On this page
-
Text (1)
-
104 FKUITS IN THEIR SEASON.
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
* Xii. The Pi/Um. Fkom The Wave-Hollowed...
their be flayed hands solel in y water by the in nails order of that women they , who may keep perform constantl the y operation
dippingtheir quite delicate coolly , for color as and tlie transparency rude touch of , the any use iron of weapon any such would is strictl mar y the for several
they forbidden successive are then . days After impaled to warmth being on pointed left and skinless air osier all damp rods in , being and sun exposed carefull for y guarded several days ,
required rounded against ; for shape their sale , stones and when put are they away then are covered , extracted duly coffined with , they woollen in are little pressed cloths round until into flat
boxes made of willow , and lined with a shroud of white paper cut into at the most edges , having -excellent , throug sweetmeat h manifold . The inflictions more common become , but refined still
Provence very a superior lums super ordinary which " French as being plum the , " most is also flesh mostl y and y prepared bearing from the
most bloom p are , the finest , for the purpose ; and the Perdrigone , the Prune cVAst , , a long kinds violet- most colored usuall one , or the loyed St . Catherine In order , a that
yellowish sortare the y emp . the are beautiful gathered , bloom very carefull may be y retained before sunrise even in by their taking dried hold state of , their they
from stalks contact without with touching each other the fruit , on , and vine laid leaves one placed by one in , and baskets free ,
being left thus for two or three days , when they are submitted to the same process as the but humbler those from " prunes the nei . " hborhood The latter of Tours -are made are
in laces g black considered very sort many the called p best the ; , and Prune various cPA kinds gen , are is one employed of the ; but commonest a nearly .
"When shaken , from the treesthe first which fall are rejected as heated being probabl and shut y worm close -eaten for twent ; the , y rest -four are hours placed , then in an taken oven out slig , htly and been heated this time
the next day put in again , the oven having to to ei a g temperature hty degrees . of the After one hundred another of cooking degrees sorts interval ; then they taken , they are- rounded out are exposed and left by
till coldwhenin case some , turning laced , the stone in , the without oven breaking the heat the of skin which , and is , after again this reduced process to , are
crevice close eight rep y confinement de is grees stopped ; and they with tliis are elay , time released , or not dried onl , and grass y is a the . cup After door of cold closed an water hour , but of being every this
for put put white another into into dustiness it the can twenty oven bear manifests , by - , four they the hours time are itself once , that at which more this the is end is exposed to just them of as which to warm what the perio fiery as the a d bloom ordeal finger that
lost is dry to ing if the they they growing must are now receive fruit reheate , it and at d once should after , , for having they this now delicate once of indi require been efflorescence suffered any more then to is coolartificial bloomproduced by means being
an go , when sometimes ; the . dry substituted ing process _Tby , the is c unprinci omplete p by led the . Those look of the loyed fruit , and ge
104 Fkuits In Their Season.
104 _FKUITS IN THEIR SEASON .
-
-
Citation
-
English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), Oct. 1, 1861, page 104, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01101861/page/32/
-