The United States Practical Receipt Book, Or, Complete Book of Reference, for the Manufacturer, Tradesman, Agriculturist Or Housekeeper: Containing Many Thousand Valuable Receipts, in All the Useful and Domestic Arts |
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The United States Practical Receipt Book: Or, Complete Book of Reference ... A. Practical Chemist No preview available - 2016 |
The United States Practical Receipt Book: Or, Complete Book of Reference ... A Practical Chemist No preview available - 2022 |
Common terms and phrases
acetate alcohol alum ammonia antimony apply bergamot bitter almonds blue boiling water bottle brandy bruised carbonate cassia chalk clean cloves cold water colour cool copal copper cork cream decoction dilute Dissolve distilled Dose drachms drops eggs essence of lemon evaporate ferment filter fire flour flowers gallons gentle heat ginger glass grains gum arabic isinglass juice lamp-black lard lime linseed oil liquid liquor litharge Lozenges lump-sugar Macerate Melt mercury metallic milk mixture mucilage muriate nitre nitric acid Ointment ounces pearlash phial piece pills pint potash pounds powder precipitate quantity quart rape oil rose-water roses sal ammoniac salt saltpetre silver soap soda soft solution spermaceti spirit of wine spirits of turpentine spoonful starch stir strain suet sufficient sulphuric acid sweet oil syrup Take tartar tea-spoonful tincture varnish vessel vinegar warm wash white sugar white wax yeast yellow resin yellow wax zinc
Popular passages
Page 262 - Tripoli powder, put it into an earthen pot, with just enough water to cover it; then take a piece of white flannel, lay it over a piece of cork or rubber, and proceed to polish the varnish, always wetting it with the Tripoli and water. It will be known when the process is finished by wiping a part of the work with a sponge, and observing whether there is a fair, even gloss. When this is the case, take a bit of mutton suet and fine flour, and clean the work.
Page 59 - Armenians, have a singular method of ornamenting watch cases, &c., with diamonds and other precious stones, by simply glueing or cementing them on. The stone is set in silver or gold, and the lower part of the metal made flat, or to correspond with the part to which it is to be fixed; it is then warmed gently, and...
Page 42 - Take two ounces of sal ammoniac, one ounce of flowers of sulphur, and sixteen ounces of cast iron filings or borings. Mix all well together by rubbing them in a mortar, and keep the powder dry. When the cement is wanted for use, take one part of the above powder, and twenty parts of clean iron borings or filings, and blend them intimately by grinding them in a mortar.
Page 56 - ... required for use. This tincture will keep for years, and yield a perfume little inferior to otto of roses. A few drops of it will suffice to impregnate the atmosphere of a room with a delicious odour. Common vinegar is greatly improved by a very small quantity being added to it. The "Literary Gazette...
Page 108 - Into a large glass jar inverted upon a flat brick tile, and containing near its top a branch of fresh rosemary, or any other such shrub moistened with water, introduce a flat, thick piece of heated iron, on which place some gum benzoin in gross powder. The...
Page 141 - Procure a phial with a glass stopper accurately ground into it ; introduce a few copper filings, then entirely fill it with liquid ammonia, and stop the phial so as to exclude all atmospheric air. If left in this state, no solution of the copper will be effected. But if the bottle be afterwards left open for some time, and then stopped, the metal will dissolve, and the solution will be colourless.
Page 59 - Dissolve five or six bits of gum mastich, each the size of a large pea, in as much spirits of wine as will suffice to render it liquid...
Page 267 - Pass them through a solution of fine hard soap, at a hand heat, drawing them through the hand ; rinse in lukewarm water ; dry and finish by pinning out. Brush the flossy or bright side with a clean clothes-brush the way of the nap. Finish them by dipping a sponge into a size made by boiling isinglass in water, and rub the wrong side. Rinse out a second time, and brush and dry near a fire, or in a warm room. Silks may be treated in the same way, but not brushed. If the silks are for dyeing, instead...
Page 29 - To fifteen quarts of water put six pounds of brown sugar; let it boil ten minutes, and take off the scum : pour on it half a peck of primroses ; before it is quite cold put in a little fresh yeast, and let it work in a. warm place...
Page 325 - To wash a White Lace Veil. Put the veil into a strong lather of white soap and very clear water, and let it simmer slowly for a quarter of an hour. Take it out and squeeze it well, but be sure not to rub it. Rinse it in two cold waters, with a drop or two of liquid blue in the last.


