Lip Salves
A good lip-salve may be made as follows:–
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1. Take an ounce of the oil of sweet almonds, cold drawn; a drachm of fresh mutton suet; and a little bruised alkanet root: and simmer the whole together in an earthen pipkin. Instead of the oil of sweet almonds you may use oil of Jasmin, or oil of any other flower, if you intend the lip-salve to have a fragrant odour.
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2. Take a pound of fresh butter; a quarter of a pound of beeswax; four or five ounces of cleansed black grapes, and about an ounce of bruised alkanet root. Simmer them together over a slow fire till the wax is wholly dissolved, and the mixture becomes of a bright red color; strain, and put it by for use.
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3. Oil of almonds, spermaceti, white wax, and white sugar-candy, equal parts, form a good white lip-salve.
Source: The Ladies’ Book of Etiquette, and Manual of Politeness, Florence Hartley
Remedial Qualities of Common Fruits
A table giving the remedial qualities of the common fruits and vegetables is herewith appended: —
Celery for any form of rheumatism and nervous dyspepsia.
Lettuce for insomnia.
Water-cress for scurvy.
Onions are almost the best nervine known. Use for insomnia, for coughs and colds, and as a complexion curer. Eaten every other day, they soon have a clearing and whitening effect on the complexion.
Spinach for gravel.
Asparagus to induce perspiration.
Carrots for suffering from asthma.
Turnips for nervous disorders and for scurvy.
Raw beef proves of great benefit to persons of frail constitution, and to those suffering from consumption. It is chopped fine, seasoned with salt, and heated by placing it in a dish in hot water. It assimilates rapidly and affords the best nourishment.
Eggs contain a large amount of nutriment in a compact quickly available form. Beaten up raw with sugar they are used to clear and strengthen the voice. With sugar and lemon juice the beaten white of egg is used to relieve hoarseness.
Cranberries for erysipelas are used externally as well as internally.
Cranberries eaten raw are one of the finest tonics and appetizers known.
In cases of yellow or typhoid fever, cranberries are almost indispensable as a tonic and to assist in clearing the system of the harmful bacteria.
For some forms of dyspepsia there is no more simple and effective remedy than raw cranberries. Carry a supply in the pocket and eat them frequently during the day. They will cure headache as well.
People who are subject to biliousness will find that with cranberries a part of each day’s food they will be free from such attacks.
Honey is wholesome, strengthening, cleansing, healing and nourishing.
Fresh ripe fruits are excellent for purifying the blood and toning up the system.
Sour oranges are highly recommended for rheumatism.
Watermelon for epilepsy and for yellow fever.
Lemons for feverish thirst in sickness, biliousness, low fevers, rheumatism, colds, coughs, liver complaints, etc.
Blackberries for diarrhoea.
Tomatoes are a powerful aperient for the liver, a sovereign remedy for dyspepsia and for indigestion.
Tomatoes are invaluable in all conditions in which the use of calomel is indicated.
Figs are aperient and wholesome. They are said to be valuable as a food for those suffering from cancer. They are used externally as well as internally.
Bananas are useful as a food for those suffering from chronic diarrhoea.
Pie-plant is wholesome and aperient; is excellent for rheumatic sufferers and useful for purifying the blood.
Peanuts for indigestion. They are especially recommended for corpulent diabetes. Peanuts are made into a wholesome and nutritious soup, are browned and used as a coffee, are eaten as a relish simply baked, or are prepared and served as salted almonds.
Apples are useful in nervous dyspepsia; they are nutritious, medicinal and vitalizing; they aid digestion, clear the voice, correct the acidity of the stomach, are valuable in rheumatism, insomnia, and liver trouble. An apple contains as much nutriment as a potato, in a pleasanter, more wholesome form.
Grapes dissolve and dislodge gravel and calculi, and bring the stomach and bowels to a healthy condition.
Ripe pineapples have been put upon the list of foods especially healthful for persons troubled with indigestion, the juice being especially valuable in such cases. Shred with a silver fork, and reject all the indigestible core. The juice of a ripe pineapple is an almost invaluable remedy for diphtheria, the acid seeming to dissolve the strangling growth in the throat.
Source: The Canadian Family Cookbook, Grace E. Denison
Filed under Remedy | Tags: aperient, apples, asparagus, asthma, bananas, beef, biliousness, blackberries, bowels, calculi, calomel, carrots, celery, colds, complexion, consumption, coughs, cranberries, cranberry, denison, diarrhoea, digestion, diphtheria, dyspepsia, eggs, erisyphelas, fever, figs, grapes, gravel, headache, hoarseness, honey, indigestion, insomnia, lemon, lemons, lettuce, liver, nervine, nervous dyspepsia, onion, oranges, peanuts, perspiration, pie-plant, pineapple, rheumatism, rhubarb, scurvy, sickness, skin, spinach, stomach, sweating, throat, tomatoes, tonic, turnips, typhoid fever, voice, watercress, watermelon, yellow fever | Comment (0)Broth for Sick and Convalescent Persons
Put a Crag-end of a Neck of Mutton, a Knuckle of Veal, and a Pullet into a Pipkin of water, with a spoonful or two of French-barley first scalded in a water or two. The Pullet is put in after the other meat is well skimmed, and hath boiled an hour. A good hour after that, put in a large quantity of Sorrel, Lettice, Purslane, Borage and Bugloss, and boil an hour more at least three hours in all. Before you put in the herbs, season the broth with Salt, a little Pepper and Cloves, strain out the broth and drink it.
But for Potage, put at first a good piece of fleshy young Beef with the rest of the meat. And put not in your herbs till half an hour before you take off the Pot. When you use not herbs, but Carrots and Turneps, put in a little Peny-royal and a sprig of Thyme. Vary in the season with Green-pease, or Cucumber quartered longwise, or Green sower Verjuyce Grapes; always well-seasoned with Pepper and Salt and Cloves. You pour some of the broth upon the sliced-bread by little and little, stewing it, before you put the Herbs upon the Potage.
The best way of ordering your bread in Potages, is thus. Take light spungy fine white French-bread, cut only the crusts into tosts. Tost them exceeding dry before the fire, so that they be yellow. Then put them hot into a hot dish, and pour upon them some very good strong broth, boiling hot. Cover this, and let them stew together gently, not boil; and feed it with fresh-broth, still as it needeth; This will make the bread swell much, and become like gelly.
Source: The Closet Of Sir Kenelm Digby Knight Opened, K. Digby
Filed under Remedy | Tags: barley, beef, borage, bread, broth, bugloss, carrots, chicken, cloves, convalescence, convalescent, cucumber, digby, grapes, green peas, jelly, lettuce, mutton, pease, pennyroyal, pepper, pipkin, potage, pullet, purslane, salt, sick, sorrel, thume, turnips, veal | Comment (0)Acute Illness
The simplest and quickest method of recovering from attacks of acute illness, fevers, inflammatory diseases, etc., is to rest quietly in bed in a warm but well-ventilated room, and to take three meals a day of fresh ripe fruit, grapes by preference. If the grapes are grown out of doors and ripened in the sun so much the better. I have found from two to three pounds of grapes per day sufficient. If there is thirst, barley water flavoured with lemon juice should be taken between the meals.
Source: Food Remedies: Facts About Foods And Their Medicinal Uses, Florence Daniel