cookbooks

Raspberry Vinegar No 2 Recipe

Take two pounds of sugar; dissolve it in a pint of water; then clarify,

and let it boil till it is a thick syrup. Take the same quantity of

raspberries, or currants, but not too ripe, and pour over them a quarter

of a pint of vinegar, in which they must steep for twenty-four hours.

Pour the fruit and vinegar into the syrup, taking care not to bruise the

fruit; then give it one boil, strain it, and cork it up close in

bottles. The fruit must be carefully picked and cleaned, observing not

to use any that is in the least decayed. To the syrup of currants a few

raspberries may be added, to heighten the flavour. An earthen pipkin is

the best to boil in.

Vote

1
2
3
4
5

Viewed 1433 times.


Other Recipes from Pickles.

Butter Scotch. Mrs. Edward E. Powers.
For Six Hundred Pickles. Mrs. M. E. Wright.
Cucumber Pickles. Mrs. H. T. Van Fleet.
Chow-chow. Mrs. Alice Kraner.
Chow-chow. Mrs. C. C. Stoltz.
Pickled Onions. Mrs. Dr. Fisher.
Pickled Peaches. Mrs. Dr. Fisher.
Mango Pickles. Mrs. W. H. Eckhart.
Mixed Pickles. Maud Stoltz.
Tomato Chow-chow. Mrs. A. H. Kling.
Spanish Pickle. Mrs. W. H. Eckhart.
Celery, Or French Pickle. Mrs. F. E. Blake.
Green Tomato Pickle. Mrs. F. R. Saiter.
Cucumber Pickles. Kittie M. Smith.
Chopped Pickle. Mrs. S. A. Powers.
Currant Catsup. Mrs. E.
Flint Pickles. Mrs. Laura Martin Everett.
Tomato Catsup. Mrs. G. Livingston.
Tomato Catsup. Mrs. Alice Kraner.
Cold Catsup. Mrs. F. E. Blake.
Common Catsup. Mrs. F. E. Blake.
Gooseberry Catsup. Evelyn Gailey.
Spiced Grapes. Mrs. G. A. Livingston.
Pickled Pears. Mrs. F. E. Blake.
Rosa's Sweet Pickle.