS and GRAIN , for the purpose of making HATS and BONNETS ; and also Instructions for erecting and using Ice - houses , after the Virginian manner . BY WILLIAM COBBETT . A NEW EDITION . LONDON : PUBLISHED BY WILLIAM ...
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... Yeast . 8. Selecting , cutting and bleaching the Plants of English Grass and Grain , for the purpose of making Hats and Bonnets : 9. Constructing and using Ice - Houses . COTTAGE ECONOMY . No. I. INTRODUCTION . To the Labouring A 2.
... Yeast . 8. Selecting , cutting and bleaching the Plants of English Grass and Grain , for the purpose of making Hats and Bonnets : 9. Constructing and using Ice - Houses . COTTAGE ECONOMY . No. I. INTRODUCTION . To the Labouring A 2.
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... plants have six leaves , which will be very soon , dig up , make fine , and manure another rod or two , and prick out the plants , 4000 of each in rows at eight inches apart and 3 inches in the row . Hoe the ground between them often ...
... plants have six leaves , which will be very soon , dig up , make fine , and manure another rod or two , and prick out the plants , 4000 of each in rows at eight inches apart and 3 inches in the row . Hoe the ground between them often ...
Page 8
... plants from the bed . 119. If you find the ground dry at top during the winter , hoe it , and particularly near the plants , and rout out all slugs and insects . And , when March comes , and the ground is dry , hoe deep and well , and ...
... plants from the bed . 119. If you find the ground dry at top during the winter , hoe it , and particularly near the plants , and rout out all slugs and insects . And , when March comes , and the ground is dry , hoe deep and well , and ...
Page 9
... plants , as you did those in the fall . Dig up the ground and manure it , and , as fast as you cut cabbages , plant cab- bages ; and in the same manner and with the same cul- tivation as before . Your last planting will be about the ...
... plants , as you did those in the fall . Dig up the ground and manure it , and , as fast as you cut cabbages , plant cab- bages ; and in the same manner and with the same cul- tivation as before . Your last planting will be about the ...
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Cottage economy: containing information relative to the brewing of beer ... William Cobbett Affichage du livre entier - 1822 |
Cottage Economy: Containing Information Relative to the Brewing of Beer ... William Cobbett Affichage d'extraits - 1828 |
Cottage Economy: Containing Information Relative to the Brewing of Beer ... William Cobbett Aucun aperçu disponible - 2015 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
acre amongst bacon bake barley bees better boil bonnets bread brewing bushel of malt bushel of wheat cabbages cask clean colour common cost cottage Crested Dog's-tail cut and bleached drink eight England expense farmers feed feet Fiorin flitches flitches of bacon flour four fowls gallons garden geese give goats grain half heat Hertfordshire hops ice-house inches keep labour labourer's family Leghorn lettuces liquor living loaves manure mashing-tub matter means milk mill miserable Miss WOODHOUSE never paragraph pigs plants plat potatoes pounds pounds weight public house quantity quarter rods of ground scalding seed shillings small beer sort of grass stick sufficient suppose Swedish turnips taken taste thing tun-tub turkeys utensils weather week WILLIAM COBBETT winter wort wretched yeast young
Fréquemment cités
Page 12 - Before you hang it up, lay it on the floor, scatter the flesh side pretty thickly over with bran, or with some fine sawdust, not of deal or fir ; rub it on the flesh, or pat it well down upon it : this keeps the smoke from getting into the little openings, and makes a sort of crust to be dried on.
Page 7 - Talk, indeed, of your pantomimes and gaudy shows j your processions and installations and coronations ! Give me, for a beautiful sight, a neat and smart woman, heating her oven and setting in her bread ! And, if the bustle does make the sign of labour glisten on her brow, where is the man that would not kiss that off, rather than lick the plaster from the cheek of a duchess...
Page 7 - If the weather be very cold, some cloths or sacks should be put round the tun- tub while the beer is working. In about six or eight hours a frothy head will rise upon the liquor; and it will keep rising, more or less slowly, for about forty-eight hours. But, the length of time required for the working depends on various circumstances; so that no precise time can be fixed. The best way is, to take off the froth (which is indeed yeast) at the end of about twentyfour hours, with a common skimmer, and...
Page 1 - Women, so amiable in themselves, are never so amiable as when they are useful ; and as for beauty, though men may fall in love with girls at play, there is nothing to make them stand to their love Hke seeing them at work.