BRANDY.
83
half absolute alcohol,) is of about the same
strength as pure foreign brandy, and, if taste–
less and inodorous, is precisely the same spirit
as pure foreign brandy would be were it de–
prived of the oils, acids, and other constituents
before mentioned, it plainly follows that, by
taking a certain quantity of pure spirits–
whether a few degrees above or below proof–
and adding to that spirits the proper proportion
of the volatile oil, acetic acid, acetic ether,
amanthic acid, and tannic acid, with the color–
ing matter found in every pure foreign brandy,
you at once produce the article in all its purity,
rendering it almost impossible for the most ex–
perienced dealer or the most skillful chemist
to detect the imitation.
i-
The reason is, you
have manufactured an article possessing all the
constituents
and
properties,
with the
fragrance
and
aroma
?f the BEST FRENCH BRANDIES, and
far superior to the diluted and adulterated
brandies now brought from European ports.
You have now been made acquainted with
the basis for making pure French brandy,