The frugal housewife; or, experienced cook : wherein the art of dressing all sorts of viands with cleanliness, decency, and elegance is explained in five hundred approved receipts ... / originally written by Susanna Carter, but now improved by an experienced cook in one of the principal taverns in the city of London.

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Tripe, Bacon, Tongues, Beef, Leg of Mutton. To souse Tripe. When your tripe is boiled, put it into salt and water; change the salt and water every day till you use it; dip it in batter, and fry it as the pig’s feet and ears, or boil it in fresh salt and water, with an onion sliced, a few- sprigs of parsley, and send melted butter for sauce. To salt Bacon. When your pig is cut down, cut off the hams and head ; if it be a large one cut out the chine, but leave the spare-ribs, it keeps the bacon from rusting, and the gravy in ; salt it with common salt, and a little saltpetre (but neither bay salt nor sugar); let it lie ten days on a table, that will let all the brine run from it, then salt it again ten or twelve days, turning it every day after the second salting ; then scrape it very clean, rub a little dry salt on it, and hang it up. N. B. Take care to scrape the white froth off very- clean that is on it, which is caused by the salt working out of your pork, and rub on a little dry salt, it keeps the bacon from rusting: the dry salt will candy, and shine like diamonds on your bacon. To salt Tongues. Scrape your tongues, and dry them clean with a cloth, and salt them well with common salt, and half an ounce of saltpetre to every tongue; lay them in a deep pot, and turn them every day for a week or ten days; salt them again, and let them lie a week longer ; take them up, dry them w ith a cloth, flour them, and hang them up. To pickle Beef. Take sixteen quarts of cold water, and put to it as much salt as will make it bear an egg ; then add two pounds of bay-salt, half a pound of salt- petre pounded small, and three pounds of brown sugar; mix all together, then put your beef into it, and keep it in a dry and cool place. To salt a Leg of Mutton. Pound one ounce of bay- salt and half an ounce of saltpetre, and rub it all over your leg of mutton, and let it lie all night; the next day salt it well with common salt, and let it lie a week or ten days, then hang it up to dry.