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Food
1860
Syrups, to make the various Colors
Take powdered
cochineal, 1 oz.; soft water, 1 pt.; boil the cochineal in the water
for a few minutes, using a copper kettle; while boiling, add 30
grs. of powdered alum, and 1 dr. of cream of tartar; when the coloring,
matter is all out of the cochineal, remove it from the fire and
when a little cool, strain, bottle and set aside for use. This gives
a beautiful red, and is used in the strawberry Syrups only. Colored
rather deep in shade. Pine apple is left without color. Wintergreen
is colored with tincture of camwood. Not deep Lemon and Ginger,
with Curcuma Longa, more commonly called Turmeric, either the tincture
or a decoction may be used; to make the tinctures, take 1 oz. of
the root to 6 oz. of proof spirits, the docoction by using 12 oz.
of soft water, the tinctures are the best, and the proof spirit
is made by using 98 per cent. alcohol and soft water equal parts.
The two last named Syrups are not colored high, but only a few drops
to a bottle of Syrup.
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