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150

FRUIT WIN ES.

5

(l li.

C§ingcr

ill

inc.

Boil sixteen pounds of sugar and twelve ounces of well-pul–

verized Jamaica ginger in twenty-four quarts of water half an

hour; skim carefully, and let it stand till the following day.

Cut seven pounds of raisins in pieces, remove the seeds, put

the raisins in a cask with four quarts of good brandy or arrack,

and three or four lemons, sliced and without seeds: pour over it

the fluid , which you decant carefully; bung the cask; clear the

wine after a fortnight with one ounce of pale white glue, and

bottle after another fortnight.

505. <Wooscbcrr!2 lllinc.

Unripe, but otherwise perfectly developed gooseberries of a

good kind are mashed in a tub; after twenty-four hours decant

the juice; infuse the berries in lukewarm water twelve hours in

the proportion of one quart of water to four quarts of berries ;

strain; mix it with the decanted juice; add to each twenty

quarts of fluid· twelve pounds of broken sugar, and let the wine

ferment in a warm place. After two or three days fill into a

cask; add to each twenty quarts of wine two quarts of best

brandy; bung well, and place it in not too cold a cellar; to obtain

an excellent gooseberry wine it ought to remain in the cellar

five years, yet you may decant after a year: of course the prod–

uct will be inferior.

506. S1Jarlding @iooscberr!2 llline.

Forty pounds of large, but still green gooseberries are mash–

ed in a tub, infused in eighteen quarts of lukewarm water; stir

thoroughly; decant the water, and squeeze the fruits through a

i;;ieve, while you mix it again with four or five quarts of water.

Dissolve thirty pounds of loaf-sugar, and three and one-third

ounces of cremor ta rtari in the juice, and add water to have al–

together fifty quarts of fluid: cover the tub with a cloth, and let

it stand undisturbed two d ays in a t emperature not below 60<:

F.