VESSELS REPORTED AT THE DOCK.OFFICE, LIVERPOOL
... ns our Kings oil deign to feed. Unknown to Frenchmen's palate ! Tben how much doib thy taste exceed Suupmengre^ frogs, and salad I ...
... ns our Kings oil deign to feed. Unknown to Frenchmen's palate ! Tben how much doib thy taste exceed Suupmengre^ frogs, and salad I ...
... Every tiling might have l.een sown— pcss, beans, iieet-root, parsnip, carrot, potatoe. oni- ons, leeks, lettuce, parsley, salading of all kinds; but it is not too late, and no time is really lost. But the operator should lie on the alert now, dig his ground ...
... things disagreeing, If he l.cpins d — ing I'm off in a fit ! ThJs cooking?— it's messintr ' The spinach wants pressing. And salads in dressing Are best with good egg«. And John— yes, already— Has had soraelliinp heady. That makes him unsteady In keeping ...
... seen them served in six different forms — the bread made from them, the soup thickened with them, fried potatoes, potatoe salad, and potatoe dumplings ; and, lastly, potatoe cheese, which, be- aides being extremely palatable, will keep some years. During ...
... notwithstanding this, the stems are tender, succulent, and admirably suited to tbe purpose of yield ing a grateful acidity to salads, as well as forming a delicious tart, wbich probably, no one but ourselves, bas tried. It is not on account of the fioweis ...
... creamed; 30 dishes ot orange and other tourtes, 40 dishes of Almond pastry, 20 Chantilly baskets, 60 dishes of mince pies, 56 salads. The Removes — 80 roast turkeys, 6 leverets, 80 pheas- ants, 24 geese, 40 dishes of parti i'dge, 15 dishes of wild fowl, 2 ...
... substances, such as meat that has been tried or twice cooked— fish, particularly pickled salmon- ill raw vegetables (cucumbers, salads, &c —unripe fruit and fruit pies—and even boiled pease and pease it old. tat stale-bread— mutton and beef in pre- ference ...
... greatly. It is right to state, that though unripe fruit is bad and injurious, yet ripe fruit is perfectly wholesome. Cucumbers, salads, and all uncooked vegetables, are had, hut well cooked vegetables are excellent food— that is to say, taken in moderation ...
... that at a large dinner party in the neighbourhood of Baltimore, recently, consisting of gentlemen from town and country, a salad dressed with sun-flower oil was eaten, and was pronounced fo he ex- cellently well dressed, nobody suspecting it not to be ...
... nutritious diet, and moderate' mental and corporeal exertion are ihe best preventives. Vegetable food, more espe- cially salads, lettuce, &c. ought to he used sparingly, if at all.— Med. and Surgical Journal. A Scotchman in America. — A wee. ! it's just ...
... of which, it is said, will equal that of steam, without the expense, and without the danger. Electrical Experiments. — A salad consisting of mustard and cress may be produced in a few minutes by an electrical experiment. Tbe process Is to Immerse the ...