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RECIPES-TRIED AND APPROVED

... RECIPES-TRIED AND APPROVED. Blackberry Jelly.—Put the blackberries in the oven, and allow them to bake some hours, till the juice is extracted ; strain through coarse muslin ; add half a pound loaf sugar to every pound of fruit, and also the juice of ...

Published: Wednesday 11 July 1888
Newspaper: Colonies and India
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 175 | Page: 54 | Tags: none

41120 P, 4312 32V WO gee*

... would seem to date back to a hoar antiquity, for amongst the relics of the lake-dwellings we find the strawberry, raspberry, blackberry, elderberry, bilberry, and wbortleberry ; and although all these grow wild in the woods, yet, when they are found stored ...

Published: Wednesday 11 July 1888
Newspaper: Colonies and India
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 345 | Page: 53 | Tags: none

...-.rpa.4 Xdr.t.e....

... only a little of it is grated on bread-and-butter. Balm, besides possessing healing qualities, was mixed with hyssop and blackberry leaves to make a tea, said to be as good as any got from China. The leaves of coltsfoot, combined with the leaves of eyewright ...

Published: Saturday 10 September 1892
Newspaper: Colonies and India
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 330 | Page: 28 | Tags: none

THE COLONIES AND INDIA

... stock consisting of equal moieties of 1,160,00C1. of preferred and deferred. You might as well talk of a mushroom or a blackberry mine in England as of an opal one in Queensland. So writes a mineral expert of twenty-five years' experience in the Colony ...

Published: Wednesday 04 June 1890
Newspaper: Colonies and India
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 369 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

THE COLONIES AND INDIA

... pastoral purposes. The sweetbriar, also a garden favourite in some countries, has thriven almost beyond control; and the common blackberry has become a nuisance in some places, and most difficult to eradicate. Numbers and numbers of species of beautiful trees ...

Published: Saturday 27 June 1896
Newspaper: Colonies and India
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 430 | Page: 24 | Tags: none

HOW TO PREPARE THEE FOR PRESERVATION

... clear amber shines through the dainty larch and chestnut leaves. Then there are the dull chocolate and mottled red of the blackberry vines, while the poplar and the aspen shine cut with a silvery white, all speckled over with touches of green. Gather these ...

Published: Saturday 06 February 1892
Newspaper: Colonies and India
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 492 | Page: 33 | Tags: none

Priors]) NY Ram Lcrcx

... CRUZ. BOLD Amaxtcas Fox (who had been left behind): I:-g- .go away, Pretty Foxey ; I only c-c-eante to loo k for 13-)-b-blackberries, jun know. Plionsnmr Nor. Is there a martyr who can pair, In hist'ry's painful annals. With him whose wife still makes ...

CORE

... tune Lift onions, and pixie on a dry border or gravel walk. Keep down weeds, whio:i now roe spare. elsii l not.; scorns. blackberries, and elderberries are rind,' tintharing. Cider awl Terry are nor made. The temperature of the y.-ar takes a tern. Last ...

IMMEROP 81471,NWAT ;TQ THE COLONIES AND INDIA JULY 11, 188$

... The blackberry, which is the fruit of the bramble, comes into the market at a season when fruit is scarce, otherwise it would hardly hold a high place in public favour ; but, mixed with apple, it makes excellent puddings and pies, and blackberry jam and ...

Published: Wednesday 11 July 1888
Newspaper: Colonies and India
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1228 | Page: 54 | Tags: none

THE COLONIES AND INDIA

... not, however, there is a redeeming feature, for no outlay at all is necessary for a given part of the year, as when the blackberries and hedge. nuts are ripe one can get all one's nourishment direct from nature free in many of our country lanes and woodlands ...

Published: Saturday 04 April 1891
Newspaper: Colonies and India
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 590 | Page: 30 | Tags: none

ittEXBOTIOUGH & SWINTON TIMES

... They are great request, and dating my stay my appetite has been frequently appeased with blackberry pies, blackberry tuts, blackberry puddings, and ' blackberry sakes, in the making of which the Norfolk matrons ere certainly moat proficient. But I am ...

LAItORST CIRCULATION 1 Tilt. DISTIUCT. TI !luboßl' tuiittait ,imcs RIIi)AY, OCT. 9. 11191. NArtes.u. Tat/moot ..

... day their rich hues lss•oune mars pronouns d, until in time they will glow like tongues of golden flame. The fruit of the blackberry both clothes and beautifies the hedges, and the ripe Lips and haws shine out front the green, brown, and stater leaves of ...