THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FOODS AND BEVERAGES ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FOODS AND BEVERAGES Libraries and educational institutions have given this work so cordial a reception, taking its contents as their guide instead of its primary title, that I have bound a few hundred copies with the originally subordinate name of The Encyclopedia of Foods and Beverages glorified to a main title on its covers. I feel that this new title is appropriate, for it describes more than nine-tenths of the contents THE GROCER'S ENCYCLOPEDIA A COMPENDIUM OF USEFUL INFORMATION CONCERNING FOODS OF ALL KINDS. HOW THEY ARE RAISED, PREPARED AND MARKETED. HOW TO CARE FOR THEM IN THE STORE AND HOME. HOW BEST TO USE AND ENJOY THEM-AND OTHER VALUABLE INFORMATION FOR GROCERS AND GENERAL STOREKEEPERS COMPILED BY ARTEMAS WARD FORMERLY EDITOR OF "THE NATIONAL GROCER" PRICE, TEN DOLLARS 30 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK Copyright by Artemas Ward. 1911 Entered, Stationers' Hall, 1911 TO THE GROCERS AND GENERAL STOREKEEPERS OF THE UNITED STATES THIS VOLUME IS DEDICATED, BY ONE WHO HAS STUDIED THEIR BEST INTERESTS FOR MANY YEARS, IN THE HOPE THAT THEY MAY FIND IT AN AID TO BETTER DEALING, WIDER KNOWLEDGE, GREATER SALES AND LARGER PROFITS. PREFACE "If you can fill the unforgiving minute With sixty seconds' worth of distance run." --Kipling. This book is the product of many such minutes stolen out of the hours of a very busy life, at irregular intervals, during a period of about thirty years. In 1882, realizing that the Grocers and General Storekeepers of the United States greatly needed a book giving information on many points relating to their business, I attempted to supply that want, and issued The Grocer's Handbook. Time and money, as well as personal experience and proper co-operation on the part of others, were denied me, and it is with a feeling of shame that I refer to that crude but well intended effort. Perhaps the present volume is its best apology. I have never abandoned the hope of issuing a better book--have steadily collected scraps of information--noted points of value--laid plans and considered costs. In the past two years application for information has been made to producers and manufacturers in all parts of the world. So carefully detailed were the communications that return postage was provided in stamps of the countries of the recipients, even those of China and Japan, yet in numerous cases several letters had to be written before any attention was secured, and, too frequently, the replies were indifferent--perhaps it was found difficult of belief that anyone intended to publish a creditable book for Grocers! Probably the indifferent ones would now gladly give pictures, details and other information, but I was obliged to fulfill my purpose without their aid--to obtain, by personal search and often in odd ways, photographs and other illustrations, some of them rare and difficult of access, and to develop many of the most interesting features from crude commercial reports. My thanks, and those of the readers of this book are, on the other hand, due to the many leading houses of the world who kindly aided in making it what it is. Personally, I must acknowledge the industry and accuracy of Mr. Charles Martyn, formerly Editor of The Caterer, without whose efficient aid the work would have been too heavy for me. In so wide an undertaking errors and omissions will no doubt be discovered--I shall try to correct them in future editions. In several instances, prominent houses sent in absolutely contradictory statements on important subjects, while high authorities disagreed with the Department of Agriculture. In one case, a great company, unquestionably the greatest of its kind in the world, ridiculed our submitted text--and a month later its own chief chemist endorsed it as complete and accurate. The color plates, by The American Colortype Company, tell their own story of modern color printing and a well executed order. * * * * * * * * * * * * My connection with the Grocery Trade has continued unbroken during the thirty years in which this Encyclopedia has been taking form--for twenty years in editing The National Grocer (absorbed by the American Grocer in 1894)--from 1884 to 1909 as General Manager for Sapolio, and still glad to aid all its interests--and now, in presenting the completed work, I find pleasure in the thought that I am still serving my friends in the Trade. ARTEMAS WARD INTRODUCTION This Encyclopedia attempts to give some information on every article of food and drink, and also touches on many other interesting items handled by General Storekeepers. The first aim is so extensive as to approach the impossible--and to describe all the varied goods of a general stock would be impracticable--but its pages treat on more than twelve hundred subjects. The first item in the text, Abalone, tells of a shellfish of the Pacific Coast now growing in favor--the last line lists Zwetschenwasser, a German liqueur. Gunpowder, Nails, Rope, Shot and other articles are given space, and a few points of legal or commercial import are briefly considered--as, Trade-marks, Partnerships, Good-will, Power of Attorney, and, at greater length, Window Dressing, and the origin of the trade, under Grocer. The number of new fruits which during the last few years have found their way into our markets; the large, and constantly increasing, variety of other foods and food delicacies, both domestic and imported, now offered for popular consumption, and the noteworthy growth of public interest in, and knowledge of, food values, make it essential that the modern grocer keep himself thoroughly informed and up-to-date. It is this service which the Encyclopedia is designed to render. Where reference is made to seasons, the character of the general demand, etc., it must be borne in mind that the book is published in the northeastern part of the United States and that therefore it may not in such particulars accurately report conditions on the Pacific Coast, the Gulf of Mexico or abroad. The Grocer who does not think better of his calling in life as he glances over this book, is not worthy of it. Forest and Ocean, Land and Sea, the Animal and the Vegetable Kingdoms--the earth and its fullness--are all tributary to his trade. Vinegar may be a trifle, but he shall see train-loads of tank-cars carrying it to factories. Under Wines he will find twenty pages of helpful information, including a catalog of types and varieties embracing nine hundred and sixty-eight items and more complete than any hitherto published. There are eighty full-page plates in color, and four hundred and forty-nine illustrations in all. Twelve pages on Cheese contain descriptions of forty-eight varieties. Twenty on Coffee include a color-page showing twelve varieties of leading beans, so natural that they might be mistaken for real samples. Seven on Oysters are illustrated by a color-page and three full-page, and several smaller, half-tone plates. One shows the oyster in its various sizes, from the "seed" to a seven-year-old "giant," while others furnish views of planting and gathering in the United States and France. Mineral Waters gives thirty-nine different Springs, their locations and their specific qualities. Tea, richly illustrated, fills sixteen and a half pages, and Rice is shown in cultivation and gathering in many lands. If the dealer wishes to add fresh meats to his business he will find assistance in the large space accorded to Beef, Mutton, Veal and Pork, showing by colored plates and plain diagrams all the principal cuts. And his troubles are met in several directions, from Awmings to the Ants and Cockroaches which annoy him. Many extraordinary subjects are touched upon. Kangaroo Tails, as a new meat supply, is immediately followed by Kanten, a Japanese isinglass, and Kosher treats of Jewish food restrictions important to those who have Hebrew customers. Bacteria, Microbes, and Yeast tell in plain terms the latest facts of modern scientific discovery in relation to foods, their flavor, digestion, development and decay, while Food Values devotes six and a half pages to that important topic. Mushrooms, six pages and illustrations of fourteen varieties, is covered thoroughly. Every dealer should be interested in the liberal articles on Labels, Markets, Restaurants and Guilds --in the fund of information given under the heads of Cigars, Chewing Gum and Sponges --and should be glad to learn more about Cold Storage, Adulteration, Cookery, Preservation and such subjects as Fermentation and Distillation, and how to defend himself against Mold and Maggots. The APPENDIX, of thirty-nine pages, contains a list of five hundred and ninteen words used to describe foods, drinks, etc., with their equivalents in French, German, Italian and Swedish, which should prove valuable to dealers born in those countries--who, even when well aquainted with English, find many a puzzling question put to them over the counter--and should greatly aid dealers born in English-speaking lands whose trade lies with foreign-born customers. This dictionary is carefully repeated in each language, as "French-English," "German-English," "Italian--English" and "Swedish-English." As the majority do not use more than four hundred words from the cradle to the grave, these vocabularies of over five hundred words in one line of business must be very complete. The Appendix contains, next, a list of two hundred and fifty-five of the most common Culinary Terms, which explains how the well known staples sold by the Grocer at such low prices masquerade under French names to justify an enormous advance in price when they appear on Menus or Bills of Fare. Valuable tables of Weights and Measures are also included. INDEX TO COLOR PAGES Opposite Page ALLIGATOR PEARS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 16 APPLES. Plate I - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 22 Plate II - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 26 APRICOTS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 30 ASPARAGUS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 34 BANANAS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 44 BEEF CUTS. Plate I - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 50 Plate II - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 54 Plate III - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 58 Plate IV - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 62 BERRIES. Blackberries, Currants, Huckleberries, Blueberries, Dewberry, Raspberries, Cranberries, Gooseberries, Strawberries - - - 66 BREAD. Plate I --Cottage, Domestic, Graham, French - - - - - - - - 76 Plate II --Pumpernickel, Rye, Twist, Vienna, New England - - - - 80 BRUSSELS SPROUTS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 90 CELERY - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 100 CHEESE. Plate I --Pineapple, Neufchatel, Limburger, Emmenthaler ("Swiss") - - - Frontispiece Plate II --Camembert, Cheddar, Cream, Edam - - - - - - - - - - - 118 CHERRIES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 124 CLAMS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 138 COCOANUT - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 154 COFFEE. Plate I --Branch - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 161 Plate II --Beans - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 168 CORN. Plate I --Red - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 186 Plate II --Sweet - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 192 CUCUMBERS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 202 DATES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 208 DUCKS (Wild). Canvasback, Mallard, Ruddy - - - - - - - - - - - - - 218 EGGPLANT - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 224 FIG TREE - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 230 FISH. Plate I --Sea Bass, Striped Bass, Flounder, Kingfish, Whiting - - - 240 Plate II --Cod, Haddock, Hake, Halibut, Pollack - - - - - - - - 250 Plate III ---Bluefish, Butterfish, Mackerel (Common), Pompano, Smelt, Spanish Mackerel - - - 504 Plate IV --Salmon, Shad, Brook Trout, Weakfish - - - - - - - - - 540 GAME BIRDS. Ruffed Grouse, Prairie Chicken, Quail, Woodcock - - - 260 GRAINS. Plate I --Barley, Buckwheat, Rice - - - - - - - - - - - - - 526 Plate II --Oats, Rye, Wheat - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 676 Opposite Page GRAPES. Plate I --Catawba, Concord - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 270 Plate II --Delaware, Niagara - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 274 GRAPE FRUIT - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 282 HONEY - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 302 KUMQUATS AND LOQUATS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 320 LAMB CUTS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 326 LEMONS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 332 LICORICE - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 338 LIQUEURS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 342 MACARONI - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 350 MANGO - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 358 MAPLE SUGAR - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 368 MUSHROOMS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 398 MUSKMELON - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 378 MUTTON CUTS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 404 NUTS. Plate I --Brazil Nut, Butternut, Walnut, Black Walnut - - - - 410 Plate II--Almond, Chestnut, Filbert, Hickory Nuts, Litchi Nut, Paradise, Pecan, Pignolia (Pine), Pistachio - - - 414 OLIVES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 422 ORANGES. Plate I --Branch - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 429 Plate II --Florida, Navel, King, Tangerine - - - - - - - - - - - 430 OYSTERS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 436 OYSTER PLANT - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 446 PEACHES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 454 PEANUTS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 458 PEARS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 462 PEPPER AND CAPSICUMS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 468 PERSIMMONS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 474 PINEAPPLE - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 482 PLUMS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 488 POMEGRANATE - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 492 SAUSAGES. Bologna, Cervelat, Frankfurters, Head Cheese, Mortadelli, Salami - - - 556 SHELLFISH. Lobster, Crab, Crayfish, Prawns, Shrimps - - - - - - - 346 SMOKED MEATS. Bacon, Hams, Boned Shoulder - - - - - - - - - - - - 292 SPICES. Cinnamon, Cloves, Ginger, Mace, Nutmeg - - - - - - - - - - 580 ST. JOHN'S BREAD - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 592 SUGAR CANE - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 598 TEA - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 616 TOBACCO - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 634 TOMATO - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 640 TROPICAL FRUITS. Cashew, Guava, Mangosteen, Star-Apple, Sweet Sop - - - 586 TURTLES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 654 VANILLA - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 658 VEAL CUTS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 662 WATERMELON - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 388 (2) Neufchatel (3) Limburger (1) Pineapple (4) Emmenthaler ("Swiss") CHEESE A color illustration of four different types of cheese, each labeled with a number. THE GROCER'S ENCYCLOPEDIA FOR GROCERS AND GENERAL STOREKEEPERS This Encyclopedia covers all articles ordinarily handled by Fancy and General Grocers, and, in addition, a wide range of information on other subjects more or less closely allied to their trade, or to that of the General Storekeeper. The text has been made as concise as possible, while retaining the most interesting points on the cultivation, manufacturing, marketing, etc., of the principal staples. As it is designed chiefly for trade and public reference, purely technical terms--chemical, botanical, etc.--have been avoided, except where they are needed to evade the confusion which would result from the employment of contradictory popular titles or terms. The APPENDIX, commencing on page 710, contains a dictionary of all common food names, in five languages, an explanatory list of the principal French Culinary and Bill-of-Fare words and phrases in general use, and Tables of Weights and Measures. ABALONE: an immense uni-valve shellfish common on the Pacific Coast. It somewhat resembles the eastern scallop but has only one shell. Its flesh, which corresponds in general character to that of the oyster, was formerly eaten only by Chinese and Japanese fishermen, but white residents of the Coast States are beginning to appreciate and relish it. It is sold fresh, dried and canned; in the two latter cases cut into pieces of suitable size. The pearly shell is beautiful when polished and is much used in the manufacture of souvenirs, ornaments, etc. In Japan, the abalone product is an important item in the fisheries industry. Abalone Shells An illustration of two oblong shellfish. ABATTIOR (from the French Abattre, "to knock down"): a public slaughter-house. The most notable American abattoirs are those in Chicago, Kansas City, So. Omaha and New York. In the larger establishments, cattle are killed, skinned, cut up and hung in the cooling room in thirty-nine minutes--each carcass being in that short time handled by twenty men. Hogs are killed at the rate of 550 an hour, each being handled by twenty-five men in thirty-two minutes. Sheep are killed at the rate of 620 an hour, the slaughtering and dressing occupying about thirty-four minutes. Drying Abalone Meat, California Several men bend over large boxes full of shellfish, which are laid out on a shore with some low mountains in the background. The wholesale Slaughtering and Meat Packing industries of the country Stock-yards, Kansas City, Mo. An illustration of a large stockyard surrounded by fences and buildings. Several men on horses are riding around the periphery of the stockyard. employ a capital of more than $250,000,000 and about 75,000 persons. The value of the output is in the neighborhood of a billion dollars, of which approximately 85% is in the form of edible products--fresh, cured and canned meats, lard, etc.--and 15% in various industrial items. ABSINTHE: a liquor extensively drunk on the Continent, especially in France and Switzerland, and now largely exported to the United States. That of good quality consists of about 50% alcohol, distilled with absinthium or wormwood and other herbs, such as balm, fennel, anise and hyssop, or their essential oils. To prepare it for drinking, the liquor is mixed with water, added drop by drop and permitted to fall from some height. Absinthe drunkenness, or even continuous tippling, produces utter derangement of the digestive system, ending in paralysis. The herb Absinthium is employed medicinally for its tonic properties. ACARUS, or Mite: a species of insects including many varieties, among which the Cheese Mite, the Flour Mite and the Sugar Mite are common to the trade. The Cheese Mite is one of the most minute of these pests (see article on CHEESE). The Flour Mite is covered with long hairs, and is capable of a good deal of motion. The Sugar Mite is found in great quantities in all "raw" or soft sugars, but refined sugar is free from it. Brokers handling samples of raw sugar are often troubled by acari, as they bury themselves under the skin and cause an irritation similar to the itch. The surface of jelly and preserves that have been kept overlong is frequently covered with mites, and there is also a variety which lives on vegetables and makes itself especially obnoxious in the Spring. Absinthium An illustration of a tall flowering plant with compound leaves. ACCOUNTS. Family accounts are generally kept by grocers in pass-books. Care taken before accounts are opened, and while they are running, will often aid materially in their settlement. In factory districts, it is not unusual to obtain written agreements that they shall be settled regularly on pay-days. Persons desiring to open accounts are sometimes willing to give security to a small amount, or to name references. The latter offer should always be accepted, as many who would otherwise not mind defrauding the grocer will pay rather than have the case reported to those whom they gave as references. To add each account up every month or oftener and present a bill, is very important. To write plainly in the pass-book avoids misunderstandings. A duplicate should invariably be kept in the store. Union Stock-yards, Chicago An illustration of a stockyard divided into four different pens, three of which are filled with cattle. In suit for an account, the grocer should be prepared to furnish a fully itemized bill. If a short note can first be obtained it makes the suit simpler even if it is not paid, as it generally precludes all question as to the items of the bill. ACETIC ACID: which is sometimes employed by confectioners in sugar boiling, to stiffen cake icing, etc., and, in dilute form, is the principal characteristic of vinegar, is, commercially, a pungent, colorless liquid, obtained chiefly either by dry distillation of wood or by the oxidation of alcohol by means of ferments. Pyroligneous Acid, the crude product obtained by wood distillation, is the preservative principle developed in the smoking of hams, etc. ACETIC ETHER: is obtained by treatment of acetic and sulphuric acids and alcohol. It is extensively employed in the manufacture of many imitation fruit extracts, particularly cherry, currant, peach, pear, raspberry and strawberry. ACIDULATED: rendered acid or sour. "Acidulated drops" are an old-fashioned candy similar to the modern lemon and lime drops. ACORN: the seed of the oak. Acorns are important now only as an occasional food for cattle, but in the early days they served as one of the principal articles of human diet in temperate zones, and even in modern times, during periods of scarcity, they have been found an acceptable food by European peasants. They are said to be occasionally poisonous during the autumn months. ADULTERATION. The grocer is never an advocate of adulteration. Some manufacturers adulterate for the sake of profit, but even then they are generally driven to it unwillingly by the demand for cheap goods. A fair price is necessary to secure pure goods. Union Stock-yards, Chicago An illustration of a complex of buildings surrounding a large stockyard. The cry of adulteration goes to great extremes; the desire to appear critical and to be considered a good judge gives rise to much of it, and no sensible dealer will encourage it. Indeed, an honest and intelligent investigation nearly always proves that at least half the accusations are unfounded. It should also be remembered that there are many food items which are not desirable when absolutely pure--mustard is "adulterated" by nearly every large manufacturer by the addition of flour, because it is too pungent in its natural state; such "adulteration" is not only harmless but may be defended as perfectly proper and justifiable. Again, many of the statements with regard to adulteration are rendered alarming by the misuse of chemical terms. To tell the average consumer that a table syrup is made of "glucose" is to state a mystery; to say that it is made of "starch treated with hydrochloric or muriatic acid" would cause alarm--yet the final result is a thoroughly wholesome product whose principal constituents are "sugars" identical with, or closely allied to, those into which the sucrose of flowers is converted by bees in the manufacture of honey, and all starchy food is converted by the human stomach in the ordinary process of digestion. If, as modern medicine asserts, a state of dread affords a direct opening to disease, the alarmists are as dangerous as the adulterists, and it would seem better to live in ignorance than to be frightened out of the world by too critical inquiries as to what we eat or drink. Much adulteration exists which is deleterious to health, but, unfortunately, it is generally where it is least expected and rarely detected. Laws of the most stringent character are enforced in Great Britain, and fall very oppressively on retail grocers, many of whom purchase goods the purity of which they are unable to determine. AERATED BREAD: is that leavened by the addition of carbon-dioxide. See general article on BREAD. AERATED WATER: is, correctly speaking, distilled water to which purified filtered air is added to improve its flavor. The term is, however, frequently applied to Carbonated Waters (which see). AGUARDIENTE: a brandy made in Spain, Portugal and several Spanish-American countries. ALBUMEN: a thick, viscous substance found in both vegetable and animal matter. It is the most valuable component of meat, flour and many other foods (see FOOD VALUES). The best natural example is the white of an egg, which is nearly pure albumen. Chemically pure albumin is almost colorless, odorless and tasteless and is insoluble in pure water. In France, large quantities are prepared at the abattoirs by drying the blood of the cattle killed. It is used to clarify wine, syrups and other liquids, in photography, the textile industries, etc. In cases of poisoning by mineral acids the white of an egg is a valuable antidote. ALCOHOL, Ethyl Alcohol (also called Grain Alcohol, Root Alcohol, Spirits of Wine, etc., according to the source): occurs as the result of fermentation-- i.e., the effect of the growth of yeast cells, either wild or cultivated (see YEAST)--of liquid containing a moderate amount of any one of several forms of "sugar." The sugary element is the result of the conversion of starch, either by natural growth in grapes, sugar beets, etc., or by the action of malt diastase, etc., on the starch of grains (see WHISKY), potatoes, etc. The alcohol is extracted from the fermented liquid by the process of Distillation (which see). Pure alcohol is transparent and colorless, agreeable in odor, of strong and pungent taste and highly volatile and inflammable, burning with a pale blue or smokeless flame. If thoroughly refined, the product is identical--both by chemical analysis and in appearance, flavor, etc.--no matter what the source of the original starch. Brandy and Whisky generally contain about one-half alcohol in volume. "Proof spirit" contains approximately half in weight but somewhat more by volume. In addition to its use in spirituous liquors, alcohol is employed in an almost infinite variety of ways--in the arts, in the electrical world, in the manufacture of artificial silk, leather, etc., by perfumers, chemists, extract makers, anatomists, naturalists, etc. As Denatured Alcohol (see following), its scope has been greatly widened within the last few years. Denatured Alcohol: is merely ordinary alcohol with special ingredients added in order to make it impossible to drink it, the purpose being to cheapen it for industrial and commercial purposes by avoiding the heavy government tax on alcohol which can be consumed in beverages. The additional ingredients make it injurious to health and objectionable in both taste and odor, but do not detract from its commercial efficiency. Furthermore, when once denatured, there is little likelihood of it being improperly used, as it is both expensive and difficult to extract the foreign ingredients. There are two forms of alcohol so treated--one completely denatured and the other specially denatured--the latter for uses for which the former would not be suitable. The most generally approved formula for completely denatured alcohol adds ten gallons of wood (methyl) alcohol and one-half gallon of petroleum benzine to each hundred gallons of ordinary (ethyl) alcohol. Among the many possible additions for specially denatured alcohol are camphor, benzol, castor-oil and soda lye, sulphuric ether, etc. Alcohol for industrial purposes is in Germany made chiefly from potatoes, in France from beets, and in this country from grains, molasses, etc. Its manufacture adds appreciably to the wealth of the nation by turning to account damaged and spoiled grains, vegetables and fruits--all of which can be converted into alcohol thoroughly serviceable for industrial purposes. The commercial uses of alcohol, when obtainable at a low price, are almost innumerable. In the household it serves as a clean, cheap and serviceable substitute for gas or electricity, for both illumination and cooking. Its possibilities promise to be illimitable, for in France a new process has been discovered by which it may be produced by chemical synthesis, and it is predicted that the cost of such production can be reduced to less than ten cents a gallon. ALE. This was apparently the current name in England for all malt liquor before the introduction of hops, about 1524. Later, the word "beer" was similarly employed. The principal difference in the brewing of modern Ale and Lager Beer is found in the process of fermentation. Ale is a "high" or "top" fermentation at about 58° Fahr.; Lager, a "low" or "bottom" fermentation at about 40° Fahr. Each requires a special yeast. The percentage of alcohol varies from four to six per cent in ale against from three to five in lager beer, the difference being due to the greater quantity of malt used in the former. In America, ale is brewed chiefly from malted barley, grain, cerealin (a compound resembling diastase), grape sugar and hops. All varieties may be grouped under two heads: "Present Use" or "Cream" or "Light Draught" ale, intended for immediate consumption, and "Stock Ale," containing more alcohol and extract, intended to be kept for months or years, either bottled or in casks. Light Draught ales are distinctly an American product, the tendency here being toward clear, light types. In the endeavor to attain this result, some brewers have sacrificed much in flavor, but others have been successful in producing a true "Ale" with a lager beer finish. English and Scotch ales enjoy a high reputation. The latter are distinguished by the small quantity of hops employed and their marked vinous flavor. India Pale Ale derives its name from a variety originally brewed for the East Indies market, which was especially heavily hopped to better withstand the hot climate. "Bitter Ale" is similarly made by using a large proportion of hops. "Half & Half" is a mixture of half ale and half porter (see STOUT). "Musty," in New England, signifies a mixture of ale and lager beer. When properly drawn, ale should be perfectly clear, contain sufficient carbon-dioxide (carbonic acid gas) to produce a foam or collar on top and a slight champagne effervescence, and have the aromatic smell of hops. It should never be exposed to the air in an open vessel, because of its tendency to ferment and sour. When brewed by the newest methods, ale does not become turbid at low temperatures, and when bottled and pasteurized can be kept indefinitely without sediment, remaining clear even when packed on ice. Bottled ale should be kept on its side in a cool place--the temperature preferably not below 44° nor above 50° Fahr. ALEBERRY: a beverage made by boiling ale with spice, sugar and bread-sops, the last commonly toasted. A domestic remedy for a cold. ALEWIFE: an American species of herring, taken along the coast from the Gulf of St. Lawrence to Chesapeake Bay. It is largely exported after salting to the West Indies. Alewife An illustration of a small fish with pointed fins. ALKALINE WATERS. See MINERAL WATERS. ALKANET: the dark red root of a deciduous plant, of blackish appearance externally but inside showing a blue-red meat, surrounding a whitish core. It readily gives up its red color on infusion in spirits, oils, etc., but not in water, which derives from it only a dirty brown color. Alkanet is used by perfumers, etc., and it is also employed occasionally to color cheese, to improve the appearance of poor grades of port and similar wines, to give the appearance of age to port wine corks, etc. ALLIGATOR APPLE: a large, smooth, heart-shaped tropical and sub-tropical fruit. The flesh is sweet-scented and agreeable in flavor, but so strongly narcotic that it has never attained general popular use. ALLIGATOR PEAR, or Avocado: a tropical fruit, native to Mexico and northern South America but now widely grown also in the West Indies and in Florida and other Southern States. The tree is a fine spreading evergreen with large leaves of oval shape and bright green color, a free producer under good circumstances. The fruit, big and heavy, weighing ALLIGATOR PEARS A color illustration of a large round speckled vegetable, underneath which a second vegetable--this one pear-shaped, with darker skin--has been cut in half to display a smooth interior and one huge seed shaped like a teardrop. Alligator Pears A leafy tree branch laden with pear-shaped fruit. up to four pounds, consists of a single large rugged seed wrapped in a membranous cover, inside a firm, buttery flesh of bright greenish-yellow color, containing from ten to twenty percent of greenish oil. The outer skin is tough and leathery, varying in color, some being bright green, others yellow, brownish green, dark purple or red, etc. The most common shapes are the oval, pear-shaped and round or bell. The large green fruits are considered the best. Alligator Pears are now obtainable nearly all the year round--the first supplies from Colombo and other parts of South America reach the Eastern markets in January or thereabouts, the Cuban fruits following in April and continuing through the summer to October, those from Jamaica continuing to November and from Trinidad and Granada to January. The Florida supply is heaviest during the months of July and August. Alligator Pears have advanced considerably in favor during recent years. They deserve still greater popularity, as the large percentage of easily digested vegetable oil or fat makes their flesh exceptionally nutritious. The fruit is served in halves or sections, as cantaloupes, to be eaten with salt, and pepper and vinegar if desired, or with a little lime or lemon juice and sugar--or the flesh is cut in slices or cubes, similarly dressed or served with French salad dressing. If the flesh is cut into little grooves with a sharp knife, the dressing will be more easily absorbed. The flesh of the ripe alligator pear is of about the consistence of well-made butter. The fruit is just right when the flesh will yield gently to a slight pressure of the fingers. The skin is then easily peeled off the pulp. ALLSPICE, also called Pimento and Jamaica Pepper: is the dried fruit of a small West Indian tree called the Pimento. It is about the size of a pepper, or small pea, and is gathered when fully grown, but not ripened, and dried in the sun. It is called Allspice from its supposed resemblance in flavor to a mixture of cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves. It is often used in place of cinnamon. Allspice A sprig of a plant with two long leaves and bunches of small buds at the top. ALMERIA GRAPES. See article on GRAPES. ALMONDS: rated commercially among the most valuable nuts, are the kernels of the fruit of a tree, which is said to be a native of the East and of Africa but which long ago became fully naturalized throughout the whole South of Europe and is now grown with equal facility in California. It resembles the peach tree both in size and appearance. The fruit ripens generally in July and August, and the new nut crop is ready for shipment in October. Almonds are divided into "Sweet" and "Bitter," only the former being sold as an edible nut. Sweet Almonds are subdivided into several types, varying considerably in size and shape. In the shell there are three principal grades--Paper Shell, soft Gathering Almonds, California An illustration of a number of men working beneath a row of trees, using long poles to reach up into the tree branches. Shell and Hard Shell--both imported and from California. Of the imported Shelled Almonds, the best known are the Jordan and Valencia, chiefly from Malaga, Spain. Jordan Almonds are long and plump and pointed at one end--the type shown on the Color Page facing page 414. They are highly esteemed both as a dessert item and for confectionery purposes. Valencias are about three-eighths of an inch long, round at one end and obtusely pointed at the other. Bitter Almonds, imported chiefly from Mogadore, Morocco, are used only for their oils, for flavoring, etc. See ALMOND OIL, following. Green Almonds are young sweet almonds. They are often preserved in sugar. Burnt Almonds are roasted sweet almonds. They are done up with sugar when destined for use as confectionery, being then known also as "Pralines" and "Sugar Almonds." Roasted plain, they are employed for coloring and flavoring liquors. Blanched Almonds are sweet almonds with the skins removed. Almonds are also sold Ground (dried and crushed), Salted, etc. ALMOND EXTRACT: is a solution of Oil of Bitter Almonds, about 1%, in alcohol of fair strength. ALMOND OIL: is obtained by expression from the ground kernels or seeds of the sweet or bitter almond, apricot or peach. It is largely employed in perfumery. The best qualities are light yellow or white in color, almost entirely free from odor and possessing only a mild, nutty flavor. Oil of Bitter Almonds is an entirely different product, which is not obtainable by the cold, or only slightly warm, expression employed for Almond Oil--it is a volatile oil extracted by distillation from the crushed kernels of bitter almonds, apricots or peaches, after the expression of Almond Oil. In concentrated form, Oil of Bitter Almonds is poisonous because of the large quantity of hydrocyanic or prussic acid it contains, but in diluted form, as in Almond Extract, it is a popular flavoring in confectionery, cooking, etc. ALMOND MEAL, ALMOND PASTE: are made from ground sweet almonds, after the extraction of Almond Oil. They are much used in pastry and confectionery--in the manufacture of almond macaroons and other sweet pastries, in fancy cake and pie filling, etc. ALMOND MILK: is an emulsion of almond oil and water. It has an opaque, milky appearance. ALMOND SYRUP: if of high quality, is an emulsion of sweet and bitter almonds in barley syrup (then generally known as Orgeat Syrup ), or in a syrup of Orange Flower Water and sugar. Ten parts of sweet almonds are generally employed to three parts of bitter almonds. ALUM: a salt composed of the combined sulphates of Potassium and Aluminum. It crystallizes in cubes and eight-sided forms, and has a sweetish astringent taste. It is sometimes employed by bakers to whiten their bread. That used in Baking Powders is Burnt Alum--a white spongy substance produced by heating alum until it melts and then driving off all the moisture by additional roasting. Its employment in baking powders has been much abused by parties interested in other preparations, but if completely neutralized it is harmless. The taste test is a poor one, as no raw baking powder has a pleasant flavor, and an overdose of cream of tartar would be about as bad as one of burnt alum! AMERICAN WINES. American wine makers have duplicated nearly all the European Wines in popular demand. In some the results are disappointing to the connoisseur because probably of differences in climate and soil, as well as in handling, but in others a high measure of success has been attained--especially in Red wines of the Claret (or Bordeaux), Burgundy and Italian types; White wines, such as "Champagnes" and Rhine and Moselle types; Sauternes, and the stronger wines, such as Port, Sherry, Madeira, Malaga, etc. There are also several American wines which have won distinction under entirely new names, noteworthy among them being Angelica, Catawba, Concord, Delaware, Scuppernong and Zinfandel. Still wines are produced in both the East and in California, and to a limited extent in the South; "Champagnes" principally in the East, especially in western New York, and the Central States. In the East the grapes chiefly grown for sparkling wines are the Catawba and Delaware (see article on GRAPES), Elviras and Dutchess (white grapes), and the Isabella and Eumalans (black grapes). The wines from several or all of these six, and other, varieties are blended in the making of the best domestic "Champagnes." The Concord (also described and illustrated in the article on GRAPES) is used for both red and white still wines and the Clinton and Ives for heavy red wines. The most famous of Southern wine grapes are the Scuppernong (which see), Norton and Ives, the last two especially noteworthy as the source of fine clarets. The largest wine product is that of California, the average output exceeding 40,000,000 gallons a year, about 25,000,000 gallons of which is "dry" wine. The greater part of the dry-wine district is in the neighborhood of the Bay of San Francisco, the modification of the temperature there by the sea fogs resulting in grapes ripening at the particular sugar and acidity points which are the most suitable for its fermentation. The sweet wines are produced very largely in the hot interior valleys, where the grapes ripen at a comparatively high sugar and low acid point. The industry is conducted on a very large scale, especially in the sweet wine districts--there are many wineries which crush more than 10,000 tons of grapes every season. AMMONIA: is a gas consisting of Nitrogen and Hydrogen, marked by a strong pungent smell and possessing alkaline properties. Its common form, Spirits of Ammonia or Hartshorn, is water saturated with the gas. The many household uses of Ammonia are familiar to all. It is also about the best thing to apply to the bites or stings of insects and is said to be an excellent fire extinguisher. It is sometimes used in baking powders, but being extremely volatile it soon loses its strength. ANCHOVY: a small fish of fine and peculiar flavor, a member of the herring tribe, and closely resembling the English Sprat. It is found in several parts of Europe, but is most abundant in the Mediterranean, especially in the vicinity of the Island of Gorgona, near Leghorn, where also the catch is generally conceded to be of the finest quality. An illustration of a small fish. Anchovies are prepared for exportation by removing the heads, intestines and pectoral fins and packing in rock salt in small kegs; to be later bottled, whole or filleted, in oil or salt, etc., or otherwise repacked for retailing. Dutch anchovies are cleaned of their scales, the French and Italian are not. The small fish are valued more highly than the larger. Anchovies are also extensively potted and made into a butter or paste and a sauce or essence. The ancient Greeks and Romans prepared the sauce or relish known as "Garum" from them. ANCHOVY ESSENCE: a pink-colored, thick, oily sauce, consisting of pounded anchovies, spices, etc., used as a flavoring for soups, sauces, etc. ANCHOVY PEAR: a brown russet fruit borne by a very ornamental tropical tree, thirty to fifty feet in height, with large flowers and leaves averaging three feet in length. It tastes somewhat like a mango and is used in the same way. ANGEL FISH, sometimes, but incorrectly, called a "Porgy" : a dark-grey southern fish, resembling a Butterfish, but with long side-fins, weighing generally from three to ten pounds, but sometimes caught very much larger. It is in season during July and August. The flesh resembles in taste that of the Sheepshead. ANGELICA: an aromatic plant, native to the Alps, which grows wild in Europe, as far North as Iceland and Lapland. The natives of the latter country use the fleshy roots as food and the stalks as medicine. Commercially, the young and tender leaf stalks and midribs are candied for sale as confectionery, and the roots and seeds are employed to flavor gin. Angelica An illustration of a small flowering plant with fernlike leaves, shown from the blossoms to the roots. ANGELICA Wine: "white" sweet aromatic domestic wine, resembling Tokay in style. Some varieties consist of the unfermented grape juice fortified with brandy or clear spirit immediately after pressing; others are partly fermented before fortifying. ANGOSTURA, or Angustura: an aromatic bitters which takes its name from the town of Angostura, Venezuela, the original place of manufacture. It is used as a digestive tonic and for flavoring beverages, etc. It is now made in Trinidad, British West Indies. ANILINE DYES: a general name for coal-tar dyes, which are chiefly made from aniline, obtained from nitro-benzene. See DYES. (1) Spitzenberg (2) Green Sweet (3) Golden Russet (4) Greening (5) Baldwin (6) Northern Spy (7) Swaar APPLES A color illustration of seven different apple varieties, each labeled with a number. ANISE SEED, Aniseed: the minute seeds of an annual plant, cultivated chiefly in Spain, Egypt, Syria and other Mediterranean countries, but also to a large extent in Germany, principally in the vicinity of Erfurt. It is used as a condiment, in the manufacture of liqueurs, candy, etc. Chinese Common ANISE Two illustrations of different plants; one shows only the star-shaped fruit of a plant, labeled "Chinese." The second, labeled "Common," shows a flowering plant with tall, thin stems and delicate compound leaves. Star or Chinese Anise, imported mainly from China, is in flavor similar to Common Anise, but is very different in appearance, being star shaped and frequently of a total diameter of about an inch. ANISETTE, Crème d'Anise: a liqueur with aniseed flavor. See general article on LIQUEURS. ANNATTO, or Annato, Arnotto, Arnatto: a red color extracted from the reddish pulp which surrounds the seeds of the Arnatto tree, found principally in South America and the West Indies. It is exported chiefly in cakes of two or more pounds weight, generally wrapped in leaves. Externally it usually presents a brown appearance. Arnatto A sprig of a plant with broad leaves and a bunch of flowers with round petals at the top. Annatto is frequently used in coloring butter and cheese--giving the former the rich yellow hue required by the consumer without affecting its quality. ANTELOPES: the general title of a large and varied class of deer and similar animals. The flesh of some is excellent, that of others not generally agreeable to the human palate. See VENISON. ANTS. The only point concerning these troublesome insects that is of real interest to the grocer is how to get rid of them. The remedies suggested are as numerous as those for a cold! Here are a few: Balsam of Peru. Rub a thin film of it near the bottoms of the table legs or on the floor, and renew the application in three weeks. In addition, boil one ounce of the balsam in a gallon of water for thirty minutes, and sponge this water, while hot, over wooden floors and walls. Powdered Borax and Pulverized Alum. Sprinkle underneath the paper on the shelves. Oil of Sassafras. Follow the train--for ants form a train in traveling--to its origin. Saturate a small cloth with the oil and apply to every portion of the distance covered. If they come out of a crack, pour a little of the oil into it--it is sure death to them. If ants become troublesome about the pastry case in the summer time, insulate it by raising it on four inverted cups set in saucers filled with water. Give the case a good cleaning and in half a day the ants will become discouraged. Do not leave the case insulated longer than is necessary, as it is suggestive. APHIS: a plant louse or insect which feeds on vegetables, fruits, etc., and is a source of much loss to farmers and gardeners. It is also of scientific interest because of its faculty of emitting a sweet fluid known as "honey dew" or "aphis sugar," which is eagerly sought by ants. APENTA: a still and sparkling Hungarian aperient water. See MINERAL WATERS. APOLLINARIS: a noted effervescent table water. See MINERAL WATERS. APPENZELL: a cheese similar to "Swiss" or Emmenthaler. See article on CHEESE. APPLES. This well-known fruit has been much improved by cultivation from its original wild state, which is still seen in the crab apple--a small, acid, almost uneatable fruit, and yet the parent of the 1,500 varieties now used in so many ways--for eating raw, in cooking and preserving, for jellies and desserts, for cider and vinegar, etc. The cultivated tree is at its prime when about fifty years old and will bear fruit for more than a hundred years. The apple contains an abundance of potassium and sodium salts and its acids are thought to be of great benefit to persons of sedentary habits. A ripe raw apple digests in eighty-five minutes. The practice of serving apple-sauce with roast pork, rich goose and similar dishes is based on scientific reasons. The different varieties vary widely in taste, appearance and time of ripening. Fifteen of the best known types are shown on the accompanying Color Pages --opposite, and facing page 22. The Early Harvest, a small yellow sweetish type, is one of the first to make its appearance, ushering in what are commonly known as the "summer apples." Of these, the leading varieties are the Highglow, very handsome and fine-flavored, the Sourbough and the Gravenstein--the last-named generally rather large, roundish but somewhat irregular in shape and in color greenish to orange yellow, striped or mottled with red. Of smaller size but of attractive red skin and tender, juicy, sub-acid flesh is the June, very popular in the West and South. Next come the "Fall Apples," the best of which are: the Maiden Blush, medium to large in size, oblate and regular in shape, and in color yellow with crimson blush; the Belleflower; several varieties of the Holland Pippin, of good keeping quality, medium size, flattish in shape and yellow in color--inclining sometimes to green, and occasionally to red; the Fall Pippin, large, round and yellow, and the Strawberry Pippin. Of the "Winter Apples," the leading varieties are the Greening, Baldwin, Northern Spy, Spitzenburg, Seek-no-further, Lady Sweet, Gill Flower or Sheep's-nose, Green Sweet, Swaar, Streaked Pippin, Russet, Newton Pippin, etc. More Greenings are sold than of any other winter type, it being the general family apple, both raw and cooked. When first gathered in the fall it is of bright green color, but this gradually changes to a rich mature yellow. The Baldwins are comparatively inferior, generally of a dry, insipid flavor, but they are largely bought because they are sound and fine looking, frequently presenting a better appearance than really superior apples. The Northern Spy and Spitzenburg are generally considered the highest types of the "Baldwin" class of apple--good specimens are handsomely colored and excellent in flavor and quality. The Spitzenburg is of deep rich yellow, nearly covered with bright red, with darker red stripes. The Northern Spy is of similar colors but generally shows more yellow. The "Seek-no-further" is usually of deep yellow, but some varieties are bright red. The Lady Sweet or Pommeroy, one of the most desirable of "sweet apples" for general market (1) Early Harvest (3) Red June (2) Gravenstein (4) Streaked Pippin (6) Lady Sweet (5) Newtown Pippin (7) Maiden Blush (8) Fall Pippin APPLES A color illustration of eight different apple varieties, each labeled with a number. purposes, is of fine red and yellow color, good shape and flavor and excellent keeping qualities. The Gill Flower is commonly called the Sheep's-nose from its peculiar pointed shape. The Green Sweet is a crisp, brittle, juicy fruit, and one of the best late-keeping sweet apples. The Swaar, generally of greenish or yellow color effect, is not attractive in appearance but it is noted as a fine dessert fruit. The Streaked Pippin is a large fruit of mixed red and yellow color, of good edible and cooking qualities. The Russet is the latest comer and the hardiest and is usually kept until the other varieties are beginning to disappear. The Newton or Golden Pippin is now raised chiefly for export to Europe, where it is much esteemed. Another beautiful and delicious fruit is the Rennet, of regular shape, skin of rusty tinge and flesh of sweet acid and delicately aromatic flavor. It is not, though, a good keeping apple. The care of apples is simple but exact. They should be kept dry and cool--the colder the better, short of freezing--and all bruised or decaying fruit must be removed at once from contact with sound fruit, as otherwise the trouble will speedily spread to an alarming extent. The packing of apples is changing. The barrel is being superseded by the box--which is a great deal better suited to the retail trade. In the Northwestern and Pacific States it is employed exclusively. The box most commonly used measures inside 9 3/4 inches high, by 10 3/4 inches wide and about 20 3/4 inches long, and holds about one bushel, or nearly fifty pounds of fruit, varying slightly according to the variety. When the box package is used, the fruit should be carefully graded to uniform size and packed in layers. If wrapped in paper, similar to that used for oranges, a higher price can be obtained than for unwrapped fruit. A fancy display label bearing the title of the fruit and the name of the grower or dealer should be prominently displayed on each box. Apple Storage. The bulk of the apples placed in cold-storage warehouses begin to come into the market after the Christmas holidays, those first sent out being the less hardy varieties which will not keep for any great length of time. Some very choice types can be carried over until early in July, just reaching the season when the earlier varieties of the new crop are ready. Barreling Apples A group of men stand in an orchard filling up large barrels with apples that are being brought in baskets. Apples are placed in the cold-storage rooms in exactly the same barrels and boxes in which they are shipped from the grower, not even a barrel-head or box-lid being removed. The temperature is kept constantly at about 32° Fahr., and it is a pretty safe assertion that any apples going into the warehouse in perfect condition will still be found so when displayed for sale on their re-appearance in the markets. The New England system of packing apples in sand is said to be a fair substitute where cold storage is not available. A layer of dry sand is placed in the bottom of the barrel and on this a layer of apples, none of the apples, though, touching each other. Dry sand is then placed both between and over the fruit, the process being continued until the barrel is full. Apples packed in this manner keep well, and if one or two in a layer are slightly affected the sand prevents the trouble from being communicated to the others. Evaporated Apples. The best grades of evaporated apples are sold as "Fancy," the second quality as "Choice" and the third as "Prime." None but the finest varieties of the white-fleshed kinds should be used for the highest grade "Fancy." Fruit that is too poor to be worked into the "Prime" class is generally utilized by chopping and evaporating the whole fruit, without peeling or coring. The product is known as "chops" and is chiefly exported. The greater part of the evaporated apple output is handled in 50 lb. boxes, especially for export, bakers' supplies, etc., but for private trade a considerable quantity is put up in cartons, weighing generally 1 lb. gross. The latter method is the most generally satisfactory for retailing, especially if the cartons or boxes are correctly labeled with the name of the variety. The labeling is important because of the differing qualities and characteristics of the many kinds. When bulked indiscriminately, a single large box may contain a dozen different varieties, many of them unfit for cooking, and the result of their use is very liable to be disappointing. See also general article on DRIED AND EVAPORATED FRUIT. APPLE JACK: the New Jersey name for Apple Brandy. It is plentiful in most of the Eastern States and, as it is generally cheaper than any other spirit, it serves a good purpose in cooking, for sauces, flavoring extracts, etc. APRICOT: a fruit which in appearance suggests a small yellow peach, but which is borne by a tree of the same genus as the plum. It is eaten in every imaginable way--fresh, the fine varieties being especially valued for desserts; canned, dried, candied, made into jam, etc. It may be prepared for use by the housewife in any way that peaches are. The apricot was introduced into Europe during the time of Alexander the Great, and was first cultivated in England during the sixteenth century. The fresh apricot season commences about the middle of June and lasts for about eight weeks. The California dried apricot product amounts annually to 15,000 tons or more and is supplemented by the great quantity canned there. Only a comparatively small part of the California crop is marketed fresh, as the fruit is of such delicate texture that it does not stand shipment well. There is also a limited importation of dried and candied apricots from Italy and the south of France. APRICOT BRANDY: a liquor distilled from fermented apricot juice. APRICOTINE, Crème d'Abricot. See general article on LIQUEURS AND CORDIALS. APRICOTS A color illustration of an apricot branch laden with three ripe apricots. An inlaid box shows an apricot split in half to display the pit. AQUA VITAE, Latin for "water of life": a name familiarly applied to the leading native distilled spirit. Thus, it is "usquebaugh" or whisky in Scotland and Ireland; "geneva" or gin in Holland; and "eau de vie" (French for "water of life") or brandy in France. When the term is employed in England, French brandy is understood. AQUAVIT, a modification of Aqua Vitae: a liquor distilled from wheat and potatoes, originally made in Norway. ARACHIDE OIL: another name for Peanut Oil (which see). ARGOL: is crude Cream of Tartar (which see). It is held in solution in the juice of grapes but it is not soluble in alcoholic fluids, so the formation of alcohol during the fermentation of wine results in its precipitation. In wines bottled before they are fully ripe, the argol is precipitated on the side of the bottle in a sort of crust, thus forming what is called "crusted wine." The imported product comes chiefly from France and Italy. AROMA: a pleasing odor, a delicately rich and spicy fragrance, generally applied to the fragrance of wine, coffee, etc. ARRACK, Arack, Arracki, Ariki, Araka, etc.: a general name for numerous spirituous liquors drunk in the East, variously made from coarse palm sugar or "Jaggery," rice, kumiss, the juice of dates, cocoanuts and other palms, etc. The "Saki" or Rice Spirit of Japan is a softened sound of "Arracki." Arrack is consumed here to a limited extent, that from Batavia being considered the best. It is too powerful to be generally popular as a beverage, but it finds favor for use in punches and with grape fruit, etc. When sliced pineapples are put into Arrack and the spirit is kept for some time, it mellows to a delicious flavor and many consider it then unrivaled for "nectarial punch" or "rack punch." ARROW-ROOT: a starch obtained from the root of a West Indian plant, largely cultivated in all tropical countries. Its name is said to have been obtained from the fact that the Indians used the fresh roots to cure the wounds made by poisoned arrows. More probably it is derived from Ara, the old Indian name of the plant. Arrow-root An illustration of the roots of a plant, accompanied by a second illustration of a stem with broad leaves that terminates in two small bell-shaped flowers. The roots are dug when they are about a year old. When good, they contain about 23 per cent. of starch. In Bermuda and Jamaica they are first washed, then cleaned of the paper-like scale, washed again, drained and finally reduced to a pulp by beating them in mortars or subjecting them to the action of the wheel-rasp. The milky liquid thus obtained is passed through a coarse cloth or hair sieve and the starch allowed to settle at the bottom as an insoluble powder. This powder, dried in the sun or in drying houses, is the "arrow-root" of commerce and it is at once packed for market in air-tight cans, packages or cases. Arrow-root has in the past been quite extensively adulterated with potato starch and other similar substances, so care is needed in selection and buying. The genuine article is a light, white powder (the mass feeling firm to the finger and crackling like newly fallen snow when rubbed or pressed), odorless when dry, but emitting a faint, peculiar odor when mixed with boiling water, and swelling on cooking into perfect jelly, very smooth in consistence--in contradistinction to adulterated articles mixed with potato flour and other starches of lower value which contain larger particles. Arrow-root is used as an article of diet in the form of biscuits, puddings, jellies, cakes, etc., and also with beef tea, milk or veal broth, or plain boiled with a little flavoring added, as an easily digestible food for invalids and children. ARTICHOKE: a plant resembling the thistle, which is cultivated for its flowering head, gathered before the flower expands. The edible portion is the fleshy part of the calyx--the "bottom" or basin of the blossom--and the base of the leaves of the flower. The flesh corresponds to what children call the "cheese" of the ordinary thistle. As eaten here, it is generally boiled before serving, but in Europe it is popular raw, seasoned only with salt and pepper. Artichoke--showing edible base or "bottom" An illustration of an artichoke cut in half to display the inner structure. If cut so as to leave an inch or two of stem, artichokes possess good keeping qualities, frequently remaining quite fresh for two weeks or longer under average retail conditions. Canned artichokes, principally the fonds or "bottoms" only, are imported in large quanties from Italy and France. The small artichoke buds are used chiefly for garnishing. The Jerusalem Artichoke (which see) is an entirely different plant. ASH: a word generally employed in food analysis to designate the mineral components (salts, etc.), as they form the residue or "ash" left after the application of heat sufficient to destroy all combustible components. See FOOD VALUES. ASHES. Formerly, all wood ashes were saved by prudent housewives and used for soap making, because of their strong percentage of lye, and in some sections the ashes of plants, especially of ferns, are still dampened and roughly made into balls for use in house cleaning. The cheapness of modern cleaning compounds has, though, practically ended this little economy. ASPARAGUS: a native of Europe, which was a favorite vegetable of the ancient Romans. In this country, only the "spears" are eaten but in other parts of the world the seeds have been largely used for coffee--they are still recommended for that purpose in some parts of Europe--and a fermented spirit is made from the berries. An asparagus bed will continue to produce for a century, but it is at its best between the third and sixth years. Its commercial productivity is generally limited to fifteen years, as the stalks become smaller and less desirable with age unless fertilization is very heavy. The roots are buried from four to ten inches below the level and the sprouts or spears are cut as soon as they reach the surface or a few inches above it and are then tied in bunches for the market. GREEN ASPARAGUS WHITE ASPARAGUS (DEEP PLANTED) PURPLE TINTED (NEARLY WHITE) ASPARAGUS BUNCHER KNIFE 12 TO 15 INCHES LONG FOR CUTTING "WHITE" ASPARAGUS BELOW SURFACE ASPARAGUS A collage (in color) of several varieties of asparagus and the tools used to cut and bundle the vegetable. An inset box shows a bundle of asparagus tied at the top and bottom. The extension of cultivation has resulted in changing asparagus from a vegetable almost exclusively for the well-to-do into one within the reach of nearly everybody. It is furthermore a vegetable of great adaptability--it can be readily grown all the year round, though the northern winter supply is necessarily somewhat expensive, and is nearly as good canned as fresh. The two principal market divisions are into the "green," in all sizes and qualities and varying from bright green to purplish; and the "white," generally more or less tinted with purple and usually in the large size. The white is obtained chiefly by deep planting of the roots or by banking earth up around the shoots, but some special varieties grow nearly white without this assistance. The preference for one or the other is in some sections a matter of fixed local sentiment, and in others is subject to changing fashion. New England and Southern trade perfer the green; the West and Northwest, the white, and New York vacillates between the two. In cooking fine fresh asparagus, it is best to stand the bunch on end, leaving about an inch of the tips above the surface of the water. In this way it is possible to cook the spears thoroughly without destroying the appearance of the tips. If the tips are not sufficiently cooked by the steam, the bunch may be laid on its side for a few minutes immediately prior to taking out. ASPIC: the name given to a clear savory jelly made from meat and used to decorate entrées, tongues, salads, etc. The word is derived from "Spike jelly," i. e., jelly flavored with "Spike" or "French" lavender, at one time a popular dessert. ASSETS: the whole available property of a merchant or a firm. In computing the assets of a store a great mistake is made when everything in stock is put down at its original price. The available value is rarely more than what the goods would bring at auction. AVOCADO: a salad fruit gaining in popularity. See ALLIGATOR PEAR. AVOIRDUPOIS: the system of weights used for everything except medicines, precious stones and precious metals. A pound avoirdupois contains 16 ounces or 7,000 grains (see Weights in APPENDIX). The name is derived from the old French word aver (goods) de (of) peis (weight). AWNINGS: are made usually from sail duck canvas and vary in price and durability according to the heaviness of the canvas. Permanent awnings are often of corrugated iron, but the best qualities of canvas ought to last very nearly as long. The practice of whitewashing the awning in order to prevent mildew, is a useless waste of time and money--it does prevent mildew, but the lime in the whitewash eats into the cloth and renders it brittle and rotten. The tendency to forbid fixed roofs or awnings over the public streets is steadily growing, but the grocer will often find smaller awnings over his outside display of fruits and vegetables profitable if not really indispensible. AXLE-GREASE: used for lubricating axles. The basis of the different brands is a compound of fatty oils to which is added tar, graphite, or mica to increase the durability of the grease and give it a better surface. BABCOCK TEST: widely employed for determining the richness of milk and cream. The essential principle of the process is that sulphuric acid added in the proper proportion dissolves all components of the milk except the fat, permitting the entire fat content to rise to the surface to be measured. In creameries, to facilitate the process, the samples held in closed test-bottles, are, after the addition of the acid, agitated in centrifugal machines for some minutes before and after the application of a certain quantity of hot water. BACON: is the cured and smoked meat of the breast-pieces, sides and belly of the pig, the breast-pieces being generally employed for choice "breakfast bacon." In buying, one should look for thin rind and fairly even streaking of tender red lean and firm white fat. That with yellow fat should be avoided. As it loses in weight with keeping, a retailer should not carry it in greater quantities than required to meet current demands. Bacon should be kept in a cool, dry place. The injunction to avoid exposure to the sun, applies with particular force to the sliced varieties packed in tin and glass. Instead of purchasing bacon by the pound and having it cut in slices, the average householder will do better to take it by the whole strip in canvassed or wrapped form. If freshly cured when bought and if the cover is replaced each time after opening, it is easily kept in good condition until consumed. Bacon is a nutritious as well as popular article of diet. Some people of sedentary habits find it hard to digest, but the choicer kinds are quite frequently prescribed as part of invalid dietaries, in place of cod liver oil and similar preparations, the curing and smoking of the bacon-fat aiding in its assimilation. Broiling is the best method of cooking bacon, but careful frying will do fairly well. The slices or rashers should be very thin, not less than six slices to the inch. The skin on the one side and the smoke-colored edge on the other should be cut off before cooking. The broiler or pan should be warm before the slices are put on and the fire should be brisk. Some people like the bacon crisp, but it is more acceptable to the average palate when nicely browned but still elastic. It should be eaten immediately after cooking, as if allowed to stand for any length of time both flavor and tenderness are lost to a large extent. See Color Page opposite 292. BACTERIA: the family name which includes a great many of the smallest varieties of micro-organisms or "microbes"--minute vegetable growths. They are found in three chief forms--round, rod-shaped and spiral--but as a class they are distinguished by their reproduction by fission--the full grown bacterium, except in a few cases, multiplying by dividing itself instead of producing others by budding (as yeasts) or by seeds or spores (as molds). They are universally recognized as of vegetable nature but some types are motile, the power of movement being often due to hair-like processes called flagella. They are so small that they are discernible only by microscopes of high power--even the width of the finest needle would, compared to a bacterium, look like the width of a man's thumb beside a speck of dust. They are as a class the most important both for good and evil, of all microbes, the most numerous, the most vigorous--and the most difficult to control, for where the conditions are favorable, millions can result within twenty-four hours from a single active specimen left undisturbed. They are present everywhere that life is found, and some of them are always at work in all kinds of moist food unless hermetically sealed or held at the freezing or boiling points. Freezing will stop their increase but only heat considerably above the boiling point, or long continued boiling, is a sure destroyer of all kinds. Bacteria are found in great numbers also in various parts of the human body, but under normal conditions the presence there of some types is not only harmless, but absolutely necessary to health and life--for there are, from the human stand-point, both "good" and "bad" bacteria, and we need the former to counteract the latter. In addition to their functions in the human body--which subject belongs rather in the province of the physician than the layman--and their value in the general economy of the universe--which is too wide a subject for discussion here--bacteria, properly controlled, are of great value in the production of many foods. Their presence in various articles assists digestion by the chemical changes effected and also by producing flavors which stimulate the proper secretion of the digestive fluids which are not excited by flavorless articles of diet. Some varieties, for example, are almost indispensable adjuncts of butter and cheese making. The "ripening" of cream before churning, is merely waiting for chemical changes to be effected by the growth and increase in it of good bacteria. One thousand million of bacteria to the square inch is a conservative estimate for well ripened cream. Butter made from cream too fresh, and therefore deficient in bacterial life, is flavorless. This ripening of cream is not new--though the knowledge of the cause of the change is. Long before the presence and activity of bacteria were discovered, the butter maker used to set his cream aside and allow his unsuspected helpers to ripen it before he commenced churning. Another of the secrets of good butter making is though to know how far to let this change continue, for if overdone the cream is spoiled. Many bacteriologists have made a study of the production of the best kind of bacteria for the use of butter-makers, and certain varieties can now be procured in open market under the name of "Pure-Cultures." These are used in much the same manner as yeast is used by bakers. In the manufacture of cheese, bacteria play an even more important part--in fact, its manufacture without them is inconceivable, as the flavors for which cheeses are prized are directly attributable to bacterial agencies--though in some cases, as Brie, Camembert, Gorgonzola, Roquefort and Stilton, credit must also be given to the employment of special "mold" microbes. The production and sale of bacteria for cheese making has reached an active stage in Europe and it is only a question of time when it will be possible to set cultures for all the choicest imported cheeses at work in local American dairies. Again, the only good table vinegar is the result of the activity of a species of acid-producing bacteria, and even the lactic bacterium, which incurs the enmity of the unthinking by "souring" the milk, is a very good friend--in this particular case the flavor of the milk is spoiled for many people, but the lactic acid formed makes it an especially health-giving drink and prevents for a time other noxious bacteria from rendering it dangerous by decomposition. Indeed, milk that has been "preserved" from souring by checking the formation of lactic acid may prove distinctly dangerous for consumption even though the fresh flavor is retained. These instances give some idea of the good services rendered under certain conditions by many kinds of bacteria--and they are also indispensable to agriculture and other industries--but in the retailer's establishment and the household they are best regarded as enemies to be fought at every turn, for their uncontrolled access to fresh food is certain to result in loss and sometimes in danger to health. They are far more generally destructive than either wild yeast or molds. All real putrefaction is due to the action of bacteria--the breaking down of the structure of the food as they feed on certain elements in it and other changes caused by their growth and multiplication--and, as already stated, they are present everywhere, being especially plentiful in and around human habitations. Thoroughly dry, salted, smoked and (under certain conditions) spiced and pickled foods are safe from their depredations, but any fresh foods that contain from 25% to 30% moisture, except those that are very acrid or very heavily sugared, offer suitable soil for their growth and multiplication--if undisturbed, they rapidly take them through the various stages of putrefaction to the culminating point of decay. Daylight, sunshine and cleanliness are opposed to bacteria, so stores and homes, and especially kitchens, should be blessed with all three as a preliminary safeguard. Next, fresh meats, canned goods (after opening) and similar foods should be eaten as fresh as possible. When immediate consumption is impossible, a good refrigerator offers a considerable measure of temporary protection, but it is only temporary, for the growth of some kinds of bacteria is checked by nothing short of freezing. As already stated, boiling continued for an hour or so after the full heat has permeated every part of the food will kill all kinds of bacteria--will sterilize it--but this must be followed by immediate and hermetical sealing while still boiling hot, or new bacteria may get into it and start propagation afresh. BAGS. Formerly the making of paper bags was one of the duties of the grocer's assistants, but they are now made more cheaply by machinery. Many manufacturers, desirous of advertising their wares, print paper bags and supply them to the trade at a nominal price, or give them with every sale of their own goods, but every good grocer can better afford to advertise his own store in that way, than to make the trifling saving. Paper bags are made in a great variety of sizes and qualities. The present self-opening square bag was invented in 1883, following closely after the introduction of the satchel bottom bag. (See also PAPER and WAXED PAPER.) BAKING. See sub-head in general article on COOKERY. BAKING POWDER: a compound used in place of yeast, in which an acid acting upon an alkali generates carbon-dioxide (carbonic acid gas). As this action takes place as soon as the powder is moistened, the dough is made ready for baking more promptly than when yeast is used. Practically all baking powders are composed of an acid, an alkali and a filler. The alkali is nearly always Bicarbonate of Sodium, and starch is generally employed as the filler, but there is a wide variation in the acid constituent used, and baking powders may be conveniently classed according to its nature. They may be recognized as follows: (1) Tartrate Powders, in which the acid constituent is cream of tartar or tartaric acid:--Royal, Dr. Price's, Cleveland's, Sea Foam, etc. (2) Alum Powders, in which the acid constituent is generally a calcined double sulphate of aluminum and sodium:--Davis, Calumet, K. C., etc. (3) Phosphate Powders, in which the acid constituent is acid calcium phosphate:--Horsford's, What, etc. In the process of baking, the chemical constituents undergo certain changes, so that the residue in the finished bread is of somewhat different character from the original ingredients. That left in food, when cream of tartar powders are used, is rochelle salts; powders founded on phosphates leave calcium and sodium phosphates, and alum powders leave glauber's salt and a salt of aluminum. The quantity is, however, in each case very small. The date when baking powder was first manufactured is involved in some doubt, but it is known that Preston & Merrill, of Boston, made it prior to 1855, the common name then being "yeast powder." Phosphate powders were invented by Professor E. N. Horsford, of Cambridge, Mass., in 1857, and their manufacture commenced soon thereafter by the Rumford Chemical Works, of Providence, R. I. Royal Baking Powder was first introduced in 1867 and Alum powders about the year 1875. Grocers should not sell baking powders which do not give entire satisfaction, even if they are cheap and pay a good profit, because the loss resulting from a dissatisfied customer is likely to be much more than the profit on the baking powder. Private brands should be avoided because of the uncertainty as to their true character and legality under the Pure Food Laws. It is safest to buy only well known "regular" brands bearing the name of a responsible manufacturer. Care should be taken to keep all baking powders in a dry place as they lose their strength if exposed to dampness. BALM, Balm Mint, Lemon Balm. See GARDEN BALM. BALYX, or Bailk: an European, originally Russian, term for salted or smoked Sturgeon. BAMBOO SHOOTS: young shoots of the bamboo plant, eaten as a vegetable by the Chinese and one of the characteristic components of Chop Suey. Banana blossom An illustration of the end of a banana branch which terminates in a flower. BANANAS. The banana, the most prolific fruit plant known, is a native of the East Indies but is now cultivated in all tropical countries. It is palm-like in appearance, but is in fact a large "plant," the thick, soft stem being formed by the overlapping of the long vertical leaf-stalks. This stem in the dwarf types is only about four feet in height, but in the most widely known varieties it reaches from twelve to twenty feet, up to even forty feet, with a diameter in the latter case of twelve to sixteen inches. The leaves spread out from the top of the sheath, each from six to ten feet in length by two feet or so in width. The flowers, long and narrow, generally red, sometimes pink and yellow in color, are at first folded A great Banana plantation near Port Limon, Costa Rica An illustration of a man sitting on a hill overlooking a river, on the other side of which lies a line of houses which are raised on stilts. close together to form a head at the end of a large drooping spike. Those at the point of the spike die unproductive, but the others, commencing from the stem side, rapidly change into fruit, layer by layer in circles around the stem, which steadily elongates so as to give each layer or "hand" plenty of room to develop--some branches containing as many as 160 fruits. A branch is known commercially as a "bunch"--the standard size being nine "hands" or "ridges," or "layers" to a stem, with from ten to fifteen bananas to a "hand." In Central America, the bunches often run a good deal larger. Contrary to popular belief, bananas do not grow on the tree as they hang in the store, but with the small end of the fruit pointing upward. After the fruit is taken, the plant is cut down--a new stalk growing up again and producing fruit in ten to twelve months. This course is repeated for about ten years, when the vigor of the plant generally decreases and it is replaced by a new cutting. For commercial purposes, the banana is cultivated with a good deal of care--it is set out in hills and rows very much like maize, except for the much larger distances separating the hills, and is carefully weeded and watched--but as a native food it needs very little attention, all that is necessary being to loosen the earth around the roots every season and to remove any suckers thrown up and plant them at requisite distances. The yellow bananas are everywhere the most plentiful, but the red varieties are raised in considerable quantities in Cuba and Central America. Their respective merits are entirely a matter of individual opinion. The "fig" or "lady-finger" banana, a very small, thin-skinned yellow variety, is the most esteemed in tropical countries--the flesh is finer and the flavor very soft and sweet. Bananas are brought to our markets in a green state, coming chiefly from Jamaica and Central America. As they are easily frozen, they are in cold weather packed very carefully before shipping--but are always sent at the risk of the party ordering. When received by the retailer or consumer in green condition, they should be kept in a moderately warm room or cellar until they begin to show color. Both cold and excessive heat will prevent them from maturing satisfactorily. When ripened, they are especially sensitive to low temperature and will readily deteriorate in any place where the thermometer registers below 50° Fahr. Placing in a refrigerator, or even laying on a cold marble slab, will turn them black and may spoil their flavor. In selecting bunches, give the preference to those with stems still greenish in color and bearing fruit full and plump in appearance. If the fruit is thin or flat GATHERING BANANAS, JAMAICA Two men stand next to a bent-over banana tree; one is chopping a bunch of bananas from the tree with a large knife. Two other men look on from further down the lane. Placing the Bananas in freight cars Two men standing next to a freight train work at passing bunches of bananas, which are piled alongside the train, to two other men inside an open car. looking, the bunch was probably cut too soon and in that case, though the fruit may ripen and become yellow, it will never attain the flavor and delicacy of that properly developed on the plant. Some varieties are naturally more or less "flat" in appearance even when fully developed, but as they are generally inferior in quality, it is safest for the average retailer to adhere to the rule to take only those "full and plump." Properly selected and carefully ripened to a good deep yellow, the banana of the northwestern retailer is just as delicious as the fruit plucked from the plant in its tropical home. The banana is in this country nearly always eaten raw, but in the West Indies and other tropical and sub-tropical parts it is also baked and otherwise cooked, both as a vegetable and dessert, made into flour for bread, dried black in the sun after the manner of figs, preserved with sugar and with vinegar, and pressed and fermented to yield a spirituous drink resembling cider. The Plantain (which see) is of the banana family and the fruit resembles a yellow banana, but it is larger and coarser and suitable only for cooking. BANANA EXTRACT. See general article on EXTRACTS. BANNOCK: in Scotland and the northern counties of England, a flat round cake made of oat, rye or barley meal, baked on the hot hearth or on an iron plate over the fire. The bannock is the primitive cake, varied in material, of every country. Loading a fruit steamer with Bananas A line of people carry bunches of bananas across a bridge onto a steamer. For consumption in this country, bannocks are enriched by adding chopped almonds, orange peel, etc., to the dough. BAOBAB, or Monkey Bread: the fruit of a low abnormally thick-trunked tree, native to Africa but grown also in India. It is generally oval in shape and about nine inches in length. It is downy in appearance, but under the down is a strong woody shell, enclosing a fibrous and farinaceous pulp of sub-acid flavor. The juice, slightly sweetened, is frequently used in the treatment of tropical fevers. BANANA A color illustration of a banana trees growing in the wild, accompanied by a cut showing a bunch of bananas and one single banana with its peel pulled back to show the interior of the fruit. BARBADOS GOOSEBERRY: the edible fruit of the Pereskia Aculeata, a cactus found in the West Indies and distinguished as leaf-bearing in the ordinary sense of the word. It somewhat resembles the gooseberry in appearance, is generally yellow in color and of excellent flavor. BARBERRY: the berry of a shrub of prickly character, growing from four to nine feet in height, which in various types is found wild in nearly every temperate country. In the United States, it is particularly abundant in New England. The fruit, of bright red color, ripens in October and November. It is too acid to be generally acceptable for eating raw, but it makes excellent preserves, jams, etc., and as such is very wholesome. Barberries An illustration of a branch covered with rounded leaves and laden with several bunches of berries toward one end. The young leaves are of a bitter but pleasing flavor and are sometimes used as a salad and for garnishing. The famous French jam known as "Confiture d'épine vinette" is manufactured, principally in Rouen, from the Seedless Barberry. Barberries are also used in France for the manufacture of malic acid. On analysis they show in addition a small percentage of citric acid. BAR-LE-DUC "JELLY": preserves, originally of selected seeded whole white currants, but now also of strawberries, raspberries, etc., manufactured in the French town of Bar-le-duc. The popular term "Bar-le-duc jelly, " is misleading as the typical product is a jam or preserve, the berries remaining intact in a thin syrup. The title "Lorraine Jelly" is sometimes used, as the city of Bar-le-duc lies within the boundaries of the former province of Lorraine. BARLEY ( see Color Page opposite 526): a grain grown in nearly every part of the world, which has apparently been cultivated from the most remote antiquity. The Books of Moses and the early Greek and Roman writers make many references to it. The Greeks are said to have trained their athletes on it and "barley wine" or "beer" was enjoyed at a very early date. Barley grows very rapidly, in the northern United States maturing in about three months after seed sowing. The greater part of the crop is consumed in the form of malt and malt products--beer and kindred beverages, whisky, etc. Medicinally, barley is rated as the mildest of the cereals. It contains less protein and carbohydrates but more fats and salts than wheat. In various forms it is especially valuable as a part of invalid dietaries. Barley Meal: the whole grain ground, is the form in which barley is generally sold for the manufacture of beer, whisky and other liquors. In the northern parts of Europe large quantities are also employed in bread making. Barley Malt. See MALT. Pot, or "Starch," Barley: is the grain deprived of its outer husk. Pearled Barley: is the grain with both the outer and inner husks removed, followed by a polishing process. It is entitled to place as a "cereal" food, but in the average American household it is used only in soup or in preparation of home remedies for colds, etc. The largest consumption of Pearled Barley, including practically the entire output of the finer grades, is among Hebrews, who prepare it both as a breakfast food and a pudding. Patent Barley: is a flour obtained by grinding Pearled Barley. It has none of the acrid taste found in barley meal ground with the husks. BARLEY HONEY: is a Japanese product made from barley starch, generally in combination with rice flour. BARM: foam taken from the surface of fermented malt liquors. It is commonly known as Brewers' Yeast. See YEAST. BARREL. See tables of Weights and Measures in APPENDIX. BARROW, or Push-cart: a small carriage moved by hand. It should be kept well painted and under cover. In purchasing, care should be taken that the load balances evenly on the axle. BARTER: dealing by an exchange of goods. This was the original mode of dealing before the use of money and is still very common wherever money and banking facilities are scarce. The country dealer is often obliged to take eggs, butter, etc., as pay for sugar, starch and soap, and when he can move the produce quickly and well, and is not paying too much for it, the barter seems to give a double profit, because he makes something on the sale of the groceries and something on the sale of the produce. But it is often a great snare for the following reasons: First, the produce may move slowly and so tie up capital, even if it does not result in loss by deterioration of quality. Second, the belief that there is a double profit in barter, leads the dealer to pay a higher price for goods taken in trade. There is really no double profit. For keeping, handling and selling groceries, one profit is realized; for receiving, shipping and selling produce, another profit should be earned--and the dealer who performs both for a single profit, is doing half his work for nothing. Third, it requires all the average man's judgment and ability to run a grocery properly, and those who try to combine with it the business of buying and shipping produce, and its freights, sales, drafts, returns and commissions, generally find out that they are not masters of both, but that one eats up the profits of the other. Fourth, barter leads to a competition in buying which is worse than that which "cuts" in selling, for the dealer who cuts the prices of his groceries, generally stops before he gets to cost, because he knows just where that point is, but the buyer who competes on produce does not know the price at which the goods will sell in the city and is often easily led into paying more than he can realize after all the charges are paid. No dealer can afford to do two transactions for one profit; few are capable of managing a double business, and when goods are sold below their value or bought above it; it is well to let others control the market. BASIL: a highly aromatic herb, with a flavor resembling cloves. The common variety is seldom made use of, but there is a large type whose leaves are employed very generally in flavoring sauces and soups, especially Green and Mock Turtle soup. Basil vinegar is made by steeping the leaves in vinegar. Basil A stem of a plant with three branches, each of which terminates in a cone of tiny flowers. BASS: a well shaped, round and fleshy fish, of which there are three chief food varieties--the Striped, Sea and Black (or Fresh Water or Lake). The first two are found all along the Atlantic coast. The Striped Bass ranges in weight from half a pound to seventy-five pounds for some huge specimens and is in season all the year round. The Sea Bass averages from a half pound to five pounds and is in season from the middle of May to the end of December. The Black Bass averages about the same weight as the Sea Bass and is in season from June to December--its two principal types are the "Big Mouth" and "Small Mouth," the latter being considered the better. See illustrations of Striped Bass and Sea Bass in Color Page opposite 240. BATH BRICK, or Bristol Brick: a dry brick used to polish steel knives and other cutlery, originally made from deposits of fine silicious sand found near Bath, England, but later made also at Bristol, England, and at South Hampton, N. H. BATH BUN: a kind of light, sweet roll, generally round in shape and usually containing currants, etc. It takes its name from Bath, England, the city of its origin. BAY LEAVES: the leaves of a shrub of the laurel variety, growing wild in Greece, Italy and other Mediterranean countries and in some Southern sections of the United States. Among the ancient Greeks, the Bay Leaf was in large part dedicated to heroism and poetry, but modern usage consecrates it to the more material pleasures of the table. The principal consumption is of the dried leaf, used as flavoring for soups, etc. BAY RUM: a liquor obtained by distilling Bay Leaves in rum, used as a perfume and hair tonic. It is generally imported from the West Indies. Imitations are plentiful, but very inferior in fragrance. BEAD: the tiny, iridescent bubbles which, on agitation, form on the surface of some alcoholic liquors. BEADING: any substance added to spirits to make them carry a "Bead," and to cling in drops on the sides of the bottle or glass. BEAN: a vegetable which appears to have been cultivated long before the commencement of recorded history and in one variety or another to flourish in every part of the world. It was well known to the ancient Egyptians and Grecians--and when the first voyagers reached the Western continent they found that here also the growing of beans, and peas, had apparently always been a common industry among the natives--their preparation of beans and corn is perpetuated in "succotash." The bean of European history is the Broad or Windsor variety, with broad curved pods, containing thick bulging seeds of distinct and agreeable flavor. It is largely grown in Europe and Canada but is not an important crop in the United States as the climate is not suitable for its best growth. Broad Beans A short section of beanstalk laden with four bean pods. The principal beans of United States cultivation are the Kidney and Lima, both of them believed to be native to South America. The Kidney Bean is the Haricot of the French and in Great Britain is sometimes called the French Bean. There are a great many varieties, capable of general classification into "tough podded" and "edible podded." The "tough podded" class produces the bulk of the dried beans of commerce, variously known as "Kidney Beans," "Navy Beans," "Marrow Beans," "Black Beans," etc., in many colors, shapes and sizes. "Black" or "Turtle" Beans, grown chiefly in the Southern States, make an especially rich and excellent soup. Some varieties, as "Flageolets," are cultivated with special regard to the consumption of the fresh seeds or beans. To the "edible-podded" class belong the numerous types of "Wax" or "Butter" beans, eaten fresh at all stages of development. The "Cranberry Bean" or "Red Speckled Bean," both shell and beans spotted or otherwise marked with red, is a variety cultivated principally in New England and popular there for making succotash. String Beans, Snap Beans, French Beans are immature pods of numerous kinds of Kidney beans. The best have little or no "string." They should be so young that the seeds are barely visible and should be marketed as quickly as possible after gathering. In buying, see that they are crisp and tender when broken--toughness or limpness is a sign of too great age or overlong keeping. String Beans An illustration of long beans on a stem in front of some broad leaves. String beans are kept for winter use by salting, both for home use and retailing. They are a popular winter vegetable among Germans. Before cooking, they are soaked in water over night to remove the salt. Canned String Beans, described for quality as "Stringless," "Fancy," etc., are graded by size as "extra small," "small," etc. "Haricots Verts" are French string beans. Lima Beans are flat, slightly kidney-shaped, and generally wrinkled or fluted. They are very popular, both fresh and dried, the green seeded types being considered the choicest. When dried, they serve as an agreeable winter food, soaked before cooking. Lima Beans An illustration of two bean pods, which have been split open. Pea Beans are the Cowpeas of the agriculturist, but they belong to the bean family in spite of that title. They are grown in many varieties, bearing seeds of different styles and colors. Their principal use is as a forage plant and soil fertilizer, but considerable quantities are dried for winter use. They are cooked like other dried beans and have a very pleasing flavor. (1)Fifth and Sixth Cut Ribs (2)Third Cut Ribs (3)Middle Cut Ribs (4)First Cut Ribs BEEF A color illustration of four similarly-shaped cuts of meat, each labeled with a number. Among numerous other "special" varieties are the Soy Bean (which see), Asparagus Bean, Frijole, Lab-lab, Red Bean and Scarlet Runner. Asparagus Beans take their name from the great length of their pods, which average twelve inches or more in length and in some varieties even exceed a length of three feet. By Chinese gardeners in California they are known as "Tou Kok." The seeds are small but the green pods make an excellent "Snap" bean. They are used only to a limited extent in the United States, principally by the Chinese and other residents of Oriental birth or extraction, but they are beginning to find favor also among the white residents of California. They have long been cultivated in Europe. Frijole Beans are a small flat variety, generally of a reddish brown or light tan color, very common, both "green" and dried, in the Southwest and Mexico. Lab-lab, or Egyptian Kidney, beans are frequently grown as an ornamental plant but they are very productive and under proper cultivation can be used both as String and Dried beans. Red Beans are grown principally in the tropics. They are less liable to cause intestinal irritation than the ordinary bean, but they are difficult to transport because of their tender skins. The Scarlet Runner is also cultivated here principally as an ornamental climber, but it is consumed in large quantities in Europe, especially in England, both as a string and green shell bean. Selecting and cooking dried beans. Well dried, mature beans are smooth and shiny. If there are folds in the skins, it generally signifies poor drying or inferior quality. They should also be of uniform size and appearance. The most important qualification is that they should cook soft. The size is chiefly a matter of taste and the color, other things being equal, is unimportant. The prejudice against beans that grow dark in cooking is unfortunate as many of them are of fine quality and flavor and frequently more tender than the very white. Gathering Beans "down South" A woman sits in the rows of a field, holding a large basket full of beans. The silhouettes of several other workers can be seen in the backround. The first step in household cooking is the swelling of the bean and softening of the skin by soaking in cold water for generally not less than eight hours. Some cooks cover with hot water so as to shorten the time but the cold water method is preferable. The large Lima Beans after soaking may be easily slipped out of their skins by sieving or stirring in water, the skins rising to the top and being then skimmed off. After this process, beans can be boiled and served in many ways, whole, mashed as "bean pudding," in soup making, etc. Beans, as also peas, are exceptionally rich in food value. Even when immature or "green" they are much more nutritious than other vegetables of popular use, and when ripe or "dry" they excel nearly all other foods--both animal and vegetable. They average at least as much protein as meat and nearly as much carbohydrates as wheat. The only lack is in the fat component. See FOOD VALUES. BEAN FLOUR: pulverized dried or ripe beans. Used in the same way as Pea Flour (which see). BEAR-LITHIA. See general article on table and medicinal MINERAL WATERS. BEATEN BISCUIT, or "Maryland Biscuit": a kind of bread biscuit made without leavening. The folding and pounding of the dough encloses small quantities of air in minute blisters and these expanding in baking make the biscuit light and porous. BECCAFICO, or "Fig-Pecker": a name given to numerous small birds, popularly supposed to live on figs, highly esteemed for the table in Southern Europe. BEECHNUT: the seed of the beech-tree, one of the most beautiful members of the oak family, found in numerous varieties in this country and in Europe. The nuts--sharp-edged and triangular in shape--grow in pairs in a rather prickly scaly burr. The kernels are very tender and sweet flavored. See also NUTS ( Food Values ). BEE GLUE, or Propolis: a kind of glue which bees use to close up cracks, especially any cracks that admit cold. They sometimes daub it on combs, often spoiling the appearance and ruining the sale of otherwise nice comb honey. BEEF: is the most important of meats, the chief staple of the butcher and the leading food article in the average household. It is a curious and in some respects an unfortunate fact that in different parts of the country there are many names for the same "cut," but Diagrams I and II on page 57, adapted from a recent Bulletin of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, illustrate a very widely accepted division of a whole beef and show the relative positions of the cuts in the animal and in a dressed side. The Neck Piece is frequently cut so as to include more of the Chuck than is represented by the diagram. The Shoulder Clod is usually cut without bone. The Shoulder (not indicated in the diagram) includes more or less of the shoulder blade and of the upper end of the Foreshank. Shoulder Steak is cut from the Chuck. In many localities, the Plate is made to include all the parts of the forequarters designated on the diagrams as Brisket, Cross-ribs, Plate and Navel, and different portions of the Plate as thus cut are spoken of as the "brisket end of plate" and "navel end of plate." This part of the animal is largely used for corning. The Ribs are frequently divided into "first" cut, the first three ribs constituting the choicest "prime" ribs of beef, "second" cut and "third" cut, the last-named lying nearest the Chuck and being slightly less desirable than the former. The Chuck is sometimes sub-divided in a similar manner, the third cut being nearest the neck. The names applied to different portions of the Loin vary considerably in different localities. With the Hip it is generally known as "hip-loin." The part nearest the FLAT BONE TOP SIRLOIN ROUND BONE TOP SIRLOIN BEEF A color illustration of two large cuts of meat. Each cut has its own caption. DIAGRAMS I and II. 1. Neck. 2. Chuck. 3. Ribs. 4. Shoulder clod. 5. Foreshank. 6. Brisket. 7. Cross ribs. 8. Plate. 9. Navel. 10. Loin. 11. Flank. 12. Rump. 13. Round. 14. Second-cut round. 15. Hindshank. An illustration of a bull whose body is divided into sections and labeled with the numbers 1-15, flanked by a diagram showing only the body of a cow without head or legs, also divided into sections and labeled with numbers. DIAGRAM III. 1. Hindshank. 2. Round. 3. Rump. 4. Loin. 5. Flank. 6. Navel end. 7. Brisket. 8. Ribs. 9. Chuck. 10. Clod. 11. Foreshank. 12. Neck. Plate. --6 and 7. Back. --8, 9 and upper part of 10. A diagram of the body of a cow without head or legs, divided into sections and labeled with the numbers 1-12. DIAGRAMS IV and V. (See explanation on page 58.) Two diagrams of the body of a cow without head or legs, divided into sections and labeled with numbers. ribs is frequently called "small end of loin" or "small end sirloin" or "short steak." The other end of the loin is called "thick end sirloin" or "sirloin." Porter-house steaks are cut from the "thick end." The very tender strip of meat known as the "tenderloin" lies under or inside the hip-loin, being thickest at the hip part and gradually tapering off to a very narrow piece at the "small end." It is not uncommon to find the Flank cut so as to include more of the loin than is indicated in the figures, in which case the upper portion is called "flank-steak." The larger part of the flank is frequently corned, as is also the case with the Rump. In some markets, the Rump is cut so as to include a portion of the loin, which is then sold as "rump steak." The portion of the Round on the inside of the leg is regarded as more tender than that on the outside, and is consequently preferred to the latter. As the leg lies upon the butcher's table this inside of the round is usually on the upper, or top, side, and is therefore called "top round." The lower diagrams, (III, IV) show two other standard divisions--No. III, a method widely accepted by Chicago and Kansas City wholesale butchers, and Nos. IV and V a popular New York wholesale division. The following table explains the separation shown on illustrations Nos. IV and V. HINDQUARTERS 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 { Full Round 1, 2, 3 { 1--Leg or Shin. { { 2--Round: divided into Top, Bottom and Leg Bone. { { 3--Flank: of mixed fat and lean, containing Flank Steak nested in "cod" fat. { "Full" or "hip and," Loin 4, 5 { Short Loin: including Sirloin and, on under-side, part of Filet or Tenerloin. { { Full Hip: divided into Short Hip (containing the large end of Filet) and Top Sirloin (or "Butt"). FOREQUARTERS 6, 7, 8 { 6--Plate * : divided into (a) Plate End, (b) Navel End, and (c) Breast or Brisket (together with part of 9). { 7--S-Rib Cut * : divided into 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7-Rib pieces and "Chuck End" with remaining ribs. { 8--Whole, or "Full" Chuck: divided into (a) Short Chuck, and (b) Shoulder and Breast or Brisket. * An 8-Rib Cut and the Plate together are known as a "Piece." Every normal steer has thirteen ribs. The general eastern rib cut gives eight ribs, an "S-rib roast"--one rib remaining on the hindquarters and four on the chuck--but this division is subject to wide variations at the wish of the purchasing retailer. See also the four Color Pages of Rib Cuts, Sirloin Cuts, Steaks, etc.--alternate leaves commencing with that opposite page 50. The best beef is that of a young stall-fed, corn-fed steer. It should be of fine, smooth texture and bright fresh red color intermixed with fine streaks of white fat. It should retain the impression of the finger after it is removed--this is important, as old or tough beef is elastic to the touch. Meat that is pale or deep purple in color, that is wet and flabby, or has a sickly smell, should be carefully avoided. If the fat (of a healthy specimen) is yellow, the beef may still be of good quality--it is not from a stall-fed animal, but it may be a fine grass-fed specimen matured under specially favorable conditions--but if, as is generally the case, the fat is yellow from oil-cake feeding it has been obtained at the expense of the best flavor of the meat. PORTERHOUSE CUT PORTERHOUSE STEAK FIRST CUT CHUCK BEEF A color illustration of three different cuts of meat, each with its own caption. Cow beef and bull beef are also sold, but they are, at the general age of slaughtering, not in any way comparable to steer beef in quality. Cow beef is a darker red than steer beef. When young it may be more tender than steer, but it is seldom if ever as juicy or fine flavored. "Boneless cuts" of beef are supplied to retailers throughout the country by several big packing houses. They include tenderloins, sirloin strips, sirloin butts, rib-beef rolls, loin backs, clods, etc. They are especially convenient and easy for the inexperienced butcher to handle and cut up, but some judges assert that, shipped in that manner, the meat deteriorates in flavor as the result of the loss of blood and extractives. Beef to be at its best should always be aged. To age it properly, a good refrigerator is, of course, indispensable. The temperature should be about 33° to 35° Fahr., and the atmosphere dry--the dryer the better. In cold dry air, beef will ripen and sweeten and may safely be held a long time, whereas, in a warm, moist atmosphere it will become sticky and sour in a comparatively short time. It is important that the temperature should be uniform and not allowed to rise and fall. One cannot dwell too emphatically on the importance of the proper aging of beef, for cooked fresh beef, even if cut from young animals, is certain to be tough, whereas beef properly aged will be more or less tender, even if cut from animals conspicuous for the number of their years. "Light" or very lean carcases are not though suitable for aging, as the fibre is liable to deteriorate during the process. Beef is generally acknowledged to be the best flesh-former of all modern foods, as in addition to an average of about 15% to 20% of protein it contains a considerable proportion of fat in an easily digestible form. A diet very largely of meat is not, though, desirable for the average person of sedentary occupation (see FOOD VALUES). When heads of families realize that there are many cuts of beef equally as nutritious as the sirloin, porterhouse steak and standing rib roast, which can, with very little extra trouble, be served in forms just as palatable and inviting, they will find a wonderful difference in their expenditures for meats. Further, such a revolution in ideas would inevitably result in lower prices for the "choice cuts" also--it is only natural that high prices prevail for them now as the general public thinks that there are only three or four pieces of an entire beef that are fit for the table and all other parts have to be sacrificed at extremely low figures, or utilized by packers for their canned products. In broiling or frying a steak, the most important point is to put it over a quick fire and expose it on each side for about a minute so as to seal the juices in the meat--then proceed in the ordinary way to finish the cooking. Similarly, in "roasting" meat, have the oven hot, so that the outside is quickly cooked, to seal the juices inside. The average American doesn't care much for boiled fresh beef, yet, properly prepared, it is just as palatable as steak. The best cuts for this purpose are the brisket, cross-ribs and rump--the rump is especially suitable for those who prefer lean boiled meat. The principal points to be observed in cooking are: (1) tie the meat up to preserve its shape, (2) put into boiling water, (3) add salt, etc., and plenty of vegetables, (4) simmer gently until done--don't let it boil and bubble away, and don't overcook it or reduce it to rags. American prime beef has earned the reputation--abroad as well as at home--of being equal to the world's best anywhere. This is the result of the improvements during recent years in breeding, feeding and shipping. The old-time long-horned Texas steer, formerly the accepted American type, is obsolete as the result of crossing with high class imported stock and selection of the best grades has been brought to a very fine point; range feeding exclusively has been succeeded by grain feeding scientifically controlled for a considerable time prior to slaughtering, and modern methods of transportation have done away with the necessity for freezing shipments. Americans are, by the way, the greatest meat eaters in the world. The average consumption per capita here is 175 pounds per annum--and of this by far the greatest percentage is of beef in one form or another. English people average 110 pounds per capita, the French eat only half as much as the English, and the people of Germany, Austria and Italy consume still less. See also BRAINS, HEART, KIDNEYS, LIVER, SAUSAGE, SWEETBREAD, TONGUE, TRIPE, ETC., and general article on MEATS. Beef à la Mode. See BRAISED BEEF. Beef Bread: the pancreas, frequently retailed as SWEETBREAD (which see). Beef Extract: See MEAT EXTRACT. BEEFSTEAK MUSHROOM: one of the best known TREE MUSHROOMS (which see). BEER. The word "beer" as now used applies to all undistilled fermented malt liquors excepting those which travel under the special classifications of ale and porter or stout. Its principal constituents are prepared barley, called "malt" (which see) and hops with corn or rice, or both, added in varying proportions. Its flavor and quality depend not only on good materials and correct brewing, but also on the natural characteristics of the water employed--which explains the fact that, with all other conditions equal, some parts of the country enjoy a higher reputation for their beer than others are able to attain. The history of beer proper dates from the thirteenth century, but its predecessor "barley wine" was drunk in Egypt at least four thousand years ago. Herodotus describes barley wine as made from barley malt, the principal ingredient of modern beer, and history tells that the Romans and later the early Britons, Danes and Germans practiced the part of brewing it and consumed it in large quantities. In this country, in the early colonial days, every man was his own brewer. This statement is meant literally, for home beer brewing was as much a part of the housewife's duties as the making of fruit preserves. The local government encouraged however the establishment of public breweries and, their product supplementing the increase in the quantity of imported beers as ocean traffic developed, the result was that in time the custom of home brewing died out as unnecessary. The beers brewed then--and for many succeeding generations--were all of the English style--ale, porter etc.,--much heavier in alcohol than the product we know, darker in color, and more or less "muddy" in appearance. The greater percentage of alcohol was required to keep the liquor in good condition as brewing had not reached the scientific perfection of to-day. The English style of beers continued in universal use until the introduction of "lager beer" from Germany in the early half of the 19th century. The lighter beverage met with almost instant favor and in a few years the demand for it had revolutionized the brewing industry. Under different titles and brands it constitutes by far the greater part of the beer now consumed in this country. (1) Extra Porterhouse Steak (2) Second Cut or Chuck Steak (3) Hip Sirloin (4) Top Round Steak BEEF A color illustration of four cuts of meat, each labeled with a number. Formerly, beer was manufactured almost exclusively of barley malt and hops, and some varieties of both imported and domestic are still so brewed, but the addition of either rice or corn (or both) has become very general for several reasons--principally because of the preference of the general public for a very brilliant, sparkling brew and because of the high prices and limited quantity of high class barley malt produced. To these reasons may be added the fact that much even of high grade American malt contains too many insoluble albuminoids which tend to make the beer cloudy. The average proportion is 70% malt and 30% rice or corn, or 30% of corn and rice mixed. The rice is, perhaps, preferable to corn as giving a finer, cleaner taste, because of the absence of vegetable oil. The difference is, though, slight as very little oil is left in the corn after preparation. Only No. 1 white flint corn and fine ground imported Burma rice are used in high grade breweries. The preparation of the barley malt and the grinding of the corn (to a very fine hominy) are now frequently businesses separate from brewing, because of the magnitude of preparation, separating, cleansing, etc. The first stages in brewing itself are the crushing of the malt and the prolonged boiling of the ground rice or corn. The crushed malt is run into the mash "tun" or tank and mixed with warm water. Then the rice and corn, still at the boiling point, are added to it, the diastase of the malt converting the starches of the grain into "sugar" (maltose and dextrin). The "wort," as the liquid product is then called, is next run off through a filtering apparatus into covered steam-jacketed copper boilers and there boiled, by steam pipes connection, for two or three hours. The hops, in the proportion of about one pound to a barrel, are added to the liquid as soon as it commences to boil. The liquid is next pumped through a hop strainer into the cooling tanks and thence as rapidly as possible through coils of cooling pipes into the ferment tanks. Here yeast is added and fermentation takes place. On the judgment and experience displayed in the preparation and handling of the yeast depends largely the success of the brew. From the fermenting house the beer goes to the "resting" or aging tanks. The next move, after a rest of generally three months or longer, is the finishing tank, where the finished product is "carbonated" either by the addition of carbon-dioxide taken from the fermenting tanks or of a small quantity of new beer just starting to ferment. Either process furnishes the "sparkle" and effervescence which give beer its attractive appearance. Finally comes the filtering and running into kegs or bottles. It is the boiling process which chiefly distinguishes beer as we know it from the ancient "barley wine." The boiling preserves the product by the elimination of the albuminoids, etc., and gives it both better appearance and flavor. The hops tend to give the desired bitter and aromatic taste. Bottled beer is further preserved by pasteurization. The difference in the color of beers is attributable sometimes to local differences in the method of brewing, but more often to the quantity of malt used. As a general thing, a greater percentage of malt tends to make a beer darker and a greater percentage of rice to make it lighter in color. Slight variations may also be due to the difference between light and dark malt, and an especially dark color may be attributable to the addition of 5% to 8% of caramel malt to a dark malt. The difference between "heavy" and "light" beer in composition, irrespective of color, is generally attributable to the temperature at which the "wort" is made. The average is 150° to 160° Fahr., the result of adding the boiling grain to the warm, but not boiling, malt mash. A higher temperature produces less sugar and leaves a larger percentage of unconverted grain extracts in the wort--and in consequence the completed beer will be heavy in body or extract but of a low alcohol percentage. A good example of a beer rich in extracts is the dark Bavarian. Of opposite character is the Pilsner kind--which is light in composition, almost free from extracts, but of a much higher percentage of alcohol. "Brewer's Sugar" or "Commercial Dextrose," a form of glucose, is frequently used in place of part of the usual malt addition, principally from motives of economy when malt is high in price but also because it contains less nitrogenous matter and thus tends to make a clearer brighter brew. The chemical components are closely allied--malt under the action of diastase produces dextrin and maltose, and Brewer's Sugar contains dextrin, maltose and dextrose. American beer closely resembles the German in composition but it averages a little lighter in alcohol--varying in the ordinary varieties from 3% to 4%, going though in some cases as high as 7%. Some connoisseurs assert that the finest German beers excel any produced in this country, but it may be safely asserted that the average of the products of American breweries is fully equal to the average of those of any country without any exception whatever. The title "lager beer" signifies "store house beer," or beer laid by and stored for some months before use. Lager beer is distinguished in brewing by being fermented at a much lower temperature than ales. On this account it was formerly made only during the winter months, but the extension of refrigerating facilities in recent years has made its manufacture possible all the year round. Malt Beer is made solely of barley malt and hops. Bock Beer is an especially strong variety of German origin but now thoroughly localized here. It is darker in color, less bitter in flavor and stronger in alcohol. It is generally brewed in the winter from the first of the new crop of hops and malt and drunk in the spring. The goat which is usually associated with "Bock Beer" is attributable to a general misunderstanding concerning the origin of the title. "Bock" means "goat," but the name "Bock Beer" was taken from "Eimbock," the former name of Eimbeck, a Prussian city famous for its breweries during the time of the Reformation. Stock Beer and Winter Beer are, practically, equivalents of Lager Beer. Black Beer or Dantzig Beer is a very dark, syrupy brew first made in Dantzig. Bitter Beer is a name occasionally applied to ALE (which see). The most noteworthy "temperance" beers which resemble genuine beer in flavor and appearance but which show less than 1% alcoholic component are made in about the same manner and with practically the same ingredients as lager beer, the alcohol being afterwards removed by re-boiling the finished product. BEESWAX: is the fatty substance secreted by bees in making combs for the deposit of honey. The commercial product is the comb refined, bleached, etc., after the extraction of the honey. It is used in the making of fine candles and tapers, for honeycomb foundation (see HONEY), etc. See also WAX. BEESWING: a second or pseudo-crust much admired in port and a few other wines, and which forms in them only when kept for some time after the first or true crust has formed. It consists of minute, glittering, floating particles of tartar, purer and freer from astringent matter than that deposited in the first crust. BEET: after the potato, one of the most important food roots. The small delicate varieties are popular as a table vegetable, both fresh cooked and pickled; the Sugar Beet furnishes nearly half of the world's sugar supply and large quantities of alcohol, and the Mangels and other coarser types are valuable as cattle food. For use as a vegetable, beets are generally boiled but some people prefer baking, which gives a deeper color and retains more of the natural juices. The red fleshed kinds are most popular for table purposes but there are several yellow-flesh types which are very fine in flavor and especially sugary to the taste. Several varieties of beet are grown exclusively for their tops or leaves, the most important of them being Chard (which see), the White or Sicilian beet and the Sea beet. If stored in cellars, beets should be covered with sand or soil to prevent shriveling. Beet An illustration of a round beet with its leaves still attached. BéNéDICTINE: one of the most ancient of liqueurs in present use, having been continuously made since 665 A.D. It was originally prepared at the Bénédictine monastery at Fécamp, Normandy, but since the French Revolution of 1792 it has been made by a commercial company. It is flavored with a great variety of herbs, seeds, etc. See Color Page of LIQUEURS. BENGAL QUINCE or Elephant Apple: an Indian fruit of the citrus family, with smooth yellow rind and pulpy flesh of excellent flavor. A yellow dye is sometimes made from the rind, and the roots, bark and unripe fruit are locally used for medicinal purposes. BENZINE: a light oil of petroleum, used in the household for removing grease spots from clothes, etc. It takes the spot out by dissolving the grease. Commercially, it is also employed to dissolve caoutchouc, gutta-percha, wax, camphor, etc. It is very inflammable and all insurance requirements concerning it should be carefully complied with. The title "Benzine" should not be confused with "Benzene," more correctly called Benzol, a very different article, obtained from coal tar. BENZOATE OF SODA, Sodium Benzoate: a salt made by adding benzoic acid to a hot solution of carbonate of sodium--the sodium benzoate appears on cooling in the form of crystals. Commercially, it is a white powder, slightly sweet and astringent in flavor. It is used to a considerable extent as a food preservative (see PRESERVATIVES). Commercial Benzoic acid is manufactured chiefly from coal tar and by synthesis, also to a certain extent from rosins, especially that of the Tolu and other South American trees and Benzoin, exuded from the bark of an East Indian tree. It is found naturally in cranberries and some other fruits. BERGAMOT, Bergamot Orange, or Mellarosa: a citrus fruit which may be classed as between an orange and lemon, cultivated principally in the South of Europe. It is generally somewhat pear-shaped, with thin, smooth peel, lemon-yellow in color and very aromatic, and greenish, sub-acid and fragrant pulp. The oil obtained from the rind is used in flavoring liqueurs and in perfumery. BERGAMOT (HERB): a title frequently applied to a family of several different plants used as herbs for their stimulating and aromatic properties, as "Wild Bergamot," "American Horse Mint," etc. BERGAMOT PEAR: in Europe, the popular name for several choice types of pears. BERRIES: should be kept in a cool dry place. Dryness is absolutely essential. Moisture, even in a cool atmosphere, will rapidly spoil them as it conduces to the growth of mold--and when berries have begun to mold, it is almost impossible to save them. It is much better to show berries in the window, if protected from the sun, or on a display table in the store, than outside in the street where they are reasonably sure to collect a fine assortment of grit and dirt. Some grocers have become so enlightened that even inside the store they show only a few boxes at a time--just enough to attract attention. The remainder are kept in the cellar or refrigerator until they are needed. As berries require very careful handling to wash them without spoiling their appearance or flavor, the best advice is to exercise care in purchasing--avoiding those which are too soft or which show sand, etc. Only fresh clean berries should be eaten raw--others are better cooked. See also BLACKBERRIES, STRAWBERRIES, etc., and Color Page of BERRIES. BETEL NUT: the fruit of a palm cultivated in tropical Asia, noted for its narcotic and intoxicating properties. BETHESDA. See general article on table and medicinal MINERAL WATERS. BIFFINS: a special kind of dried apple, flat in appearance and soft to the touch, prepared in large quantities in Norfolk, England. They are obtained by a very slow drying of the fruit and occasional pressing. BIGARADE or Seville Orange: the type chiefly used for preserving, etc. See ORANGES. BILBERRY. See HUCKLEBERRIES. Also in some sections applied to the JUNE BERRY. BILTONG: a South African term for strips of the sun-dried meat of antelope, etc. BIN: a large wooden box or chest with a lid, used for corn, flour, sugar, etc. Also, a compartment in a wine cellar. BIRCH BEER: a summer beverage made from the fermented sap of the birch. The sap is secured by "tapping" in the spring, a large tree often giving from four to six quarts in a single day. If the holes are properly closed after use, the trees may be tapped every year without injury. CURRANTS BLUEBERRIES BLACKBERRIES CRANBERRIES STRAWBERRIES HUCKLEBERRIES GOOSEBERRIES DEWBERRY RASPBERRIES A color illustration of a variety of berries, each pictured with a few leaves and occasionally a blossom of the plant on which it grows. BIRCH SUGAR: the evaporated sap of the birch tree, produced in very much the same way as Maple Sugar (which see). BIRDS'-NEST SOUP: a famous Oriental soup made from the gelatinous, mucous substance with which several varieties of Swifts form the lower portion of their nests, building them bracket-fashion on the faces of cliffs. Kanten (which see), or Vegetable Isinglass, is frequently used as a substitute for Birds'-nests. BISCUITS or Crackers: are made nowadays in great variety and, in the majority of cases, of uniform excellence of flavor and ingredients. The result of the improvement in the domestic product during the last few years has been a noteworthy increase in consumption. The American appetite for biscuits is, however, still a long way behind that of some other countries--our annual per capita expenditure is only forty cents for biscuits of all kinds as against nearly three dollars in Canada and a full four dollars in England. The title "biscuit" is a combination of two French words which mean "twice cooked." In their original manufacture, "biscuits" underwent two separate bakings, the second to evaporate the moisture held over from the first. Enormous quantities of honey are used in the baking of the modern Sweet Biscuit as it helps to keep the product fresher and softer than when sugar is employed. The retailer is advised to buy in small lots so as to be sure that his stock is always fresh, and to lay in only those varieties for which there is a reasonably steady demand in his particular neighborhood. Hard, sweet biscuits are the best keepers. Excessive paleness is generally considered a defect as it is usually attributable to age or poor baking. Both retailer and consumer should see that crackers are kept in a warm, dry place--dampness will quickly spoil them. If moisture has deprived them of crispness, they can often be improved by putting in a hot oven for a few minutes. Bulk crackers should always be kept in boxes as nearly air-tight as possible--those with glass fronts or tops combining display and a fair measure of protection. "Package" crackers are always preferable to the bulk kind, for the latter can scarcely fail to suffer to some extent from exposure to atmospheric changes and to dust, flies and other nuisances. BISQUE: "cream" soup of Shellfish. See general article on SOUPS. BITTERS: spirits in which bitter roots or herbs have been steeped. Medicinally, they are divided into "Simple Bitters," including such remedies as Dogwood, Gentian and Quassia, which by their peculiar bitterness serve as a stimulant to appetite and digestion; "Aromatic Bitters," including Virginia Snake Root and Wild Cherry Bark, which contain an aromatic principle and are more or less astringent, and "Special Bitters" whose main principle is usually Cinchona, the source of quinine, and its several preparations--in small doses acting as "Simple Bitters" and in larger as a remedy for malarial affections. "Cascarilla" is the Spanish and South American name for Cinchona and "Calisaya" is one of the best known varieties. Commercially, Bitters are widely used in this country as an appetizer, with other spirits and water, or with syrup and soda, etc.; in the making of cocktails and various other "mixed drinks." They are known by special trade names, taken generally from the constituent herb or bark, the place of production or the name of the manufacturers. BIVALVE. As applied to foods, the term "bivalve" refers to shellfish having two shells joined by an elastic ligament which permits the shells opening (somewhat like the covers of a book--but not to an equal extent) and closing--as oysters, clams, etc. BLACK ASH: evaporated from the waste lyes of soap making and used in the manufacture of alum and common soap. BLACKBERRY: the fruit of a bushy rambler, growing wild in the woods and fields, which is sold in large quantities in the early summer months. Cultivation has greatly improved its size and quality in recent years and has extended its fruiting season to the end of September. In addition to its consumption as a fresh fruit, large quantities are used in cooking, made into jelly and jam, blackberry cordial, etc. Dried blackberries, principally from the South, are wild berries dried in the sun. The quality is generally poor. The Dewberry is a fruit of the same species, but rather smaller, rounder and more juicy. It grows on a low, creeping bramble, and ripens several weeks before the blackberry proper. BLACKBERRY BRANDY: is boiled blackberry juice with medicinal spices added and fortified with sufficient brandy to prevent fermentation. It is much used in summer complaints. BLACKBIRD: originally, the name of a distinct variety of birds, but in this country freely applied in many sections to several birds widely different in family but alike in their black plumage. The only kind that can legally be sold as a game bird is that known as the "Crow Blackbird," which is considered excellent by many lovers of bird meat. Blackbirds were at one time highly esteemed as a food delicacy in England--an historical item that has been perpetuated in the nursery rhyme concerning the "pie" containing "four and twenty blackbirds" which was "set before the king!" BLACKFISH or Tautog: a North Atlantic fish in season from April to October. It varies in weight from one to fourteen pounds, large specimens measuring as long as thirty inches--these big fish being though very scarce. Its skin is tough and black like an eel's but the flesh is white, tender and of fine flavor. Blackfish An illustration of a fish with a spiky dorsal fin and a striped body. BLACKING. The principal ingredients of common blacking are bone black, oil, molasses and a little sulphuric acid. There is also a higher grade of blacking in which wax is used instead of molasses. This produces a softer and more durable polish and excludes moisture better than the ordinary article. Blacking should be kept in a dry, cool place. BLACKSTRAP. See reference in article under heading of MOLASSES. BLANC-MANGE (from the French blanc-manger, "white eating"): correctly, a pudding or jelly made of isinglass, gelatine, calves' foot jelly, etc., and milk. Ground rice, arrowroot, cornstarch, etc., are, however, frequently substituted. Transparent Blanc-Mange, the title then being a misnomer, is a clear, flavored jelly. BLANCHING: whitening or making white. In cookery, mushrooms, artichoke bottoms, etc., are "blanched" in water prepared by adding a little lemon, butter and salt and bringing to a boil. The term is also sometimes, but incorrectly, applied in a culinary sense to Parboiling (which see in article on COOKERY). In agriculture, the stalks of celery, asparagus, etc., are "blanched" by banking earth or putting planks, etc., around them while growing, to keep the sun off and thus prevent them attaining a green color. BLANQUETTE: a delicate white wine. A special variety of large pear. The French name for white-bait. In cookery, a stew with white sauce. BLET: a form of decay showing first as rotting spots in fruit such as apples, etc. BLETTING: a term applied to the change which takes place in hard, sour apples and similar fruits after they have been stored for a considerable time. The first effects are to improve the fruit by making the flesh softer and sweeter, but continued too long the change results eventually in decay. BLIMBLING: a fruit similar to the Carambola (which see) but generally more acid. BLOATERS: selected fat herring, slightly salted and still more slightly smoked, retailed both from boxes and in cans, domestic and imported. As those in boxes are not intended for long keeping they should be consumed as soon as possible after curing. They are best from October to March. BLOOD WURST: a large sausage chiefly of pork, with hog blood, etc. See SAUSAGES. BLUE. See item on BLUING at foot of this page. BLUEBERRY: a bluish-black berry of the Vaccinium family. See HUCKLEBERRY. BLUEFISH ( See Color page III of FISH): a fish found at different periods the length of the Atlantic coast and consequently in season all the year, Florida supplying it during the winter months. It takes its name from the blue color of its skin and the slightly bluish tint of the flesh. It varies in size from half a pound to ten pounds--being occasionally found as heavy as twenty pounds. The very small fish caught during the summer months are known as "Snapper Blue." BLUE LICK SPRINGS. See general article on table and medicinal MINERAL WATERS. BLUING or BLUE: used in washing clothes to give them a whiter appearance. It is retailed in both solid and liquid form in many grades. Indigo (which see) is the original form but Prussian blue and aniline dyes are now very largely employed. Liquid blue is very apt to freeze and should be kept in a warm place or the b{illegible}ing bottles may entail great damage to other articles in stock. BOAR'S HEAD: formerly applied only to the head of the wild boar but now to of any male pig, domestic or otherwise, when served whole. The wild boar, which a shorter body and longer tusks and snout than the domestic hog and bears a thick {illegible} coat, is till hunted in Continental Europe, Northern Africa and Asia Minor. BOB-WHITE. The "Bob-White"--its name represents its call--is generally known as the Quail (which see). In some parts of the country it is erroneously called "partridge" and the "Virginia partridge." BOCKSBEUTEL, Boxbeutel: a peculiar shaped bottle in which Steinwein and {illegible}tenwein, fine Bavarian white wines, are generally imported. BOCKWURST: a term applied to various small sausages served with Bock Beer. BOILING. See sub-head in article on COOKERY. BOLETUS: the large mushroom imported under the French name of Cèpes. MUSHROOMS. BOLOGNA: a well-known sausage, originated in Bologna, Italy. See SAUSAGES. BOMBAY DUCKS: a familiar name for canned Bummaloe Fish (imported from India). BONITO: a fish varying in size from five to eight pounds, found along the Atlantic coast, generally following the mackerel, which it resemble {illegible} scale coloring. It is in season from June to October. Its {illegible} is rather dark. An illustration of a fish with pointed fins and diagonal stripes across its body. BORAGE: a garden herb. The young leaves smell somewhat like cucumbers and used for salads and cooked as greens, etc. One or two leaves or flower spikes are {illegible} added to top a punch or wine cup. BORATED FISH: fish preserved by boracic acid; largely imported from Norway. BORAX: one of the most useful of chemicals. The world's supply formerly came from Asia, principally Thibet and Persia, but the United States now furnishes a considerable share of it, the largest deposits being those discovered in the middle and late part of the last century in California and Nevada. The most famous are those "Death Valley" in California, the borax being generally found in depressions w{illegible} were probably lakes in prehistoric times. The borax there is generally in the shape of balls, from the smallest possible size to others as large as pumpkins, and usually stuck in clay around the depressions or "marshes"--technically so called though a majority of them have been dry as dust for ages and the others hold water only during rainy season. When these balls are broken they show a white crystal interior, which changes to a hard dull grey on further exposure to the air. In other parts, the borax is mixed with sand on the surface and in masses under ground. In its powdered and refined form and as boric or boracic acid, which is borax decomposed by sulphuric or hydrochloric acid, borax has an extraordinarily wide field of usefulness. It is largely used in the silk and textile trades, in paper making and various other manufactures, as a substitute for and in the composition of soap, in the making of shampoo and other hair preparations, for preserving foods and liquids of all kinds, in the sick room and nursery, for the extermination of all manner of bugs and vermin, etc. Adulterations were formerly very common but the bulk of the borax sold to-day is pure. To test it, add to the powder a few drops of strong vinegar--if it effervesces, it is not pure. The most commonly used adulterant is bicarbonate of sodium. BORDEAUX WINES--Red. See CLARET. BORDEAUX WINES--White: a majority of the white Bordeaux wines exported are produced in the celebrated Graves section of the department of the Gironde. The cheapest grades are generally marketed here as Barsac, Bommes and Graves; the next higher as Sauternes, Haut Sauternes and Haut Barsac. The term "Haut" in this connection means "Upper," the higher sections of the Sauternes and Barsac districts producing wine of better quality. The most famous variety is the Château Yquem Sauternes--some vintages attain exceedingly high value. The other first "crûs" (growths or districts) are Château Latour-Blanche, Château Peyraguey, Château Vigneau, Château Suduiraut, Château Coutet, Château Climenz Château (Bayle) Guiraud, Château Rieussec and Château Rabaut. The principal differences in the making of such wines as "Sauternes" and "Claret" are, that for Sauternes, "white" grapes are generally employed and that they are left on the vines until the last possible moment, until they are beginning to wrinkle with ripeness, so as to obtain the fullest amount of sugar; that the juice is pressed and removed from the grapes as rapidly as possible to avoid its being colored by the skins, and that, going into the press later in the season, fermentation is arrested before all the sugar has been transformed into alcohol--producing a wine "white" instead of red and sweeter than claret--in which practically all sugar has been transformed. In addition is, generally, a special selection of the grapes used--varieties heavy in sugar, such as Sauvignon and Semeillan, being grown in the majority of the vineyards of the Sauternes district--and, frequently, the addition of a small quantity of sugar-syrup after fermentation. The bulk of American "Sauternes" is produced in the Pacific Coast range district. Both the Eastern and Southern wine districts also supply a limited quantity, some brands being excellent in flavor and characteristics. See general article on WINES-- Temperature, Decanting, etc. BORECOLE: a variety of cabbage with open leaves instead of head. It is best known popularly as Kale (which see). BOSTON BROWN BREAD: a famous New England specialty. See BREAD. BOUILLABAISSE: a famous French fish stew. See Culinary Terms in A{illegible} BOUILLON: clarified broth. See general article on SOUPS. BOXBEUTEL: a special type of wine flagon or bottle. See BOCKSBEUTEL. BRAINS: should be bright in color and firm. All kinds are esteemed as de {illegible} but beef brains and calves' brains, the latter being the choicer, are the varieties retailed. In Southern cookery, the preference is generally given to sheeps' and brains. BRAISED BEEF or Beef à la Mode: generally part of the "round," boiled with {illegible} and other vegetables cut small. See Braising in article on COOKERY. BRAN: part of the husk or coat of wheat or other grain (see WHEAT) obtaine{illegible} process of flour making. Its principal use is as food for live stock but it is also {illegible} with white flour to make Brown or Graham bread, etc. BRANDIED CHEESE: old cream-cheese mixed and potted with brandy. Se{illegible} on CHEESE. BOUQUET of HERBS: a small bundle or "faggot" of various pot herbs {illegible} parsley, thyme, celery, bay leaf, etc., for flavoring soups and stews. BRANDY: a liquor obtained by the distillation of the fermented juice of fruits {illegible} the word is employed without any qualifying prefix, it is nearly always under {illegible} the liquor distilled from wine, i.e., the fermented juice of grapes. Other {illegible} generally carry the explanations of their source--as "Cherry Brandy," "Peach Brandy," etc. After grapes, the most important commercial type of European br{illegible} that made from dried figs. Red wines yield the largest amount of brandy, but the product of white {illegible} considered the finer and more delicate. When first distilled, the liquor, known then as "white brandy," is entirely {illegible} and will so remain if stored in glass or earthenware. Custom first stored it in {illegible} casks and these gradually gave it the yellowish color which it had when first {illegible} The public obtained the impression that the darker the brandy the greater its s{illegible} and as a consequence a little caramel (burnt sugar) is nearly always added to {illegible} the now characteristic "brandy color." The finest brandy in the world is that known as Cognac, distilled from fi{illegible} wines grown in the vicinity of the City of Cognac, in the department of Char{illegible} the west of France. The word "Cognac" was for many years, until checked {illegible} lation, so freely used on imported brandies that it is generally taken to be the word for brandy. The proper equivalent is though Eau de Vie, "Cognac" only a {illegible} correctly to brandy from the Cognac district. The genuine Cognac is divided into four principal grades--"Grande Champagne" or "Fine Champagne" (the very finest), "Petite Champagne," "Borderies" and {illegible} The name "Champagne" was given in Old France to a plain or upland, the {illegible} of which is chalk with a thin layer of mould. It is only suitable for vine cultiva{illegible} There are many such "Champagnes" in France, but the two most famous are those around Reims (the source of Champagne wine) and around Cognac. Their soil and subsoil are similar. The third grade, "Borderies," is so named because it is from the district "bordering on" the "Champagne." The fourth is styled "Bois," because formerly the country immediately beyond was a woodland ( bois ). It is divided into: Fins (fine) bois; Bons (good) bois; Bois ordinaires (ordinary); Bois éloignés (distant). Cognac as marketed is generally a blending of Grande Champagne or Petite Champagne with Borderies or Bois, the first for flavor and aroma and the second for strength. It is interesting to note that though Cognac is so distinctively a French product, comparatively little of it is consumed in France, the bulk being exported to English speaking countries. In the offices of the largest Cognac firms, nearly 95% of the correspondence is conducted in the English language. The use of the word "champagne" in connection with brandy is also sometimes attributed to the custom of adding a small quantity of the finest brandy in the last stages of champagne making--the choicest brandy being used, the entire grade attained commercial significance as "Champagne brandy." "Cognac Vierge" is distilled from wine made from the first pressing of the grapes. The term Fine Champagne is also applied to a blend produced in Languedoc and Roussillon. Armagnac is another high class French brandy, produced in a district in South-west France, formerly known as Armagnac--now chiefly within the department of Gers. Eau de vie de Marc, or "lees brandy," is a distinct grade distilled from the fermented liquor obtained by steeping in water the skins, etc., left over from the pressing of the grapes for wine. It is generally of minor quality, but some varieties, as the best grades from the Burgundy district, are very highly rated. Care should be taken to avoid adulterated and imitation brandies. Their use is unnecessary as there is a plentiful supply of the genuine, both domestic and imported. Of the domestic product, that from California is generally rated as the best. The average annual output is in the neighborhood of five million gallons. Of this, about one-third, principally of that made from Muscat grapes, is placed on the market as Brandy, the remainder being used to fortify sweet wines, such as Port and Madeira. Genuine new brandy is frequently given the appearance and flavor of "age" by the addition of a little old rum, old kirsch, etc. Brandy is used medicinally as a stimulant and for various other purposes. It is distinguished from the majority of other ardent spirits by its light stomachic properties. BRAWN: veal or pork trimmings, chiefly the latter, seasoned, spiced and pressed. Sold in bulk, canned and sausage form. See HEAD CHEESE. BRAZIL NUTS, Cream Nuts, Para Nuts: the fruit of a large tree, native to Brazil and Guiana. The nuts are brown and wrinkled in appearance, triangluar in shape, with hard shells and white kernels of very agreeable taste. They grow encased and packed in round seed-vessels (see illustration in first Color Page of NUTS), varying in size from that of a cocoanut to some as large as a man's head and so hard that a sledge hammer is required to break them. See also article on NUTS ( Food Values ). BREAD. It is generally conceded nowadays that the Egyptians were the first to use leaven in the making of bread, though some historians give the credit to the Chinese. From Egypt, the custom traveled to Greece and, later on, the Greeks communicated the process to the Romans, who spread the invention throughout the northern countries during their campaigns. The allusions to bread in the works of the classic authors are very numerous. Athenaeus mentions no fewer than sixty-two varieties as known among the ancient Greeks and good descriptions of many of them are given. They employed in the making a great variety of grains--wheat, barley, rye, millet, spelt, rice, etc.--combining them sometimes with other substances such as the flour of dried lotus roots and the root of the cornflag, the last named first boiled so as to give a sweet taste to the bread. In ancient Rome, public bakeries were numerous, the great majority of them conducted by Greeks, who had the reputation of making the best bread. Wheat bread is the most popular in this country because wheat flour's higher percentage of gliadin makes bread that is lighter than that of other flour. It is also credited with being a nearly perfect food ration. It is not as rich in food value as dried ripe beans or peas, but on the other hand it is in a form which is more generally acceptable as a leading article of diet and is easily assimilated. Its principal defect is the lack of fat, and that is generally overcome by the custom of eating it with butter or milk. It is also somewhat deficient in protein--hence the desirability of supplementing it with meat, fish, etc. (see article on FOOD VALUES). The exact science of modern bread making is a study of infinite minor chemical possibilities, but its fundamental principles may be outlined in a few words. The flour is mixed with water, a little salt and yeast, and left or set in a warm place to "rise." Later on, it is again kneaded and set to rise a second time. Then, as soon as the dough has risen sufficiently, it is shaped into loaves and baked in the oven. The time thus consumed varies in different processes, according to the quantity of yeast used, the temperature maintained, etc. In large modern bakeries, all or nearly all the work is done by machinery. The raising of the dough is effected by the growth in it of the yeast fungi. The diastase in the dough, produced by the action of the yeast on part of the soluble protein of the flour, converts part of the starch into a kind of sugar, and the yeast cells, feeding on and propagating in this, produce alcoholic fermentation--convert it into alcohol and carbon-dioxide (gas). The alcohol, which passes away by evaporation, is unimportant but the carbon-dioxide, being distributed all through the dough, raises it as it expands in thousands of little pockets or cells in the dough. When the loaves are placed in the oven, the heat kills the yeast cells and stops the fermentation, but at the same time causes the gas already formed to expand still further, thus again raising the bread. Later, the gas forces itself out, but the air cells still remain, held in place by the stiffening in baking of the glî;adin in the dough. The heat also changes some of the moisture into steam, which, being retained in the same or other tiny pockets, aids in the raising process--and the result is the light porous loaf of everyday use. The brown crust of the baked loaf and much of its pleasing odor, are due principally to the caramelizing of the dextrin and other sugars obtained by the conversion of the starch of the outer surface. The ordinary bread and rolls of everyday use are made from white flour--obtained by grinding the wheat grain after the bran coat and germ have been removed. For the more "fancy" varieties, milk and water, or milk alone, are substituted for the water in DOMESTIC COTTAGE GRAHAM BREAD A color illustration of four loaves of bread--one square, one round, one rectangular, and one long, each with its own caption. mixing the dough, and in some cases, sugar, butter, lard, etc., are added to it to make it sweeter or richer. New hot bread is generally rated as a bugbear to any except those of abnormally strong digestive powers--but lovers of good things to eat, who in fear of their lives have refrained from enjoying it, should take a stale loaf, wrap a wet towel around it and set it in a brisk oven for a while. The result will be a hot loaf that tastes better than one fresh from the baker--yet won't worry the digestion at all! For French bread, just dip the loaf in water and set it in the oven without any cloth around it. Bread should be kept in an air-tight show-case, box or receptacle which must be frequently scalded and aired--and thoroughly dried before using again. In other countries, under various circumstances, bread has been made from a great variety of grains, vegetables and nuts. Beans, peas, potatoes, etc., produce fair bread if mixed with wheat or rye to prevent sogginess; rice makes bread of pleasing flavor and attractive appearance; the chestnut bread of the Corsican mountaineers is agreeable and healthful and will keep fresh for as long as two weeks, and acorns, mosses and innumerable roots have also served--either alone or mixed with cereals. Aerated Bread, very popular in London, is made by charging the water used for wetting the dough with carbon-dioxide (gas), then working it up in enclosed iron kneading machines and putting directly into the oven, instead of allowing the gas to form in the dough from the fermentation caused by the working of yeast. The advantage is that bread can be thus made more quickly and cheaply and chemically purer--but, to the American palate, aerated bread has a rather flat taste. An objection in the trade is that owing to its firm crust it does not show its staleness and when taken away by the bakers is sometimes returned again as fresh--to the injury of the grocer, whose customers naturally complain. Boston Brown Bread is made from rye, cornmeal and graham flour, well sweetened, principally with molasses, cooked by steaming, boiling or baking, and generally served smoking hot. It was originated in New England and is still very popular there. Within recent years it has attained also a considerable sale in other parts of the country, with a growing use in canned form. It is very nutritious but not as easily digested as wheat bread. Corn Bread has never attained full favor in the North, but in different forms it is an important article of food in the South, where it is consumed as "corn bread," "corn muffins," "Johnny Cake," "Corn Pone," etc. French Bread, as generally known in this country, is a long narrow loaf--often eighteen inches long and upward--of crisp crust and proportionately little crumb. In France, there are two distinct types of bread. The kind already mentioned, in Paris sometimes reaching a length of three to five feet, is known as "Pain ordinaire" (ordinary bread). The other is "Pain riche" (rich bread)--a finer variety mixed with milk and made in all sorts of shapes (crescents, etc.), generally of small size. Gluten Bread is made from ordinary flour dough subjected to straining and pressing under a stream of water until most of the starch is worked out, leaving the gluten as the principal component. Properly made, the result is a light elastic loaf especially suitable for diabetic and other patients from whose diet starch (and its product, sugar) should be excluded. Graham Bread, or Brown Bread, Whole Wheat or Entire Wheat Bread. Graham Bread is generally made from flour which contains all of the "bran coat," or at all events the "aleurone layer" (see WHEAT), but its composition varies considerably. As generally eaten nowadays, it is in other respects made in the same way as "white" bread, but the original Graham bread was made without yeast--the few "holes" in it being due probably to some minor fermentation. In flavor it was sweet and fairly palatable, but a good deal heavier than yeast bread. Whole Wheat or Entire Wheat bread is made from flour which consists sometimes of the entire grain ground up; at others, merely a coarse flour containing part of the aleurone layer and grading between "Graham" and "ordinary" flour. The comparative advantages of "ordinary" or "white," Graham and Whole Wheat breads have been in dispute a long time. Advocates of Graham and Whole Wheat breads claim for them greater nourishing properties--others contend that "white" bread is more easily digested by the average person and that therefore more food value is assimilated by its use, irrespective of the chemical analyses of the loaves. To a disinterested party, the comparative advantages or otherwise seem to be principally a matter of individual taste and digestion. The chemical difference is slight. Leavened Bread is bread of any kind, raised or "leavened" by yeast or any similar agent. Honey Bread is ordinary white bread slightly sweetened. Macaroni Bread has nothing to do with macaroni. It is ordinary white bread made from flour of the prolific variety of hard wheat know as "Durum" or "Macaroni" wheat, now largely grown in the western and southern states. Its advocates claim for it all the advantages of other wheat flour. Malt Bread is that in which malt extract is added in making, the result being a bread that is sweeter (from the sugars formed by the action of the diastase of the malt) and moister (because of the dextrin formed). There is also an increase in the phosphatic content, etc. Pumpernickel is a dark German bread of unbolted rye, very heavy and slightly acid, made from fermented dough. Thinly sliced, it is considered a delicacy when made into sandwiches or eaten with the soup course. It is sold generally by delicatessen dealers--made here and also imported, the latter being canned in thin slices. Rye Bread, as sold in this country, is generally part rye and part wheat flour, sometimes flavored and sprinkled with caraway seeds. Full rye bread is heavy in character owing both to the general manner of its manufacture and to a peculiarity of the gluten of rye flour, and has an aromatic taste independent of the flavor of the caraway seed, etc., added in baking. It is a very important article of diet in Germany and the principal staple food in Russia. (1) Pumpernickel (2) Vienna (3) Twist (4) New England (5) Rye BREAD A color illustration of five different loaves of bread, each labeled with a different number. Salt-rising Bread, is bread leavened by the addition to the sponge of a fermented batter of warm milk, salt and, generally, cornmeal. The name is derived from the salt dissolved in the milk to prevent the growth of bacteria in it while it is exposed to the atmosphere awaiting the action of (generally) "wild" yeast (see YEAST). Unleavened Bread is made without yeast or any other raising agent. Some "dyspeptic breads" are sold in this form, but the most commonly seen type is the "Matzoth," a large round cracker or biscuit, made only of flour and water, eaten during the Jewish Passover--both plain, in place of leavened bread, and cooked in various ways. Vienna Bread is an American title for loaves made of the same kind of dough used in France for the pain riche mentioned in the paragraph on French Bread. It is seldom if ever baked in Vienna in the large loaves seen here! Gathering Bread Fruit, Panama An illustration of a man standing among the undergrowth of some trees laden with large fruits. BREAD FRUIT: the sweet, starchy fruit of a tree of tropical growth. It is round in shape, nearly or quite as large as a man's head and covered with a thick greenish rind. The natives generally gather it when the starch is in a mealy condition, then peel it, wrap it in leaves, and bake it by placing between hot stones. They also preserve it by allowing it to putrefy in watertight pits, the result being a mass resembling soft cheese, which, when used, is baked in the same manner as the fresh fruit. For Northern tables, it is best prepared by scooping a hole in the top, filling with butter and baking. Another method is to boil the entire fruit until tender, then peel, slice and serve with butter sauce. It resembles sweet potato in flavor and texture. BRETZEL. See PRETZEL. BRIE CHEESE. See CHEESE. BRIMSTONE. See matter following title of SULPHUR. BRINE: water in which salt has been dissolved until it will not take any more. It is used for preserving meats, butter, etc. When employed for meat, saltpetre is generally added to retain or enhance the desired red color and a small quantity of sugar or molasses is sometimes included to give a sweet flavor. Brine is best kept in kegs made of oak or other hard timber. Meat should not be left in it longer than two months without boiling and skimming the brine, as the latter is liable to acquire poisonous qualities. After re-boiling, more salt must be added to bring its strength up again. In country districts, brine is used over and over again, as old brine containing meat extract is said to take less from meat put in it than fresh brine. It is, though, scalded, skimmed and strengthened after each batch. BRIOCHE: is, strictly, a slightly sweetened rich bread or very plain cake, but, in general usage, the title is applied to a bun with syrup poured on it. "Fancy" brioches have a centre filling of cherries, pineapple, etc., mixed with liqueur. BROCCOLI: a variety of the common cabbage produced by cultivation. It is very similar to the Cauliflower, but more highly colored. It is not grown as much as formerly, as Cauliflower is now in the market nearly all the year. BROILING. See suggestions on this subject in general article on COOKERY. BROOM CORN: a plant of the same variety as Kaffir corn and sorghum, native to the East Indies, but now cultivated in both this country and Europe. It is said that the American industry is due to Benjamin Franklin, who picked one seed from a whisk brought to Philadelphia by a lady and planted it. It differs from other plants of the same species in having seed heads with longer, straighter and stronger branches or straw. The Standard plant gives the large heads used for carpet brooms, etc., and the Dwarf those made into whisks, etc. BROOMS: are generally made of broom-corn, the seeds being combed out by machinery. The handles vary from the cheapest to the most expensive woods. For their quality, brooms depend not only upon their material, but upon the way they are put together. They should be securely fastened and wrapped with from two to six ties of twine or wire--the more the better. The corn should be clean, tough, and regular in appearance. To clean brooms, dip them in hot soap and suds --it can be done on wash days. The life and flexibility of the broom will be improved and the carpets will be cleaner. BROSE: a kind of porridge made by adding boiling water, milk or broth to oatmeal, or barley or other meal and mixing by stirring. It is named according to the liquid used as a basis--as "water brose," "beef brose," etc. Athole Brose, often used in Scotland as a remedy for a sore throat, is made of oatmeal or honey and whiskey. It takes its name from the town of Athole. BROTH: a liquid or clear soup obtained by boiling or steeping meat, poultry, game, shell-fish (as clams, etc.) in water, generally with the addition of vegetables or herbs, followed by straining. If obtained at a low temperature, it may contain a considerable percentage of nutriment, but, as generally made, it is principally valuable as a stimulant. Clarified broth is also known as Bouillon and Consommé (see SOUPS). Broths have especially high value in the treatment of invalids, convalescents and others with delicate stomachs. They are nowadays agreeably diversified by using a variety of distinctive vegetable and other flavoring ingredients--as "celery broth," "tomato broth," etc.--and are so retailed in bottles and cans. See also MEAT EXTRACT. BROWN BREAD: a term popularly applied to the various forms of Graham and Whole Wheat bread. See BREAD. BRUSSELS SPROUTS: one of the numerous special varieties of cabbage, cultivated in Belgium since early in the thirteenth century and now grown in every temperate climate. It is distinguished by its long stalk to which are attached a number of miniature cabbages, each an inch or so in diameter, which in the best varieties are when raw nearly as firm and hard as the stalk itself, but when cooked are as tender as fine cauliflower and possess a very delicate flavor. The chief season is from September to January. The outer skins should be peeled off before cooking and boiling should be continued only long enough to make the "Sprouts" tender--their best qualities are lost and they become watery and mushy if overcooked. BUCKWHEAT ( See Color Page I of GRAINS): originally styled "Beech-wheat" because the grain presents a triangular shape resembling that of the beechnut. It is known in France as "Blé Sarrasin" because report says that it was brought to Europe by the Crusaders. The plant, hardy and very rapid in growth, is raised in this country chiefly in Pennsylvania, New York and the New England states. Buckwheat in blossom on a Pennsylvania farm An illustration of a large field full of blossoming plants with a barn in the background. Buckwheat flour is very popular for batter cakes, especially in cold weather. Unmixed, it is dark in color and of a rather rank bitter flavor, but this is generally modified by mixing with wheat "middlings"--the combination making dough that is lighter and sweeter, and cakes which brown more rapidly on the griddle. In buying Buckwheat flour, small, frequent purchases are best. It should be kept cool and well covered as it is much sought by insects. BUFFALO BERRY: a fruit resembling the barberry, popular in the West, where it is used in any manner suitable for currants. Its name originated in the old-time custom of serving it as a sauce with buffalo meat. Buffalo Berries An illustration of a branch with long leaves and clusters of small berries on its stems. BUFFALO LITHIA. See MINERAL WATERS. BUN: a well-known class of light sweet cakes of small size and generally round shape. See CROSS BUNS, BATH BUNS, etc. BURDOCK or Gobo: a vegetable native to Japan and in general characteristic similar to the common wild Burdock. Its young roots are variously prepared. BURGUNDY WINES: take their name from the ancient province of Burgundy, France. They are much "heavier" than Bordeaux wines and contain a considerably greater alcohol percentage. The best varieties, those produced in the hilly lands between Dijon and Chalons in the department of Coté d'Or, rank very high in the esteem of connoisseurs and are often recommended to invalids as a stimulating and highly tonic beverage. Burgundies are divided into two principal classes--"red" and "white," the red being generally the choicer. The chief types are sold both "still" and "sparkling." Red Burgundies are subdivided into three classes. The most famous, those of CLASS I, are Romanée Conti, Chambertin, Clos de Vougeot, Richebourg and La Tâche --varying in retail value, according to vintage, etc., from one to ten dollars a quart, the last-named being for a famous old vintage of Romanée Conti. The word "clos" means literally "enclosure" and hence "locality" or "vineyard." With the exception of the CLASS I varieties and a few examples of CLASSES II and III, the bulk of the Burgundy imported into the United States is marketed under the name of the commune, or district, of production--as Beaune, Corton, Nuits, Pommard, Volnay, Vosné, Vougeot, etc. Prominent among the lower grade, lighter red varieties are Macon and Beaujolais. Though "white" Burgundy as a class is not as highly considered as red Burgundy, the best vintages of one variety, Montrachet, which resembles very fine Rhine Wine, are world-famous. Other excellent white Burgundies are Meursault and Chablis, the latter in varying qualities from quite ordinary to choice. High grade Burgundies will keep from twenty to thirty years, and sometimes longer, often greatly improving with age. The lower grades are best at from five to ten years. Burgundy should never be served as delivered from the merchant as it requires a considerable time, two or three weeks at least, to settle after being disturbed. It should be drunk at about the temperature of the average dining room or a trifle warmer. It should never be iced. Old Burgundies require care in decanting to be enjoyed at their best--see general article on WINES. BURNET or Pimpinel: a garden herb, the young leaves of which are used for salads. They resemble the cucumber in flavor. BUSHEL. See tables of Weights and Measures in APPENDIX. BUTTER: as a food dates back to the time of the ancient Jews, but by the Greeks and Romans it was used only as an ointment and even now it is largely sold for that purpose by apothecaries in the countries bordering on the Mediterranean. The greater part of the butter sold by merchants to-day is that made by creameries and the result of this centralization has been to improve greatly the average quality and to establish uniformity so that varying qualities may be intelligently graded. By the old-fashioned method, cream for butter making was obtained by allowing the milk to stand from twenty to thirty-six hours, the cream which rose to the top being removed when sufficiently "ripened" or soured. By the creamery method, the cream is generally separated from the whole milk while it is still sweet by running it through specially designed centrifugal separators. It is then treated by the addition of pasteurized skim milk, previously curdled by the addition of "pure cultures" (see BACTERIA), in order to bring about the lactic fermentation essential to a butter of good flavor. If the churning is to proceed at once, which is preferable, from 20% to 30% of the "starter" is added, but if time is allowed for ripening, an addition of about 5% is sufficient. Butter made from separator-cream, untreated, is not "butter" in the true sense of the term--it is better described as an emulsion of butter-fat. The great majority of the butters of commerce show a water content between 12% and 16%. U. S. "Standard" butter contains not less than 82.5% of milk fat. Cream Separator in operation A man pulls the lever on a large machine, which is pouring some liquid into a large jug. Denmark has for years held the reputation of producing the finest butter in the world. It can be found all over the world in shops where luxuries are sold. In South America, in the East and West Indies, in India, Egypt and in tropical countries generally, epicures pay $1.00 a pound for it in tins of one, two and three pounds' weight. No other country has been able to produce butter that will stand changes of climate so well. Its excellence is due to the efficiency of the government system for controlling the output. Almost equally good results are obtained by the regulations of the Cork Market, Ireland, and by government control in New Zealand. Improvements in creamery methods and conditions promise to give equal reputation to the United States product before long. More than ordinary care is required if a merchant wishes to establish and maintain a reputation for selling good butter. In the first place, it generally pays to buy grades a little choicer than that of the average market--a half cent or a cent a pound additional often means something quite a little choicer than the regular run--and particular customers are seldom averse to paying a cent or two extra for especially fine butter. Whether or not this is done--it is of course not advisable in every neighborhood--it is very poor policy to charge higher than the market value of any grade. Not one person in a thousand can judge the value of coffee, for example, with any degree of accuracy, but a big percentage have keen noses and palates wherewith to discriminate in the matter of butter. It is very easy and very damaging to get a reputation for selling poor butter. A retailer should know how to test butter both by taste and smell. Many merchants depend on only one or the other of these senses and as a result they often find themselves at fault in their purchases. This is particularly true of the dealer who buys by taste and is addicted to the use of tobacco or liquors. At times, his sense of taste may be keen enough to discriminate in a remarkable manner, but if he has recently been smoking he will find that it cannot be depended upon. Hence it is wisdom to cultivate both taste and smell to a point where, if one fails, the other can be relied upon. The expert buyer generally tests first by smell, breathing it well back into the nose, then by taste and finally by allowing a little to melt in the mouth and letting the flavor expand up through the nostrils--this last test to determine its keeping qualities. A modern churn which first converts the ripened cream into butter and then thoroughly works and salts it. An illustration of a huge round machine containing some doughlike substance, attended by a single person. Butter to be especially avoided is that which is "lardy," "oily," or "woody" in flavor. It should neither be oily nor "dry" in appearance, nor flecked, cloudy or streaked. There should be no holes or crevices in it--as these enclose moist air and favor fermentation. When broken, it should show a rough fracture--if it breaks smooth, it is deficient in "grain"--which in a majority of cases stands for richness of quality. When pressed, the moisture which exudes should be quite clear--if it is milky, it possesses inferior keeping qualities. The highest prices are paid for butter hand-worked, unsalted and very dry--under 11% moisture. In buying by tub, it is well to verify the weight of butter obtained, instead of depending only on the classification of the tub as "5 lb.," "10 lb.," etc. Renovated" or "Process" butter is that produced by working over low grade or slightly deteriorated butter, by first melting and settling it, then skimming off froth and scum and discarding the curd and brine settled, freshening by strong currents of air, mixing in fresh milk inoculated with bacterial cultures, churning and then rapidly cooling. The butter is then drained, salted, worked (to remove the excess of milk) and packed or made into prints. In the hands of a reliable manufacturer, who refrains from using improper materials, the processing of butter is a distinct advantage to the food supply and the product is very similar to "real" butter. As, however, there are differences in the nitrogenous components it should never be sold or represented as fresh. In several states such sales and representations are prohibited by law. An easy test to distinguish between fresh butter and "process butter," and also oleomargarine, is to boil a small amount, stirring thoroughly two or three times. Process butter and oleomargarine will boil noisily, sputtering more or less--like a mixture of grease and water--but will produce little or no foam. Genuine butter on the other hand boils with less noise and produces an abundance of foam. To distinguish between process butter and oleomargarine, melt a sample and note the odor--in process butter (and fresh butter) the "butyric acid" smell will be very noticeable, but it is absent from oleomargarine, a "meaty" odor taking its place. Butter is now generally classified as Creamery, Process, Factory, Packing Stock and Grease Butter--defined by the N.Y. Mercantile Exchange as follows: Creamery: -- Butter made in a creamery from cream separated at the creamery or gathered from farmers. Process: -- Butter made by melting butter, clarifying the fat therefrom and re-churning with fresh milk, cream or skim milk, or by other similar process. Factory: -- Butter collected in rolls, lumps, or whole packages and reworked by the dealer or shipper. Packing Stock: -- Original farm butter in rolls, lumps or otherwise, without additional moisture or salt. Grease Butter: -- All classes of butter grading below No. 3 Packing Stock. Creamery, Process and Factory Butters are, in the New York market, graded as "Special," "Extra," 1st, 2nd and 3rd. Packing Stock is graded as 1st, 2nd and 3rd. The very choicest butter is thus Creamery Special. The word "Special" as applied to any of the three mentioned classifications is defined as requiring 90% of the butter so graded to conform to the standard, and the remaining 10% to be fully up to the "Extra" grade, the quality just below "Special." Following are the Standards of "Special" grades of butter: Flavor --must be fine, sweet, clean and fresh, if of current make; and fine, sweet and clean, if held. Body --must be firm and uniform. Color --a light straw shade, even and uniform. Salt --medium salted. Package --sound, good, uniform and clean. Equally important with proper selection, is the care of butter after it reaches the store. A separate refrigerator should be reserved for it as it readily absorbs the odor of other articles, thereby losing its own delicate flavor and often acquiring a most disagreeable odor and "twang." Meats, cheese and some fruits, as cantaloupes, pineapples, etc., are especially detrimental. The refrigerator must be kept thoroughly clean, as otherwise it will itself spoil the flavor--and pine wood in all forms should be kept away. In the sale of butter, clerks should be instructed to handle it as carefully as possible. In cutting tub butter, the aim should be to avoid "mussing" or mangling it--a clean cut slab is much more pleasing than when half of it looks like a collection of odds and ends. Wooden butter dishes are not used as much as formerly, but where they are in favor it is advisable to wrap the butter in waxed paper first. The more popular method now is to wrap in waxed paper, then in ordinary wrapping paper. If butter is ladled, all the implements used should be scalded at least once a day, and kept in fresh-made brine. When butter becomes rancid, it is due to the formation of Butyric acid. A fair measure of freshness can be obtained by thoroughly washing it with fresh milk, which readily absorbs Butyric acid, and then with fresh water to remove the milk, so that it will not sour in the butter. All this care on the part of the retailer is, however, often upset by the customer's lack of care after purchasing. Whenever possible, customers should be advised to keep butter free from contaminating influences. Very few households can enjoy separate refrigerator compartments for butter, but every one can have a covered china or earthenware vessel in which to keep it--then, if the refrigerator is kept scoured and dry and the vessel clean, scalded before use, and always covered, there is a reasonable chance of the butter retaining its purity unless the other articles in the refrigerator have very strong odors. If a customer has no jar, the best advice is to keep the butter always thoroughly wrapped in the waxed paper in which you deliver it. A good refrigerator and a plentiful supply of ice are, of course, desirable for keeping butter, but care along the lines mentioned is to so great an extent the essential point, that butter will stay fresh and pure for a reasonable time without either refrigerator or ice if kept in a dry, clean, covered vessel set in a cool place--the butter under such circumstances being preferably kept wrapped in waxed paper inside the vessel. A damp or "musty" room--or its vicinity--should be carefully avoided as that odor has as close an affinity for butter as any other. Where such advice can be given without offense, it is well worth while imparting it, with a view to avoiding the trouble so frequently caused by customers, generally in perfectly good faith, bringing butter back as "bad" which had left the store in good condition. The natural color of the best creamery butter throughout the greater part of the year varies from almost white to a delicate light yellow or cream--it is only in the spring when the cows are first turned out to pasture that it naturally presents a really yellow color. The average consumer, however, expects butter to have a good bright color all the year round--and in consequence nearly all butter is brought up to that appearance by the use of various coloring additions. The colors used are chiefly those derived from vegetable sources, as annatto and carrot juice. In contrast to the general taste, there has developed in the larger cities a considerable demand among the customers of high class stores for un-colored and un-salted butter--variously known as "Fresh," "Sweet" and "French." Some of the French stores of the metropolis and elsewhere have always handled this for their patrons, but the present sale to a large number of families of other nationalities and to many high class hotels and restaurants is of comparatively recent origin. The perfumed butter used in Paris is made by taking pats of "fresh" or unsalted butter and placing them on a layer of some variety of flowers, according to the perfume desired, a piece of muslin being laid between the butter and blossoms. Another layer of flowers is placed above the butter and then ice is added. BUTTERFISH ( See Color Page III of FISH): a fish varying in weight from four to the pound up to three-quarters and one pound each, found principally along the northern Atlantic coasts. In appearance it suggests the pompano. It is most plentiful during the summer and fall. BUTTERINE: an artificial butter composed of beef oil, neutral lard, etc. See article on OLEOMARGARINE. BUTTERMILK: the liquid which remains after the separation of butter from cream. It is generally a by-product of butter manufacture. When produced under sanitary conditions and drunk fresh, it is not only exceedingly agreeable to many palates, but is very nutritious, as it contains all the cream nutrients excepting the fat. In Scotland and Ireland, it is consumed in enormous quantities as an accompaniment to porridge and potatoes, and its use, principally as a beverage, has in the last few years been greatly extended in this country. A pint of buttermilk of average richness contains about as much nourishment as 2 1/2 ounces of beef. As a cheap source of protein, which comprises nearly half of its BRUSSELS SPROUTS A color illustration of a carton of brussels sprouts, accompanied by an inlaid cut of the plant on which they grow. percentage of food value, it is even more deserving of notice than skim milk, to which it is very similar in chemical components--though generally regarded as inferior, it ranks higher in nutriment value. It is an especially valuable addition to the dietary when there is a deficiency of other nitrogenous food and therefore combines well with a farinaceous diet, supplying the protein lacking in cereals, etc. (see FOOD VALUES). Though buttermilk contains as a rule very little milk fat, it is seldom entirely free from it, and it frequently happens that where milk is abundant and rich a considerable quantity of fat is allowed to remain in the buttermilk in the form of butter. This increases its food value, but a careful skimming may be necessary if the milk is intended for special dietary. When made from fresh whole or partly-skimmed milk with selected or cultivated lactic ferments or bacteria, buttermilk contains high medical virtue--tending to prolong life by preventing decomposition of food in the bowels and avoiding the abnormal formation of gas, uric acid, toxins and other undesirable products of excessive intestinal fermentation. This result is produced by the action of the serviceable bacteria which flourish, to the exclusion of undesirable micro-organisms, in the lactic acid into which a considerable part of the sugary food elements is converted by the ferments introduced into the milk. The only important difference between buttermilk thus prepared and the creamery product is that the natural process is accelerated and the introduction of other and undesirable bacteria can be prevented. Buttermilk is best kept in glass or china vessels as the lactic acid is liable to affect other receptacles. BUTTERNUT ( See Color Page I of NUTS): the oily nut of the North American White Walnut, ripening in September. It is of the same order as the ordinary Black Walnut but is longer, and has an exceedingly rough shell. The meat is rich, oily and agreeable in flavor. When young and tender, it makes a delicious pickle. BUTTON MUSHROOM: the Mousseron of French importations. See MUSHROOMS. BUTYRIC ACID: the oily acid which under certain conditions forms in butter and gives it the smell and flavor generally described as "rancid." Commercial Butyric Acid, a colorless liquid, is obtained from numerous sources. BUTYRIC ETHER: a fragrant compound-ether obtained by treatment of salts of butyric acid, employed in the manufacture of several artificial fruit extracts, particularly apple, melon, pineapple and strawberry. CABBAGE: the vegetable which probably comes next to the potato in the quantity consumed. It is found in more than seventy varieties, of which several are of sufficiently distinct form, both in appearance and quality, to be generally known under special titles, as Broccoli, Brussels Sprouts, Kale, Kohlrabi and Savoy Cabbage (which see under their respective heads). The varieties of the common cabbage may be grouped in two classes, the Early and Late, according to their time of ripening. A small illustration of a head of cabbage. Only cabbages that are crisp and of bright color can be considered desirable. If to be kept for any considerable length of time, they require a temperature near freezing--the average cellar is too warm to answer the purpose. If stored in barrels, they are best placed with the roots uppermost. In places where cold storage is not available and circumstances warrant the trouble, cabbage of any kind, and several other vegetables, as celery, can be kept fresh for a considerable length of time by cutting so as to leave about two inches of stem below the leaves, scooping out the stem for from an inch to two inches, splitting the core of the vegetable to prevent sprouting, then suspending by a cord attached to the stem and each day filling the hollow part of the stem with fresh cold water. A pinch of bi-carbonate of sodium added to the water in which cabbage is boiled will retain the green color of the leaves. It is good policy to throw away both the unconsumed portion and the water in which it was cooked. Red Cabbage is a favorite for pickling. See also articles on SAUERKRAUT and SLAW or "Cold Slaw." CABERNET: wine, both "white" and claret style, domestic and imported, from the Cabernet grape, the variety principally cultivated in the famous Médoc section of France. The fruit is fragrant and yields a delicate, brilliant, rather light-colored wine. CACTUS: an order of curious, usually prickly, generally leafless plants, with fleshy stems or bodies--a number of them bushy, some resembling telegraph poles in general appearance and conformation, others of round or oval shape suggesting huge spiny melons, etc. Many types are capable of extensive growth in regions so arid as to be otherwise unproductive. A majority of the most important edible-fruit varieties are included in the Opuntia genus, the fruits being best known in this country under the title of PRICKLY PEARS (which see). Among other interesting examples are the BARBADOS GOOSEBERRY, MEXICAN STRAWBERRY and STRAWBERRY PEAR, and the fruit of the MELON THISTLE, all of which are described in their alphabetical positions. CAFFEINE: the stimulating principle of coffee. It is chemically identical with the theine of tea, kola, etc. CAKE: is made in many varieties in modern bakeries, from the very plain to the extremely "rich"--as the heavier kinds of fruit cakes. If of sound materials and properly baked, it is as nutritious and wholesome as it is agreeable to the palate. Some people find the rich types difficult of digestion, but many more would be able to enjoy cake without any unpleasant after-effects if they were to treat it as essentially a part of the meal--to be eaten in place of some other portion thereof--instead of looking upon it as an "extra" and thus throwing additional work on a stomach already loaded with other foods. To keep cake fresh, put an open vessel of water in the show-case. To keep flies away, sprinkle cloves in it. Tin is the best receptacle. CALCIMINE or Kalsomine: a superior form of Whitewash. A mineral and glutinous composition made in white and colored form for tinting and decorating plastered and sand-finished surfaces, such as ceilings and walls. Calcimines vary greatly in quality, but are all furnished in powdered form requiring the addition only of hot or cold water. CALECANNON or Kolcannon: a dish common to some parts of Ireland, which consists generally of a bit of salt pork with potatoes, cabbage and seasoning. CALF'S BRAINS: a meat delicacy in great popular demand. See BRAINS. CALF'S-FOOT JELLY: is made of gelatine extracted from calf's-feet. Sweetened and flavored with sherry, etc., it is served as a dessert. It is also a favorite item in convalescent dietaries. CALIPASH, CALIPEE: the upper and lower parts of turtle-meat. See TURTLE. CAMEMBERT: one of the most popular of French cheeses. See CHEESE. CAMPHOR: is a tough and crystalline stearoptene from the wood of the Camphor Laurel or Camphor tree, native to China, Japan and Borneo. It is generally obtained by chopping the wood into fragments and placing in a "still" with a certain quantity of water, the steam generated carrying the camphor off in vapor. After various processes, it resolidifies as a yellow-brown, semi-transparent mass, which is then refined and pressed into various shapes. In addition to its household use in wardrobes and clothes-trunks to keep away insects, camphor is employed in the manufacture of celluloid and explosives, to make the stars and fire of the pyrotechnists, by the varnish-maker to increase the solubility of copal and other gums, etc. Mixed with six times its weight of clay and distilled, it suffers decomposition and yields a yellow, aromatic volatile oil, smelling strongly of thyme and rosemary, which is much used to adulterate some of the more costly essential oils and to perfume fancy soaps. Synthetic camphor is now made from fine white turpentine. It is more resinous than gum camphor and less aromatic, but possesses the same general merits and qualities and is equally good for medicinal and most commercial purposes. Its sale commercially depends upon the comparative market values of gum camphor and turpentine. If turpentine is high in price and gum camphor low, the synthetic is not able to compete with the natural product. CANARY SEED: the seed of the canary grass, native to the Canary Islands, but long ago naturalized in many temperate climates. Its principal use in this country is as bird food. It is generally mixed with rape and other seed that cheapen it, but the straight Canary seed is decidedly preferable. It should be kept in a dry place and away from vermin. Industrially, a flour made from Canary seed is employed in the manufacture of fine cotton goods and silk stuffs, and in the Canary Islands, Italy and North Africa it is used as food. Canary Seed An illustration of a plant with long, thin leaves and a cluster of seeds at the top. CANARY WINE: a gold colored wine resembling Madeira, made in the Canary Islands, principally on the Island of Teneriffe. When new, it is rough and unpleasant, but after two or three years it becomes mild and very agreeable. It was at one time a very fashionable wine. CANDIED FRUIT. See article on CRYSTALLIZED FRUIT. CANDIED PEEL: the crystallized rinds of lemons, citrons, etc. See CITRON. CANDLES: are now generally made by molding in metal forms, though some grades, notably church candles, are still made by the dipping process. The materials chiefly employed are stearin, paraffin and beeswax, separate and in various combinations and compositions. For decorative purposes they are frequently colored with aniline dyes. Tallow candles, formerly the most common, are now seldom sold except in frontier districts and other remote parts--they are very easily and cheaply manufactured but burn away so much more rapidly that other kinds are really less expensive. Stearin candles are also known as "Adamantine" candles because they are capable of sustaining a very warm temperature without bending. They give excellent service and are deservedly popular. Stearin is obtained from tallow by separating it from the oil and glycerine. Its crystalline structure at first rendered manufacture difficult as the crystals contracted when the candles cooled after molding, but this has been remedied by mixing in a little paraffin. Paraffin, a petroleum product which is largely employed to-day, makes a clear candle resembling wax and gives a good pleasant light. A little stearin is usually added as the pure paraffin is apt to bend or droop when warm. Beeswax candles are employed principally for church and decorative purposes. Spermaceti, from the head of the sperm whale, was formerly an important candle material but is now practically out of use. Hotel candles are merely ordinary candles of about half the usual size. Modern candles burn with a quiet, steady flame. If they flare, flicker and gutter, it is because they are exposed to drafts. The cotton wicks now used are braided and are chemically so treated as to be self-consuming--snuffing them is no longer necessary. Although petroleum, gas and electricity are improved factors in artificial lighting, candles are still used in large quantities on account of their adaptability for producing a light promptly under all conditions, and, chiefly, because they have the advantage over all other forms of lighting in being both portable and absolutely safe. CANDY. U. S. "Standard" Candy is defined as a product prepared from a saccharine substance or substances, with or without the addition of harmless coloring, flavoring or filling materials, containing no terra alba, barytes, talc, chrome yellow or other mineral substances or poisonous colors or flavors or other injurious ingredients. A candy department, if properly managed, is generally a source of good profit, and advertising, for the grocer. To handle it to advantage, however, proper facilities--in the form of glass show-cases, etc.--are absolutely necessary. A messy looking, fly-attracting candy-counter is worse than none at all. It is usually profitable to stock three distinct lines--(1) "Penny" goods for children, (2) moderate price candies for the average customer, and (3) "fancy" candies. All kinds should be handled in small lots so as to ensure a speedy turnover and, consequently, fresh goods at all times. They should be kept from exposure to heat or dampness. If the demand warrants a large stock, as much as possible of it should be kept in a special cooling room or cabinet of moderate temperature. A good supply of pretty boxes, lace paper, wax paper, candy tongs, etc., is a great stimulant to custom. A box of candy fixed up with all such little fancy extras appeals with special force to the feminine appetite--and pocketbook. The materials principally used in the manufacture of candy are sugar, chocolate, cocoanut, nuts, raisins, corn syrup, fruit pulps, cherries, gum arabic, cooking starch, molasses and licorice. Any desired tint can now be obtained by vegetable colors or harmless coal-tar dyes (see COLORS). Candies may be classified according to their nature or method of manufacture as follows: HARD BOILED CANDY: candies cooked to a high degree of temperature, such as stick candy, lemon drops, hoarhound drops, etc. These are generally made by the vacuum process. OPEN FIRE CANDY: candies cooked in open kettles over furnace fires of coke, and pulled over hooks or on pulling machines, such as molasses taffy, cream taffy, etc. PAN WORK: various forms of candy, nuts, etc., coated with sugar in revolving copper kettles or pans, such as sugar-coated almonds, jelly beans, cinnamon imperials, burnt almonds and burnt peanuts. GUM WORK: candy cooked in large melting kettles, then molded in impressions made in starch, dried, separated from starch and sugared, such as gum drops. These are also allowed to stand in sugar syrup over night, thus forming a crystal on the goods, which gives them a bright, brilliant lustre. CHOCOLATES: various kinds of candy dipped in chocolate, such as chocolate creams, chocolate almonds, chocolate chips, etc. CREAMS: sugar cooked low and beaten to a creamy consistence, molded in impressions made in starch, dried, separated from starch, and crystallized. CARAMELS: sugar and corn syrup cooked to a proper consistence in open stirring kettles, run out in thin sheets on marble slab tables and cut into squares when cooled. COCOANUT CANDY: sugar, corn syrup and cocoanut, cooked in open stirring kettles, run out on marble slab tables and cut into various shapes when cooled. MARSHMALLOWS: sugar, corn syrup and gelatine, beaten together, molded in impressions in starch, dried, separated from starch and dusted with powdered sugar. There are endless varieties of candy made by combinations of different materials, varying in wholesale value from 4c. to 50c. a pound and in retail from 10c. to $1.25. When eaten in moderation, it is as wholesome as it is palate-pleasing. The United States consumes more candy per capita than any other country in the world--its annual output is about 400,000,000 pounds. CANISTER: originally a basket of kanna or reed, now a box or case for tea, etc. CANNED GOODS. The preservation of foods by sterilization and hermetical sealing is not a new process, but its present importance as an industry is of comparatively recent origin. The list of articles which are preserved by canning is a long one, and includes a great variety of fish, meats, fruits, vegetables, poultry, soups, etc.--yet the industry is susceptible to still greater development. Current opinion in this country credits the United States with being the foremost exponent of canned goods and it is true that in several items, such as salmon, tomatoes, corn, etc., the total output is considerably greater than that of all other parts of the world combined, but in diversity of articles we have much to learn from Europe. We are all acquainted with some of the special French lines, but it would surprise the average reader to see the variety of the outputs of other continental nations. Holland, for instance, has canneries which put up from two to several hundred different items. The list includes nearly every possible vegetable, in first and second qualities, separate and mixed--as for example, several varieties of peas, separate, and combinations of "green peas and spring carrots," etc., numerous combinations of vegetables and meat--as, "beef and onions," "green peas and veal," "chestnuts and sausages," "spinach and ham," etc.; and all kinds of meat delicacies, poultry, game, soups, sauces, fruits, etc. The most numerous items are vegetables, meats and mixed vegetables, and meat. Many of the canned articles used in Europe, but at present unknown in this country, are sure to become popular here in course of time if canning interests foster public confidence by rigid inspection of their outputs and unremitting vigilance to see that irresponsible or unscrupulous concerns do not foist undesirable goods on the market. Canned goods consisting of sound foods, put up with proper care and handled thereafter with reasonable precautions, are just as wholesome and nutritious as the fresh articles. To foster the trade in canned goods, which offer large future possibilities for him, the retailer should use every possible care to see that a customer receives nothing that is open to suspicion as to the quality, nor objection as to the quantity, of the edible contents of the can. A can of tomatoes, for example, should contain chiefly tomato flesh--it should not reveal on opening a superabundance of watery juice. The present method of canning is the process invented by a Frenchman named Francois Appert a little more than a hundred years ago, improved in detail and amplified in use by modern mechanical devices and equipment. The two principal points to be achieved are (1) the exclusion of all air from the can by hermetical sealing and (2) the destruction of all micro-organisms by sterilization--cooking the can at high temperature and high pressure. The details of the process vary with different foods and cannery methods. Some items are placed in the cans in a raw condition, others are first partially cooked. Some undergo two cookings in the can, being "vented" between cookings-- i.e., the tops are pierced to allow the steam to escape, the holes being soldered over immediately thereafter. Many modern canneries achieve the same purpose by means of a steam-heated "exhaust box" which extracts part of the air in the filled cans before they are sent to the capping machines. If only good grades of bright tin plate are used, the sterilization has been complete, and the can is air-tight, the food contents, whether meats, vegetables or fruit, will remain good and wholesome for an almost indefinite length of time. Any imperfection in the can or damage to it, which admits even the smallest amount of air, will result in fermentation and decomposition and render the contents unfit for food, so care should be exercised in the handling of all canned goods. A similar result will ensue from imperfect sterilization-- i.e., if the heat employed was not sufficient to sterilize every portion of the contents. Fermentation of any kind will tend to make the can bulge more or less. Consequently, if there is the slightest swelling of the can, either top, bottom or sides, send it back--never on any account sell or use such a can as it may be poisonous enough to kill. All canned goods are returnable for this cause, being guaranteed by the packer to the jobber and the jobber to the retailer. The "swelling" is a reasonably sure test for all unopened canned goods except corn--which may be found sour inside a can in apparently normal condition. The reason that jams and other sweet preserves maintain their wholesomeness without such precautions as required for the canning of meats, vegetables and unsweetened fruits, is that heavy syrup is not favorable to the growth of yeast, etc. The "biggest sellers" in canned goods in the United States to-day are in fish --salmon (a long way in the lead) and sardines; in fruit --peaches; in vegetables --tomatoes, corn and peas, twice as many cans of tomatoes being sold as of corn and five times as many as of peas. Grocers should never sell a can of any meat or fish in the summer without advising the buyer to keep it on ice for a while before opening it. Meats, salmon, lobster, crabs and shrimps are disgusting to many people when taken out in a flabby and warm condition, but the simple precaution mentioned will give the fresh, firm appearance desired. The last point in the use of canned goods--and a very important one--is the necessity of every consumer understanding that, as soon as a can is opened, all of the contents must be taken out and put in a china, glass, earthenware or similar receptacle, dish or plate--and covered, if held over after a meal. The very best and purest canned meats and fish are liable to generate poisonous ptomaines, if left standing in the can. It may be added that ptomaine poison is not a special poison from canned goods only--it may be, and often is, generated in various items of home-cooked food if unduly exposed, or left long enough to permit decay to set in. CANTALOUPE: a general title for several varieties of muskmelon, derived from Cantalupo, Italy, the place of their first cultivation in Europe. See MELONS. CANVASBACK: one of the most famous of wild water-fowl. See DUCKS ( Wild ). CAPELAN: a small fish very abundant along the shores of Newfoundland. It is principally used for bait in codfishing but some of the catch is dried for human consumption. The flesh is agreeable in flavor, somewhat resembling fine herring. CAPERS: the flower buds of the caper bush, growing in countries along the Mediterranean. They are used as pickles and to add to sauces, etc. The caper crop is gathered from June to September or October, the end of July giving the heaviest yield. After picking, they are carefully dried to avoid fermentation and then stored in barrels of vinegar, the latter being sometimes flavored with tarragon sprigs, elder flowers, cloves, peppercorns, etc. During the winter following the gathering, the capers are graded by size by passing through sieves. The seven chief classifications are--"Nonpareil" (smallest), "Surfine," "Capucine," "Capote," "Fine," "Mi-fine," and "Commune" (largest). After grading, they are replaced in barrels of vinegar and thus preserved until sold. Before shipment, they are washed in vinegar of a standard of 12°, which renders them quite firm, and placed in barrels without vinegar, the finer qualities to be repacked in bottles, etc. A fraud sometimes attempted is to mix with the capers a quantity of nasturtium berries, which resemble them in size and appearance. CAPON: a male chicken castrated to increase its growth and weight. See CHICKEN. CAPSICUM. There are many species of Capsicum, all native to the warm parts of America, Africa and Asia, and now cultivated in every part of the world. The small fruited types, generally the most pungent, are best known popularly as "Chilies," and the larger as "Peppers." "Chilies" are used whole in vinegars, pickles, etc., and to grind into cayenne pepper, and "Peppers" are eaten as a vegetable and ground into red pepper (see CHILI, PEPPER and PEPPERS. Green ). CAPUASSA: a yellow-fleshed, large-seeded, Brazilian fruit enclosed in a rough hard shell. European travelers have said in describing the crushed and diluted pulp that the resulting drink "is worth a voyage across the Atlantic." CARAMBOLA (also called the Coromandel Gooseberry in India): a curiously formed fruit about the size of a large egg, with a thin, smooth, generally yellow, coat. Its flavor varies from sweet to acid so it is variously consumed,--raw, cooked, in chutneys, etc. CARAMEL: a dark-brown substance obtained by heating either "ordinary" or "starch" sugar. It is formed also during the roasting of all materials containing sugar, such as malt (which see) and coffee. It is much used for coloring wines, spirits, soups and other liquids and for flavoring custards, milk, etc. "Caramels" is the name given to a candy whose soft mucilaginous character is due to its large proportion of Glucose (see CANDY and GLUCOSE). Caramel Cereal, used as a coffee substitute, consists chiefly of malted grain. CARAWAY SEED: the highly aromatic seeds of a plant which grows wild in the meadows of Holland and Northern Germany, and is cultivated in many other countries, including the United States--especially California. They are employed in a variety of ways--as a culinary flavor, in confectionery, baking, etc., and in the perfumery and soap making industries. The roots of the Caraway plant were at one time eaten as a vegetable, and the young and tender leaves still occasionally serve for flavoring soups, etc. Caraway An illustration of a delicate plant with compound leaves and small clusters of flowers grouped in two bunches at the ends of its stems. CARBONATED WATERS: a wide class of refreshing refrigerant beverages, rendered sparkling by impregnating them with carbon-dioxide (carbonic acid gas) under pressure. The term does not include beverages in which the carbon-dioxide is produced by the natural process of fermentation. The carbon-dioxide is produced preferably by the use of bicarbonate of sodium, but also frequently from limestone, marble dust, etc., by the action on them of sulphuric or other acid. The gas is first washed with water and stored in a copper bell or gasometer, being thence pumped along with water into copper or gun-metal vessels lined with pure tin, being made to mingle with the water by agitation or other means. When the pressure inside the water reaches about 100 pounds to the square inch, it is ready to be bottled in syphons. A great variety of temperance beverages are made by putting a sufficient quantity of flavoring syrup in bottles and filling with Carbonated Water. Many spring waters carbonated by nature have important medicinal properties (see MINERAL WATERS). CARDAMOM: the dark wrinkled triangular seeds of a spice plant, native to India. They possess an aromatic and agreeably pungent flavor and are used in cooking, especially in curries and soups, by confectioners, etc. CELERY A color illustration of a head of celery, accompanied by an inlaid cut of an unharvested celery plant. CARDOON: a plant of the thistle family, somewhat resembling the Artichoke, but generally larger, some varieties attaining a height of eight to ten feet, with leaves often three feet or more in length, light green in color and covered with white down. It is grown chiefly for the stems and leaf mid-ribs of the young plant, which are thick, fleshy, tender and crisp if properly cultivated and blanched. Cardoon is used in salads, stews, soups, etc., and as a vegetable, in the last-named case being served with various forms of dressing or with butter sauce, etc. Considerable quantities are imported from France to supplement the domestic product. In cooking, the stalk is cut into thin strips about five to six inches long, cooked in slightly salted water until tender, then freed from strings, etc., and set aside to become cold. If not properly prepared, it is dark in color and unpleasantly bitter. The main root, which is thick, fleshy and pleasing in flavor, is also frequently prepared as a winter vegetable. Cardoon An illustration of an uprooted plant with long stalks and pointy-looking leaves. CARLSBAD. See article on table and medicinal MINERAL WATERS. CARMINE: a red coloring obtained from the female cochineal, a small insect found chiefly along the Phœnician coast. It is used for culinary purposes, in the manufacture of syrup, sauces, etc., and in various other industries. CAROB BEAN: the "Husks" of the Prodigal Son. See ST. JOHN'S BREAD. CARP: a fresh water fish spending most of its time in muddy bottoms and banks. It is generally of bronze appearance and the larger specimens attain a weight of fifteen to eighteen pounds. There are many varieties, the three best known being the Buffalo or "Common," in season from the middle of July to October; the German, about half the size of the Buffalo and distinguished by its sides being bare of scales, in season from October to April; and the Salmon, a variety which by environment has attained a slight salmon tint and taste. The flesh of all except the Salmon is a firm white. The German Carp are the descendants of fry imported from Germany, but they have lost some of the fine characteristics of the home fish. CARRAGHEEN, IRISH MOSS, PEARL MOSS: a species of edible seaweed named after the town of Carragheen, near Waterford, Ireland, found on the coasts of the British Islands, the rocky shores of continental Europe and the Eastern shores of the Northern United States and Canada. Similar varieties abound also on other parts of the American coast line. Carragheen An illustration of a seaweed with delicately branching leaves. The Carragheen of domestic use is obtained principally from New Hampshire and Massachusetts, the harvest season there extending from May to September. After gathering, the plants are washed in salt water and spread on the beach to dry and bleach, the process being repeated several times. As marketed, Carragheen is in pieces of from two to three inches to a foot in length, cartilaginous and flexible in texture, branching in shape, and in color from a reddish brown to straw color or white, varying with local differences in the plant and the extent of the bleaching. The greater part of the supply is employed in the clarifying of beer. The remainder is retailed through druggists and grocers, etc., the best qualities packed in half pound and pound boxes. To make a nutritious beverage, which is considered also a good demulcent for coughs, a scant ounce of Carragheen is placed in a quart to three pints of water, gently heated until the liquid is syrupy in consistence and then strained, milk and sugar or sugar and lemon juice being added to taste. In the preparation of blanc-mange or jelly, a larger quantity is required. A good receipt is to soak a small cupful in cold water for about five minutes, then tie it in a cheese-cloth bag, place in a double-boiler with a quart of milk, add a little salt and cook for a half hour. When done, take the bag out, flavor the liquid with lemon or vanilla extract and pour into a mold or small cups, previously wet with cold water. When the jelly is set, it can be eaten with sugar and cream or fruit as desired. CARROT: a root vegetable cultivated in both the United States and Europe, the small tender varieties for culinary purposes and the larger, later types for feeding cattle. It is one of our most wholesome vegetables and is consumed in a variety of ways--separately and in soups, stews, etc. In cold storage, carrots have been held in barrels from November to the middle of July, but under other conditions they tend to heat and decay. If cold storage is not available, they are best stored on slat platforms, and covered lightly with sand. Good ventilation is an absolute necessity. When purchasing carrots, see that they are firm to the touch and crisp when broken. The juice of the red varieties is frequently employed on the farm to color butter. A small illustration of a carrot, showing the root and leaves of the vegetable. CARTON: a pasteboard box for holding soaps, cereals or other goods. CASEIN: the cheesy portion of the curd of milk, the protein constituent of milk. (See MILK.) CASHEW NUT ( See illustration in color page of TROPICAL FRUITS): a kidney shaped nut which develops pendant-fashion on the red or yellow "Cashew apple," the two constituting the fruit of a large evergreen shrub, native to the West Indies and widely grown in other tropical countries. The nut, of greenish-brown color, rich in milky juice when fresh, and with a delicate almond flavor, is consumed raw, roasted and pickled. The whole raw nut should never be crushed by the hands or teeth as between its two shells is a thick liquid which is so caustic that it readily blisters the lips and skin. The acid disappears with heat, so the roasted nuts do not offer this objection. The "apple" is seldom seen in this country, but it has a pleasing sub-acid flavor and is enjoyed locally. The Cashew Nut is valuable in many branches of business, being used in the manufacture of oil, ink, dyes, mucilage, cosmetics, etc. CASSAREEP: the juice of the bitter Cassava or Manioc (which see) boiled to the consistence of thick syrup and flavored with spices. It is used as a basis for various sauces and as a culinary flavoring, principally in tropical countries. It is exported chiefly from British Guiana. CASSAVA, Cassava Starch: starch obtained from the roots of the MANIOC (which see). CASSEROLE: a porous dish of clay or earthenware, much used in French cooking. The heat penetrates it slowly and all the juices and flavors of the meats, etc., are retained. CASSIA BARK: a variety of Cinnamon (which see). CASSIA BUDS: the dried flower-buds of the tree which yields Cassia Bark, to which their flavoring is similar. In appearance they slightly resemble cloves. The Cassia tree does not bear buds until from fifteen to twenty years old. CASTILE SOAP: a soap made of olive oil, also called Marseilles Soap. See SOAP. CASTOR-OIL: an article of great commercial importance, made from the seeds of the Castor-Oil plant. In addition to its medicinal use, it is employed in the manufacture of some transparent toilet soaps, as a lubricating oil, in the arts, etc. CATAWBA: one of the most celebrated of native American wines. It is a "white" wine, both still and sparkling, of fine flavor, originally produced from the Catawba grape, and now from their blending with other varieties, such as Delawares, etc. The highest priced variety is the "sparkling"--the finer grades of which compare favorably with imported wines. The sparkling variety should be served cold; the "still" at about the temperature of the room. Some red Catawba is made, but in comparatively small quantity. "Sweet Catawba" is a rich fortified wine. CATCHUP: also called "Ketchup" and CATSUP (which see). CATFISH. Two entirely different fish--one found in salt-water and the other in lakes and rivers--are known as "catfish." The flesh of the salt-water fish, which occasionally attains a weight of sixty pounds and is called the "Hogfish" in some parts, is very good in flavor, but the catch is nearly all cured, very little being marketed fresh. The river variety is smaller and not particularly choice in flavor, but properly prepared, after the removal of its coarse brown skin, it is found quite as pleasing to the palate as many more highly rated fish. Catfish dinners are much esteemed along the Schuylkill River at Philadelphia. CATNIP, or Catmint: a field plant growing wild throughout the United States. The leaves and young shoots--aromatic, pungent and more or less bitter--are used for seasoning and as a domestic remedy. The leaves are best while the plant is blooming. They may be preserved by drying a few days, being afterward kept in a dry place. Everyone is familiar with the pleasure a cat finds in playing with catnip, and catnip-balls, containing a few pieces, are an article of regular sale. CATSUP, Catchup, Ketchup: a word derived from the name of an East Indian pickle, which was formerly applied specifically to the boiled spiced juice from salted mushrooms, but is now freely attached to various sauces (sold both bottled and in bulk) which consist of the pulp--boiled, strained and seasoned--of various fruits, as tomatoes, green walnuts, etc. CAULIFLOWER: a variety of cabbage. It has been styled "cabbage with a college education," for its characteristics are the result of careful cultivation--the flower buds and stalks having been exaggerated by seed selection, etc., into a compact white mass which constitutes the vegetable proper, instead of the leaves as in other varieties of cabbage. In addition to its use fresh-boiled, etc., great quantities are consumed as a pickle. The local Eastern crop is supplemented by large shipments from both France and California. Cauliflower may be kept in any way suitable for cabbage (which see). An illustration of a whole cauliflower plant, including the roots. CAVIAR: the salted roe of various large fish of the sturgeon family. Nearly all the world's supply now comes from the Caspian Sea. The finest quality caviar is that from the Beluga, a Russian word meaning "Great White Sturgeon," the largest of all sturgeons, which grows to a length of twelve or fourteen feet and sometimes weighs considerably more than a ton--a single cowfish of that size giving as much as 360 pounds of caviar. These very big fish are becoming more scarce every year and the average Beluga now caught is much smaller. One hears and reads much of "Astrakhan Caviar"--yet there are no fisheries at Astrakhan (Russia). The name has clung because the City of Astrakhan is the greatest shipping place for caviar, largely via Germany. Beluga or "Great White Sturgeon" An illustration of five men on a beach standing next to a large dead fish. Again, many people speak of "German Caviar," yet none of the small German Caviar product is exported--the impression arises from the fact that the Russian export trade is carried on principally by German firms with Hamburg as headquarters. London and Paris are both "outside markets," drawing their daily and weekly supplies from the Hamburg houses--but all the caviar they receive is Russian caviar. After the fish has been killed, the roe is separated from the skin and fine tissues which envelop it by gently rubbing through a sieve. For "fresh," i.e., mildly salted, caviar, for which only roe in the best possible condition is suitable, it is then salted in the proportion of two to six pounds to each hundred pounds of roe, drained and put up in air-tight tin packages or glass jars. Roe in which the eggs are too soft or too far ripened for "fresh" grades, is cured with 10% of salt and packed in barrels for export, to be later repacked and cooked in tins for retail handling. This is the sandwich and canapé caviar of ordinary use. "Pressed Caviar" is a peculiarly Russian variety of which very little is exported. The size of the egg or grain varies from very small to that of peas. The color is generally black but may be also any one of various shades of yellow, grey, dark green and brown. The real test of caviar is its flavor and this is as often found in the small as in the large grain and in the black as in any other color, but the large eggs and the grey and yellow or "gold" colors are the most rare and therefore the most expensive. The gold color is considered the choicest in Russia, the greyish in Germany. There is very little caviar produced in North America to-day, uncontrolled slaughter of the fish for many years having rendered it so scarce that it hardly pays to hunt it. Formerly, after supplying home markets, a considerable quantity of American caviar was shipped to Europe for sale as medium and coarse grades. Caviar in America is generally eaten on bread or toast with oil, lemon juice or vinegar and various garnishes. It is also occasionally served on ice as a special course at luncheon and dinner parties. CAYENNE: a red pepper, named after Cayenne, a city of French Guiana. CELERIAC: a kind of turnip-rooted celery. It is good for salads, the root being boiled and sliced cold for mixing with other ingredients. CELERY: as we know it, is the cultivated variety of a plant of the parsley family, which is found wild in many parts of both this country and Europe. It is grown in large quantities in divers latitudes--New York, Michigan, Ohio, Florida, California and Bermuda being the largest producers. It was formerly obtainable only at certain seasons, but the finer grades are now on sale all the year round. Celery requires constant care and cultivation, and rich moist soft soil of saline character to attain its best qualities. For early celery, the seed is planted in hot-houses and the small plants are set out as soon as the frost leaves the ground. For late celery, the seed is sown in the open ground. The whiteness of the stalks is obtained by "banking" earth or other material up along the rows of plants or putting boards alongside for the same purpose. Some growers raise three crops each season, following each lot by immediately setting out the small plants for the next. Blanching Celery by boards An illustration of several people working in a field to prop up long boards between rows of vegetables. Every part of the celery plant can be used to advantage. The stalks and heart are served in a variety of ways--plain raw, with various fillings, in salads, cooked in numerous ways, etc. The outside stalks may be cut in pieces and stewed. The trimmings are excellent for flavoring broths, etc. The seeds are used for celery salt and many pickles and seasonings. Celery from Michigan and New York State is best from July 15 to December 1 or later; California ships principally from Thanksgiving to March 1; Florida from February 15 to May 1 and Bermuda from April 15 to the middle of June. To keep in the best condition, celery should be wrapped in paper and held in a cool place. In refrigerated cooling rooms, it can be kept in good condition from one to two months. It may also be stored in cool cellars if packed just as taken from the ground, without either washing or trimming, heads up in long deep boxes and filled around the roots with sand, which should occasionally be moistened. Girls hoeing Celery beds, near Buffalo, N.Y. An illustration of two girls standing in a field, holding hoes. A barn can be seen faroff in the background. CENTRIFUGAL MACHINE: an apparatus used in many different industries, chiefly for the extraction of moisture--to remove the syrup from sugar, to extract the honey from honey-comb, to dry yarn, cloth, etc. The process is, essentially, placing the substance or material in a perforated basket or case which is revolved with great rapidity, the result being that the moisture is expelled from the basket and caught in the receptacle enclosing it. CèPES. See MUSHROOMS. CEREALS. Agriculturally speaking, the term "cereals" refers to all species of "grasses" which bear grain, the most important being wheat, corn, rye, oats, rice and barley. The world's huge crop of wheat, for example, comes under this classification. From the standpoint of the grocer and the average consumer though, the term applies specifically to preparations of grains intended for table use--such as oatmeal and the great variety of so-called "breakfast foods." The subsiding of the temporary popularity which a multitude of cereal preparations and combinations enjoyed a few years ago, banished into oblivion a long list of "breakfast foods," but a number of those which remained by virtue of proved merit and consistent publicity have grown steadily in public esteem, and the line is well worthy of attention, for it is clean and easy to handle, being practically all package goods, and quite profitable, if the proper kinds are selected. Package cereals may be divided into three main classes: (1) crushed raw, (2) partly cooked and (3) malted. In the last named, part of the starch is converted into maltose and dextrin (forms of sugar--see article on GLUCOSE) by mixing the ground grain and malt and keeping it for a time at the proper temperature, then passing the mixture through hot rollers and drying. It does not, however, pay to handle this line unless there is a fair margin of profit. Nor should too many kinds, nor too large quantities be stocked, as if held for a long time weevils are liable to get in and spoil the goods. The more general use of the double-boiler has improved the preparation of cereals, preventing loss by burning and scorching, but in the average household the raw or semi-cooked varieties are not sufficiently cooked before serving. Thorough cooking increases their food value by making them more readily digestible. The "fireless cooker" is the ideal utensil for this purpose. Cereals should always be kept in a dry, cool place. CERIMAN (sometimes called the "False Bread-fruit"): a sub-tropical fruit, varying from cone to banana shape and often reaching a length of fourteen inches. The flesh is excellent in flavor and delightfully aromatic. The husky skin is tender and easily removed. Ceriman blossom and immature fruit An illustration of several conelike fruits, one of which is surrounded by a curved leaf or petal. CERVELAT: a popular variety of smoked sausage. See general article on SAUSAGES. CETTE WINES: "Burgundy," "Port," "Vermouth," etc., exported from Cette, an important city on the French Mediterranean coast and the principal shipping point for the Department of Hérault. Hérault produces nearly one-tenth of the total French wine supply, but only a comparatively small quantity is exported, the bulk being retained for domestic consumption. CHAMOIS SKIN, or LEATHER, Shammy: used for polishing, is, ordinarily, goat or sheep skin made soft and pliable by treatment with oil. It takes its name from the original use of the skin of the Chamois, a goat-like antelope, of mountainous parts of Europe and Western Asia. To clean "shammy," use warm water, soap and a little soda, rubbing the soap well in. Washing in plain water will harden it. CHAMPAGNE. Contrary to general impression, Champagne is made from fine varieties of black and red grapes. Its "white" color is due to the fact that the grapes are pressed before the skins have had a chance to color the juice. The grapes are sorted immediately after gathering and taken at once to the press-house where they are again critically inspected during the weighing and then, with the least possible delay, pressed to separate the juice from the pulp. The products of the first three pressings become first class wines. The subsequent pressings produce only an inferior article, generally used for local consumption. This virgin wine is left standing in large vats to await fermentation--the process being instigated by the micro-organisms ("wild" yeast cells) contained in the "bloom" of the grape and carried into the juice when pressing. In fermentation, the natural sugar of the grape juice is transformed into alcohol and carbon-dioxide (gas). The latter escaping by the bunghole, produces the stage commonly called "boiling." As the weather becomes cold, the ferments gradually lessen their activity until the wine finally becomes clear and is in condition to be separated from its lees. With the approach of the following spring comes the most critical operation--the one which tests the experience and ability of the wine merchant--the blending of the crude wines to suit the tastes of his clienteles in various countries. When the desired result has been obtained, the "cuvée" is said to have been formed and is ready for bottling. A certain amount of cane-sugar is added to the wine and it is then put into new and carefully cleansed bottles, which are corked as filled and taken at once to the cellars. The return of spring again sets the ferments in action, transforming any natural sugar still left in the wine from the previous fall--and also the cane-sugar added--into alcohol and carbon-dioxide--but this time the gas cannot escape and instead mingles with the liquid, producing the "sparkle" for which champagne is famous. But the development of the wine is not yet completed, for this last fermentation leaves a deposit or sediment to be got rid of. To accomplish this, the bottles are held in racks, head downwards at an angle of 70°, for three months or longer while the deposit slowly descends and collects on the corks. Every day during the entire period a specially trained cellarman gives each bottle a slight twisting motion to assist its descent. When all the sediment has collected on the corks, the cellarman takes each bottle separately and removes the cork, or undoes the iron clasp holding it, according to the method employed, and the rush of the carbonate gas forces the deposit out with a loud report. The wine is thus left absolutely clear and sparkling. By the most modern process, the necks of the bottles, when ready for the extraction of the sediment, are placed to a depth of about three inches in a refrigerating bath to congeal the deposit and thus facilitate its expulsion. The second fermentation has removed all taste of sugar, and for a perfectly "dry" wine, the cellarman refills the empty space in the neck of the bottle, left by the withdrawal of the sediment, with unsweetened "dosage" and recorks the bottle as it is. Nearly all the champagne sold is though sweetened more or less--the extent varying with the preferences of the different countries to which it is to be shipped--and consequently the dosage usually consists of sugar dissolved in "champagne" brandy and variously flavored. A keen palate can often clearly detect the flavors of the dosage--as of apricots or other fruits. The bottles go next to underground wine cellars to mature. The cellars or "caves" at Reims consist of miles of tunnels cut in and through old chalk pits. The length of time required to attain proper maturity depends to a certain extent on the quality and characteristics of each year's vintage. An average of eight years is generally considered sufficient. It is a matter of common knowledge that many of the stronger "still" wines are improved by long life in the bottles, but that a good vintage champagne will improve up to the tenth year is not generally known. The "dryer" the wine, the more important becomes the time set apart for its aging, and the finer the discrimination possible in comparing the merits of different vintages. In heavily sweetened champagnes, the "sharpness" of immature wine or the mediocrity of a poor vintage may be obscured to a very considerable extent by the sugar flavor. An easy test for age in champagne is found in the corks extracted. If the end of the "stem" swells out to approximately the same dimensions as the head of the cork, you may be sure the wine has not been very long in the bottle. If it swells only moderately, it has been to that extent better matured. If it proves to be lacking entirely in VINEYARDS COVERING HILLS IN THE CHAMPAGNE DISTRICT, FRANCE An illustration of four farmers standing in a field, which stretches out to some hills far away in the distance. resiliency and retains the straight up and down shape of the inside of the bottle's neck, it has been aged sufficiently for any connoisseur's requirements. This test applies only to champagne and similar sparkling wines,--not at all to old ports or Rhine wines, or any other wines held longer than ten years to mature, as in such cases new corks are generally substituted about every ten years. Most of the champagne consumed in Russia, Germany and other countries of Northern Europe is heavily sweetened. An 18 to 20 per cent syrup addition was formerly common in that shipped to Russia and 14 to 16 per cent in that for Germany. About 12% was quite common in France itself. The champagne consumed in those countries is not as sweet as formerly, but it would still be considered excessively so by English and American connoisseurs. "Sec" or "dry" champagne is wine with only a comparatively little sweetening--generally from 3 to 5 per cent. "Extra dry" has still less. "Brut," which means "natural" or "unsweetened," signifies champagne without any sweetening or, as generally, with only the minimum amount. In Europe, the terms "sec" and "brut" serve to distinguish the wines so labelled from the heavily syrupped types mentioned, but as very little really sweet champagne is ever seen in this country (practically all of the importations being of the "sec," "extra sec" and "brut" types), "sec" has come to mean "sweet" to American consumers. It is "dry" in comparison with the sweet European champagne, but it is "sweet" in comparison with the still dryer "brut." A small quantity of champagne sweeter than "sec," though not nearly as sweet as much of that consumed in Northern Europe, is imported and sold here under special trade titles, but the demand for it is comparatively small. "Sec" is probably the typical American taste, being generally preferred both to sweeter and dryer types. It is necessary, however, to confine oneself to generalities in discussing this subject, as both wines and firm policies vary considerably. It is impossible to give a conclusive idea of the sweetness of different cuvées by naming the percentage of syrup added, as different quantities may be required to obtain the same degree of sweetness--the same amount of syrup added to a fine mellow wine would make a much sweeter article than if added to a young sharp wine. And, as there is no absolute standard of definition for "sec" or "brut," it may happen that one firm's "brut" is sweeter than another's "sec." Another classification, which does not so generally affect the average consumer, but is understood by the connoisseur, is into non-Mousseux, not effervescent (seldom seen); Crémant, moderately sparkling; Mousseux, sufficiently effervescent to eject the cork with an audible report, and Grand Mousseux, excessively effervescent. It is very important that champagne should be kept in a dark cellar where the temperature is cool and even. If exposed to light and variable temperature, it will lose much of both effervescence and flavor. The bottles should be laid on their sides, inclined slightly downwards so that the wine keeps the cork moist. If it has been shipped a considerable distance, it should be allowed to rest a few days before serving. Champagne should be drunk cold, but the cooling process should be gradual--it is detrimental to shake it or turn it violently in the cooler, as is so frequently done. Several styles of wine glasses are used for serving champagne. The most desirable are those which show the "sparkle" best and retain it the longest. The "hollow-stem" glass is excellent by both these standards. It is important that the glasses be perfectly dry before pouring the wine into them--a damp glass kills much of the sparkle. As the sale of imported champagne is in this country largely directed by advertising, is not generally advisable to stock heavily any brand with which the public is not thoroughly familiar. The French government has restricted the use of the title "champagne" to wine made within a certain clearly defined area, covering nearly all of the Department of Marne--which includes, among others, the cantons of Avize, Ay, Chalons, épernay and Reims--and a few communes in the Department of Aisné. There are several American "champagnes" now made which are excellent in quality and show a good profit to the retailer. See AMERICAN WINES. CHAMPIGON: the French name for Mushroom (which see). CHARD, Swiss Chard, Leaf-Beet: a variety of beet which is grown only for its leaves and stalks, the latter, and also the leaf midribs of some types, being cooked and served in any way suitable for Asparagus. The leaves are prepared as "greens" or may be chopped up, mixed with cream and served with the stalks. Swiss Chard is a variety with especially large stalks, leaves and midribs. The term "Chard" is also applied to the blanched stalks, midribs, etc., of the artichoke, cardoon and several other plants. Swiss Chard An illustration of a plant with rounded leaves growing from the ground. CHARLOTTE. See list of Culinary Terms in APPENDIX. CHARTREUSE: a famous liqueur ( see Color Page of LIQUEURS) originally made by monks of La Grande Chartreuse, France. After the exclusion of the Carthusian monks from France, they retired to Spain near Tarragona and there, claiming the process as still their exclusive secret, make a liqueur branded "Liqueur des Pères Chartreux." It contains the aromatic principles of a great variety of fruits, spices and herbs and is marketed in three colors--green, yellow and white. See also "Chartreuse" in Culinary Terms in APPENDIX. Filling cheese hoops with the chopped curd An illustration of two men working in a factory; one of the men is emptying a bucket into a machine. CHEESE: the product obtained by coagulating the casein of milk by means of rennet or acids, with or without the addition of ripening ferments and seasonings. The casein is usually coagulated with rennet, the curd being then separated from the whey and pressed in suitable molds. By act of Congress, approved June 6, 1896, cheese may contain additional harmless coloring matter--this generally consists of annatto or other colors from vegetable sources. Whole-milk or full-cream cheese is made from milk from which no portion of the fat has been removed. U. S. Standard whole-milk cheese or full-cream cheese is cheese containing in the water-free substance not less than fifty (50) per cent of butter fat. Cream cheese is made from milk and cream, or milk containing not less than six (6) per cent of fat. Skim-milk cheese is made from milk from which part of the fat has been removed. Cheeses are commonly graded as Special, Fancy, Good, Prime, Common, etc. Italy and Switzerland supply the greater part of the cheese imported. Next come Holland and France. As an article of food, cheese is very nutritious. When eaten in quantities it burdens the digestive organs, but in small amounts, as a condiment, it stimulates and aids the digestion of rich foods and dessert. When taken after eating, and especially when rich and old, it is particularly efficacious in that respect by powerfully promoting the secretion of saliva and gastric juice. In the United States, cheese making has been transferred bodily from the realm of domestic arts to that of the manufacturer, and farm-made cheeses are hard to find anywhere. New York and Wisconsin together produce three-quarters of the entire output of the country. Next in order are Ohio, Illinois, Michigan and Pennsylvania. Cheese Curing Room An illustration of a man in a room filled with tubs of various sizes. More than nine-tenths of the cheese made is of the familiar standard copied after the English Cheddar. The annual consumption here though is only 3 lbs. per capita, which shows how little its highly nutritious value is appreciated. In manufacture, the milk is generally warmed in large vats to a temperature of not less than 84° Fahr. The rennet, or other coagulative mixture, is then added, a pint of rennet being sufficient to turn from 2000 to 3000 quarts of milk. As the curd forms, the temperature is raised to nearly 100°, until the whole mass of curd separates from the whey. The latter is then drawn off by cutting the curd across both ways, and passing wired paddles or curd-knives through it. After the whey has been removed, the curd is allowed to "mat" or ferment slightly and it is then broken up, salted, formed and pressed. Ten days or so later, the cheese is rubbed to remove any mold, and perhaps paraffined to prevent such formation later. It is then kept until properly ripened for market. The storing of newly made cheese is the next point that engages the attention of the maker and wholesale dealer. The same principles which influence the maturing or ripening of fermented liquors also operate here. A cool cellar, neither damp nor yet too dry, which is uninfluenced by changes of weather or season, is commonly regarded as best for the purpose. The temperature should not be permitted to exceed 50° to 56° Fahr. at any time--an average of about 45° is preferable when it can be maintained. A place exposed to sudden changes of temperature is as unfit for storing cheese as it is for storing beer. Roquefort, the highest grade of highly ripened cheese, owes much of its perfection to the dry caves in which it is stored and ripened. The care of cheese in the store is often neglected. In warm weather, it should be kept in a cool, dry place, and frequently inspected and turned over in the boxes. If a cheese shows signs of swelling, it should be pierced with a wire to give vent to the gas, which can then be expelled by gentle pressure on the swollen portion. All mold or mites on the top of the cheese should be swept or neatly scraped off and the surface rubbed with a little sweet oil or strong brine. For maggots or "jumpers," the remedy is to clean the affected parts and keep the cheese well dusted with rice flour. If the loose sheets or plates which lie on the top and bottom of the cheese are found to be damp, they should be replaced by clean, dry ones. The cut cheese can be kept moist by pressing lightly buttered pieces of parchment firmly on the cut surfaces or by buttering them. There will also be less tendency towards dryness, and therefore less shrinkage, if each exposed surface is cut from alternately. The fresh appearance of the cheese in general can be retained by wiping the outside each day with a damp cloth, soaked in salt water. For the important part played by bacteria, etc., in the ripening of cheese, see article on BACTERIA. There are countless varieties of cheese, but those described in the following list may be taken as representative of all popular types. Camembert, Cheddar, Cream, Edam, Limburger, Neufchatel, Pineapple and Swiss are depicted in the two color pages of CHEESE--(1) the frontispiece, and (2) facing page 118. APPENZELL: made either of skim or whole-milk, in Appenzell, Switzerland. It is very similar to Emmenthaler (which see). BRANDIED: strong old cheese, ground or rolled fine, and mixed with brandy. A full-cream cheese, which has become a little over-ripe, is pared and then rolled into a smooth dough with a rolling pin. Layers of this dough, from a half inch to an inch thick, are put in an earthen crock, and good brandy is poured over each layer. When the crock is nearly full, the cheese is covered with several thicknesses of oiled muslin, and, during the first few weeks, a little brandy is poured on top at regular intervals. It will improve with years. BRIE: a soft French cheese, treated and ripened in much the same way as Camembert (which see). CACIOCAVALLO: an Italian cheese, generally of roundish-beet shape and about three pounds in weight, which after making and salting is filled into sausage skins and lightly smoked. It is sometimes eaten fresh, but is more often stored for several months and then grated to use as a flavoring for soups and as an addition to macaroni and similar pastes. CAERPHILLY: a hard Welsh cheese generally weighing about eight pounds, made from very sweet whole milk. CAMEMBERT: a soft, rich cheese, made in the former province of Normandy, France, the best now coming from the districts of Orne and Calvados. It is generally put up in round wooden boxes or tins and is marketed in May and November. It is made from two separate curds, the morning and the evening, and the strength of the rennet mixture employed is varied with the weather, being much stronger for the winter than for the summer product. When the first curd is ready, it is filled into molds with great care so as not to break up the mass, but to fill each round hoop or form with one motion. These filled forms are placed on straw mats, which facilitate drainage and add to the agreeable appearance of the finished cheese. The morning's curd will have sunk considerably by the time the evening's curd is ready, and the latter, which may be a little richer, is added to it, the top of the under layer being slightly disturbed or scored to facilitate joining. On the second day, the cheeses, having hardened sufficiently to be turned, are slightly salted on the surface and set on fresh mats to remain till they are hard enough to be removed from the frames. In the drying room, where they rest for four days, the first or white fungus or mold appears--this is essential to their flavor and ripening and is succeeded after about a week by the fine blue mold characteristic of the fully developed cheese. When the condition of the blue mold is fully established, the cheeses are removed to the curing room, where they are kept at a temperature under 60° Fahr. until ready for market. More Camembert cheese would be used if the ordinary consumer knew how to handle it. At dinner parties or hotels it is easy to dispose of an entire cheese at one meal, but the provident housewife hardly likes to see three-quarters of it dry up or run away because the family is small or the cheese is only appreciated by the head of the house--or whichever sex. Keep your Camembert cheese under a large inverted finger bowl --you can find no better receptacle. If kept in a cool place, the cheese naturally stiffens. If it is fresh and not shrunken it will always be soft if held for a few hours in a warm room. In cutting for the first time, cut a section as shown in Figure 1 below, and then push the two sides of the cheese together as in Figure 2--the rind will thus continue to protect it. At the second meal, cut through crosswise and at the end of the meal push the parts together (Figure 3), so that the four quarter-sections again make a circle, exercising a little care in pasting the side joints. This process may be repeated as often as necessary, but it is to be hoped that the cheese will be sufficiently appreciated to be consumed within four meals. Cutting Camembert Cheese Three illustrations of a wheel of cheese, labeled 1, 2, and 3. Each cheese wheel is marked with solid and/or broken lines. CHEDDAR: which takes its name from the village of Cheddar, England, the original place of manufacture, is, from the standpoint of quantity consumed, one of the most important of all cheeses. It is generally of pale color and agreeable nutty flavor, but the title, as now employed, applies to the essential process of manufacture rather than to any one type, "Cheddar" being sold in many styles, shapes and sizes. All Cheddar is made from sweet milk and a distinctive feature of its manufacture is the development of the maximum quantity of acid obtainable in the whey without injuring the texture of the cheese--but the milk used may be either whole, partly skimmed or skimmed, and the cheeses may be white or colored yellow and may be marketed mild and fresh or thoroughly ripened. Those of whole milk are known as "full cream," others as "part skim" or "skim." The cylindrical shape is the most popular for the large cheeses. CHESHIRE: is made from whole milk. It resembles Cheddar but is of stronger flavor. In England, Cheshire cheeses weigh up to as high as 150 or 200 pounds, but in this country they range from 20 to 70 pounds, generally in cylindrical shape. From eight to ten months is required for ripening. COLHOMMIER: a small Brie cheese five to six inches in diameter and one inch in thickness, weighing about one pound. COTTAGE, also called "Dutch Cheese" and "Smier-Kase": a sour milk cheese extensively made and consumed here, sold both in bulk and wrapped in tin-foil. The curd is broken up and held at about 100° Fahr. until sufficiently firm, the whey next being drained off and the curd placed under moderate pressure for some time. If to be held long, it is packed in tubs and placed in cold storage to prevent ripening. For eating, it is generally moistened with milk or cream. COTTENHAM: a rich English cheese, in flavor and consistence quite similar to Stilton, but flatter and broader in shape. CREAM: is made in several ways, the two chief varieties of American manufacture being (1) sweet cream thickened with rennet or by souring, drained and salted; and (2) cream curdled with rennet, broken up to allow part of the whey to escape, then mixed or worked almost to a paste, molded into pieces weighing two to four ounces, wrapped in parchment paper and tin-foil and placed on the market fresh (without any curing). The second style is manufactured here on a very large scale. There are also a number of French Cream and "Double Cream" cheeses, of which Neufchatel and Gervais are the best known examples. DEVONSHIRE CREAM: is, essentially, cooked cream. The cream is allowed to rise on the milk for several hours, then the milk and cream (still together) are scalded and set aside to permit the cream layer to harden. The latter is then put in small molds and set on straw mats to drain. It is ready for market without further preparation as soon as it is hard enough to retain its shape. D'ISIGNY: a soft, creamy American cheese, bearing a close resemblance to imported Brie, but made by a process similar to that for Camembert and put up in Camembert shape, though a little larger--about 1 1/2 inches thick and 6 inches across, wrapped in paper and weighing about a pound. DORSET: resembles Stilton in character and manufacture. It takes its name from Dorsetshire, England. DOUBLE GLOUCESTER. See GLOUCESTER. DUNLOP: a rich, white and buttery cheese, resembling Cheddar, made in round forms of from thirty to sixty pounds. It was formerly the national cheese of Scotland, but has been practically superseded in that country by Cheddar. DUTCH CHEESE: a general name for Edam, Gouda and Cottage Cheese (which see). EDAM: a highly salted, red, round cannonball cheese, made in Edam, Holland, and its vicinity, principally on farms. The curd is pressed in molds--sometimes of metal, but usually of wood, cup shaped and round bottomed, with similar shaped tops to complete the spherical form--going next for a few days to "salting" cups of similar shape. In the curing room, the cheeses are placed on shelves with holes in them to prevent them rolling off, and are turned and rubbed each day. At the end of a month they are washed, dried and rubbed with flaxseed oil till they shine and are then ready to be loaded into carts--which are generally dragged by dogs to the market town. The red color of the outside skin is obtainable by carmine or a weak solution of litmus and Berlin red. The shells of Edam or Pineapple cheese are useful for serving macaroni. Heat the shell in a moderate oven and pour in the (cooked) macaroni. If the macaroni is to be browned, set the filled shell in the oven again--this will, however, destroy the shell after three or four times. EMMENTHALER (commonly called Swiss Cheese, or Schweitzer ): a rennet cheese made from whole milk, of mild rather sweet flavor and generally distinguished by holes or "eyes" of various sizes and frequency. It was originally made in Emmenthal, Switzerland, and that country is still a large exporter in spite of the fact that similar cheese is now manufactured in nearly every country. The French product is known, both in France and by export, as Gruyère. That made here is known as "Domestic Swiss." The cheeses are often very large--from 60 to 220 pounds each, sometimes in blocks about twenty-eight inches or so long and eight inches square, but generally circular, the larger ranging up to four feet in diameter and six inches in thickness. The genuine Emmenthaler, when exported, is never less than four months old. It keeps, under favorable conditions, for many years. It should be nutty in taste, and rather dry, but tender. The "holes" or "eyes," though generally characteristic, are not necessary to its quality, for many good Swiss cheeses are "blind," as dealers describe them. ENGLISH DAIRY: a very hard cheese, prepared in about the same way as Cheddar, but cooked for a longer time. It is made quite extensively here, principally for culinary purposes. GEDORT: a Norwegian cheese, small in size and solid in form, wrapped in foil. GERVAIS: a French cheese made from a mixture of whole milk and cream. It is very lightly cured and is generally consumed fresh. GLOUCESTER ("single" and "double"): is mild, somewhat buttery and not friable. It comes in large, round, flat forms. "Single Gloucester" is made from milk deprived of part of its cream. "Double Gloucester" contains all the cream. GORGONZOLA: a rich cream cheese, akin to Roquefort and made in a somewhat similar manner, but milder in flavor and cheaper, produced in the mountain villages of Italy. The clayey outside surface of the whole cheese is a mixture of gypsum, tallow, etc., and is designed to aid in preserving it. Well-made Gorgonzola can be kept in good condition for a year or longer. GOUDA: a Holland cheese made from whole or partly skimmed milk, coagulated with rennet and colored with saffron. It is pressed in round molds and weighs from ten to forty-five pounds. As marketed, each cheese is contained in a bladder or other covering of animal tissue. GRATED CHEESE: any hard cheese grated for use with macaroni or other appropriate dishes. See also PARMESAN. GREEN CHEESE. See SAGE CHEESE. GRUYèRE: the French make of "Swiss Cheese." See EMMENTHALER. (1) Camembert (2) Cream (3) Edam (4) Cheddar CHEESES A color illustration of four different cheeses, each labeled with a number. A part of the golden field as seen from a window in the weigh-house tower. Each of the piles contains from 500 to 900 cheeses. A storeyard full of cloth-covered stacks of cheeses. A number of people wander among the stacks, inspecting the cheese. A pair of official porters taking a tray-load of cheeses to the weigh-house. The picture shows how carefully the piles are covered until and after the hour of the market. A number of people wander among cloth-covered stacks of cheeses. Two of them are carrying a large pile of cheese between them on a tray. THE CHEESE MARKET AT ALKMAAR -- the most important distributing point in North Holland for the round cheeses known in America as "Edam." The market is held every Friday, the cheeses being brought into town in great quantities, by boat and wagon, from the dairies of the surrounding districts. Before shipping, they are colored red or a brighter yellow, generally the former. Hundreds of cheeses curing in a dairy at Haslev, Denmark A room full of cheeses being pressed between boards. A man can be seen bending over the cheeses at the far end. KOSHER: a cheese made especially for Jewish trade. Its manufacture resembles that of Limburger, but it is eaten fresh. KOSHER GOUDA: made for Jewish trade and bearing a special stamp for identification. It resembles Gouda, but has no bladder covering and is smaller--about 8 1/2 inches in diameter and three inches thick, weighing four to six pounds. LIMBURGER: was originated in the town of Limburger, Belgium, but little is imported nowadays as that of domestic manufacture is fully equal in quality to the European and is made at a cost of less than half that of the imported article. Literally thousands of tons of Limburger are now produced here every season--principally in the States of New York and Wisconsin and chiefly for consumption by our German-American population. The process of manufacture in its first stages does not differ from the usual method of cheese making, except that a lower temperature than for most varieties is kept while the curd is forming, the animal heat alone in summer being often high enough. Great care is taken to use pure milk, free from taint, and cleanliness is requisite in every stage of the making. Upon the curd being formed, it is slowly and carefully cut into square pieces the size of dice, careful handling being necessary to avoid breaking the butter globules upon which the richness of the cheese depends. It is next slightly scalded and stirred, and most of the whey drawn off, then, without being salted, it is dipped out in perforated wooden boxes or molds, about five inches square, and left to drain without any pressure being applied. In a few hours the packages are carried into the curing cellar and placed edgeways on shelves, like bricks set to dry. Every day thereafter they are rolled in salt and replaced when they have absorbed enough. They are also turned almost every day, and the slimy moisture which exudes is rubbed evenly over the surface, serving the double purpose of keeping the cheese moist and closing all cracks in which flies might lay their eggs. This outside moisture decomposes while the cheese ripens, and being composed chiefly of albumen, like fresh meats, etc., the same results follow its decomposition, and the "Limburger odor" is developed--which never forsakes it and sticks closer than a brother to all who touch or eat it. After eight or ten weeks it is packed in paper and tin-foil, and is ready for market--in consistence, contents and nourishment the richest cheese that can be made, but to the uninitiated a malicious and premeditated outrage upon the organ of smell! LIPTAU: a Bohemian cheese, made from goat's milk and usually heightened with red pepper or other condiments. It generally comes in small tin-foil packages, is rather greasy and has a sharp taste. MENAUTA: a rich soft French cheese, imported generally in small round tins. NEUFCHATEL: a soft French cream cheese, sold in tin-foil cylinders about three and a half inches long and weighing about five or six ounces. PARMESAN: a hard Italian variety, used in grated form. It is made from skimmed milk, and hardened by slow heat. The rennet is added to the milk at about 120° and after about an hour the curdling milk is set on a slow fire and heated to 150°, when the curd separates into small lumps. A few pinches of saffron are in to produce the desired color. About a fortnight later, the outer crust is cut the new surface is varnished with linseed oil, one side being painted red. cheese is an excellent accompaniment for macaroni and similar pastes and is frequently added to soups, etc. PINEAPPLE: a hard, highly colored cheese, made in various sizes and so named because the curd is pressed in pineapple shape. The diamond-shaped ridges are caused by the cord nets in which the cheese is hung up to cure. It resembles Cheddar in manufacture except that it is cooked much harder. PONT L'éVèQUE: a soft French cheese, about 4 1/2 inches square and 1 1/4 inches thick. PORT DU SALUT: a French cheese, seven to ten inches in diameter, with firm, tough rind but soft homogeneous interior. POTTED CHEESE: a domestic cheese generally made by grinding well ripened cheese very fine, mixing it with butter, condiments and brandy or other spirits, etc., and putting up in small porcelain jars. See also BRANDIED CHEESE. PROVOLE: a round or oval Italian cheese, weighing from four to six pounds, and resembling "Caciocavallo." Smaller cheeses, about two pounds each, are styled Provoloni. ROQUEFORT: a famous cheese, named after the French village of Roquefort, where great herds of the sheep that supply the milk are pastured on an immense plain of rich velvet-like herbage, which is stringently protected by both law and custom. Remarkable care and skill are employed in its manufacture. The herbage is supplemented by a diet of prepared food; the water supplied to the herds is whitened with barley flour and the yield of milk is stimulated in every possible way, even to beating the udders with the hands after milking. There are many thousands of these sheep and very picturesque are the milking hours, morning and evening, when the army of pail-bearing maidens hurry over the fields, each in search of a favorite animal. Every morning, in the farmhouse, the milk is skimmed, strained, warmed almost to the boiling point, emptied into enormous pans, stirred well with willow sticks, a portion of rennet added, and then covered and left to gather into curds--which an hour or so afterwards are cut up into pieces about the size of walnuts. Half a dozen other operations follow, then comes the "moldy bread" process, which produces the special characteristics of Roquefort. The bread used is made of the finest wheat, or of winter barley, leavened with a large quantity of brewer's yeast, kneaded to excess and thoroughly baked. The crust is removed after standing a day and the crumb is pounded in a mortar and put away in a damp place till it is covered with mold. When it is ripe enough, the new cheeses are thoroughly rubbed with this moldy bread and layers of it are put between the layers of curd so that they may absorb still more of the mold. After several days' pressing, the cheeses are wrapped in linen and dried, and then by the shepherd-dairymen to the village and sold to the owners of the vaults or --natural clefts or artificial excavations in the limestone rocks--hard by the the town. caves, the cheeses are piled up and salted, being frequently rehandled and so that the salt may thoroughly impregnate them. They are next scraped and with long needles so that the mold may run entirely through them, and then again piled up and left till they are perfectly dry, in this process developing white mold which is scraped off from time to time. Very few, even of those who know the cheese well, are acquainted with all the pains taken to please their palates. The best season in the United States for serving Roquefort is from October to May, but if kept in cool cellars it may be enjoyed all the year. It is generally eaten in small quantities at the end of a dinner. It is especially delightful if rolled with half its bulk of butter, sprinkled liberally with cayenne pepper and spread on toasted biscuits. It is also used to fill the hollow parts of stalks of celery, etc. SAGE CHEESE: is made by the cheddar process and in many shapes and sizes. Its distinguishing characteristic is its flavor of sage and its green mottled appearance when cut. The color is obtained either by mixing sage leaves in the curd before pressing, or by the addition to the main curd of "green curd" obtained by the aid of the juice of green corn--in the latter case, the sage flavor being obtained by the use of sage extract. Parsley, spinach and marigold leaves, bruised and steeped before use, are sometimes employed in place of sage leaves. SAP SAGO CHEESE: a small, hard green cheese, flavored with the leaves of a kind of clover, made in Switzerland. It is shaped like a truncated cone--four inches high, three inches across at the base and two inches at top. It is chiefly used for grating. SMIER-KASE. See COTTAGE CHEESE. STILTON: manufactured in Leicestershire, England, and the richest and finest of English cheeses. It is of a pale color, with veins generally marked by green, or bluish-green, fungus. It is made of raw whole milk to which cream from other milk has been added. It is greatly improved by age, and, to be enjoyed at its best, should not be eaten before it is two years old. A spurious appearance of age is often given it by placing it in a warm damp cellar, or by surrounding it by fermenting dung or straw. Stilton cheeses are generally twice as high as they are broad, with surfaces brown and crinkled and weighing from twelve to fifteen pounds. Ripened Stilton cheese is also sold finely ground and put up in jars holding from one to two and a half pounds. SWISS CHEESE or SCHWEITZER KASE: as understood in this country, is another name for "Emmenthaler" (which see) or "Gruyère." In Switzerland, the original place of manufacture, it indicates a minor grade, being made of half-skimmed milk instead of the full cream milk of Emmenthaler. TROYES: is the name of two varieties of cheese--one known also as "Ervy," a washed cheese with a yellow rind; and the other called "Barberey" and closely resembling Camembert. VACHERIN. "Vacherin à la main," is a very soft cheese--the rind is hard, but the interior is spread on bread or eaten with a spoon. "Vacherin fondu" is made in about the same way as Emmenthaler, but the cheese after ripening is melted and spiced. WESTPHALIAN: comes in small balls or rolls of about one pound each. It derives its peculiar flavor from the curd being allowed to become partly putrid before being pressed. WESTPHALIA SOUR MILK: a hard sour-milk cheese, flavored by the addition of butter and caraway seed or pepper. WILTSHIRE: resembles poor Cheshire or Gloucester. The outside is generally painted with a mixture of reddle, or red-ocher and whey. CHEESE CAKE: a cake or open pie with curd or cheese as the principal "filling" ingredient. CHEESE SAFE: a wire cover framed in wood and hinged in the center. It excludes flies and mice and yet admits air. It does not exclude the "tasting customer" and a burglar-proof safe is one of the greatest needs of the trade! CHERIMOYA: the fruit of a tree cultivated in Mexico, Central America and parts of South America, especially Peru. It varies from the size of an average apple up to a weight of fifteen pounds. The pulp is white, juicy and of exceedingly fine flavor. It is probable that the Cherimoya will in the near future become very popular as with scientific culture there seems to be no limit to the excellence it may reach and, cut when fully developed but not ripe, it stands transportation well. With only very ordinary and careless methods, the tree averages annually a crop of a hundred or more fruits which are so delicious that they retail in Mexico at from three to eight (American) cents each. CHERRY: a fruit which is believed to have originated in Persia. In this country, it is most popular raw, canned and otherwise preserved, and put up in liqueurs (as Cherries in Maraschino and Brandied Cherries ). It is also stoned and dried, becoming then the "pitted" cherry of commerce and is the source or essential ingredient of various liqueurs, etc.--notably Maraschino and Kirschwasser. Picking the Cherries along the road, Westerhausen, Germany An illustration of a number of people standing in a lane between two rows of trees. Three ladders have been propped up into the trees in the foreground, and some of the people have climbed the ladders with buckets in hand. The variety most esteemed as a dessert fruit and for canning, is the Wax Cherry, of light color with rosy cheeks, named for its beautiful waxy appearance. For purposes of distillation, preference is given to the wild cherry, which is smaller and less fleshy than the cultivated, but in the best types is very sweet and often decidedly aromatic, the most noted being the black Marasca cherry, of Dalmatia. In the forest regions of France, the wild cherry is an important item of the local food supply, large quantities being consumed fresh during the ripening season and the balance of the harvest being dried for winter use, in jams, etc., and in the form of Cherry Soup--which consists substantially of bread and water with a little butter and dried cherries for flavor. In the valley of the Rhine, the schools often close when the cherry crop is ripe, so that both children and parents may gather the luscious harvest. In this country, California and Oregon are constantly increasing their production, as the dry climate of the orchard CHERRIES A color illustration of cherries hanging from a tree branch, accompanied by an inlaid cut depicting the cherry fruit cut in half. regions of those states permits the fruit to reach there its very highest perfection. Recorded evidence does not go back far enough to say when wild cherries first became an object of the gardener's care. The early Romans were familiar with eight varieties and quantities of cherry stones have been found in the lake dwellings of Switzerland. CHERVIL: a highly esteemed garden herb grown in all temperature climates and very popular in the South. It is similar to parsley, the Curled being even handsomer. Chervil Bilbur, or Turnip-Rooted Chervil, is a French variety grown for its roots, which resemble the Parsnip in shape and color. It is a very desirable vegetable, the flesh being sweet and delicate in flavor and almost floury in texture. CHESHIRE: a cheese akin to Cheddar. See general article on CHEESE. CHESTNUT (See Color Page II of NUTS): the fruit of a tree which is found in several varieties in different parts of the world. The name is derived from that of the town of Kastana in Asia Minor, which is also more or less closely preserved in several other languages--as the French "Châtaigne" and the German "Kastanien." The nuts grow inside a prickly husk, generally two in each husk, ripening with the first frost. The American chestnut is usually smaller, but generally sweeter, than the Spanish. The Chincapin is a very small dwarf variety of the American. The Japanese averages larger than the American and in sweetness may be generally classed between it and the Spanish. In this country, chestnuts are eaten in various forms--raw, boiled, steamed and roasted. They are very nutritious, the dried nuts containing an appreciable quantity of protein, fat and sugar to supplement the starch which is their chief component. The sugar content frequently reaches as high as 15%, the fermentation of the juice yielding a fine granular sugar. They should though be well roasted or boiled for a long time, as raw they are exceedingly indigestible. See also MARRONS. Chestnut Burrs bursting An illustration of a chestnut plant laden with chestnuts, most of which are splitting open. In some mountainous districts of Europe where cereals cannot be raised, the chestnut takes the place of grain to a considerable extent. The chestnut harvest is the event of the year on the slopes of the Apennines and Pyrenees--the gathering of the nuts being for three or four weeks the leading occupation of every mountain village. When all the trees have been stripped, the fruit is spread on frames of lattice-work and dried by keeping a fire burning underneath. It is then steamed, roasted, made into pudding--the original "Polenta"--or ground into flour for bread making. In some parts of Italy the peasants use a cake made of chestnuts as a substitute for potatoes. CHEWING GUM. The original "chewing gum" was spruce gum, the exudation of the cut branches of the spruce or fir tree. Later, pure white paraffin wax, variously flavored, took its place--but only in its turn to give way to the "chicle" now almost exclusively employed. Chicle is a gum which is obtained from a tropical tree botanically known as the achras sapota, a member of the family which gives the Sapodilla fruit (see SAPODILLA), and variously called the Naseberry and Sapodilla, growing most freely in Mexico, Central America and parts of northern South America. Though its employment in the manufacture of chewing gum is of comparatively recent date, chicle was used by the Indians prior to the days of Columbus as a means of quenching their thirst. It was first commercially imported as a substitute for rubber, but its peculiar suitability for chewing gum has resulted in the entire product being consumed by that industry. In the year ending June 30, 1910, nearly five and one-half million pounds were brought into the United States. The trees are "tapped" during the rainy season. The sap or juice as it exudes has the appearance of milk, gradually changing to a yellow color and about the thickness of treacle. The tree drains rapidly, the full supply of "milk" being generally obtained within a few hours, but an interval of several years usually elapses before it will yield a fresh supply. The milk differs from the juice obtained from the sugar maple, for example, in that it is not the life sap of the tree and the flow varies greatly, some trees which show full life yielding much less than apparently poorer specimens. "Crude chicle" is obtained by simple boiling and evaporation of the milk accompanied by frequent kneading, the product as pressed in rough molds being of a light gray color. The bulk of the crude chicle manufactured is shipped in blocks to Canada, where it is further evaporated and carefully refined prior to importation into the United States. In the chewing gum factory, the refined chicle is chopped or ground fine, screened and boiled to the right consistence in steam-jacketed kettles. The flavoring and sugar are then added and the whole is transferred to large centrifugal receivers in which it is whipped and kneaded into a dough. It goes next to the kneading tables where it is thoroughly "worked" with powdered sugar and then passed between rollers set with numerous small knives which roll it into sheets and cut it into marketable size. After a final drying, the pieces are ready for wrapping--generally performed by machinery, a single modern wrapping machine being capable of turning out an average of 20,000 packages a day. It is estimated that chewing gum to a value of $40,000,000 was used in the United States during the year ending June 30, 1910, and present indications are that it will before long have attained almost equal popularity in Europe. Some manufacturers of patent medicines are now successfully combining digestive and antiseptic ingredients with chewing gum. CHICK PEA: the "pulse" of the Orient. See GARBANZA. WELL-KNOWN VARIETIES OF CHICKENS 1--Barred Plymouth Rock 2--Black Minorea 3--White Plymouth Rock 4--Silver Wyandotte 5--White Wyandotte 6--Light Brahma 7--White Leghorn 8--Duff Cochin 9--White Orpington 10--Silver Spangled Hamburg 11--White Langshan 12--Black Houdan An illustration of 12 different varieties of chickens, each of which is labeled with a number. CHICKEN. The word "chicken" formerly meant "young fowl," but usage has applied it to fowls of all ages, the young birds being designated as "spring chickens," "broilers," etc. The fowl has been reared for food for so many centuries that its first conversion from its wild ancestors is lost in tradition. Poultry raising has been practiced in Europe from the earliest recorded times, and domestic fowl were plentiful in Great Britain long before the Roman invasion. The best known types of chickens especially suitable for table purposes are the many varieties of the Brahma (very large birds), Cochin, Langshan, Dorking, Orpington, Plymoth Rock, Wyandotte and Houdan. Representative examples of all of these, except the Dorking, are shown on the page illustration preceding. Attention is also directed to the consideration of fowls from the standpoint of egg production in the article on EGGS. To the general rules for selection given in the article on Poultry (which see) may be added that, thick scales on the legs, thin necks and dark colored thighs are signs of toughness in chickens. A good table bird should have a large full breast and, at other points also, a large proportion of meat to the size of the bones--long thin legs and wings are especially undesirable. Many heated controversies have been held over the question as to whether drawn or undrawn poultry keeps better. The advocates of the "undrawn" method appear to have the best arguments on their side. Chickens should be starved for at least twenty-four hours before killing. Those that have been killed with partially filled crops should be avoided, as the disintegration of the grain quickly discolors the flesh. In common with all other meats, chickens should be thoroughly cooled for a couple of days before cooking. Dry-picked chickens will keep longer than scalded birds. The plucking should be performed immediately after killing. Capons are considered a little choicer--more tender and of higher flavor--than ordinary fowl. They can be distinguished by the pale and shriveled appearance of the combs, the undeveloped condition of the spurs and especially round well-fleshed bodies. Poulards, or Spayed hens, are in France considered particularly delicate also, but in this country they are not rated as much, if any, better than first-class pullets. Milk-fed Chickens are those fattened for market chiefly on milk-soaked bread. Properly regulated, the diet gives birds with very delicate flesh. A "Squab Chicken" should average 3/4 pound to 1 1/4 pounds in weight; a "broiler" 1 1/2 to 2; one to "sauter," about 2 1/2 pounds; for "roasting" 3 pounds or so; and for fricassee, 4 pounds. The meat of well fattened chicken of young and medium age has about the same nutritive value as beef, but it is generally considered easier of digestion and therefore especially suitable for invalids and convalescents. American custom generally discards as refuse various parts of the bird which are considered of value in some other countries. The head of the chicken, for example, is in Europe often left on the bird when it is cooked, as the brain is considered a tit-bit; cocks' combs are everywhere recognized by French cooks as a delicacy worthy of preparation as a separate dish or especially desirable for garnishing; and the feet, skinned and dressed, are used for making broths, etc. CHICKEN HALIBUT: a term generally applied to young HALIBUT (which see). CHICORY. There are two main varieties of the Chicory family under general cultivation-- Cichorium Intybus, native to Europe and Cichorium Endivia (See ENDIVE), native to the East Indies. "Cichorium Intybus" is broadly divided into "Large-rooted Chicory," of which the two best known types are the Brunswick and Magdeburg, and "Common Chicory." Large-rooted Chicory is cultivated chiefly for the sake of its root, which attains a length of ten to fourteen inches and a diameter of about two inches and produces the "chicory" consumed in large quantities as an addition to coffee (which see). It is kiln-dried, sliced, roasted with a little oil and ground into different sizes, from pieces the size of a coffee bean down to "fine pulverized." When raw it is white and fleshy in appearance, but when roasted it resembles roasted coffee. Unlike coffee, it contains no caffeine, but it has a bitter principle and a volatile oil and the roasting brings out an aroma. Roasted chicory is highly absorbent of moisture, and should therefore be always kept in closed bottles or canisters, etc. Common Chicory An illustration of a leafy plant. Chicory root is also used in Europe as a vegetable and the young blanched shoots, forced in dark cellars, principally in winter, are the Barbe de Capucin, "Monk's Beard," of the famous French salad of that name. A similar, though not quite so delicate, product is obtained by similar treatment of Common Chicory. For Witloof Chicory see ENDIVE. Common Chicory is the salad plant, grown for the young plant's narrow curly leaves, which are generally partly or wholly blanched in cultivation. It is also cooked sometimes as "greens." The title "Succory" is a corruption of "chicory." CHILI, or Chilies: the Mexican, and quite generally the popular, name for the pods of several species of small-fruited, specially pungent capsicums (which see), put up as a separate pickle or added to "mixed pickles," etc. They are largely consumed in hot countries. The two Mexican dishes containing them which are best known here are chili con carne and the chicken tamale. The word is also used as a group name for many articles highly seasoned either with whole capsicums or cayenne pepper, etc. CHILI COLORADO SAUCE: a bottled sauce made of Mexican sweet red pepper pods finely minced in a vinegar pickle. CHILI SAUCE: a bottled sauce made of peppers (green or red), ripe tomatoes, seasoning, etc. CHILIAN MYRTLE: one of the best varieties of the MYRTLE (which see). CHINCAPIN or Dwarf Chestnut: a low tree, bearing fruit the size of a hazel nut. A number of species are native to the East. It does not grow south of Maryland. See CHESTNUT. CHINESE FIG: one of many titles for the Japanese Persimmon (see PERSIMMON). CHIPPED BEEF: a term applied to thin-sliced DRIED BEEF (which see). CHITTERLINGS: sausages made of pig intestines (see SAUSAGES). A tuft of Chives An illustration of a chive plant with a shovel stuck into the ground next to it. A portion of the plant has been dug from the ground and lain in the foreground. CHIVES, or Cives: a plant of the onion family, cultivated principally for its leaves, which grow in thick tufts resembling grass in appearance but hollow like onion leaves. It is a good substitute for onions, especially in soups and stews. CHLOROPHYLL: the natural pigment which imparts the green color to leaves and plants and enables them to obtain nourishment by converting to their use the chemical components of the soil. Plants not endowed with Chlorophyll are unable to nourish themselves and must feed on vegetables or animal matter (see FUNGI). Chlorophyll is commercially used to give a green tint to oils, etc. CHOCOLATE. See COCOA AND CHOCOLATE. CHOP: as applied to tea, etc., signifies either the grade--"first chop" then signifying "first quality"--or a special brand or lot. The word originally signified a Chinese custom-house pass or mark. CHOP SUEY: a thick stew typical of the Chinese restaurant in the United States. The ingredients vary greatly in different establishments, among the many possibilities being chicken trimmings, other meats of any kind, bamboo shoots, mushrooms, rice, etc. CHOW-CHOW: a mixture of pickles of various sorts in mustard. Also, and originally, a Chinese sweetmeat consisting of pieces of orange-peel, ginger, etc., in syrup. CHOWDER: a dish composed of fish, pork, onions, biscuit, etc., stewed together, popular in all parts of the country, but especially appreciated on the New England coast, where "clam chowder" and "fish chowder" parties are very common. In New England, cider is sometimes added to the stew. The name comes from the coast of France, where the Chaudière is a large cauldron in which the fisherfolk cook a very similar mixture of fish. Chowder is now sold canned. CHUFAS, Earth Almonds, Rush Nuts: the tuberous roots, about the size of beans, of a sedge common to Southern Europe. They rank high in nutrient qualities, and are equally acceptable fresh and dried. CHUTNEY: a pickle originally made in India, that country still being the source of a number of the finest grades. It is generally based on mangoes with the addition of many other items, such as tamarinds, raisins, ginger, spices, etc. The formula varies greatly with different manufacturers. The Ceylon product is frequently flavored with garlic. Domestic products include Apple Chutney and similar types. CIBOL: another name for the WELSH ONION (which see). CIDER: is the juice of apples, both fermented and unfermented. "Sweet Cider" may be either unfermented or with fermentation checked at an early stage so as to leave unchanged a considerable amount of the sugar in the juice. "Hard Cider" is that in which fermentation has continued until all the sugar has been changed into alcohol (and carbon-dioxide) and is consequently sour to the taste. Unfermented cider is frequently styled "apple juice" to distinguish it from fermented "sweet cider." Cider is obtained by chopping and grinding apples to a pulp, and then pressing in a mill. A dark liquid is obtained which, unless sterilized for "apple juice," will at once begin to ferment and in a few days become the liquid known to commerce as fermented "sweet cider." Great care is again necessary to preserve it in that condition or it quickly develops into "hard cider." Fermented sweet cider contains from 4% to 8% alcohol and also malic and acetic acids, sugar salts and extractives. Among the most popular, are clarified types such as Champagne Cider, Sparkling Cider and similar imitations of Champagne, generally put up in champagne bottles, with the corks wired down and covered with tin-foil. It should be stored in a cool place, and it greatly improves with age. Bulk Cider should be kept especially cool, as otherwise it is apt to sour after being tapped. At a temperature of about 75° Fahr., it will gradually become vinegar. If the head of a cask is swollen by pressure from within, a hole should be bored in it to relieve the pressure and prevent leakage. Cider for bottling should be of good quality, sound and piquant, and at least twelve months old. Before bottling, it should be examined to see if it is clear and sparkling. If not, it should be clarified (see CLARIFICATION) and left for a fortnight. The bung should be taken out of the cask the night before the bottling day, and the filled bottles should be held a day before being corked down--these precautions are necessary to save the bottles from being burst by pressure. Only the best corks should be used. When cider is wanted for immediate use, or for consumption during the cooler portion of the year, the bottles may be corked within two or three hours after being filled, but in summer, or for long keeping, this practice is inadmissible. To keep new cider from fermentation, powdered wood charcoal in the ratio of a pint to a barrel is recommended. Place in a cotton bag and suspend in the barrel. A small quantity of cider is annually imported, chiefly from Spain and Germany. CIDER VINEGAR. See general article on VINEGAR. "C. I. F.": signifies charges or allowances for Cost, Insurance and Freight. CIGARS. A cigar department, if properly managed, generally pays good profits to the grocer. Tobacco in every form has always been sold by grocers in the smaller towns--and there is no good reason why cigars at all events should not take their place among other staples in the larger cities also. The purchase of cigars is not a general household expense, but it often falls to the lot of the housekeeper to supply them, and it is a convenience to her to be able to buy in a store to which she is accustomed and in which she feels confidence. Further, a clean, up-to-date grocery store selling a good class of wines and liquors and a good line of cigars, quickly attracts a very profitable trade from the men themselves. First one and then another will drop in to order some wine or some spirits sent "up to the house" and if the cigar case is attractive, a purchase follows almost as a matter of course. Proper treatment and first-class goods will mean keeping a large proportion of them as steady customers. To retain men's trade for the cigar department, a grocer must, however, give it even more careful attention than if he were a cigar dealer exclusively. A man getting a bad cigar at a regular dealer's, may attribute it to chance or even to himself as being off taste--but if he has purchased it from his grocer, he is immediately confirmed in his previous general impression that you "can't expect to get a good cigar in a grocery store." Eternal vigilance is decidedly the requirement for obtaining and keeping this line of custom--but it is worth it! The merchant adding this line for the first time will do well to avoid the rather general error of putting in too large a stock. The result is liable to be that cigars are held in the show-case longer than is good for them, with a consequent loss either of money invested or of your reputation as a purveyor of good cigars! A small stock of a few well-selected lines of moderate price is the best plan. Cigars improve with age to a certain point in especially equipped establishments--but not in the average retailer's store. The next essential is to see that the cigars are kept in good condition. The method depends upon circumstances and localities. In summer, for example, the problem in coast towns is to keep them from becoming too moist--whereas in inland states it is to prevent them from drying out. A Havana Cigar Factory An illustration of a number of people sitting at tables in a factory. Putting the bands on Cigars A line of women sit at a table walled in by cigar boxes. In winter, with artificial heat, artificial moisture is essential nearly everywhere. An open pan of water in the case, with rolls of blotting paper reaching to the top of the case, will answer the purpose if you do not possess one of the several styles of cigar moisteners. Too much moisture--keeping cigars in a damp place--is as bad as drying them out, for even the best varieties will become heavy, soggy and rank-flavored. They must also be kept away from any articles of strong odor, such as cheese, fish, spices, coffee, tea, etc.--and place fine cigars in a separate case, as contact with coarser grades will tend to spoil their flavor. The principal divisions of cigars are into (1) those imported from Cuba, (2) clear Havana cigars manufactured in a climate as nearly as possible like that of Cuba (as Key West, Tampa, etc.), and (3) domestic. To these may be added a growing demand for the Porto Rico and Philippine products. For commercial purposes, cigars are again divided into three grades of tobacco--dark, medium and light--these including forty or fifty shades grouped under the seven following sub-headings:-- Oscuro, very dark. Maduro, dark. Colorado maduro, dark brown. Colorado, medium dark brown. Colorado claro, light brown. Claro, very light colored. Double claro, or amarillo, lightest of all (this grade seldom seen). A light-colored wrapper does not necessarily signify a specially "mild" cigar. It is the "filler" which determines the strength--and both light and dark tobacco is liable to be bitter and strong if it has not been properly ripened and cured. There is practically no limit to the number of sizes or shapes in which cigars are made, as many manufacturer may bring out as many styles as he pleases and name them to suit his own particular fancy. The prevalence of Spanish names and terms is due to the fact that for many generations all the best cigars were manufactured in and exported from Cuba and other Spanish-speaking countries. It is impossible to give any fixed set of rules for judging the quality and value of cigars and tobacco. The best and only conclusive test--that used by manufacturers themselves--is smoking one or two samples to ascertain the virtues or defects of any particular variety. Consequently, unless a merchant is personally a critical smoker and a good judge of cigars, he can be guided only by the reputation of the importer, manufacturer or jobber, and the comments of his customers. The safest plan is to confine orders to houses of long-established and irreproachable reputation. Many a promising cigar department has dwindled to an ignominous finish in the effort to make bigger profits by purchases of cigars "just as good and $10.00 a thousand cheaper" from plausible manufacturers of the opposite type. The merits of color, size and shape as a "selling" proposition must be gauged by the popular and individual tastes of consumers. (See also article on TOBACCO.) CINNAMON ( See Color Page of SPICES): is the spicy bark of young branches of the Cinnamon Tree, cut off in strips and dried in the sun, curling during the process into the quills with which the consumer is familiar. Ceylon Cinnamon is obtained from Cinnamomum Zeylanicum, native to Ceylon but also cultivated to some extent in the East Indies. Cassia Cinnamon is from Cinnamomum Cassia, the chief East Indian and Chinese type. Both kinds are sold both in quills and ground, their fragrant aromatic flavor making them a popular adjunct in cookery, confectionery, etc. Ceylon Cinnamon is the variety referred to in the general article on SPICES as, in earlier days, a commodity of great value and the cause of many wars and much bloodshed. It was first carried to the world's markets by Arabs, who kept its source a close secret for a number of centuries and contrived to discourage possible investigators by stories of fabulous monsters inhabiting the country from which they were supposed to obtain it. That the tree grew wild in Ceylon, was not generally known until the 14th century, in spite of the fact that the spice had been continuously in use since the early days of Israel, Greece and Rome. A pile of peeled Cinnamon sticks, Ceylon A young boy wearing a loincloth stands in the middle of a pile of sticks. Three other people stand in the background, hands on hips. Ceylon Cinnamon is of a pale yellowish-brown color and generally of lighter, cleaner and smoother appearance than Cassia. The quills (the smaller enclosed in the larger) are also usually thinner and more tightly rolled, but these distinctions are not absolute, as there are many different grades of Cassia. Cassia Cinnamon was until recent years decried as an inferior imitation, principally because the greater part of the supply consisted of the inferior and poorly prepared China product. It has however just as good botanical title to the general name of "Cinnamon" as the Ceylon type, and, as the result of the fine quality now exported from French Cochin-China and the Dutch East Indies, it is to-day given the preference in the United States and in several European countries, because its flavor is more pronounced and more lasting--the Ceylon is milder and so much more volatile that it loses readily on exposure to the air. The demand for Ceylon Cinnamon has indeed so lessened that commercial interests are urging the cultivation of Cassia in Ceylon in order to maintain the island's position in the trade. In analytical circles the Ceylon variety is still conservatively described as "True Cinnamon" instead of by the commercial term "Ceylon Cinnamon." The lower grades of Cassia are cheaper than any of the Ceylon generally marketed, but the best qualities are more expensive. The four main grades are those known as Saigon, or Saigan, from French Cochin-China (the choicest): Corintje and Batavia of the Dutch East Indies, and China (the cheapest). Saigon Cassia is generally used for blending with lower grades. CISCO: a small lake fish resembling in size and appearance the fresh-water herring. In some localities it is known as "whitefish." Cisco A small illustration of a fish. CITRANGE: a new member of the citrus family (which includes oranges, grape fruit, lemons, etc.), produced by cultivation. It resembles an orange in general characteristics but is more tart in flavor. It is also described as a "hardy orange," because the trees which bear it can withstand lower temperature than the ordinary orange tree. The fruit is used for making summer beverages, for cooking, etc. CITRIC ACID: is obtained chiefly from lemons and other citrus fruits but is present in a majority of acidulous fruits such as currants, cranberries, etc. CITRON: a fruit which is cultivated chiefly for its thick, spongy rind, which in candied form--then thick, tender and of delicious flavor--is popular for use in cakes, preserves, etc. It is also employed in the making of fruit syrups, liqueurs, etc. There are many varieties of the fruit, which is generally warty and furrowed in appearance, with pulp similar in flavor to that of a lemon but less acid, in the largest types attaining to a length of nine inches and weighing up to twenty pounds. It grows freely in sub-tropical climates but is seldom seen by the average consumer in its fresh condition. A small quantity is produced in California but the bulk of the supply is imported. The variety known as Leghorn Citron comes from Corsica and Sardinia, where the fruit is cut up, barreled in salt pickle and shipped to Leghorn. After remaining for a month or more in the pickle, the rind, freed of seeds, etc., is boiled until tender and then set to soak in slightly sweetened water in order to extract some of the salt. The following day it is removed to a second solution and the next day to another, the process being repeated for a week or more, each new solution being a little sweeter than that preceding. The rind is finally boiled for a short time in heavy syrup and thence goes to racks in a heated room to dry and crystallize. The following day it is ready for packing, being put up in various styles for different markets. The unripe fruit of the ungrafted citron tree is the "Citron of the Law" used by many Jewish communities in the ceremonies during the Feast of the Tabernacles. CITRON MELON: used for preserving. See article on MELONS. CITRUS: a genus of plants which produce a great number of useful fruits. Citrus Aurantium is the family name for the trees which give us sweet oranges; Citrus Bigaradia is the bitter or Seville orange; Citrus Limonum, the lemon; Citrus Limetta, the lime; Citrus Medica, the citron; Citrus Paradisi, the grape fruit; and Citrus Japonica, the kumquat. CLAM: the most common American shellfish, eaten fresh in enormous quantities and also extensively consumed in canned form, especially in the West. Its great popularity has resulted in a demand that has in some sections exceeded even the bountiful natural supply, and many of those who make a business of supplying the market have turned to "clam farming" on the tidal mud flats. Clams imbedded in the mud--as exposed by digging A dug-out patch of mud with a group of clams scattered at its bottom. The Hard Clam -- called "quohaug" in some parts of the East and "poorquaw" in Nantucket--is the variety generally offered in city markets. The small or young clam is the more tender and in most demand for eating raw, the larger clams being generally used for soups, chowders, etc. Where quality is paramount, the hard part of the large clam is often cut off and discarded. Digging Clams at low tide An illustration of a group of people working on a beach with buckets and shovels. Hard Clams are also generally known as "Little Neck" clams in contrast to the Soft Clam, which has a long distendible neck. Soft Clams, also called "Soft Shell Clams," have shells which are thinner, flatter and less round in shape. They are used in a similar diversity of ways--on the shell, broiled, fried, stewed, steamed, etc. Small, inferior grades are strung on cords and sold at a low price by the "bunch" for soups, etc. The eastern supply of clams comes from Long Island and the New England coast. CLAM BOUILLON, or Clam Broth: an excellent article when put up by reliable firms. Drunk hot, it is a good remedy in many cases of indigestion. CLAM CHOWDER: a stew of clams and various other items. See CHOWDER. CLARET. What we call "claret" is known in France as Vin de Bordeaux, "(Red) Bordeaux wine," sub-divided by the names of cantons or communes, as "St. Julien," etc. The term "claret," an Anglo-Saxon name originally applied only to red Bordeaux wines, is a corruption of clairet, a French word applied in France to any light pale wine SOFT CLAMS HARD CLAMS Tonging for Hard Clams Digging Soft Clams A color illustration of two groups of clams, one oblong and completely off-white in color, the other slightly more rounded and with a purplish tinge on the inside of the shell. Two inlaid cuts accompany the illustration: one of a man wading in some low water with a bucket and a shovel, and the other featuring a man in a boat, extending a large pair of tongs to scoop something from the ocean floor. and also to various infusions of aromatic plants with wine, honey or sugar, etc. In France, the term "Bordeaux wine" is applied generally to that produced throughout the entire southwest, but the best comes from the Department of the Gironde, of which the city of Bordeaux is the capital, and of the Gironde wines a large majority of the finest red types, are from the Médoc section, which includes the communes of Arsac, Cantenac, Labarde, Ludon, Macau, Margaux, Pauillac, Pessac, St. Estèphe, St. Julien et Beychevelle and many others of note. Less in quantity, but almost equally famous, are the red wines from the vicinity of St. Emilion. Red Bordeaux wine, or Claret, is famous both for its bouquet and as a table beverage generally acceptable even to the poorest digestion. Its tonic effect is attributed to the characteristic combination of tannin with a certain low percentage of alcohol. It varies greatly in price according to the special vintage, etc., but its general usefulness is enhanced by the fact that, though the fine bouquet of the expensive types is not found in the cheaper grades, the food value of all grades is practically the same--the composition shown by analysis varies little, no matter what price is paid. Clarets are broadly classified as "Château," "Bourgeois" and "Ordinary" or "common." Château, are those bearing the name of the château or estate on which they were produced. Bourgeois, represent the great bulk of medium grade wines and are generally named according to the district of production. "Ordinary" or "common," are those made by peasant growers, etc. The last-named are seldom exported. The best Château wines, the Vins classés, the total product of which is small in comparison with the great bulk of Bordeaux wine, are divided into the five representative "crus"--classes or "growths"--given below. No formal revision of this classification has been made for many years, but it is still essentially correct, in spite of inaccuracies in the nomenclature of a few of the Châteaux of the second to fifth crus. FIRST CRU. COMMUNE. Château Margaux Margaux " Lafite Pauillac " Latour " " Haut-Brion Pessac SECOND CRU. Château Brane-Cantenac Cantenac " Durfort-Vivent Margaux " Lascombes " " Rauzan-Gassies " " Rauzan-Ségia " " Lalande Pauillac " Mouton-Rothschild " " Pichon-Longueville " " Cos d'Estournel St. Estèphe " Montrose " " Ducru-Beaucaillou St. Julien " (Gruaud) Larose " " Gruaud-Larose-Sarget " " Léoville " " Léoville-Barton " " Léoville-Poyferré " THIRD CRU. COMMUNE. Château Cantenac Brown Cantenac " d'Issan " " Kirwan " " Palmer " " Giscours Labarde " La Lagune Ludon " Becker Margaux " Desmirail " " Ferrière " " Malescot-St.éxupéry " " Calon-Ségur St. Estèphe " Langora St. Julien " Lagrange " FOURTH CRU Château Poujet Cantenac " Prieuré " " Marquis de Terme Margaux " Duhart-Milon Pauillac " Rochet St. Estèphe " Beychevelle St. Julien " Brapaire-Duine " FOURTH CRU-- Cont'd. COMMUNE. Château Saint-Pierre St. Julien " Talbot " " Latour Carnet St. Laurent FIFTH CRU. Château Du Tertre Arsac " Dauzac Labarde " Cantemerle Macau " Batailley Pauillac " Clerc-Milon " " Croizet-Bages " " Ducasse-Grand-Puy " " Grand-Puy " " Haut-Bages " " Lynch-Bages " " Lynch-Moussas " " Mouton-d' Armailhacq " " Pédesclaux " " Pontet-Canet " " Cos-Labory St. Estèphe " Belgrave St. Laurent " Camensac " Cachet du Château wines are those bottled on the Château or estate and bearing its crest or trade-mark. Other exported Château wines are generally matured and bottled by wine merchants, many of them of long standing and international reputation. Some Cachet du Château wines command very high prices, but it must be remembered that though the château bottling guarantees the genuineness of a wine, it does not necessarily vouch for its being of high value, as its merit depends upon the quality of the year's vintage. A Château claret of an especially good year is often a great deal more expensive than the same Château's production of the year before or after. Also, some of the finest wines are those matured and bottled by high class wine merchants, who buy largely in bulk when a vintage--either or both Château or Bourgeois--promises to be desirable. In such cases, the reputation of the wine merchant takes the place of that of the Château as a guarantee of its quality. The high repute of the fine Château types is due to the extreme care exercised at every stage--in the selection of the vines and their cultivation, as well as in the making and maturing of the wine itself. Bourgeois wines are generally divided into "first," "second" and "third" grade. The types best known here are the various grades of Médoc, St. Julien, St. Emilion, St. Estèphe, Margaux and Pontet Canet. To understand the wide variation in price of clarets bearing the same general name, it is only necessary to remember that French claret titles are chiefly geographical and that, quite naturally, many grades may be found in the same locality. For example, one of the cheapest grades of French clarets imported is generally known here as "Médoc"--and correctly so if the wine comes from the Médoc section--but, as noted in the second paragraph, the same section produces also nearly all the very finest French clarets--those of the first "cru" or grade being in France specifically known as Vin du Médoc, or "Médoc wine." Similarly, a St. Julien may be a moderate-priced wine bearing only the name of a district, or an expensive one with a Château title. In addition, is the variation from year to year in the quality of the wine produced. The purchaser who is not a connoisseur is consequently guided either by the reputation of the firm selling or by that of the Château, if buying Château-bottled wine. Fine clarets will keep and improve for about fifteen years or a little longer. After that, they generally deteriorate very rapidly. They should never be used immediately after delivery, as they require at least two weeks to settle and become clear. They should, like Burgundy, be drunk at the temperature of the average dining room. The best grades will contain about half a wine-glass of thick wine and sediment in each bottle, and care must be exercised to avoid mixing this up when carrying from the cellar and when pouring into the glass or decanter, or the wine will appear dull and have a rough, bitter taste. See general article on WINES (decanting, etc.). The lower priced clarets form an especially refreshing summer drink, served either undiluted or liberally mixed with water. America produces a large quantity of excellent wine of Claret type, variously labelled according to the fancies of the makers. Some varieties masquerade under French claret names, as "St. Julien," "Margaux," etc. Others bear the more honest titles of the grapes principally employed, as "Norton," "Ives," "Concord," etc., in the East and South, and "Cabernet," "Zinfandel," etc., in California, or special trade or locality names. The bulk of American claret is produced in the coast range district of California (see AMERICAN WINES). The practice of diluting with water is particularly suitable for American claret when consumed as a general table beverage, as it is usually stronger in alcohol than French claret. See also BORDEAUX WINES (white). CLARIFICATION, or Fining: the act of making "clear" or "bright," applied especially to "clearing" or "fining" liquids by the addition of albumin, gelatine or isinglass, etc. The substances used in the process are known as "finings" and their operation is similar to the "settling" of coffee by the addition of egg-albumen (egg-white). When added to wine, for example, the result of the "fining" is to remove part of the tannin--the latter coagulates the fining and the mass drops to the bottom, leaving the liquid clear. Clarification is a very delicate process, because the removal of too much tannin injures the liquid, yet if too much is left, it becomes cloudy again. Boneblack, Charcoal, Bullock's Blood, etc., are still largely used in the clarification of sugar, but centrifugal force is the principal agent in modern refineries. See general article on SUGAR. Many liquids are clarified by filtering through cloth, silk, etc. CLOVES ( see illustration in Color Page of SPICES). Cloves, widely used for flavoring desserts and confectionery and medicinally, are the dried flower buds of the clove tree. As plucked, they are reddish in color, but this changes to the familiar dark brown in the process of drying, performed either by the smoke of wood fires or by exposure to the sun. The clove tree, an evergreen, grows to a height of forty feet, bears its developed clove buds in its seventh year, and gives two crops annually, increasing its productiveness up to an age of nearly a hundred years. The clove industry was for many centuries confined to very narrow limits. A few islands of the Molucca group furnished the world's supply up to the beginning of the seventeenth century; then the Dutch, having driven the Portuguese out of the "Spice Islands," tried to destroy all the clove trees except those on the Island of Amboyna, to perfect their monopoly. A Clove plantation in Zanzibar An illustration of a group of people walking in a lane between two rows of rees. Later, the Island of Zanzibar became an important producer, but for a number of years following 1872 it was again unproductive as the result of a cyclone which uprooted nearly all of the mature fruit-bearing trees. An interesting result of the cyclone was the release from the Dutch government warehouses at Amboyna of surplus cloves that had been accumulating there for generations--no sales having been permitted except when the bids reached the prices set by the government. The markings on some of the barrels received at that time in New York showed that they belonged to the surplus of crops reaching back nearly a hundred years--some of the barrels were ready to fall to pieces, but the cloves were in excellent condition. The principal sources of supply today are the Islands of Zanzibar and Pemba (British East Africa) and the East Indies (both Dutch and British). The best grade of British is that known as Penang; that of Dutch is Amboyna. Dark, well-formed cloves are the best. Mother Cloves is the dry ripe fruit. It somewhat resembles the olive in appearance. Its flavor is similar to, but much weaker than, that of the ordinary clove. CLYSMIC. See general article on table and medicinal MINERAL WATERS. COAL TAR: a by-product of the manufacture of coal-gas and coke, was first noted in the latter part of the sixteenth century by a German chemist named Johann Joachim Becher. For a long time it was though practically a waste substance, ill-smelling, black and sticky, of no market value and difficult to dispose of in any way, as it polluted rivers and destroyed vegetation. Towards the middle of the nineteenth century, the pitch and lighter oils obtained by distilling it became of importance in the roofing, paving and chemical industries, eventually being used for making briquets and for wood preservation, waterproofing, preservative coatings, etc., but its real history commences with the founding of the Coal Tar chemical industry by Sir Henry Perkin in 1856. Since that date science has produced from it an innumerable variety of chemical compounds of the most diverse characters and uses--comprising dye-stuffs, antiseptics, explosives, medicines, some of the most fragrant of perfumes, saccharin (a substance 300 times sweeter than sugar), flavoring extracts, etc., etc. The flavoring extracts produced include vanillin or artificial vanilla, cinnamon oil, oil of bitter almonds, coumarin, oil of wintergreen, essence of orange blossoms, essence of rhubarb, etc. The list might be indefinitely extended, for it has been stated by a prominent chemist that a majority of the foods listed on the average bill of fare, could be counterfeited in flavor by the use of Coal Tar preparations. COCA: the leaves of the coca plant, Erythroxylon, a bush resembling the blackthorn, which grows to a height of five to eight feet. They are thin, opaque and oval, tapering somewhat like tea leaves in the best types, a light olive-green above and whitish-green on the under-surface. When dried, they have an odor resembling that of tea leaves and an aromatic bitter taste. They are employed medicinally and in the manufacture of various tonic beverages for their stimulating property--which is akin to caffeine or theine but is held in the leaves in larger proportion than caffeine in coffee or theine in tea. The natives of various parts of South America, particularly Peru, chew the dried leaves, generally together with a little pulverized unslacked lime, for the ability they give to resist fatigue. Though this use has apparently been a daily custom for uncounted generations, it is seldom that any ill effects are noted. The principle chemically extracted is the drug Cocaine. COCHINEAL: the best example of coloring from animal sources. See CARMINE. COCKIE-LEEKIE: a Scotch soup of which the "character" ingredients are fowls, leeks and seasoning. COCKROACH: an orthopterous insect which may be classed among the most offensive and objectionable of domestic pests. It is extremely voracious, not only devouring all kinds of provisions, but destroying silk, flannel and even cotton fabrics in the absence of anything more edible. It is nocturnal in its habits and exceedingly active and swift of movement, its flattened form enabling it to insinuate itself easily into crevices and thus escape detection. It is found in many varieties and in every part of the world--from the Frozen North, where it is often responsible for the destruction of the winter's supply of dried fish, to its most favored habitat, the tropical zone. The three chief domesticated species found here are, Blatella Germanica, the small variety known as the German Cockroach, Water-bug, Croton-bug, etc.; Blatta Orientalis, the Common Cockroach or "Black Beetle"; Blatta Americana, the American Cockroach, which averages the largest of the common varieties, and the Periplaneta Australisae, or Australian Cockroach. In spite of their geographical titles, these four are now international in distribution. The Australian Cockroach is not so frequently seen in northern states, but it is the most plentiful and obnoxious in Florida and other parts of the South. Except for differences in size, the domesticated roaches of temperature climates resemble each other in general characteristics, but the wild roaches of the tropics present a wonderful diversity of size, color and shape, one species attaining the enormous length of six inches. Another large, partially domesticated variety found in the West Indies is locally known as the "drummer," from the tapping noise it makes on wood--the sound thus produced, when joined in by several of the creatures, as it usually is, being sufficient to destroy the slumbers of a household. The only certain way of ridding an apartment or store of roaches is by fumigation, the two most widely approved agents being hydrocyanic acid gas and bisulphid of carbon, but this method is not always practicable or convenient. If the warfare against them is conducted persistently and systematically, they can generally be driven away or destroyed without fumigation, by the distribution of small pills of Phosphorus Paste, or by the use of Flowers of Sulphur, fine powdered Borax or Persian Insect Powder, blown by bellows into cracks and crevices in the floor, woodwork, walls, etc., and distributed in all corners and obscure parts of rooms and closets. Another method is to smear a piece of wood with syrup and float it in a broad basin of water before retiring. When fires and lights are extinguished, the roaches come out of their holes and drown themselves in the water in their efforts to reach the bait. The chinks and holes from which they have come should be filled with unslacked lime. Traps of this--or any other--character are though seldom efficacious against the very astute Water-bug. COCKLES: an English shellfish, imported cooked in small flat cans. When taken from the can, they are washed thoroughly in cold water, frizzled in butter and served hot on toast--or in rice, curried, etc. Cockles are new to the American public, and, unless the housewife is warned to wash them thoroughly, they will not be appreciated. COCKSCOMBS: the crests of the male domestic fowl, cut off and blanched. They are retailed in bottles by fancy grocers, for use chiefly as a garniture. COCKTAIL: a "mixed drink" now largely sold in bottles. The best known are the Manhattan and Martini--the former being composed of whisky and vermouth, and the latter of gin and vermouth--in addition to bitters, syrup, etc., in each case. A "dry" cocktail is one made without syrup. The word is also applied to a service of oysters, etc., in a glass with a special sauce. DRYING COCOA BEANS ON BAMBOO FLOORS, LA CLEMENTINA, ECUADOR An illustration of large bamboo slats covered with mounds of cocoa beans, which are covered with nets. Two people are standing near the bean piles, one of whom using a rake to spread the beans. Several buildings and a tropical forest can be seen in the background. COCOA AND CHOCOLATE. The word "Cocoa," now universally used in English-speaking countries, is a corruption of "Cacao"--the full botanical title being "Theobroma Cacao," which, translated, is "Cocoa, the food of the Gods," clearly demonstrating the early recognition of its high food value! Cocoa beans were used as food in Mexico, the West Indies and elsewhere long before the discovery of this hemisphere by Columbus. The earliest references to it are found in the writings of the explorers who followed him--tradition has it that the first to tell of the new beverage was Bernal Diaz, one of the Spanish officers with Cortez, who observed Montezuma quaffing a concoction of it from a golden cup. Its use was soon an established custom in Spain and Portugal, which are to this day large per capita consumers of cocoa and chocolate, and as early as 1550 chocolate factories of considerable size existed in the south of Europe--in Lisbon, Genoa, Turin, Bayonne and Marseilles. The cocoa-tree grows to an average height of twenty to thirty feet and is of spreading habits and healthy growth. Bucare-trees, tropical trees of rapid growth, are set between the rows to shade the young trees until they have attained maturity. A minimum temperature of 80° Fahr. and plenty of moisture, both of soil and atmosphere, are required to bring out their full bearing possibilities. The trees begin to bear fruit at three or four years, continuing to the age of about forty years. Some fruit is ripening all the year round, but two main crops are gathered, generally in June and December (or January)--the latter being the more important. The cocoa beans or seeds are found in pods of varying shapes from seven to twelve inches long and rather more than a third as much in diameter at the thickest part. The ripe pod is dark yellow or yellowish-brown in color with a thick, tough rind enclosing a mass of cellular tissue. The beans, about the size of almonds, but more suggestive of vegetable beans in shape, are buried in the tissue, each in a thin shell varying from the papery texture of the Ceylon and Java beans to the hard skin of the other varieties. When fresh they are bitter in taste and of a light color, turning reddish-brown or reddish-grey during the processes of sweating and curing. Cocoa Pods on Trunk of Tree An illustration of a tree with large pods growing out of its trunk. A curious fact is that the pods grow most freely on the older branches and the trunks of the trees, often on those entirely bare of foliage, instead of among the fullest foliage as with the majority of other fruits. In gathering, only fully ripened pods are taken. They are first left on the ground for twenty-four hours to dry and are then cut open and the beans taken out (the beans still remaining in their shells). Eccentric Growth of Cocoa Pods An illustration of cocoa pods growing among the branches of a tree. The next operation is the "sweating" or curing. The acid juice which marks the beans is first drained off and they are then placed in a sweating box, in which they are enclosed and allowed to ferment for some time, great care being taken to keep the temperature from rising too high. The fermenting process is in some cases effected by throwing the seeds into holes or trenches in the ground and covering them with earth or clay. The seeds in this process, which is called "claying," are occasionally stirred to keep the fermentation from proceeding too violently. The final plantation process is the drying of the mass in the sun--the beans of good quality which have been carefully fermented there assuming the warm, reddish tint so highly prized. They are then ready to be put into bags and sent out into the markets of the world. In the cocoa and chocolate manufacturing establishments the beans are cleaned, sorted and roasted--the roasting being most important, for upon it depends to a great extent the flavor of the finished cocoa. Too little, leaves the beans crude and unflavored, and too much will make them bitter. Harvesting Cocoa Pods An illustration of a group of people using poles to remove cocoa pods from the trunks of the trees. The roasting machine keeps the seeds in constant motion over the fire or hot pipes for about twenty-five to forty-five minutes. They go next to the "cracker," which cracks the shells and breaks the beans into small fragments. After the "cracker" comes the "fanner," which separates the shells from the bean fragments and sorts them later by screens into six different sizes, the last being as fine as dust. The cracked beans are known as "cocoa-nibs." The next step is the "blending." Cocoa beans of different plantations and countries vary in flavor and strength very much as do tea-leaves or coffee beans, and it is the aim of each manufacturer to make a blend which will produce the best possible flavor, aroma, etc. The cracked beans designated for each blend go first to the "mixer" and then to the "grinders," which reduce them to a thick, oily liquid. Drying Cocoa Beans on cement floors in Dominica An illustration of a small group of people spreading beans in a large open area. A small building and several palm trees can be seen in the background. If "plain" or "bitter" chocolate is being made, the manufacture is then complete. The liquid is cooled to the proper temperature and run into molds where it remains until cooled to hard cakes by refrigerating machines. For "sweet chocolate," cocoa-butter and sugar are added to the liquid which comes from the grinders, and mixed in the "melanger" or mixer, and the resulting paste is sent through the "rollers," coming from them smooth, even and with all the air pressed out. For "Vanilla Chocolate," some high-grade vanilla beans, and in some cases a small quantity of spices such as cinnamon and cloves, are added at the same time as the sugar. In "Spanish Chocolate" and similar varieties, almonds are often used instead of vanilla and with the addition of cinnamon and cloves. The paste which comes from the rollers is next weighed off and placed in molds--being thoroughly shaken down in them by automatic agitators. For "Cocoa" or "breakfast cocoa," the liquid which comes from the grinders is deprived of some of its oil or butter, leaving a comparatively hard dry substance which is ground to powder and bolted through very fine silk screens. Only the fine powder passes through, the remainder being held to grind over again. This is put up for the market in various sizes of cartons and cans. Removing Cocoa Beans, Curing and Drying An illustration of a group of people working at a cocoa plantation. Two of the people are stripping cocoa pods of the cocoa beans, while several other people spread the beans out on wooden trays in the background. One of the distinguishing characteristics of absolutely pure cocoa when ready for the market is a rich, reddish color, commonly known among artists as "cacao-red." When the powder is so dark as to appear almost black it is generally a sign that it has been artificially colored, or that it was made from imperfectly cleansed beans of a poor quality. Cocoa contains a percentage of theobromine which corresponds to the stimulating properties of tea and coffee, but its high merit lies principally in its very large proportion of nutritive substances--roasted cocoa beans contain an average of 49% pure oil, 18% protein matter, 10% starch, and 7% other carbohydrates, etc.--contained in a form which is very palatable, however it is taken into the system--whether as a 1 HARD OUTER SHELL 2 SOFT INNER LAYER 3 BEAN IMBEDDED IN SLIME TISSUE 4 SLIME TISSUE DRAWN BACK TO EXPOSE BEAN 5 BEAN SHELL OR ENVELOPE 6 COCOA BEAN OR KERNEL COCOA POD, two-thirds average size, half of outer shell removed An illustration of a cocoa pod, which has been cut to reveal its inner structure. Parts of the pod are labeled with numbers. beverage or confection, in puddings, cakes, etc. Its value is highly regarded by all civilized governments--in Europe and the United States, chocolate is a part of the army ration as a food and of the navy ration as a beverage. The United States is to-day the largest cocoa consuming country in the world. During 1910, more than 115,000,000 pounds of cocoa beans were imported into the United States--nearly one-third of the entire world production. The chief sources of the crude beans received here are the British West Indies (chiefly Trinidad), Brazil, Portuguese Colonies, Ecuador, San Domingo, Venezuela, East Indies, Dutch Guiana, Cuba, etc. Some prepared cocoa and chocolate is imported from Germany, Holland, France, Spain, Switzerland and other European countries, but, on the other hand, the United States is beginning to figure as an exporter of the prepared article. Dutch cocoas are distinguished by their treatment with sodium carbonate or ammonium hydrate. The reason given is that the process makes a greater percentage of protein available as a nutrient by destroying the cellular tissues. The objection to the process is that it increases the proportion of mineral salts. The apparent result is to make the cocoa darker in color and more frothy when prepared for drinking. By U. S. standards, Plain or Bitter Chocolate is the mass obtained by grinding cocoa nibs without the removal of any constituent except the germ, and contains not more than 3% ash, insoluble in water, 3.5% crude fibre and 9% starch, and not less than 45% cocoa fat. Sweet Cocoa should not contain more than 60% sugar. No chocolate or cocoa preparation should contain in the sugar-and-fat-free residue a higher percentage of ash, fibre or starch than found in the fat-free residue of Plain Chocolate. The principal commercial classifications as they interest the consumer are: Cocoa: the ground cocoa bean, from which part of the oil or fat has been extracted, sold in powdered form. Because of the smaller quantity of oil, cocoa is more acceptable to many digestions than the richer chocolate. It may be added that the fact that the cocoa tin is not full when opened does not necessarily imply short measure. The tins used by manufacturers are larger than required for the weight called for, as cocoa fresh from the machines bulks a little larger than after it has been shaken down in commercial handling. Chocolate: the ground cocoa bean, generally in cake form, sweetened and unsweetened, flavored and unflavored, for cooking and eating. The "white" appearance sometimes noted when cake chocolate has been kept in stock for a long time is not attributable to age--it probably indicates that it has at some time been exposed to excessive heat. When pure chocolate is subjected to a temperature of 96 degrees or thereabouts, it begins to melt and allows part of the oil or butter to rise to the surface. When the temperature is lowered, so that the chocolate again becomes solid, the outside of the cocoa will show a thin covering of congealed cocoa-butter, which being of a yellowish color looks "white" in contrast to the brown of the chocolate itself. It is also erroneous to suppose that this is an indication that the chocolate is of inferior quality or is injured for practical use, for if it should be melted again and poured into molds and cooled at the right temperature it would resume its original color. Powdered Chocolate: sweetened chocolate of varying styles and compositions, sold in a pulverized condition. Milk Chocolate: a compound of milk powder and the ground cocoa bean, sweetened, flavored, etc. Cocoa Nibs: the cracked cocoa bean, without further treatment than the clearing of chaff, shells, etc. This is often recommended by physicians who wish their patients to receive the full nutriment of the cocoa bean, without the extraction of any of its oil and without the addition of any flavoring or sweetening ingredients. The beverage is prepared by steeping the nibs in boiling water, very much as for tea or coffee. Cocoa Shells: the shells separated from the cracked beans. They contain a very small percentage of the food properties, but quite a little of the flavor of the cocoa bean, and make a cheap and pleasant drink. They are usually bought as a matter of economy, but they are also popular among some well-to-do people of weak digestion. Cocoa Butter: the fat or oil extracted from the cocoa bean. It has high commercial value. The greater part of it is employed in confectionery, especially in covered candies, such as Chocolate Creams, but a considerable quantity is used in the druggist's trade--in the manufacture of toilet preparations, cosmetics, etc., and also in the natural form without change or addition whenever the requirements call for a pure fat that will melt at the temperature of the body and will retain its sweetness indefinitely. Cocoa and chocolate and all allied products should be kept cool and dry to prevent deterioration. In preparing cocoa or chocolate for the table, it should be remembered that the full flavor and most complete digestibility are only attainable by subjecting it to the boiling point for a few minutes. Neither is properly cooked by having boiling milk or water poured over it--in that way you get all the "food value" into the stomach, it is true, but the same remark applies if you eat it raw--keep it boiling for a few minutes to enjoy it at its best. A COCOANUT GROVE An illustration of a grove of palm trees, each tree bearing a large bunch of coconuts. Some of the coconuts have fallen from the tree in the foreground. Husking the Crop in a Cocoanut Grove near Mayaguez, Porto Rico An illustration of a number of people work among a large pile of fallen coconuts. COCOANUT. The cocoanut palm is a native of the islands which dot the Southern Pacific, but it is now widely grown in many other tropical parts of the globe, particularly in the West Indies, Ceylon and parts of India. It flourishes best in the sandy soil along the sea-shore and frequently attains to the height of one hundred feet--a long straight slender trunk, without either branch or leaf--perpendicular to the sky or leaning to one side or the other according to the mercies of the wind in its youth--with a crown of palm leaves for its head. The nuts hang downward near the trunk from the under-part of the crown--the yield averaging from fifty to one hundred nuts a year. The tree grows wild without care, but for commercial purposes it is raised in plantations or "groves." The cocoanut, as the average person sees it, is a large woody-looking nut, three or four inches in diameter, the shell enclosing an inside covering of half an inch or more of white meat, and holding a small quantity of cocoanut milk. On the tree the nut is enclosed in a husk, two or three inches in thickness, according to the stage of ripeness, and a green outside skin. When the nut is first formed inside the husk the shell is thin, and in place of the firm white meat is a thin coating of a white, creamy substance--which you eat with a spoon and find delicious--and a large quantity, two glasses or more, of sweetish water with a mild delicate cocoanut flavor. As ripening continues, the outside skin takes on a brownish appearance, the husk shrinks and becomes more and more fibrous, the shell of the nut inside becomes harder and the creamy substance and the water inside the shell become the firm white meat and the smaller quantity of milk that constitute the cocoanut of general sale. The outside husk is removed before shipment here, partly to save space in packing, but also because it is easier to ascertain the condition of the nuts--any damaged or cracked specimens are thrown out as they would either dry up or become rancid in transportation. The "eyes" and "nose" in the "face" of the cocoanut--the delicate spots in the shell--are often tarred over to prevent the entrance of air. A Raft of Cocoanuts Drifting Down a Stream in Luzon, Philippine Islands A round raft laden with cocoanuts, being guided down a river by a single man standing in the middle of the raft. In places where they are grown, "green" cocoanuts are generally preferred for eating raw, the "cream" and water being sought--the meat of the ripe cocoanuts being principally used for cooking, confectionery, etc.--and quite a few green cocoanuts are brought here during the year for special stores and individuals. They are gathered by natives who climb up, or rather walk up, the trunks--with the aid of a rope in the case of the taller palms. Ripe cocoanuts are gathered after they have fallen of their own accord--fortunately for the native population they rarely fall except at night when the "seal" is loosened by the heavy dew. The quantity of ripe cocoanuts sold in this country to be eaten raw is considerable, but the most important traffic is in the meat itself--dried, shredded, macerated, etc., for cooking, confectionery, etc.--and in the oil produced from it. The greater part of the cocoanut meat utilized here is made in this country from whole nuts, 95,000,000 being imported during 1910; but large quantities, nearly 27,000,000 pounds during 1910, are imported ready dried, coming principally via San Francisco from the Philippine Islands, the East Indies and the Islands of the South Pacific. It is commercially known as "copra." Cocoanut oil--in temperate climates, a soft white fat--is obtained by pressing either the fresh meat or the dried copra, the former being the choicer. It is imported in large quantities--principally from Ceylon and the East Indies (both direct and via England), in addition to that manufactured here, for use in cooking oil preparations, in the manufacture of soap, etc. There is an increasing consumption of cocoanut "butters" prepared from cocoanut oil, especially in tropical countries, as it stands greater heat than dairy butter and is acceptable to many palates. Marseilles, France, is the center of the industry. The value of the cocoanut palm to the natives where it flourishes can scarcely be exaggerated. There is literal truth in the native proverb to the effect that "He who plants a cocoanut-tree plants vessels and clothing, food and drink, a habitation for himself and a heritage for his children." Cocoanut Rafts on One of the Waterways of Manila, P. I. A number of coconut-laden rafts tended by men with long poles, who seem to be relaxing on the rafts. Several buildings can be seen on the banks of the river. He who would do so could build himself a home of "porcupine wood," which is procured from the trunk of the tree and is very durable. Leaf-stalk rafters are to his hand, and his house is readily completed with a picturesque roof of thatched leaves. He can cover his floor with matting made from the coir (the fiber which is about the nut), and the same fiber will supply him with clothing, cordage and fishing lines. He can make brooms and brushes of the ribs of the leaves, and can utilize the old leaves in making buckets. The house completed, it can be decorated with fans and with cups artistically carved from COCOANUT A color illustration of a single coconut-bearing palm tree in a desert setting, underneath which stand two men and a camel. An accompanying inlaid cut shows two coconuts, one of which is cut in half to show the interior of the fruit. the nuts. The palm furnishes transportation also, for the sea-going canoe of the South Sea Islander is made of rough pliable planks of cocoanut-wood, grooved to fit and stitched together with cocoanut-coir twine. As regards food, he can sustain life on the monotonous but dainty fare provided by the green and ripe nuts. The latter will give him also cocoanut-oil in which he can fry any other food he may obtain, and from which he can manufacture soap and candles. The terminal bud may further be cooked like cabbage, and both temperance and intoxicating beverages may be prepared from the sap and fruit. "Tuba," a beverage highly prized and extensively consumed by the natives, is the sap of the flowering fruit-bearing stalks. As its extraction destroys the nut-bearing capacity, it is generally confined to trees devoted exclusively to the purpose. The fermented juice is intoxicating and yields on distillation a spirituous liquor known as "Coco wine." COD: one of the most abundant of food fishes, found in all northern temperate seas and taken in large quantities by both nets and lines along the North Atlantic and Arctic coasts of both America and Europe. It ranges in size up to a hundred pounds, the average market weight though being less than ten pounds. It is a very voracious fish, all the small ocean inhabitants serving it for food, and extraordinary prolific, the roe often containing from two to eight million eggs and sometimes constituting a full half of the weight of the female. See Color Page facing page 250. Cod is marketed in various forms, fresh, salted and dried, in the latter state being generally sold by the quintal (112 pounds). In addition to the large consumption in North America, great quantities of the dried fish are carried from Newfoundland to the West Indies, South America and Europe, especially to the Catholic countries of the latter continent. Fresh cod is at its best during the winter months. The head and shoulders, the choicest portions, are preferably boiled, the remainder being usually sliced for frying, etc. In Norway, cows are frequently fed on cod heads and seaweed in order to increase their supply of milk. In Iceland, the waste parts, bones, etc., are utilized as cattle food. Drying Cod on Racks at a Cape Ann Wharf, Gloucester, Mass A large yard filled with drying racks, most of which are laden with fish. The rack farthest to the right remains half empty; a lone man is working on covering it with fish as well. Salt Cod of all kinds is, when possible, cured immediately after catching. The fish are first split from head to tail and next thoroughly cleaned of all traces of blood by repeated washings in salt water. Part of the backbone is next cut out and the fish, after being drained as nearly dry as practicable, are then placed in vats or similar receptacles and covered with salt, remaining thus until sufficiently cured. When the curing process has been completed, they are taken out of the vats, washed and brushed to remove superfluous salt and placed to dry in the sun, spread out on wooden racks, on the beach or elsewhere. They are considered fit for market when they show "bloom"--a whitish appearance on the surface. They are sold in many forms, popular types being Boneless Cod and Flaked Cod, put up in small boxes; Shredded Cod, in papers and cans, etc. Dried Cod in a Warehouse, Aalesmund, Norway An illustration of two men standing in a building. Dunfish is one of several names for dried cod. The title is traced to two different sources--(1) as applied to the fish dried on open "downs" or "hills," from the Gaelic "Duin," a hill; (2) as descriptive of the color of cod cured by being salted and piled below salt grass in a dark room for several months, being turned once or more during that time. Rock-Cod, or Klipp-fish, is applied to the fish dried on the rocks. "Scrod" is a term which was originally applied to any fish, particularly cod, "scrodded" or "shredded," but it now generally signifies a young cod split and slightly salted. Cod Sounds, or Swim-bladders, and Cod tongues are popular delicacies, both separately and mixed. They are eaten fresh, being then in season from October to May, and salted or pickled. The dried Sounds also furnish an isinglass very little inferior to that from the Sturgeon. Cod Roe is a favorite table delicacy and is also important commercially as a bait for fish, large quantities being used in the French sardine fisheries. COD LIVER OIL: the expressed clarified oil of cod livers. It is considered an excellent aid in the treatment of pulmonary diseases and also in various forms of debility, the food value of the pure oil being supplemented by a noticeable percentage of phosphorus, iodine and bromine. There are three grades--Light Yellow, Light Brown and Dark Brown. The best qualities of Light Yellow come from the Lofoten Isles, Norway. The high grade "cod oil" of commerce is identically the same as "cod liver oil"--both are extracted from the cod livers--but publicity has made the latter title more familiar to the general public. Nearly all of the cod liver oil on the market formerly came from Newfoundland and Norway, but Alaska and Japan are to-day also important manufacturing points. "Emulsion" of cod liver oil, a popular modern form, is a milk-like preparation, the oil finely divided and held in suspension by the addition and mixing in of, generally, glycerine and tragacanth. COFFEE COFFEE BERRY HALVED, SHOWING SINGLE COFFEE BEAN. COFFEE BERRY WITH HALF OF FRUIT PULP REMOVED, SHOWING TWO COFFEE BEANS IN PARCHMENT COVERINGS. A color illustration of a plant with compound leaves; flowers and berries are also growing from the leafstalk. The illustration is accompanied by an inlaid cut detailing two coffee beans, one of which has its parts labeled. COFFEE. The civilized world is indebted to Africa for the coffee bean. Its name is variously attributed to that of the Abyssinian province of Caffa and the Arabian word K'hawah. Its early history is clouded in tradition, but it appears to have been known by the Ethiopians of Northern Africa from time immemorial. They used it not only for the making of a beverage, but also as a war food, by mixing the roasted, pulverized beans with grease and molding into balls--this being the only food they carried on short forays. Its use reached Abyssinia toward the end of the thirteenth century, and traveled about two hundred years later into Arabia. The latter country seems to have been the stepping-stone to its universal consumption--and it was Arabian coffee shipped through the port of Mocha that shed a halo around the name of "Mocha" and led the coffee world into using it as a panoply for millions of tons that never saw Arabia! In those days Arabian merchants were the most enterprising in the world--they stood at the gateway from Asia to Europe, and they added the coffee bean from Africa to the spices and other luxuries of the Orient. The use of coffee quickly spread outward--first to Persia and Syria, then to Cairo and in a few years to Venice. A little later it became the favorite drink at Constantinople, and Oriental coffee-houses sprang up everywhere in the city. For the next hundred years, the trade appears to have rested content with the conquest of the countries bordering on the eastern Mediterranean, but in the middle of the seventeenth century the demand for coffee arose almost simultaneously in London, Paris and other European centers--and coffee-houses in London and cafes in Paris became important both in point of number and for the fashionable, literary and political classes which crowded them daily. The progress of the coffee bean was beset with many obstacles. Religiously inclined people denounced coffee as an insidiously pernicious beverage, statesmen saw political danger in the discussions which marked the attendance at the coffee-houses--on this ground they were closed by government orders on several occasions and in several countries--and governments found new sources of revenue by heavy taxation on every gallon of coffee brewed--but the beverage proved its real worth by out-living all restrictions, and even all changes from the customs and habits of those former generations, and has steadily gained in popularity to the present rather staggering figures of an average yearly consumption of more than 2,500,000,000 pounds. Bronze-Colored Maidens Assorting Coffee, Nicaragua An illustration of two lines of women standing in front of large round bins, looking in at their contents. Until almost the end of the seventeenth century, only a little more than two hundred years ago, the world was entirely dependent on Africa for its coffee beans--no one had apparently attempted to carry the coffee shrub into any other soil. Louis XIV is credited with being the first to grow it in the French West Indian Colony of Martinique--and soon afterward it was successfully introduced and cultivated by other European governments in the West Indies and by the Dutch in Java, Sumatra and other islands of the Malay Archipelago. It was introduced into India in about 1700; twenty years later into Ceylon, from Java, by the Dutch, and in 1740 into the Philippines by Spanish missionaries from Java. At about the same time the first shrub was planted in Brazil, now the world's greatest coffee-growing country, and a little later it spread to Cuba, Porto Rico and Mexico, and thence to practically all other parts of Central and South America. To-day Africa, the original source, is a comparatively unimportant factor in the great bulk of coffee production. Growing the Bean and Preparing it for Market. The common coffee shrub is an evergreen plant, which in its native growth is a slender tree of eighteen to twenty feet in height, with the greater part of the trunk clear but opening near the top into a few long drooping branches. Under cultivation the shrub is kept in a condition of short close growth, from four to six feet high, so as to increase the crop and to facilitate picking it--the branches, flexible, loose and expanding out and downwards, the lower ones horizontal, the upper, inclined to trail--the whole very pleasing in appearance. The leaves are oblong-ovate in shape, from five to six inches long and from two to three inches in width when full grown; smooth, firm and leathery in texture, dark, shiny green on the upper surface and pale green underneath. The flowers are white and fragrant, resembling the jessamine in odor, growing in dense clusters in the axils of the leaves. The fruit, which quickly follows the flower, is a fleshy berry, green at first, changing to a yellowish tint, then to red, looking then much like a small red cherry, and finally to a smooth glossy purple or dark red. There are generally two or three main harvests in the course of a year, and cultivation aims to direct the crops as closely as possible to that end, but in a greater or less degree the shrub bears blossoms and fruit contemporaneously all the year round. The flesh or pulp of the fruit, sweet and agreeable in flavor and frequently eaten by the pickers, encloses two seeds or beans, each inside a thin parchment-like skin. These seeds, oval in shape, rounded on one side and flat on the other where they rest together, with a little groove running the length of the flat side, constitute the raw coffee of commerce. They are at first of a soft bluish or greenish color, becoming hard and flinty on exposure and changing generally with age to a pale yellowish tint. When only one bean is found inside the berry--occasionally in all varieties and frequently in a few--the "flat side" still holds the distinguishing groove, but it is nearly as round as the other. These beans are known as "pea-berries," "male berries" or "caracolillo" (Mexican). They are most plentiful on old bushes. There are many varieties of coffee plants, but they all have the same general characteristics, and botanists differ as to whether or not they are really divisible into different families. The variety of general cultivation to-day is that known as the Arabian coffee plant. Increasing attention is, however, being devoted to the Liberian and the Maragogipi because of the more vigorous growth of the shrubs and the larger size of the beans (see Color Page of COFFEE BEANS). They do not present the fine cup quality of the better grade Arabian, but their size and strength of flavor give them value for blending. The Liberian is native to Liberia, Africa, and is cultivated to a considerable extent in several countries, including Brazil, the Dutch East Indies and Ceylon. The Maragogipi is a native of Brazil. COFFEE BUSH LOADED WITH BERRIES An illustration of a large bush with compound leaves. The coffee shrub grows best in rich, well-irrigated soil in upland countries. Tropical climate, entire absence of frost and protection from the wind, are among the essentials. Propagation is by buddings, cuttings and seeds, the custom varying in different countries. The young plants are transferred from the nurseries to the plantation when about eighteen inches high. In some countries they are planted close together--from four to eight feet each way; in others they are spaced as wide as ten to twelve feet and other crops are planted between the rows. The first crop is generally gathered when the shrubs are four years old, and they continue to produce for from ten to twenty years--and sometimes longer. The berries are picked when just fully ripe--if not mature, the best flavor of the beans is lost, and if allowed to become over-ripe they may fall off and become spoiled on the ground. The picking is done by hand, the berries being dropped into a basket suspended around the neck of the gatherer, or into broad, flat bamboo receptacles placed beneath the shrubs, and thence emptied into hampers or sacks located at convenient points. Under the old method, the berries are allowed to dry before the pulp is removed, but in what is known as the "new," "washing" or "West Indian" process (W. I. P.), they are taken direct and as fresh as possible to the "pulping house," where the pulp or meat is at once removed by machinery--leaving only the beans inside their "parchment" covering. This work is very carefully done, for to scratch the skin of the bean itself, called the "silver skin," to distinguish it from the parchment covering, is to render it worthless because of the processes to follow. From the pulping machines, the "parchment" beans, so called because they still retain the outer skin-covering referred to, run into the first of a series of fermenting and washing tanks, where by lying in water or moistening they are fermented and then washed to remove the saccharine matter adhering to the parchment. After the washing, the beans undergo the drying process--by exposure to the sun or by artificial heat, according to circumstances. This is the last stage of the beans as "parchment coffee." The next step is hulling and peeling, but before this is undertaken the bean is allowed to remain in its parchment for several weeks, as this "curing" improves its quality and makes it retain its color better. The longer it is left--even for months or years--the more, as a rule, it will improve, but as lengthy curing makes it very difficult to remove the silver-skin, the bean is never left in the parchment longer than is absolutely necessary. "Hulling and peeling" consists in the removal, generally by milling, of both the "parchment" and the "silver-skin." The bean after this process is at first very light-colored, but it soon changes to a sort of fern-green or greenish-yellow hue, and this color it retains for a considerable time if kept under proper conditions and away from dampness. With greater age the tint becomes, as already noted, a pale yellow, except East Indian types, which change in some cases to a dark brown as the result of storage methods and shipment in slow wooden sailing vessels. As the beans emerge from the huller, they come first under the influence of a fan, which separates and removes the detached skins, and then go to the "separator"--an inclined revolving cylindrical sieve, divided into different meshes. Sand and dust drop through the first section, small and broken beans into the next and so on, the best and largest beans being retained. In the most up-to-date plantations, separators of the eccentric or vibrator type have been installed in place of the revolving sieves, as they make possible a more accurate separation by sizes of the ordinary or "flat" beans, in addition to separating the peaberries for shipment as such. The separation is followed by a careful sorting over by hand of the better grades to pick out any discolored or otherwise undesirable beans. As soon as the sizing and grading are finished, the coffee is packed in bags or casks and is ready for market. The methods outlined are employed only on modern plantations equipped with improved appliances, but the same principles are followed by all firms or individuals using the "washing process" on any scale. By the "dry" method, "milling" is used entirely in place of the fresh pulping and washing. The value of the coffee marketed by the producer depends to a large extent on the care and judgement exercised in bringing it through the various processes--and the same care must be continued in the transportation of the bags to the port of shipment and in storing them in the ships which carry them to the consuming countries. The transportation of coffee is also an important item in its cost. Its journey from the plantation to some central point is often by human portage through mountain districts and then by slow, tedious, bullock travel for long distances to the coast--with all the risk of deterioration en route. Coffee Consumed in the United States. The following table of the imports of coffee into the United States during the twelve months ending June 30, 1909, gives a fairly accurate idea of the relative importance of the sources of our supply. The total figures vary considerably from year to year, generally averaging less than The calendar year 1910 showed a total of only 804,417,451 pounds. POUNDS Brazil . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 818,444,714 Colombia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60,183,641 Venezuela . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54,774,402 Other parts of South America . . . . . . 1,416,768 Mexico . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35,004,112 Guatemala . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26,370,598 Salvador . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10,025,794 * Costa Rica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,956,093 Other Central American States . . . . . 1,399,156 Java, Sumatra and the East Indies generally . . 11,993,156 ------------- Carried forward . . . . . . . 1,022,568,807 POUNDS Brought Forward . . . . . . . 1,022,568,807 West Indies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,313,213 Arabia (from Aden, the U. S. port of Mocha coffee) . . . 2,128,582 Turkey in Asia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,371,746 Holland (principally coffee from the Dutch East Indies re-shipped) . . . 1,593,003 England (including India and Ceylon coffees re-shipped . . . 2,054,119 Miscellaneous sources (re-shipped from Europe, small quantities from Africa, etc.) . . . 16,839,298 ------------- Total . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,049,868,768 *The imports from Costa Rica generally range from 11 to 20 million pounds. It will be noted that Brazil supplied nearly 78% of all the coffee imported, and that other parts of South and Central America and Mexico furnished more than 18% leaving less than 4% to the credit of all the remainder of the world. In other words, we received during the year 1,010,575,651 pounds from South America, Central America and Mexico as against only a little more than 39,000,000 pounds from all other countries. The coffee classifications best known to the general public are "Mocha," "Java," "Rio," "Santos," "Maracaibo," "Bourbon Santos," "Bogota" and "Pea-berry." The cheapest varieties of general consumption are the low grade Rios, and the dearest, the high grade "Javas," or East Indian, and Mocha. There was formerly a great deal of deception and misunderstanding, much of it entirely unnecessary, in the buying and selling of coffee--not only by mixing in low grade, imperfect and otherwise undesirable beans for the sake of greater profit, for similar practices are found in greater or less degree in every line--but also in the marketing of good products under titles to which they have no right. The misuse of geographical names was for many years so widespread that they lost practically all their real significance to the general public--almost any small coffee bean was passed as "Mocha" and any larger uniform bean for "Java." That this was done is convincingly proved when we note that only a trifle more than one pound in every hundred received during the year came from Java or the vicinity of Java, and that all the coffee from the Mocha port of shipment amounted to only about one pound in every five hundred--yet every grocery store in the country sold enormous quantities of "Java and Mocha." The practice of substitution extended also to every variety and every grade of every variety. Since the passage of the Pure Food Law there has been a great improvement in conditions. Millions of labels reading "Java and Mocha" were destroyed, others were amended by such additions as rendered them permissible. The word "Blend" was for a time so employed as to give prominence to the legend "Mocha and Java" on mixtures in which beans of those two types must have felt hopelessly in the minority, but this also was checked by the rule that coffees named in blends must be given in the order of the proportions contained in the package. Coffee Bush in Flower An illustration of a flowering bush in a tropical setting. This revolution will eventually prove of great advantage to the industry. The former methods tended to retard rather than advance the proper appreciation of coffee as a beverage, which will naturally follow consistent retailing of the different varieties, grades and blends under inviolable titles. In many cases, the old style nomenclature was a distinct fraud on the purchaser by obtaining from him a higher price than the value of the beans. In others, where no fraud was intended and where the product was worth the price charged, the masquerade name attached to it was a foolish following of trade traditions. The practice is entirely unnecessary, as the average coffee sold here is of good quality, well and cleanly prepared, quite worthy of sale under its own proper names. In defense of the retailer and merchants generally, it must be added that for generations they were in a majority of cases themselves victims of a world-wide system of false naming and substitution and that they only passed goods on as they received them and designated them the "same as others did." Coffee Pickers Homeward Bound A line of people walk down a forest path, laden with large packs which they carry across their shoulders. When the adulteration of coffee is practised, it is generally in the ground bean. Nearly every conceivable substitute has at some time been ground and roasted to a resemblance of coffee--among them rye, rice, holly berries, barley, acorns, beet-root, beans, peas, carrots, etc. If Chicory is added without the knowledge or desire of the consumer, it is entitled to place as an adulterant, but it differs radically from the other articles mentioned as a great many people, especially in European countries, consider the addition of a certain percentage as an improvement on the straight coffee (see article on CHICORY). Under the present law, the addition of Chicory must be announced on the label. The average chemical composition of raw and roasted coffee is as follows: Raw Coffee Roasted Coffee PER CENT PER CENT Caffeine................................ 1+ 1+ Sugar................................... 9 to 10 1/2 Caffetannic acid........................ 8 to 10 4 to 5 Fat and oil............................. 11 to 13 13 to 14 Albumin................................. 10 to 11 11 to 13 Nitrogeous extract and coloring matter.. 4 to 7 12 to 14 Dextrin................................. 1- 1+ Cellulose (fibre), etc. ................ 38 48 Ash..................................... 3 to 4 4 to 5 Moisture................................ 8 to 10 1 The liquid obtained by the ordinary brewing of the ground coffee contains however only unimportant percentages of components other than "Caffeine," which furnishes its stimulating properties, etc.; "Caffeole," the chief aromatic principle produced from the fat, oil, etc., by the roasting process, and "Caffeic acid," a secondary flavoring component. The sugar is converted into caramel in the roasting. The coffee bean contains less stimulating property than the tea leaf, but, as more is used for making the beverage, the two liquids offer approximately the same stimulating power. Some of the albumin and cellulose is dissolved in the brewed coffee, and a little food material is thus included in the beverage, but the amount is necessarily quite small. The bulk is left in the "grounds." The United States is the largest per capita consumer of coffee, the average consumption being about twelve pounds a year. Coffee Blending. Blending is an important branch of the coffee business, but no exact rules can be laid down for its practice, as tastes differ in every country and often in different sections of the same country. The fundamental intent in high-class blends is to obtain a smooth, mellow, aromatic liquor, to add strength if too mild and to modify if too heavy. The genuine Mocha, for example, is a little too acid and the genuine Java generally not quite acid enough--hence the advantage of a blending of genuine Mocha and Java. In low grade blends, the aim is to make cheap, coarse beans palatable by adding a certain quantity of others of more pleasing flavor. The best blends are obtained by roasting each type separately and then mixing and closing them up together immediately after--as old crop and new crop, or "mild" and "strong" beans require different lengths of time for the best results in roasting. If put in the cylinder to roast together, some are liable to be half raw while others are over-cooked. Coffee Selection. Long experience is essential to the training of a coffee expert. The chapters following on the different coffee growths give brief descriptions of the beans of the principal varieties--but there are so many different kinds, so much alike and yet with so many minor differences of size, appearance, color and cup quality, that very few people can correctly judge the quality of a bean by its appearance raw--and only the keenest experts can determine its exact classification after roasting. The best test for the average merchant or consumer is by a sample infusion after roasting and grinding. In purchasing the raw beans, one should also though bear in mind that: (1) If all of one variety ( i. e., before blending), they should be fairly uniform in size, appearance and color. (2) They should be free from stems, stones, dirt and all such foreign matter. (3) When cut, they should be the same general color all the way through. If the inside is considerably lighter than the outside, it will usually be found that the beans have been artificially colored. Simple tests for ground coffee are: (1) Press a little of the dry coffee between the fingers--if it cakes, it is adulterated, probably with chicory. (2) Place a little of the dry coffee in a glass of water. If nearly all floats and the water does not color--or only a very little--the coffee is probably pure. If part of the coffee floats and part sinks, it is adulterated--probably with cereals, chicory or similar substances. If the water turns a deep reddish tint, chicory has been added to it. (3) Spread a little dry coffee on a piece of glass or something similar and moisten with a few drops of water. Then pick out some of the smallest pieces with a needle--if they are soft, the coffee is certainly adulterated, as real coffee bean particles stay hard even after long immersion in water. It must be remembered that the above tests apply only to the purity of the bean--they tell nothing of the flavor or aroma, which are determining points of value. A coffee may be perfectly pure, yet be harsh, musty, hidey or in many other ways undesirable--hence the necessity of testing flavor and aroma by making an infusion. Coffee Roasting. The proper roasting of coffee alters its appearance and flavor by bringing about important changes in the component parts of the bean. It develops the "caffeine" (the active principle of coffee, corresponding to the theine in tea), by separating it from the tannic acid, frees the highly aromatic coffee-oil (the amount and quality of which JAVA--EAST INDIAN MOCHA SANTOS RIO BOGOTA MARACAISO BOURBON SANTOS CENTRAL AMERICA MEXICAN MARAGOGIPI LIBERIAN PEABERRY COFFEE BEANS A color illustration of twelve different varieties of coffee beans, each with its own caption. largely determine the value of the roasted product), renders the fat more easily soluble by releasing it from the fat cells, and reduces the natural sugar while converting the saccharine matter into caramel. The result is that after roasting the bean readily releases the flavor and aroma for which it is famous and will, by thorough infusion in boiling water, yield a total of more than 40% of soluble matter--though in ordinary coffee making only from 10% to 15% is actually extracted. The roasting in the average modern United States plant is preceded by passing the beans through a cleaning and milling machine which removes all foreign matter and gives a smooth finish. From this they go into large revolving perforated steel or iron cylinders, encased in brick and revolving over brisk fires. The cylinders are fitted with interior lateral ridges which keep the beans constantly moving in order that they may not become "tipped" or scorched. The time of roasting varies, but generally takes thirty minutes for a "light," and from thirty-five to forty-five minutes for a "high" or "dark" roast. From the roaster, the beans pass to the "coolers," fitted with powerful exhaust fans which draw cold air through them to stop the roasting process, and then to the "stoner," which is an air-suction pipe generally about twelve inches in diameter and ten feet in height, the coffee being drawn up this pipe into a hopper, leaving the stones at the bottom to be discharged automatically. Finally comes the filling, by machinery, into bags, cans, etc. The operation of roasting is easy to describe, but it requires much experience and good judgment to bring out the full strength, character and aroma. A "light" roast should be of a cinnamon-brown color, uniform in appearance and free from specks. A "medium" roast should be deep chestnut. A "high" or "dark" roast should be of a chocolate-brown color and oily in appearance but free from burnt or scorched beans--which will spoil the flavor of any coffee, no matter how high grade. The "medium" roast is the most desirable for general retail custom. Drying Coffee Beans An illustration of large vats of beans set in a clearing in a tropical forest. So important is this process that a well roasted minor grade will yield a better liquor than the finest coffee a little under or over roasted. Coffee loses generally about 15% in weight in roasting, and afterwards should always be kept as tightly sealed as possible, as it loses in flavor from contact with the air and the beans become tough and hard to grind. Grinding, Preparation, Etc. The manner of grinding or cutting the coffee bean depends upon individual taste and custom. Coarse-ground coffee is not generally desirable, as it requires too long an infusion to extract the full strength--and too much boiling tends to spoil both flavor and aroma. A medium-fine grind is the most generally serviceable for ordinary home use. There are many different formulas for preparing coffee for the table, the majority capable of being classified under the three following headings: Infusion or drawing: putting the ground coffee into boiling water and keeping it hot on the range without boiling for eight to ten minutes. With ordinary care this method will produce a very pleasing beverage, but it does not bring out much of the stimulating property of the bean. Decoction or boiling: putting the ground coffee in cold water, allowing it to come to a boil and keeping it boiling for a few seconds. This brings out more strength than the preceding method and makes an excellent liquor--but if the boiling is continued too long the fine aroma passes away. For the "old-fashioned" boiling method, the white of an egg is first stirred into the ground coffee. The latter is then placed in the pot and the proper amount of boiling water is poured over it--the water, taken fresh, having previously been allowed to boil hard for ten minutes. The coffee is permitted to come to a good boil, is stirred thoroughly once and then placed on the back of the stove for ten minutes. If any grounds appear on top, they are stirred a little and allowed to settle. This process gives excellent results but it requires a good deal of care. Filtration or distilling: by the use of a "percolator," the boiling water passing slowly through the ground coffee held in the center of the machine. This method is largely used because the result is nearly always uniform. No matter which method is employed, the grounds should never be allowed to remain in the coffee for any length of time after it is made. In hotels, restaurants and other establishments where it is brewed in large quantities, the coffee is generally held in a bag or other receptacle in the upper part of the urn, in order that the grounds may be the more easily removed. The best general advice to the person wishing a good cup of coffee is to buy coffee as pure as possible and of flavor that suits the individual taste, to have it fresh roasted, fresh ground to moderate fineness and fresh made in a scrupulously clean coffee-pot. With these points secured, a little practice will produce a fine beverage by any reasonable process. A little cold water dashed in boiling coffee checks the boiling and causes the grounds to settle, leaving the beverage perfectly clear. In Creole cookery, the same result is obtained by adding a small piece of charcoal. French Coffee. The special flavor noticed in much of the coffee served in France is generally due to any one or all of the three following causes: (1) the addition of 10% to 30% of chicory, (2) the especially heavy roasting of the bean, and (3) the occasional addition of a little butter and sugar during the roasting. It is generally made in a percolator from fine ground coffee, the liquid being passed through the percolator two or three times to acquire greater strength. Café au lait, "Coffee with milk" or "French Breakfast Coffee," generally means strong coffee served with boiling milk--about half coffee and half milk or to suit the individual taste. Café noir, Black Coffee or After Dinner Coffee, requires an especially generous proportion of coffee, and percolation continued until the liquid is black. Demi-tasse de café, or café demitasse, means literally only a small or half cup of coffee, but, carelessly used, the expression has come to signify Café noir or After Dinner Coffee. COFFEE PICKERS An illustration of two lines of people standing on either side of a lane bordered by large bushes. Each person is carrying a large basket with a shoulder strap. Café à la crème is made by adding plain or whipped cream to good Café noir. Vienna Coffee is prepared in a special urn which passes and repasses the steam through the (finely ground) coffee, thus retaining the full aroma. It is served with whipped cream. Creole Coffee is prepared by slow percolation. The coffee, fresh roasted and ground, is pressed compactly in the filter of the pot and a small quantity of boiling water is poured over. When this has passed through, more water is added, the process being continued at intervals of about five minutes. The result is a very strong and rich extract, which may either be served fresh or be preserved in an air-tight vessel for future use. A small quantity--even so little as a tablespoonful--of good "Creole Coffee" is sufficient for a cup of coffee of ordinary strength. Turkish Coffee is made from beans ground as fine as powder, placed in a pot (either large or "individual") with cold water and brought to the boiling point. It is never allowed to boil and is served as it is without straining or settling the grounds. Dutch Coffee is prepared by cold water process from very fine-ground coffee held in a special filter with top and bottom reservoirs. It requires four hours or longer for the water to percolate through the coffee, and in its passage it extracts a large percentage of strength and flavor. Russian Coffee is strong, black coffee. Coffee Extract or Essence. Genuine coffee extract is made commercially by distillation--steaming and evaporating the liquid until it is reduced to the desired strength. One or two teaspoonfuls is generally sufficient to make a cup of coffee of moderate strength. For household purposes, it can be made with nearly the same result by following the formula for "Creole Coffee." Coffee, whether raw or roasted, should always be kept away from all strong odors, as it absorbs them very rapidly. Roasted coffee (as already mentioned) should never be exposed to the air, as it will quickly lose its flavor and aroma. The Principal Coffee Growing Countries. The first division of coffee is into "strong" and "mild." The Rios and some of the Santos constitute the "strong" varieties. The other part of the Santos crop and practically all the importations of other kinds, come under the heading of "mild." The next classification by the wholesale merchant is by the country of export, subdivided in each case into various growths and grades. BRAZIL.--RIO, SANTOS, BOURBON SANTOS. The best known Brazil coffees are the Rios and Santos. Rio coffees are heavy in body and with a distinctly characteristic flavor and aroma. The beans vary in size and color from large to small, and dark green to light yellow. Santos coffees are generally milder than the "Rios" and very smooth and pleasing in the cup. The finer grades are of such excellent quality that they have been widely substituted for even high grade "Javas." They range from large to small and from green and rich yellow to very pale yellow. "Red Bean" Santos is obtained from the Campinas district. It is considered more "flavory" and richer than the yellow or greenish beans. "Bourbon Santos" is a small bean variety which has grown rapidly in popularity on account of its acid or vinous character. It was formerly sold as "Mocha" or "Mocha Seed." Among the numerous other types of Brazilian coffee are "Victoria" or Capotinea, Bahia and Liberian Rio. The most generally accepted grades of "Rio" and "Santos" are from 1 to 10 or as follows: Fancy --large and uniform in color and in size; clear and perfect in selection and attractive in general appearance. Divided into "Light," "Medium" and "Dark." Prime --very clear and regular in color and size, but not so rich in appearance as "Fancy." Divided into "Light," "Medium" and "Dark." Good --uniform in color and size, but ranging from "clear" to "strictly clear." Divided into "Light," "Medium" and "Dark." This is the average or "standard" grade. Fair --only moderately clean and liable to contain some broken and otherwise imperfect beans. Ordinary --irregular in color and size and liable to contain many black broken beans and a proportion of hulls, etc. Common --the lowest grade, mixed with bad and broken beans, chaff, hulls, etc. COLOMBIA.--BUCARAMANGA, BOGOTA, "SAVANILLA." Colombia has in recent years grown largely in importance as a coffee raising country and its natural advantages promise still more abundant production. The two best known varieties are Bucaramanga and Bogota, which rank among the finest of American coffees. The Bucaramanga bean is large and solid and the liquor full, fragrant and aromatic. France and the United States take practically all the exportation. Bogota is a mountain grown coffee, the bean large, uniform and bluish-green, and the liquor full-bodied, round and fragrant. It is the basis of a great number of high-grade blends. Medellin is, in the best grades, also very highly considered. Other lesser types are Cauca, Ocana, etc. Colombia coffees are also commercially known as "Savanillas." VENEZUELA.--MARACAIBO, LA GUAYRA. The two best types of Venezuela coffee are Maracaibo and La Guayra. Maracaibos are divided into several varieties, among them Cucuta, Merida, Bocono, Tovar and Trujillo (the lowest), graded as Washed (the best), Prime to Choice, Fair to Good, Ordinary, etc. Both the Cucuta and the Merida in good seasons often equal the finest coffees grown anywhere. The beans are large, round and solid, rich-yellow in appearance and making liquor of full ripe flavor. The other three varieties mentioned are generally smaller and unattractive in appearance and their liquor is light, but they are useful for blending, as their flavor is usually pleasant. La Guayra coffees are best known by the Caracas, Porto-Cabello and Coro types. Choice "Washed" Caracas is an exceptionally fine coffee--rich, heavy and fragrant. The bean is large and bluish. "Milled" Caracas makes only fair liquor. The bean is yellowish and medium size. "Porto-Cabello" and "Coro" coffees, also largely consumed, vary in the bean from medium to small and from dark to pale green. They are classed as a mild coffee, but their liquor develops good strength as well as flavor. Among other varieties largely exported are Carupano and Angostura. CENTRAL AMERICA.--GUATEMALA, COSTA RICA, SALVADOR. The finest Central America coffee is generally that from Guatemala, where cultivation is conducted on the most modern lines. The best known type is the "Coban," a large shapely blue bean producing a fine aromatic liquor. Next in importance is the output of Costa Rica. The raw bean averages large and handsome and roasts to very good advantage, but the bulk of the best grades goes to Europe, and many shipments of the lower qualities sent to the United States give a liquor somewhat bitter and not very desirable. The Salvador bean is generally of medium size and, in the best grades, is well developed, heavy and greyish-yellow. The liquor is fairly strong, but of only moderate flavor. The poorer grades are very uneven and broken and the liquor weak. Nicaragua coffee closely resembles the medium grade of Salvador. Honduras produces a yellow heavy bean of attractive appearance. The liquor is smooth and pleasing but rather weak and frequently marked with a cocoa odor. Panama has not yet established any high records, but the quality of the product has been considerably improved in recent years. MEXICO. Mexican coffee is roughly divided into "Washed" and "Unwashed," the former being the choicer. The bulk of the export formerly went to France, but the United States receipts have grown largely during recent years. The two "fanciest" types of Mexican beans are the Tepic and Caracolillo, the latter being generally known here as "Mexican Pea-berry." Tepic, formerly known as "Mexican Mocha," is said to be grown from a later introduction of the Arabian shrub, so carefully cultivated that some judges consider the product fully equal in quality to that of the parent plant. The bean is small, hard and of steel-blue color, making a creamy, aromatic liquor. Very little of this variety is exported, local consumers taking nearly all the crop. Caracolillo is a variety almost unique. As already noted, "Pea-Berries" are found to some extent in all coffee-bean crops, but the shrubs from which the Caracolillo product is obtained bear it almost exclusively. After these two special types, which do not affect the general market, come Oaxaca, Cordoba, Coatepec, Colima, etc. The Oaxaca (pronounced Wah-har-kar ) bean is large and well developed, blue in color when new, but becoming whiter as it ages. The liquor is strong, rich and fragrant. Cordoba is sometimes styled "Mexican Jack." The bean is large and yellow and the liquor rich and full, resembling a fine Maracaibo or a medium fine "Java." The Coatepec bean is large, well developed and more acid than the preceding types. Colima is a medium-sized bean, flat, fairly well developed and with liquor pleasing in flavor and moderately rich. Small quantities come also from Tuxpan and several other lowland districts, but the quality is generally inferior. JAVA AND OTHER DUTCH EAST INDIAN ISLANDS. The Dutch East Indies, especially the islands of Java, Sumatra and Celebes, are famous as the largest exporters of fine coffees. They are best known to the lay public by the name of the island of Java, the most populous of the group and the central point of Dutch commercial activity, but the greater part of the East Indian coffee consumed in the United States is of Sumatra growth. That from Celebes is generally rated the highest in European markets. Other countries produce in certain sections beans as choice as the very best "Java," but the quantities they can export are comparatively unimportant. The greater output of the Dutch East Indies is partly due to the natural adaptability of soil and climate and partly to the systematic cultivation by native inhabitants under the rule of Holland. In spite of government care there is, however, much variation in the beans grown--a considerable quantity of those exported do not deserve the reputation the fine "Javas" have earned. East Indian coffees are in this country principally graded by color--"Brown," "Yellow" and "Pale"--the darker beans bringing the highest prices. This discrimination was originally founded on the fact that some of the choicest varieties of "Java" beans become at the same time browner in color and more mellow and pleasing in flavor in storage and transport--being in the former respect entirely unique. The distinction is not fundamentally accurate, as some of the light bean varieties are better than many of the dark types. In Europe, the yellow colored beans are preferred. When fresh, all East Indian coffees are light sea-green, or blue-green. Dutch East Indian coffees, other than those grown on the island of Java itself, are now generally described in trade and government circles as "Dutch East Indian," or by trade titles, or by districts, as Padang, Mandheling, Corinchie, Timor, Kroe, etc. The title "Government" is sometimes applied as a distinguishing title to coffee produced on plantations operated under government supervision--as are all of the old and many of the new plantations. The title " Old Government Java" was at one time a name to conjure with, for, as first employed, it applied only to beans that had been held--sometimes for considerable periods--in the government storehouses. Until recently, nearly all the produce of the Dutch East Indies was sold by quarterly government auction, and any goods for which the upset price was not bid were held in the warehouses to await an improvement in market demands--the result being in many cases an improvement also in the coffees, spices, etc., by the opportunity thus given them to mature under the best possible conditions. The term long ago though deteriorated into a practically meaningless trade title from being applied indiscriminatingly to any brown East Indian coffee irrespective of growth or quality, and it is now "out of date," as the government auctions were discontinued in June, 1909, present sales being by contracts with firms or individuals. "Plantation" or "Private Growth" coffees are those raised on plantations owned and operated by individuals in contra-distinction to those under government supervision. Some are of very high quality. "Blue-bean Java" is a title occasionally applied to W. I. P. or "Washed" East Indian. "Liberian-Java" is that grown from shrubs of the Liberian species. Its quality is generally inferior to the Arabian bean varieties. ARABIA--"MOCHA." Arabian coffee is universally termed "Mocha," though no coffee was ever grown in Mocha--which is only a shipping town surrounded by deserts, and not to-day even an important shipping point, as the opening of the Suez Canal transferred nearly all the traffic to the ports of Aden and Hodeidah. This country is supplied from Aden. The best Arabian and the true "Mocha" coffee is that from the province of Yemen. The most surprising point in connection with its cultivation is that though the coffee shrub requires in other countries rich soil and favorable conditions to produce an acceptable crop, here in Arabia some of the choicest coffee in the world comes from stunted shrubs growing in hot, sandy, stony mountain-side gardens. All conditions, climate and soil seem to be against the shrub's best growth, but by way of recompense it receives the most careful and painstaking human attention. The gardens are arranged on rocky terraces, one above the other, and are irrigated from large reservoirs of spring water placed above the highest. There are two main crops during the year. The berries, instead of being picked, are allowed to ripen until they fall. They are then carefully gathered up, dried, hulled and cleaned with scrupulous exactness. The separation of the finest "Mocha" beans by growers and merchants is in itself a study of infinite detail--they are assorted and re-assorted into a perfect graduation of sizes and qualities. The true Yemen "Mocha" bean is very small, hard and round, regular in size in the best qualities, olive-green when new and a rich semi-transparent yellowish when aged. Its odor when fresh roasted is characteristic, and the liquor is creamy, rich, rather heavy, a little acid, and extremely aromatic and fragrant. "Tehama" Arabian coffee -- that from the province of Tehama--is distinctly inferior to "Yemen." The bean is of about the same size, but it is immature in appearance and often mixed with fragments of hull, etc. Its flavor is quite second-rate when drunk alone, but it imparts a pleasing fragrance and delicacy when blended with a good "Java," etc. Abyssinian coffee from the vicinity of Harrar and properly called "Harrar Coffee" was formerly shipped via Aden as "long-berry Mocha." It is of the same color as the real "Mocha" but is longer and more pointed and has a rank, leathery odor. WEST INDIAN COFFEE. The West Indian islands produce a large quantity of excellent coffee, but the bulk of the finest grades is exported to Europe, as better prices can generally be obtained there than in this market. The greater part of the supply shipped to this country comes from the British West Indies, principally from Jamaica, and Haiti, with small quantities from Santo Domingo, Cuba and the Dutch West Indies. The best Jamaica coffee, known as "Blue Mountain," is a bean of fair size, attractive appearance and bluish color, making a full, rich, fragrant liquor, but "Plain-grown," the variety chiefly imported, is a much inferior grade. The bean, large, whitish and flat, is generally "hully" and the liquor is strong and rather rank or "grassy" in flavor. It is employed almost exclusively for blending with beans of other varieties. Haitian and San Domingo beans are large, flat and whitish. Their appearance is spoiled by crude preparation, which leaves them hully and includes broken beans, stems, etc., but their liquor is rich, mild and pleasant. The best Cuban grades come from the Guantanamo, Alquizar and San Marcos districts and the Sierra Maestra plantations. The beans are large and whitish and rather especially rounded on the flat side. They are generally excellent in cup quality. Porto Rico produces very good coffee, the beans regular and well-formed, from yellow to greenish in color, and making a very good flavored liquor, but the product DRYING COFFEE AFTER "WASHING PROCESS" An open yard full of large tubs containing coffee beans. One man stands in the yard among the tubs, and a large building can be seen in the background. goes almost exclusively to Europe. Proposed Government co-operation with the growers may result in stimulating traffic with this country. CEYLON AND INDIA. There are several distinct varieties of Ceylon coffees, as follows: "Native," grown in the lowlands--a large, flat white bean of poor quality. "Plantation," the product of carefully cultivated modern plantations--the bean large, of light-bluish or green tint, well developed and very regular, giving a liquor which is smooth, rich and aromatic. "Liberian-Ceylon," a hybrid of the Liberian species--the bean smaller and paler than the parent variety and the liquor less strong, but smooth and pleasant in flavor. "Ceylon-Mocha," a small bean, very even and uniform--generally obtained by separating from the regular "plantation" crop. Both in appearance and flavor it resembles the genuine "Mocha." The two best known varieties of Indian coffee are "Malabar," a small hard bean of fine quality; and "Mysore," a large bluish-green bean, giving a rich, strong liquor, resembling "Java." ECUADOR.--GUAYAQUIL. Coffees from Ecuador are generally known under the title of Guayaquil, from the general port of that name. The beans vary from medium to large, are fairly uniform in appearance and give good full fragrant liquor. They are quite largely shipped to the Pacific Coast States. PHILIPPINES. The coffee industry in the Philippines has in the past suffered from lack of proper cultivation, but it is only a question of time when it will fill an important position, for both soil and climate are admirably suitable. In spite of scanty attention and poor preparation, the better grades have won high esteem in European markets because of their rich flavor and pleasing aroma. The beans are generally classed as Luzon, Manila and Zamboango, the two latter from the names of the shipping ports. Luzon is a small bean type, hard in texture and rich in cup quality. If properly cleaned and prepared, it would rank high. The Manila bean is medium in size, regular in shape and pale green in color, with fine aromatic liquor. It comes principally from the districts of Cavite, Batangas, La Laguna and the immediate vicinity. Zamboango, from the Southern islands, is the poorest grade. The beans are large, yellowish and rather flabby and the liquor is weak and coarse. OTHER COUNTRIES. In addition to the countries referred to in the foregoing pages, there are a number of others which produce coffee to a considerable total, including some of very fine quality, but the imports into the United States are not sufficient in volume to affect market conditions. COGNAC, pronounced Kone-Yak: the best variety of Brandy (which see). COKERNUT: a method of spelling "cocoanut" introduced by the London Custom-House, in order to distinguish more widely between this and other articles spelt much in the same manner and extensively used in commercial circles--as Cocoa, Coca, etc. COLA NUT: one of several spellings of KOLA NUT (which see). COLD SLAW. See item under heading of SLAW. COLD STORAGE. The cold storage system, first attempted about 1860, has grown to extraordinary proportions. It has revolutionized the meat supply and extended the fruit seasons. It has rendered possible an uniform distribution of fresh foods throughout every part of the country and carried the surplus, not only of America but also of Australia and Russia, to the markets of Europe. It has remedied immense waste which was formerly unavoidable, and in countless ways improved the world's food supply. Its system includes a transcontinental chain of big storage houses for meats, fruits, poultry, eggs, etc.; refrigerator cars running from ocean to ocean, and great steamers especially equipped for the transoceanic transportation of perishable food products. The temperatures most suitable for preserving food products of general consumption are named elsewhere in this volume in the articles descriptive of each. The following table shows the lowest and highest temperatures to which the goods mentioned may generally be subjected without injury under the conditions stated. Any temperature below or above the degrees named is liable to damage them. Lowest Outside Temperature. Temperature Above Which Injury Occurs. Degrees Fahr. Degrees Fahr. Apples in bbls., covered with straw............. 20 75 Apples, loose, packed in straw.................. 28 75 Apricots, baskets............................... 35 70 Asparagus, in boxes covered with moss........... 28 70 Bananas, in bulk and in boxes with straw........ 50 90 Beans, Snap, in barrels or crates............... 32 65 Beer, in kegs, packed in manure and shavings.... 32 75 Beets, in crates................................ 26 70 Bluing.......................................... 30 .. Cabbage, early or late, in barrels or crates.... 25 75 Cauliflower, in barrels with straw.............. 22 70 Celery, in crates............................... 10 65 Cheese.......................................... 30 75 Cider........................................... 22 70 Clams, in shell, in barrels..................... 20 65 Cocoanuts, in barrels or crates................. 30 90 Crabs, in baskets and barrels................... 10 65 Cucumbers, in boxes with moss................... 32 65 Drugs (non-alcoholic), packed in dust........... 32 .. Eggs, barreled or crated........................ 30 80 Extracts (flavoring)............................ 20 .. Fish, in barrels always iced.................... 10 65 Fish, canned.................................... 18 .. Ginger Ale...................................... 30 .. Grapes, packed in cork.......................... 34 .. Grape Fruit..................................... 32 .. Ink............................................. 20 .. Lemons, in boxes or crates...................... 32 75 Lettuce, in boxes or crates..................... 26 70 Melons.......................................... 32 80 Milk............................................ 32 75 Mucilage........................................ 25 .. Mustard, French................................. 26 .. (Continued on following page.) Lowest Outside Temperature. Temperature Above Which Injury Occurs. Degrees Fahr. Degrees Fahr. Olives in bulk, in barrels...................... 28 .. Olives, in glass................................ 25 .. Onions, in barrels, boxes or crates............. 20 80 Oranges, in baskets, boxes, barrels or crates... 28 80 Oysters, in shell, in barrels................... 20 65 Oysters, shucked, in barrels.................... 30 70 Parsley, in baskets............................. 32 75 Parsnips, in baskets or barrels................. 32 70 Pears........................................... 32 80 Peaches, fresh, in baskets...................... 32 80 Peaches, canned................................. 20 .. Peas, in baskets or barrels..................... 32 80 Pickles, Brine, in bulk, in barrels............. 22 .. Pickles, Brine, in glass........................ 20 .. Pineapples, in barrels, in crates, or in bulk... 32 75 Plums, in boxes with paper...................... 35 75 Potatoes, Irish, in barrels or baskets.......... 33 80 Potatoes, Sweet, in barrels or boxes............ 35 80 Preserves....................................... 20 .. Radishes, in baskets............................ 20 65 Rice, in barrels and sacks...................... 20 90 Spinach, in barrels or crates................... 15 75 Squashes, in crates............................. 32 75 Strawberries.................................... 33 65 Tomatoes, fresh................................. 33 90 Tomatoes, canned, in boxes...................... 28 .. Turnips, late, in barrels....................... 15 75 Vinegar, in barrels............................. 22 .. Watermelons, in barrels and in bulk............. 20 85 Waters, mineral................................. 28 .. Wines, light.................................... 22 .. Yeast........................................... 28 65 Foods which have had the benefit of proper care in cold storage are just as wholesome and nutritious as the fresh items and in a majority of cases retain their full flavor. They should, however, be used as speedily as possible after their removal from storage as they are somewhat more susceptible to "spoiling" than fresh foods--this is especially the case with poultry and fish. The methods of modern refrigeration are described in the article on ICE AND REFRIGERATION. COLLARD: a variety of smooth-leaved cabbage whose leaves do not form a head. The term is also sometimes applied to the leaves of any kind of cabbage when cut very young for use as "greens." COLOR and COLORING MATTER. A great improvement has been made during the last few years in the class of coloring matters employed in the preparation of foods, candies, etc. The use of unwholesome chemicals has been practically eliminated and there is no longer any reason why the consumer should look suspiciously at an attractively colored confection. Every tint desired can now be obtained in perfectly harmless vegetable and other extracts, supplemented by a number of coal-tar or aniline dyes approved by the Government after painstaking analysis and investigation. The dyes referred to are employed in such minute quantities that they cannot harm anyone. A quarter of an ounce of "orange," for example, will give a strong yellow color to 500 pounds of candy. The animal color most used is Cochineal (red). Vegetable colors are derived principally from Beets, Currants, Heliotrope, Indigo, Litmus, Magenta or Fuchine, Persian Berries, Rhodites (a salt of the Rose), Safflower, Saffron, Spinach and Turmeric. The use of artificial coloring matter still needs--and in most states receives--very close inspection and regulation. There is no longer, except in very flagrant cases, any danger to health, but proper control is necessary to prevent commercial fraud by the use of colors--i. e., so improving the appearance of inferior articles as to make it possible to sell them at the price of better class goods. The use of colors solely to enhance the enjoyment of foods--as in candy, liqueurs, and many other articles--is entirely legitimate. To do so to conceal their inferiority, is reprehensible. Colors for domestic uses are retailed in both paste and liquid forms. COLT'S FOOT: a plant named from the shape of its leaves. It is supposed to possess medicinal properties, and to alleviate coughs, asthmas and chest troubles, its leaves being smoked as a tobacco. Colt's Foot Candy and Colt's Foot Rock are confections based on the herb or its flavor. COMESTIBLES: a term borrowed from the French, used in England and Continental Europe to embrace the entire class of edible goods. COMFITS: "Pan-Work" candies, such as Sugared Almonds, with a distinctive center covered by successive coats of sugar (see CANDY). COMPOTE. See list of Culinary Terms in APPENDIX. COMPRESSED VEGETABLES: vegetables evaporated at a comparatively low temperature, from 120° to 140° Fahr., until they are well shrunk but have not become brittle, then spread in layers and compressed into cakes about 1/2 inch thick. The cakes are frequently stamped into "one-ration" tablets of about 1 ounce each. They are very useful under some conditions, but unless carefully and successfully prepared they are liable to have too strong a "hay" flavor to be generally liked. COMPRESSED YEAST: the most powerful of all fermenting agents in domestic life, was introduced from Germany about 1862, and has grown in popularity until thousands of wagons make the daily rounds of the grocery stores to supply fresh cakes, and exchange the stale. See article on YEAST. COMUS: the "god of revelry." The luxuries of the table are called the "gifts of Comus." CONCORD CLARET: a wine of claret type from the Concord grape. CONCORD GRAPES. See general article on GRAPES. CONDENSED or EVAPORATED MILK. The invention of the process of condensing milk is generally attributed to Gail Borden in 1856, but some authorities assert that it was invented in Switzerland. In view of the enormous present dimensions of the industry, it is interesting to note that the Patent Office Examiners were with difficulty induced to grant a patent because they insisted that milk could not be evaporated in a vacuum. It was the exigencies of the Civil War which first secured national recognition for condensed milk and advertised its merits throughout the world. It soon after became a commodity of universal use on ocean steamers and in mines, forests and construction camps, reaching ultimately every nook and corner of the universe. There are to-day more than two hundred factories in the United States, all using the vacuum process. The industry consumes yearly more than 600,000,000 pounds of fluid milk and the product totals to between five and six million cases of forty-eight cans each. The fundamental requirement of all first-class condensed milk is absolutely pure milk produced under the most hygienic conditions. As typical of the pains taken to ensure this, one may take the contract between a first-class factory and the farmer. It is full of all manner of stringent conditions. The factory binds itself to take an average of so many pounds of milk per day for each month of the year, at so much per hundred pounds--the price being higher during the winter than during the other months. The farmer, on his part, agrees that his cows shall be fed upon particular food, that they shall not eat turnips, brewery or distillery grain, or any other food that will impart a disagreeable flavor to the milk or reduce its richness; to hold the milk room at a certain temperature, and with a certain amount of ventilation; that the cows shall be kept clean and groomed; that the cans shall be washed and placed in the sun when they are not in use, and that they shall be turned down, bottom upwards, on a rack at least three feet from the ground; that he will report any sickness in his animals, employees or family, etc. In short, every possible precaution, including traveling inspectors, to see that all requirements are fulfilled, is taken to secure proper care and cleanliness. It is in these respects that milk used for making condensed milk is generally superior to the ordinary store milk. To fully appreciate the principle employed in the manufacture of condensed milk, one must remember that the composition of milk includes from 84% to 90% water (see article on MILK). Any desired part of this water can be extracted without taking anything from its food value, for the latter is found in the fats, milk-sugar, casein, etc., all of which remain in the condensed or evaporated product. In the manufacture of Sweetened Condensed Milk, the liquid milk is strained, cleansed in centrifugal separators, heated to the proper temperature to expel the gases of the milk and destroy the germs, again strained, mixed with a certain quantity of standard granulated sugar and run into vacuum pans where it is "condensed" by evaporation--boiling in a vacuum at a very low temperature--of part of its water contents. It is then ready for canning. The vacuum pan employed is an egg-shaped copper vessel heated by interior steam coils and an outside steam-jacket around the lower portion. In one side of the dome is a small window, through which a light illuminates the interior, and opposite is an eye-glass through which the condition of the contents may be observed. The pan is also provided with a vacuum gauge, test sticks, etc. Good sweetened condensed milk will keep for years, but all kinds will gradually thicken in time--poor brands naturally becoming thick and hard far sooner than well made full-cream products. The cases should not be stored near boilers, steam pipes or any extreme heat. At home, as a can seldom outlasts the day, it is not likely to spoil, but the best place for it is in the refrigerator, so covered as to prevent it from absorbing the flavors of meats, etc. The Unsweetened Condensed Milk, largely used for city consumption and delivered in bottles, is made by the same method as the Sweetened except that the sugar is omitted. It is not intended for long keeping. Evaporated Milk is the trade designation for milk, without sugar addition, evaporated in vacuum pans to the consistence of cream, then run over cooling pipes and into cans and immediately sealed, followed by the same "cooking" for sterilization purposes as any other canned goods. The result is an unsweetened product which will keep good almost indefinitely. After coming from the sterilizer, the cans are agitated in a shaking machine which breaks up the fat globules and are then stored in warm rooms until "cured" to the right degree. Though the same principle is employed in all condensed and evaporated milks, there is plenty of room for discrimination in purchasing different varieties. The best grades should be creamy-white, smooth, free from a "cooked" taste, of just the right consistence, etc. Furthermore, there is a wide range in food values, for the latter naturally depend on the amount of water extracted. Evaporated milk of good quality is, when diluted with two-thirds of its bulk of pure fresh water, almost if not quite the equal of fresh milk. U. S. "Standard" Condensed or Evaporated Milk must contain not less than 7% of milk fat and not less than 28% of milk solids, including milk fat. CONDIMENTS: substances taken with food to season or improve its flavor, or to render it more wholesome or digestible. They include such articles of general consumption as salt, vinegar, spices, etc. A majority of them, in moderation, stimulate both appetite and digestion, but their excessive use tends to vitiate the gastric juice and injure the stomach. CONFECTIONERY. See article under heading of CANDY. CONSERVE: a word often used as of the same meaning as "preserves," but really a term of pharmacy or of candy making. Conserves are fresh flowers, fruits, roots, etc., preserved by beating with powdered sugar to the consistence of stiff paste, the object being to retain as much as possible of the natural properties of the raw fruit, etc. The conserves of the candy maker are made for consumption as sweetmeats; those of the druggist are frequently employed as a vehicle for medicines. To the working confectioner, the term "conserves" means sugar and added ingredients so cooked as not to produce a "grainy" effect. CONSOMMé. See sub-head in article on SOUPS. COOKERY. The fundamental principles of cookery may for general consideration be divided as following under the headings of Par-boiling, Boiling, Steaming, Stewing, Roasting and Baking, Broiling, Frying and Sauter. Par-boiling is a process principally designed to improve the appearance of poultry, tongues, etc. It imparts a whiter color and softens some items, while adding firmness to others (as Sweetbreads). The usual method is to put the article in cold water, gradually raise the temperature to the boiling point, then take it out, plunge in cold water and leave there until quite cold. It is later removed and wiped dry, preparatory to dressing. Par-boiling meat, although it renders it more sightly, lessens the nutritive qualities by abstracting a portion of the soluble salts which it contains, especially the phosphates, and thus deprives it of one of the principal features which distinguish fresh from salted meat. Animal food, before being dressed, may be washed or rinsed in cold water without injury, provided it be quickly done; but it cannot be soaked in water at any temperature much below the boiling point without the surface, and the parts near it, being rendered less nutritious. The term "blanching" (which see) is sometimes but incorrectly employed in place of "par-boiling." Boiling, in the general culinary acceptance of the word, is the simplest and, when properly performed, the most economical method of cooking, as the cooked flesh and the accompanying broth represent practically the entire nutritive value of the raw food. The actual boiling temperature, 212° Fahr., should be maintained throughout the cooking of all green and a majority of other vegetables, but in the cooking of meats it should be restricted to the first five or ten minutes--after that, the meat should be "simmered" at a temperature of 175° to 185° Fahr. The first few minutes' boiling coagulates the albumen in the surface of the meat, forming a kind of hard envelope which prevents an excessive amount of the nutritive elements escaping into the water--then the "simmering" cooks the inside but leaves it tender, as the heat which reaches it is not high enough to harden it as the outside "envelope" is hardened when the water is allowed to boil. The pot should always be covered to avoid loss by evaporation, and the food should always be kept covered with water--if more water is required to take the place of that lost by evaporation, hot water should be added so as to avoid changing the temperature. Fresh meat for boiling should always be put into boiling water; salt meats into cold water. No exact rules can be given as to the time required to boil foods properly, but moderate care and judgement will nearly always suffice to determine this point. (See also additional suggestions at the end of the article on BEEF and in the article on VEGETABLES.) Boiling Meat for Broth. When strong broth is desired more than the meat itself, the meat should be put into cold water, as that permits a large part of the nutritive ingredients to escape into the water, then gradually brought to a boil and thereafter simmered until done. See also article on MEAT EXTRACT. Steaming: is slower than boiling, but with proper utensils it is considered especially desirable for the cooking of small pieces of meat and some vegetables and puddings. Stewing follows the same theories as "Boiling," for it is nothing more nor less than "simmering" in a smaller quantity of liquid the meat and liquid being served together as a "stew" instead of separately as "boiled meat" and "soup" or "broth." It offers the great economic advantage that, properly performed, it will render tender, palatable and nutritious the coarser, cheaper parts which would seem undesirable if broiled, roasted or baked. CORN A color illustration of three cobs of corn, tied together by their peeled-back husks. An inlaid cut depicts a cone-shaped pile of cut cornstalks. The meat chosen should have little fat, the cooking should be slow and easy, the scum and fat should be removed occasionally and the pot or pan should always be covered. The meat is frequently partly fried ("browned") or par-boiled before setting to stew. Roasting and Baking. Old-fashioned "roasting" consisted in cooking meats on a spit before an open fire, as still done in England, but in this country the term is now applied almost exclusively to meat cooked in the oven. The term "baked," formerly applied to all foods cooked in the oven, is now confined to fish, vegetables, etc., as "baked weakfish," "baked potatoes," etc.--meats such as beef, lanb, etc., are similarly cooked but are known as "roast beef," "roast lamb," etc. "Roasting" involves a considerable loss of weight, but it has always been and still remains one of the most popular methods. The chef points to be observed are: (1) To keep the oven clean. (2) To regulate the temperature to avoid both waste of time by too slow cooking and poor results by excessive heat. (3) That the greatest heat should be for only the first ten minutes, to obtain the outside "envelop" of coagulated albumen to retain the juices--as mentioned under the head of Boiling --and then should be more moderate--and steady. (4) That the meat must be basted frequently, as this greatly assists in the cooking, keeps the meat juicy and improves the flavor. Both roasting and baking develop the meat extractives or flavor to a high extent, lightening the meat at the same time by the melting of some of the interleaved fat and changing some of the connective tissues into gelatine. Braising is a popular French method which may be described as a combination of roasting and stewing. Small joints or pieces of meat are placed in a "braiser" --a shallow stewpan with a closely-fitting, grooved lid--and the cooking, very slowly done, is started on top of the range and finished in the oven. The braiser is always lined with a "mirepoix," a layer of slices of bacon or ham, vegetables, herbs, etc., and the meat is generally moistened with stock--broth of meats, vegetables, etc.--or stock and wine. Delicate meats are protected by covering with buttered paper. The result is a very savory and aromatic dish. Broiling is the principle of old-fashioned roasting applied to smaller pieces of meat. Important points to be remembered are: (1) To keep the gridiron clean and well greased. (2) To have a clear, bright fire. (3) To season the meat before putting it on the gridiron. (4) To quickly harden both sides to avoid loss of juices. (5) To avoid dropping fat into the fire, as this results in jerky, smoky flames which are liable to spoil the flavor of the meat. (6) Not to over-cook. Frying has been erroneously described as "boiling in fat"--in effect it more nearly corresponds to the principle of roasting, as fat or oil attains a much higher temperature than water and more effectually seals the outside of the meat, etc., being cooked. "Dry frying" signifies the use of only a small quantity of fat or oil. "Deep" or "wet" frying is the use of sufficient fat or oil to cover the article being cooked. Butter is not suitable for deep frying as it is liable to burn before the food is cooked. Olive and other high-class vegetable oils of similar character, do not offer this objection. Care should be taken to avoid over-frying as the result is to make foods very indigestible. Sauter means "to toss." The food is "tossed" by moving the pan quickly back and forward over a brisk fire. When applied to meats, it is practically the same as "dry frying." When applied to items such as French peas, for example, the "tossing" is continued only long enough to heat them through. COON: a colloquial form of RACCOON (which see). COPRA: the meat of the cocoanut, dried. See COCOANUT. CORDIALS. See general article of LIQUEURS. CORDON BLEU, "Blue Ribbon": a term applied to a first-class cook, generally to female cooks. The "Blue Ribbon" originally represented an ancient French order of Knighthood and was first conferred upon a female cook by King Louis XV at the suggestion of Madame Du Barry. CORDON ROUGE, "Red Ribbon": a culinary distinction granted by an English society to clever cooks, both men and women, and others who have invented valuable methods of preparing foods, etc. CORIANDER SEED: the fruit of a small plant, growing chiefly in the south of Europe. It is used as a culinary flavor, especially for curries, in confectionery, and to aromatise spirituous liquors. Coriander An illustration of a flowering plant with delicate fernlike leaves. CORK: is the outer layer of the bark of a species of oak tree which grows in Southern Europe and along the North African coast. It is principally cultivated in Spain and Portugal, those two countries furnishing the greater part of the world's supply. The first stripping is taken when the tree is from fifteen to twenty years old, the cork bark being subsequently removed every eight to ten years. The first two "crops" though are of poor quality and are suitable only for coarser commercial purposes. The bark for bottle corks is not obtainable until the third stripping and each coat thereafter is generally better and finer than the one preceeding. Cork Tree A small illustration of a huge tree. The stripping takes place during the months of July and August, the bark being taken off in sections. After removal, it is scraped and cleaned and then flattened by heating and pressing. It is then ready for manufacture or exportation. For making "corks" for bottles, the cork is cut into strips and the strips into squares about the size of the particular cork desired. The squares are rounded and shaped by a broad sharp knife--by hand, for no machine has as yet been able to give continuous satisfaction. In addition to its use for closing bottles, cork lends itself to a variety of other purposes--for life belts and jackets, hat and shoe linings, artifical limbs, architectural models, etc. The chips and cuttings are ground up and used in the manufacture of linoleum, etc. Old corks of all kinds have, consequently, real value and should not be thrown away. So numerous are the commercial possibilities of cork, that in spite of the large annual production, the supply is never equal to the demand--prices are continually growing higher and substitutes are used wherever practicable. CORKSCREW. A grocer who sells bottled goods and has no corkscrews in his stock, is short-sighted. They can often be sold to ladies, especially the Patent Lever types which involve no strain in pulling the cork. That a grocer must have one corkscrew admits of no question--customers naturally expect to have their purchases opened if they request it. A five-cent corkscrew readily given with a purchased bottle, especially to a new customer, will very often be much appreciated. The more easily a bottle, or can, is opened, the more quickly it is consumed, and the sooner the grocer may expect another order! CORN. The title "corn" is used in a general way to designate all the principal grains--wheat, rye, etc.--but as particulary applied in this country it refers to "Indian Corn" or "Maize"--the most beautiful and luxuriant of all grain "grasses," resembling rather the sugar cane of the tropics than other cereals, and the most abundant in product. It is native to this country and was used as food by the Indians centuries before the era of Columbus, and probably by the civilization which antedated the "Red Man." Corn is lower in protein than hard wheat and oats, but is fully equal in that respect to other grains and it surpasses many in the proportion of fat or oil. It does not make as good bread for general purposes as wheat because of its smaller proportion of gliadin, but otherwise its use as a food ranks very high in national importance--being enjoyed in a great variety of styles--coarse ground into hominy, cornmeal, etc., and boiled as "hominy," "mush" or "hasty pudding," or baked in hoe-cakes, johnny-cakes, corn bread and muffins, converted into syrup, ground fine as "corn-starch" for puddings, etc., eaten green--boiled with beans to make "succotash" or "on the cob," and canned for use when "green corn" is unobtainable--and very often preferably when it is. The consumption of canned corn has grown to very large proportions, the annual output of the State of Maine alone reaching about twenty-three million cans a year. Maryland, New York, Indiana, Sweet Corn An illustration of several baskets filled with ears of corn. Ohio and other States are also constantly increasing the big totals of their products. The average annual crop of corn in the United States is about 3,000,000,000 bushels. This staggering total is variously utilized. Part of it is employed in the starch, brewery, whisky, glucose and other industries and part in the food products already mentioned, but the bulk is transformed into meat--for corn is our most important live stock food, rounding out the steer and putting fat on the hog. Comparatively little is exported as grain, but a very large quantity, an annual value of a great many million dollars, in the form of meat products--cattle and swine on the hoof, fresh, salted and canned, and lard and various other items. The greater part of the "field corn" grown is of the "Dent" species, sub-divided into innumerable varieties, but capable of a general grouping into two classes--"yellow" and "white." It is this field corn which is used in the manufacture of cornmeal, hominy, corn-starch, corn syrup, etc., and for cattle food. Of the other kinds, the best known commercially are "sweet corn" --grown principally for canning and for green corn "on the cob," and pop-corn (which see). Sweet corn is distinguished by its crinkled, semi-transparent appearance when dry. When cut for green corn, it should always be consumed as soon as possible after picking as it deteriorates rapidly in holding. The husks should be bright and fresh looking. Wilted or partly dried specimens should be avoided. The corn grain may be divided into the germ (the oily part), the endosperm (the body of the corn, consisting principally of starch, together with some gluten), and the hull or "bran." In the manufacture of corn products such as starch, syrup, etc., the initial step is the separation of these parts by steeping, grinding, etc. The germs are used in the manufacture of Corn Oil (see following). The hulls are mixed with the water used in steeping the corn before separation, and the water containing the gluten separated from the starch of the kernel (see STARCH), the product being used as cattle-feed. From the starch are produced three principal varieties of products: (1) Dry starches of various qualities, both edible and laundry. (2) Corn syrups and corn sugars of divers grades (see CORN SUGAR, CORN SYRUP AND GLUCOSE). (3) Dextrins (see DEXTRIN). The Corn Products Refining Company furnish the following table, giving in detail the trade products of the grain. See also Color Pages, opposite and facing 186. An illustration of a kernel of corn, with labels indicating the parts of the kernel and the commercial uses for each part. SWEET CORN A color illustration of a cornstalk. An inlaid cut provides a closer view of a single cob of corn, the husk peeled back to reveal the kernels beneath. CORN FLOUR: made from white corn, is used in the manufacture of many pancake flour mixtures, and also to some extent by bakers and confectioners for dusting purposes. CORNMEAL: is made from both yellow and white corn. The principal divisions are into "bolted" and "grauulated." The Granulated represents the harder part of the corn, which remains granulated after grinding. The Bolted is the softer part which passes through the bolting cloths. White cornmeal of both classes is used extensively in the South, for cooking, baking, etc. The White Bolted is used in the North also by bakers and confectioners for dusting purposes, and in some parts to a considerable extent in the making of corn bread. Yellow Granulated is consumed in large quantities in the Northern States, but is seldom seen in the South, where the White Meal is almost universally preferred. Yellow Bolted is used in the manufacture of Brown Bread, etc., and is exported to the West Indies for native consumption. Cornmeal varies with the quality of the corn used and quickly deteriorates in warm weather or in heated houses. When fresh ground and promptly consumed, it has a much better flavor than when held in stock. In many country houses the careful housewife puts a large round stone in the center of the cornmeal firkin to prevent the meal from "heating." In Italy, cornmeal mush called "Polenta" is the principle article of peasant diet for many months of the year. CORN OIL: used in various degrees of refinement as a cooking and edible oil, in the manufacture of soap, lubricating oil, oil cloth, rubber substitute, etc., is made from the germs, which, after separation from the body and hull of the grain, are dried, ground and pressed into cakes, to be later subjected to high pressure, the oil running out into collecting tanks. When pure it is golden yellow in color and marked by a pleasing taste and aroma somewhat suggestive of freshly ground grain. The residue of corn oil extraction is pressed into oil cakes, to be used as cattle food, etc. CORN SALAD: also called Fetticus, Field Salad, Fat Hen, Lamb's Quarter, Marsh Salad, Hog Salad and Doucette: a salad plant, found in numerous varieties and known locally by many names. Several kinds form "rosettes," others resemble Seed Lettuce in appearance and growth. It makes an especially good salad mixed with lettuce, the outer stalks of celery or sliced beets, giving a slightly bitter taste which is generally very well liked. CORN-STARCH: used in the manufacture of puddings, etc., is made from the raw starch of corn by breaking it up, washing and siphoning repeatedly, running over refining sieves of fine silk which remove any particles of fibre still adhering, putting through various refining processes, drying until the content of water has been reduced to only about 10% and finally pulverizing. CORN SUGAR or Commercial Dextrose, etc.: used in the manufacture of caramel or sugar coloring, beer, vinegar, etc., is made in the same manner as Corn Syrup except that the evaporation is carried on for a longer time. The end product is run into barrels or other receptacles where it crystallizes, and is then shipped either solid in the barrels or broken up by chipping machinery. See also "Commercial Dextrose" in article on GLUCOSE. CORN SYRUP, or Commercial Glucose, etc.: is used as table syrup (see SYRUP); in confectionery, baking, etc. (see GLUCOSE), and in the manufacture of jams, vinegar and various other food products, in addition to the large quantity empolyed in other industries. In manufacture, raw (corn) starch is mixed with water to form what is known as "starch milk," then a small quantity of hydrochloric or muriatic acid is added and the whole is run into "converters"--large closed copper vessels, where steam is applied under about 40 pounds pressure, quickly changing the starch into a mixture of glucose and dextrose. The product is next run into a tank where alkali is added to neutralize the acid used and the liquid is then filtered and decolorized by passing through bone-black, in much the same way as cane sugar is purified, and finally evaporated to the proper consistence in vacuum pans. CORNED BEEF, Pork, Etc.: meat preserved with brine. Good grade corned beef is made from the rump, chuck and plate (See article on BEEF). It should consist exclusively of meat cut from young cattle in good condition. If canned, it should be well trimmed, the skinny and connective tissues removed and freed from gristle, bone, blood clots and excessive fat. No soft fat at all should be included. It should not contain more than about one thirty-second of jelly--which should be made only from soup stock and bones--and should not show excessive liquor when opened. For Corned, or Pickled, Pork, see article on PORK. CORNED BEEF HASH: as put up in canned form, consists of about 50% corned beef and 50% vegetables, chiefly potatoes and onions, seasoned with pepper and salt. COS LETTUCE. See item under title of ROMAINE. COSTERMONGER: a term applied to a person selling any kind of food--fruits, fish, vegetables, etc.--in the street from barrows or carts. the title is a corruption of "Costard Monger" or "Costard Seller," Costard being an Old English name for "apple"--first applied to a special variety, but later to any kind. COTTOLENE: a frying and shortening material resembling lard, made from cotton-seed stearin (see COTTONSEED OIL) with enough beef suet added to give it the desired consistence. COTTON. Crude cotton is the soft, wooly fibre contained in the seed "boll" of the cotton-plant. The boll bursts when ripe, presenting then the appearance of a small bunch of cotton-wool attached to the dried calyx. The fibre varies from one-half inch to two inches in length, is either white or yellow in color and is variously named from the land on which it is cultivated, the place of production, etc., as Upland Cotton, Sea Island Cotton, Florida Cotton, etc. The seeds scattered through the fibre are extracted by means of the machine known as the cotton-gin. COTTONSEED, Flour, Meal, Oil. Cottonseed comes from the gin with short soft lint still adhering to the shells. Its general commercial treatment produces from each hundred pounds, about 46 pounds of lint and shells, 36 pounds of oil cake or "cake" and 16 pounds of crude oil. The lint is marketed as cotton batting, etc., the shells are used as fuel and fertilizer, the oil-cake as fertilizer and cattle-feed, and the oil for edible purposes, soap manufacture, machinery uses, etc. COTTON PLANT--the lower bolls ready for gathering. A small illustration of a cotton plant. The seed, when freed from the down, somewhat resembles a small coffee-bean in size and form. Cottonseed flour, or (whole) meal. The ground whole cottonseed has in recent years attracted attention as a valuable food material. The decorticated seed contains an average of 10% water, 19% protein, 20% fat, 24% carbohydrates, 22% fibre and 5% ash (see FOOD VALUES). It is too rich to be suitable for use as a substitute for wheat flour in bread, for example, but it may be advantageously employed in combination with it or other flour. Cottonseed Oil, when thoroughly refined for edible purposes, serves as an excellent and inexpensive substitute for olive oil in cooking. It is also largely used as a salad oil, for packing sardines and other products, etc. "Choice" oil is of a light lemon color and mild and neutral in flavor. "Prime" oil is slightly darker in color and is sweet in flavor but without any seedy taste. Cottenseed Stearin, used in the manufacture of cottolene, compound lard, etc., is obtained by separation from the refined oil. The lower grades of oil and the residue separated in refining, employed for mechanical purposes, soap manufacture, etc., are reddish or brownish and unpleasant in flavor. The value of the oil obtainable from the average American cotton crop is estimated at nearly one hundred million dollars, yet less than a hundred years ago the bulk of the seed was treated as a waste article and considered troublesome because of the difficulty of disposing of it. The real importance of the present extensive industry commenced with the still more recent date of 1855, when improved methods of decorticating the seeds were invented. Part of the seed has always been employed as a fertilizer, but even the full exploitation of its oil possibilities would not interfere with this use, as experience warrants the belief that the cotton-meal residue, after the extraction of the oil, is nearly or quite as valuable for fertilizing purposes as the whole seed. COUMARIN: the flavoring principle of the TONKA BEAN (which see). CRABS: the most popular of all crustaceans. They are found in great variety, some existing entirely in the sea, others in shallow water, both fresh and salt, and yet others on land. they multiply rapidly and are in season all the year. At the mouth of the Chesapeake, the beach is often covered for miles with a layer of crabs a hundred feet wide, driven ashore by the wind during weather cold enough to partly numb them. In this country the type principally consumed is the Blue Crab, but we also enjoy, particularly as a garnish, the tiny Oyster-Crab--which makes its home within the oyster shell, but is nevertheless a true crab. The Hermit Crab is another small soft-tailed variety which makes its home in univalves or single shells, as the Oyster Crab in bivalves. As food, the two important divisions of Blue Crab existence are into Hard Crabs and Soft Shell Crabs. Soft Shell Crabs, in season from April or May (according to the season) to October 15, are those which have just cast off their shells. At one stage they are called Shedders. They come to market packed in seaweed, and should be kept moist, and in such a position that the gills are always wet. The male crab has a long white narrow tail turned around its under part. The female has a broad, brownish feathery tail. The meat principally eaten is that from the inner top of the back and the claws. The center of the body is filled with the liver, a soft yellow substance which is not generally consumed, but which some people consider a delicacy, especially when mixed with the eggs of "coral" of the crab. Canned Crab Meat: is a convenient and desirable article for salad and similar purposes. The best packing is that in which the tender white "lump" pieces predominate or are exclusively used. Other grades consist chiefly of the smaller, but also very delicate, "flakes" and claw meat. An increasing quantity is imported from Japan. The crab catch on the Chesapeake and the canning of the meat are thus described: "Each of the boats carries six hundred feet of lines, anchors, buoys, etc. Small lateral lines are attached to the main line at intervals of eighteen inches. To these the bait is attached--tripe generally being used. At stated periods the boats are visited by a larger one which collects the catch and carries it to the factory. There the crabs are carefully assorted, and any that may have died during the trip are thrown out. Those that pass the inspection are placed in latticed cars, each holding two hundred and fifty dozens. The cars are run into steaming tanks and sixty pounds of steam is instantly turned on. Each individual crab, with one spasmodic twist, immediately relinquishes all earthly ambitions and dies, that man may profit by his involuntary sacrifice. There is no lingering torture, as in the old-fashioned way of boiling, to cause the meat to become fevered and soggy--it leaves the shell as white, sweet and dry as it is possible to get it. After the steaming the crabs are passed to the 'strippers.' These, standing before the trough of clear, cold water, dexterously remove the top shell, viscera, etc., and after carefully washing each crab pass it to the pickers, who occupy long tables running the length of the house. The meat is here picked out into half-gallon buckets to the tune of 'We'll Put John on the Island!' and 'I'm Traveling to My Grave,' a hundred colored voices taking up the refrain. Afterwards it is weighed and carefully examined to see that it is clear of shell--if not up to the standard, it is returned to the picker. From the weigher it goes to the canning-room, where it is packed in one and two pound cans, and then passed to the process room, sealed and cooked. Every can is afterward examined to see that it is perfect. If found so, it is varnished, wrapped in a handsome label and packed two dozen in a case, ready for market. Thus packed, it will keep for an almost unlimited time in any climate." CRAB APPLE: the parent from which all the varieties of the cultivated apple have sprung. It is a small fruit, about one inch in diameter, having a harsh, acid taste, which renders it almost uneatable when raw. It is generally used for making preserves and jellies. Crab Apple A short sprig of a plant thick with leaves and small fruits. CRACKERS. See general article on BISCUITS. CRACKNEL or Egg Biscuit: a high-class plain biscuit made in various shapes, all thicker than the average biscuit but extremely light, very finely grained and of a peculiarly smooth and shiny surface. As only first-grade wheat flour, eggs and a small percentage of sugar enter into their manufacture--no water or other moistening being added--they are valued as a delicate and nutritious food. CRANBERRY: a small acid fruit, growing in boggy and marshy ground, largely used for making tarts, sauces, jelly, etc. Four varieties are generally recognized--the Cherry, the Olive, the Bugle and the Bell, their titles being more or less descriptive of their shape. The berries were first cultivated at Cape Cod, and Massachusetts is still the largest producing state. The markets also receive large quantities from New Jersey and Wisconsin, and small supplies from several other states. The soil for producing them must be a marsh of muck or peat that can be drained a foot below the surface and is capable of being flooded in winter to protect the roots. CRANBERRIES--"Bugle," "Bell," and "Cherry" types A small illustration of three different berries situated next to a diagram of fruit-bearing plants shown from tops to roots. In the districts where they are grown extensively, the cranberry "picking season" is a bonanza to every man, woman and child. The pickers are generally paid about 75 cents a bushel. Two bushels is considered an average day's work, but experts often gather five, and sometimes seven bushels. In Germany and some parts of the United States, the berries are gathered with a wooden comb, but the best method is to comb them off with the extended fingers. This does less injury to the fruit and to the plant. Gathering Cranberries, Mass. An illustration of workers wading in a swampy field, pulling a large comblike tool through the plants at their feet. More money has been made and more lost in the culture of cranberries than in almost any other berry. Too frequently the crop is a total failure. The cranberry worm devastates the bushes, or an early frost kills the berries. Cranberries vary widely in price. They are at times so cheap that it is interesting to know that if all soft berries are picked out, the remainder can be kept sound for months by putting them in jars, covering with water, setting in a cool place and occasionally replenishing the water. Medium-sized berries are generally more solid and therefore keep better than those that are especially large. Great care should be taken in cool weather to avoid buying berries which have been bitten by frost. The fruit of the High Bush Cranberry, or Cranberry Tree, which attains a height of eight to twelve feet, resembles the ordinary cranberry in flavor and general appearance but it is smaller and contains only one seed. In spite of its similarity, it is not related to the cranberry proper, belonging instead to the same species as the old fashioned Snowball Bush. CRAYFISH or Crawfish: a diminutive lobster found plentifully in our rivers and in season from September to April. It is popular as a garniture because of its form and color, and the flesh from its tail forms many delicate entrées, salads, etc. CREAM: the fatty element of milk. In good rich milk the proportion varies from one-fifth to one-third. The proportion in milk sold by different dealers is usually easily ascertained by putting a sample of each in bottles or tubes and letting them stand undisturbed for forty-eight hours--the difference in color will distinguish the cream from the milk, and show the relative quantities contained. Most of the cream sold as such is now separated from the milk by centrifugal separators instead of allowing it to rise. U. S. Standard cream must contain not less than 18% milk fat. State standards vary from 15% to 20%. Good cream by natural separation will average about 22%. By centrifugal separation it can be made to vary from very "light," as low as 9%, to very "heavy," as high as 55%. CREAM CHEESE. See sub-head in general article on CHEESE. CREAM NUT: one of several names for the BRAZIL NUT (which see). CREAMERY: an establishment for the manufacture of butter, etc., from cream obtained from the farmers of the neighborhood. The product is sold and quoted as "Creamery" or "Creameries." See BUTTER. CREAM OF TARTAR: is refined Argol, or Tartar, a substance found in the juice of grapes and obtained as a precipitate after its fermentation. It has an acid, cooling taste, and is used in the preparation of summer drinks, as an aid in raising bread and cakes, etc. Its sale by grocers has been greatly lessened by the increase in the popular use of baking powders. There are usually from one to three inches of dark "grounds" or lees at the bottom of a full barrel of new wine after it has stood long enough to settle. After a certain time, the lees are removed in a "cake" and then dried and broken up till they are about the size of common sand and of a pinkish tinge, like the "tailings" of a Nevada quartz mill. This product is sold to tartar manufacturers. In refining, the powdered lees is put into vats of hot water, cooked for about two hours and then run off into shallow receivers around which the crystals speedily form in a thick mass. The same water is used repeatedly as it always holds a certain quantity of tartar in solution. Tartar from wine that has been cleared with plaster is richest in Tartaric Acid, while that formed in wine that is cleared with eggs is richest in Cream of Tartar. The tartar takes a tinge of pink or cream, as the wine in which it forms is red or "white." Cream of Tartar is generally adulterated, sometimes to the extent of two-thirds or three-fourths of the bulk sold. As a majority of the articles added are insoluble earths, it can be tested by boiling it in water eighty times its own bulk--if any sediment remains, it is not pure. CRéME, "Cream": a name applied to many compound spirits and liqueurs, as Crême de Menthe, etc. (see LIQUEURS). See also article on SOUPS. CRèME DE MENTHE, "Cream of Mint": a popular liqueur of peppermint flavor, some varieties containing also other aromatic principles. It is put up in "white," green and red colors and is generally sold in bottles of fancy shape. CRESCENTS: (1) rolls of Vienna Bread dough in crescent shape; (2) shapes of Genoese Cake with water icing of various colors; (3) a kind of French bonbon. CRESS, or Pepper Grass: a name applied to a number of pungent flavored plants of the mustard family, used as a condiment, for garnishing and in salads, etc. The leaves of the common varieties are very much divided and frequently curled. Those of the Broad-leafed types have the blade entire except for occasional notches along the edges. In the market-gardens surrounding London, cress is grown in enormous quantities. It is generally sown together with mustard, the growth being forced and the leaves cut when from 1 1/2 to 2 inches high. Rape is frequently substituted for Mustard and is considered preferable by some people--the flavor is not so pungent but the leaves are stiffer and keep fresh longer. See also WATERCRESS. CROSS BUNS: small circular cakes or buns, so-called because marked with the cross, especially baked in many sections for consumption on Good Friday. They are popularly known as "Hot Cross Buns" and as such are in many English towns cried about the streets on the morning of Good Friday. CROUSTADES: are cases or shells of biscuit or pastry composition, made in various shapes and used for the service of creamed fish, etc., and some entrées and desserts. CROWN OF JAPAN. See JAPANESE ARTICHOKE. "CROWNS." The word "crown," as commercially applied to dates, figs, raisins and some other food products, signifies "grade" or "quality." The higher the number used as a prefix, the choicer the grade--9-crowns raisins being, for example, a little choicer than 8-crowns, etc. CRUSTACEANS: animals with jointed shells, as the lobster, etc. See SHELLFISH. CRYSTALLIZED FRUITS. The theory of crystallizing fruit is to extract the juice and replace it with sugar-syrup which, upon hardening, preserves the fruit from decay but retains its natural shape. The general method to boil the fruit--preferably unripe and in the case of "stone" fruits while the stone is still soft--until tender and then suspend it in strong syrup until it has become almost transparent, occasional evaporation keeping the syrup at the fullest strength. The fruit is next dried in stoves or drying rooms at a temperature of about 120° Fahr., until the syrup has crystallized. Another process--that principally employed in Portugal, one of the most important producing countries--consists essentially of repeated boilings of the unripe fruit in strong syrup, followed by draining and, lastly, drying on trays in the open air. A wide variety of fruits are now candied, among the latest additions being the "Prickly Pear" of California. They constitute a form of sweets admirably adapted to the grocer's counter as they are closely allied to his regular stock and are very attractive in appearance. The housewife can make a very showy confection by cutting the red heart of the watermelon into slices and then into fancy shapes, immersing them in crystallizing syrup and then allowing to dry. The pink and red color showing through the crystal coating makes an extremely pleasing appearance. CUCUMBER: one of the most popular of salad vegetables. It is somewhat indigestible, but when properly prepared and dressed--with plenty of oil--it may be eaten without the slightest fear of evil consequences. The rind is considered poisonous, so paring should be thorough and deep. Cucumbers when marketed should be crisp and firm to the touch. For sale fresh, they are selected according to both ripeness and size, the latter varying greatly with different varieties. For general pickling, they are gathered when from 2 1/2 to 5 inches long. Very small pickled cucumbers are known as Gherkins (which see). Dill pickles are made either from fresh or salted cucumbers--the former being considered the choicer, but the latter having better keeping qualities. The Dill pickling process employs pickled dill seed or herb and "dill spice"--composed of allspice, black pepper, coriander seed and bay leaves--in addition to the brine. The English cucumber, of which there is a small sale in Eastern markets, is round instead of triangular like the American, generally very much longer in proportion to diameter, more uniformly green and with very little seed. In England and the Continent, cucumbers are often boiled in thick sections and served with hot butter or cream sauce. CUMIN: a herb of the caraway type producing seeds of aromatic odor and taste which are popular in Europe and Asia for flavoring soups, pastry, liqueurs, etc., but are little used here except in curry powders. CUMQUAT. See matter following title of KUMQUAT. CURACOA: one of the most popular liqueurs. The best varieties consist chiefly of lemon and orange peels and bitter oranges distilled with clear spirit and rum. The finished product may be red, orange or "white" in color and is marketed both in tall narrow jugs and in bottles. It is excellent for flavoring sweet sauces, jellies, etc. See Color Page of, and article on LIQUEURS. CURCUMA, Curcumin: a yellow coloring matter extracted from TURMERIC (which see). CURRANTS. Two varieties of fruit, entirely different except in size, are known as "Currants"--one used as a fresh, and the other as a dried fruit. The fresh currant, a small acid berry sometimes eaten raw but principally consumed in the form of jelly and cooked in pies, etc., is the fruit of a bush resembling the gooseberry bush. The most common type is the Red Currant. "Green currants" are Red currants gathered for cooking before they are ripe for the sake of their peculiar tartness. The White Currant is a similar variety produced by cultivation--it is less acid and consequently more pleasing for eating raw. The Black Currant is a separate CUCUMBERS A color illustration of cucumber plants growing in a field. An inlaid cut shows a cucumber sliced in half horizontally, a thin vertical cut of a cucumber, and a third uncut cucumber. London Red London Market White "grape" Transparent Ponions Moore's Select SIX CHOICE VARIETIES OF CURRANTS An illustration of six bunches of currants, each with its own caption. type and of different flavor--its juice, credited with being aperitive, is used for flavoring purposes and in making wine, liqueurs, jellies, etc. The dried currant, extensively used in cakes, etc., is a small seedless "raisin," the fruit of a species of grape vine grown principally in the Grecian Islands of Zante (hence the term "Zante Currants"), Cephalonia and Ithaca and in the vicinity of Patras. The fresh ripe fruit is also locally employed in wine manufacture. The title "currant" is a corruption of Corinth, the name of the now unimportant Greek town of Gortho at the time when it was one of the most prosperous of Mediterranean cities. During the middles ages, currants were known as raisins de Corauntz. CURRY POWDER or Curry Paste: a condiment so highly seasoned that it is only within recent years that it has obtained a substantial foothold in temperate climates, though it has been extensively used in India and other Eastern countries for many generations. In India it generally consists of black pepper, cayenne pepper and a variety of spices--nutmeg, cinnamon, cloves, etc.--made into a paste or powder with turmeric. Its composition varies with different makers. That sold here usually contains chiefly turmeric, coriander seed, cayenne, black pepper, fenugreek seed, ginger and lime juice. It is retailed in packets, jars, bottles, etc. The word "curry" is of (Asiatic) Indian origin and originally signified there a "stew"--generally of chicken, veal or lamb. The "finishing or seasoning of the dish was frequently performed at the table by the host or some other member of the party, many English officers at one time priding themselves on the special combinations of spices, etc., that they had learned or invented, just as in every country many epicures pride themselves on their ability in making a salad or sauce. Later, the word came to be applied more particularly to the mixture of spices added than to the dish itself. In India and Ceylon, curry sauces are added to a variety of dishes--generally a few minutes before serving or before the completion of cooking. Vegetables of all kinds, in addition to meats, poultry and fish, are so treated. Curry is best kept in a bottle or jar, tightly corked or stoppered. CUSK: a fish similar to and about the same size as the cod, sold fresh and salted. CUSTARD APPLE, or Anona, Coster, Bullock Heart, etc.: local titles of a West Indian fruit somewhat resembling the Northern Papaw. It is a member of the Anona family, which includes the Sweet-sop, Sour-sop, Cherimoya, etc. It is generally round in shape, with skin varying from yellowish to reddish brown and greenish-white pulp of light texture which is sometimes described as of "Custard" consistence. An illustration of an oblong fruit attached to a leafy twig. CUTTLE-FISH BONE: as known to the retailer, is the bone of a kind of shell-fish, placed in cages for birds to whet their bills upon it. It should be kept by all grocers who sell bird food as it is a small and profitable item and not liable to spoil. It is also sometimes used in the preparation of tooth-powders, for polishing metals, etc. Cuttle-fish An illustration of a small squid. DAB: a title applied to several fish of the flounder family, found along the North Atlantic coast. The best known types are the Rough Dab and the Rusty or Sand Dab. DAIRY: a term which covers everything pertaining to milk-- the "dairy" may be the farm, milk-house, place of butter and cheese manufature or retail store. The best situation for a small dairy building is on the north side of the dwelling-house, in order that it may be sheltered from the sun during the heat of the day. Necessary features are ample ventilation, the absolute exclusion of flies and other insects and cool even temperature. The walls should be double, or at least especially thick, and the windows provided with shutters or doors. Farm dairies have been largely superseded by cheese and butter factories or "Creameries," generally divided into a number of departments. Association, State and Government dairy schools, and the Agricultural Experiment Stations have greatly increased the efficiency of those engaged in the industry. DAMAGED GOODS. The liability of many goods to damage en route makes it important for the dealer to act cautiously in throwing the blame on the wholesaler or shipper. Nothing can be more unwise than to receive a shipment of goods by freight and return a damaged cheese by express, or return an entire invoice because one item in it is wrong. Write carefully and cooly to the shipper, stating the particulars and saying that such articles are held subject to his order--and expense and trouble will be saved to all concerned. Many goods, especially in winter, are sent at the risk of the party ordering them and it is best to understand all the circumstances before making claims. Just claims should always be made promptly, but it is very dangerous to contract the reputation of making claims on trivial grounds. DAMSON: a species of peculiar-flavored small black or blue plum, much used in the filling of tarts, etc., and in liqueur manufacture (see SLIVOVITZ). It is delicious cooked, but too astringent to be enjoyed raw. DANDELION. The dandelion, one of the most common and familiar of spring flowers, is entitled to much higher place than it at present holds in general estimation here. Perhaps because of excessive familiarity with it as a "weed," and partly also in some sections because it is regarded as of essentially medicinal properties, the average person ignores its manifold virtues and possibilities as a salad plant, alone or with other plants, but John Evelyn placed it among his famous seventy-three salad herbs and European gardeners and cooks have made it fashionable on the other side of the Atlantic. In this country also it is now extensively cultivated by Eastern market gardeners, being raised in hothouses between seasons. The leaves when "blanched" by covering with earth, or potted and grown, from strong roots, in a warm dark cellar, are white, crisp and delicious. The young leaves resemble Endive. Even the ordinary green leaves lose much of their bitterness if washed and macerated in several waters and they make excellent spring "greens," especially if stewed with an equal quantity of sorrel leaves. "Dandelion Coffee" and "Dandelion Chocolate" are made from the root, roasted and ground. The "coffee" is a mixture of ordinary coffee and powder, or extract, of dandelidon root. The "chocolate" contains one-fifth chocolate and four-fifths roots. DATES. In Persia, Arabia and northern Africa, the date palm forms one of the principal sources of natural wealth. The wood and leaves are used in every imaginable way, just as natives in other parts of the world use the cocoanut, and the fruit, fresh or dried, frequently serves the Arab as his only food. Its preponderating content is sugar, the protein percentage being small, but the sugar is of so pure and wholesome a quality that it is very easily digested. The date palm commences to bear fruit at from six to eight years, continuing to one hundred years--and often for several centuries. It is particularly valuable to humanity because it will flourish under conditions which kill all other vegetation. Excessive alkalinity of soil and a hot, dry climate, which would make any other growth almost impossible, result in its very finest product. The finest of all dates are the Deglet Noor, from the "Sunken Gardens" of the Algerian Sahara, the palms growing in dells of sand, the lower parts of the trunks buried in the sand and the strong rays of the desert sun reflected from the sandy slopes on each side. In addition to its own growth, it has converted many parts of the Sahara into richly productive zones, the shade it affords making it possible to grow figs, almonds, etc., in the oases. Part of a bunch of dates hung up to ripen An illustration of a large bunch of dates hung from one end. The palms are divided into male and female trees. In a wild condition there are generally about equal numbers of each, but under cultivation one male tree serves for from forty to one hundred female trees, the fertilization of the blossoms of the latter being insured by tying to every flowering branch a sprig of the male flowers. Gathering dates, Elche, Spain An illustration of two men standing in a grove of tall trees. Under ordinary conditions a good tree will bear annually from sixty to two hundred pounds of fruit, the amount being sometimes increased by careful cultivation to from four hundred to six hundred pounds. The fruit is borne in bunches weighing from ten to forty pounds, hanging directly beneath the feathery head of the palm, the individual dates adhering to numerous slender twigs attached to the central stems. As the dates do not all ripen at the same time, the branch, after cutting, is usually placed in a dry and shady location for the green fruit to mature. For specially early fruit the first ripening dates are sometimes picked from the bunch before the branch is cut. There are three principal types of dates--the Sweet, the only variety known outside the home of the palm; the Mild Sweet, generally eaten as a fresh fruit; and the Dry or "Camel" date, preferred by the Arabs as a general food article, both pressed whole and ground into date flour, as under proper conditions it will keep for years. The flavor of the Camel Date is excellent, but it is too dry to correspond to the ordinary consumer's conception of what the fruit should be. Of the Sweet Dates, the choicest are generally those which are large, softish but not sticky, not too much wrinkled, of a reddish or yellowish brown on the outside, with a whittish membrane between the flesh and the stone. Nine-tenths of the supply imported into the United States comes from Arabia, chiefly by way of Smyrna. The bulk arrives pressed in large boxes, gunny bags or frails, but the finer types are packed in small fancy boxes, baskets, etc. The choicest dates are those from Tunis, Algiers and Morocco. Among the best known varieties are the Deglet Noor, already referred to; the Tafilat from the Morocco Sahara; the Menakher, a long, large brown date from the Tunis Sahara, and the Rhars. The high price of these "fancy" dates is due to European competition for the comparatively limited supply. Fard dates are a black, rather hard variety, extensively used for stuffing. Persian dates are generally lighter in color and of softer flesh. The Rhars and similar varieties are especially full of sugary juice, and the Arabs make "Date Honey" from them by hanging the bunches up to drain. The fruit used is afterwards packed for general consumption, sometimes pounded and pressed into cakes. A special method of preparation for the best oriental trade is to press out the juice of a certain number of dates and use this as a syrup in which to pack other rich dates in large vases. DATES A color illustration of date palms growing in a desert; several men and camels are traversing the desert beneath them. A detailed illustration of the date fruit cuts across one corner of the illustration. Young Date Palms bearing fruit in an orchard near Phoenix, Arizona An illustration of three small palm trees growing in an arid-looking field. More trees can be seen farther off in the background. The fermented sap of the palm, and also the fermented juice or syrup of the crushed fruit, are consumed locally as Palm Wine or Date Wine, etc.; the young leaves may be cooked as "Palm Cabbage," and the stones are ground into "Date Coffee," for human use or for cattle food, or are pressed to obtain "Date Oil." In other parts of the world are found numerous special varieties of the date palm, among the most noteworthy being one common to South India and the East Indies, which is even higher in sugar content than the African or Arabian type. Date sugar from this palm is a commercial product of considerable value. Another small fruited species gives a specially desirable date meal. A considerable measure of success has already rewarded efforts to grow dates in this country, in several parts of California, Colorado and Arizona. The climatic and soil conditions have proved entirely suitable, and the result will probably be the transformation of sections so alkaline as to be otherwise worthless, into richly productive areas. The value of the product is inicated by the importation of twenty or more million pounds every year. Stuffed dates are prepared in constantly increasing variety--filled with almond and other nut meats, separately or mixed with date, fig or raisin meat or the latter without the nuts; ginger, peanut or walnut butter, various forms of confectionery, etc. DATE PLUM: a name applied to the American Persimmon (See PERSIMMON). DECANTATION: the operation of pouring or drawing off the clear portion of a liquid from the impurities or grosser matter that has subsided. It is commonly performed either by gently inclining the vessel, or by a syphon or pump. See WINES. DECANTER: a bottle especially designed for the service of wines, liquors, etc. It is often difficult to clean decanters, especially after port wine has stood in them for some time. The best method is to wash them out with a little pearlash and warm water adding a spoonful or two of fresh-slacked lime, if necessary. A few small cinders or pieces of raw potato may be used to facilitate the action of the fluid against the side of the glass. A little strong oil of vitriol will also rapidly clean glass bottles. DELAWARE WINE: a class of domestic wines, red and white, sweet and dry, made principally from Delaware grapes. DELICATESSEN. The delicatessan stores now so numerous in all our large cities started with one place in Grand Street, New York, opened about 1868. Their stocks embrace a wide variety of food items--ready-cooked meats, cheeses, fine canned goods--such as sardines, mushrooms, caviar, etc.--packet teas, olive oil etc.--in short, all the most profitable articles of the grocer's stock. DEMERARA SUGAR: a name given to the finest flavored of "raw sugars"-- sugar before the refining process. The term was formerly restricted to that from the Demerara section of British Guiana but is now applied also to similar sugar from the West Indies. It is usually of a light straw color and large crystallization. DEMIJOHN: a very large-bodied bottle with a small neck, generally protected by wickerwork covering. DENDANG: a local name for the sun dried meat of the East Indies. DERMESTES: commonly called the Bacon Beetle. The larva of this insect is very destructive to bacon and other dried meats and often to cheese. It is a worm about 3/8-inch in length, tapering towards the tail, dark-brown above, white beneath, with long hairs and two horny hooks on the end of its body. DESICCATED MILK. Evaporated milk finely powdered. DESICCATED or DRIED SOUPS. There are two main classes of desiccated or dried soups, put up for army, camp and similar purposes--those entirely of meat, and those entirely or principally of vegetables. The former should consist of meat extract obtained by extracting and then condensing the juices of lean meat at a low temperature, the completed product appearing in tablet form or in tubes of paraffin wax, etc. The vegetable soups consist of several varieties of dried vegetables chopped up and mixed with dried flavoring herbs, etc., with sometimes the addition of a certain quantity of gelatine or meat basis. For commissary and export purposes, cubes of compressed dry vegetables are enclosed in jackets of gelatinous soup, both jacket and contents being dissolved in the hot water to be used in making the soup. All dried articles of this kind should be carefully guarded from moisture. DEWBERRY: an early variety of Blackberry (which see). DEXTRIN or British Gum: a substance obtained by roasting starch. Its principal use is in the textile industries, as gum for postage stamps, in mucilage manufacture. etc., but it is also sometimes employed as a glaze for certain candies. It was discovered by the accidental overheating of starch and its process of manufacture was for a long time kept secret. Its name arises from the fact that under polarized light it turns the plane to the right or "dexter". DEXTROSE. See article under heading of GLUCOSE. DIAMOND BACK: the most famous variety of TERRAPIN (which see). DIASTASE: a ferment found in grains and other seeds during germination (see MALT). It is also present in human and animal saliva. DIGBY CHICKS: smoked herrings from Digby, Nova Scotia. DIGESTIBILITY OF FOODS. See FOOD VALUES. DILL: a herb of the parsley family, grown chiefly for its aromatic pungent seeds, which are employed in the manufacture of sauces, pickles, etc. See CUCUMBER. Dill A sprig of a plant with thin leaves and thin blossoms at the top. DISTILLATION: is, in its fundamental features, the vaporizing of a liquid by heat in one vessel and then conducting the vapor or steam into another cool vessel, where it is condensed into a liquid. The value of the process is found in the fact that very few liquids become vapor at the same temperature. Ethyl alcohol will vaporize at 173° Fahr., and water at 212°--so that each can be readily separated from the other or from other components. Distillation in its simplest form, may be explained by remarking that if one places a kettle of wine, for example, on a stove, the steam which comes out of the spout prior to the water-boiling point, 212° Fahr., is principally alcoholic vapor, which, if passed into another vessel and held until it condenses into a liquid, will be a crude brandy. A simple distillation will not produce a complete separation--the alcoholic vapor passed out containes a certain percentage of water--but the process can be repeated until nearly all water is eliminated. A complete separation can only be secured by placing the liquid, after distillation to the highest possible percentage, in suspended skin bags. The water, being heavier than the alcohol, settles to the bottom and gradually drips through the bag. The principal use of the process of distillation is for the manufacture of commercial alcohol (see ALCOHOL) and liquors such as brandy, whisky, rum, etc., and to add special flavors and properties to alcoholic liquors, as in the manufacture of perfumes, liqueurs, etc., but it is also employed to separate light and heavy oils, in the manufacture of certain products from coal tar, to purify drinking water, to separate volatile from non-volatile substances either in watery or alcoholic solutions or mixtures, etc. Another familiar example is the changing of sea water into fresh water by distillation--the fresh water passes over as steam, leaving the salt behind. In the manufacture of brandy, rum, whisky, etc., distillation is preceded by other processes which produce a fermented liquid consisting of alcohol, water and solids, it being the duty of distillation to separate the alcohol and water from the solids and then to eliminate a part of the water and certain other volatile substances. Brandy is made from wine (the fermented juice of grapes); rum from a fermented molasses and other residue of sugar manufacture; whisky from a fermented grain mixture (see article on WHISKY). The fermented liquid is placed in a "still." The old-fashioned pot-still consists of a large round pot with a short copper "chimney" for the vapor, with a bend at the top and a horizontal continuation in the shape of an elongated neck or spout. The still is heated to 173° Fahr. and over, by direct fire beneath in a brick "oven" surrounding the "pot," and the alcohol in the ferment changes into vapor or steam and passes up and along the neck. This neck connects with a long tapering copper pipe, called the "worm," coiled in a tank of running water, which cools and condenses the vapor into a liquid and runs it into the receiving vessel. The process is continued until practically all of the alcohol contents of the liquor have been extracted. This first product is again distilled and the result is "whisky," "brandy," etc., according to the character of the fermented liquid employed and the method of distillation. In a majority of present day establishments, large modern stills, the contents heated by steam coils, have succeeded the old-fashioned pot still, but the principle employed is identical. The still with a short "chimney" leading into the "neck"--in some cases it is only the turn of the neck itself--is employed where it is desired to carry over as much flavor or perfume with the alcohol as possible. When for other purposes very strong and tasteless spirits are desired, "patent" or high chimney stills are employed, as the flavor-oils, etc., being heavier than the alcoholic vapor, fall away in its passage upwards. In addition, three and sometimes four re-distillations are employed to further abstract the water, etc. Distillation in its leading principles and cruder forms is a process easy of accomplishment, but much care, experience and judgement are required to produce spirits of high grade and quality. Dry Distillation: is a separation of one or more components from a solid body by the action of heat without the addition of liquid. In Destructive Distillation, a term which is synonymous with Dry Distillation in the majority of its uses, the substance is placed in ovens or "retorts" of various shapes and compositions, of metal, clay, etc., which are subjected to sufficiently great heat to decompose their contents. The Destructive Distillation of bituminous coal, for example, gives gas for illumination, power, etc.; coal tar, a thick liquid substance, now of great commercial value (see article on COAL TAR) and coke, the dry residue, generally utilized as fuel for blast-furnaces. DISTILLED WATER. See sub-head in general article on WATER. DRIED BEEF, Smoked Beef, Chipped Beef. The thick flank is the part generally used for Dried Meat. It is divided lengthwise, set for about ten to fourteen days in a pickle of salt, sugar (or molasses) and a little saltpetre, then hung up and smoked like ham. Large quantities are sold in thin slices, put up in tins or glasses, in that condition being generally known as "Chipped beef." A popular method of service is to blanch, drain and serve with Cream Sauce. DRIED AND EVAPORATED FRUIT. The great industry of drying and evaporating has made a diet of domestic fruit possible the year round irrespective of climate and season. It is also possible to sell the product at prices within the reach of all classes of people, because of the cheapness of the process and the lower cost of transportation per pound of actual food, as a result of the elimination of the bulk of the water which forms so large a percentage of both fresh and canned fruits. The comparative merits of the open-air "drying" and the indoor "evaporating" processes hinge entirely upon the matter of climate. In California, open-air drying is almost universally employed, as the sections of the state where fruit is dried are practically free from rain and excessive moisture during the drying season. In nearly every other part of the United States, the evaporating process has entirely superseded open-air drying for commercial purposes and has resulted in fruit that keeps better and consequently commands a higher price than sun-dried fruit from the same localities. In drying peaches, apricots and similar fruits they are first cleaned and cut, then placed cup-side up on wooden trays about three by seven feet in size and given a preliminary sulphur bath to sterilize them, before the trays are placed in the sun to dry. In good weather, five or six days are sufficient for thorough curing. The fruit is finally graded and packed in boxes and bags of various sizes. Evaporation. The history of the evaporating process begins about 1868. Two years later Charles Alden patented a tower form, known as the Alden Process, which temporarily achieved great popularity. Since that time many machines have entered the market, and it is said that in Wayne County, N.Y., alone, more than 2,000 small evaporators are used on the farms. The system most in favor now among the larger packers consists of a slat floor with a furnace underneath, the fruit being spread thickly on the floor and dried by the heat rising through it. The newest method is by means of DRYING APRICOTS IN CALIFORNIA A man bends over in a farmyard to spread out large trays full of fruit, a tall stack of which remain off to one side, ready to be placed. Several buildings and a windmill appear in the background. steam pipes running back and forth through the chamber of the evaporator. The advocates of this process claim that the heat is more evenly distributed and the temperature more uniform, avoiding all danger of scorching the fruit. In order to secure the best results of evaporation it is necessary to run the temperature as high as possible without injury to the fruit and to keep the air in rapid circulation throughout the chamber. It is under these conditions that the slight chemical changes in perfectly evaporated fruit take place--the albumen, instead of being slowly dried, is coagulated and greatly assists in the preservation of the fruit with the richness and flavor it possessed in its natural state. After the trays are removed from the evaporator, the fruit is put into bins where it is stirred occasionally and allowed to remain until it has passed through the sweating process. Next comes the grading, by appearance, quality, etc. Apples are generally peeled, cored and sliced by special machines before being passed to the evaporator. Pears and peaches are usually cut in halves and evaporated with or without being peeled. The cores and skins are evaporated separately, but in the same way as the fruit. When properly cured, they possess commercial value in home and foreign markets for the manufacture of jellies and vinegar. Standards, etc. Much trouble formerly arose from the lack of a standard of dryness in evaporated fruit. A bushel of green apples, for example, weighs about 50 lbs. and should make 7 or 8 lbs. of white stock and 4 lbs. of waste--five-sixths of the fruit being water. Apples when thoroughly dried still contain about 30 to 35%--being only half dried, they molded, discolored and fermented or soured. The present food law fixes 27 1/2% as the limit, which has practically eliminated that particular trouble--to the great advantage of the industry as a whole. During the Summer months and in warm climates generally, dried fruit is best kept in cold storage. If in good condition when put in, it will maintain its quality, flavor, etc., for a long time. If held in stores where it is exposed to dampness, it is liable to sour or become moldy. Preparation for the Table. In preparing dried or evaporated fruits such as apples and peaches for the table, the best results are attained by cooking slowly for several hours at a temperature just below the boiling point, enough water being added at first to cover the fruit. Every package of dried fruit should bear printed directions for making pies and for other forms of cooking, as very few housewives know how to use it to the best advantage. See also articles on APPLES (dried), DATES, FIGS, PRUNES, RAISINS, etc. DRIED HERBS, VEGETABLES, etc. See HERBS, BEANS, COMPRESSED VEGETABLES, JULIENNE, LENTILS, PEAS, POTATO CHIPS, etc. DRUMFISH: a Southern sea fish, resembling the black grouper, which averages in weight from one to ten pounds. DUCKS. There are twelve "standard" varieties of domestic ducks raised in this country, but the most popular and abundant is the White Pekin, first imported from China about 1872. It is a large bird, a pair often reaching a total weight of twenty pounds, of delicate flesh and an excellent layer. It may be recognized by the peculiar turned-up effect of its tail and its erect carriage--its legs are set so far back that it walks in an upright position. In a good specimen, the back is long and broad, and the breast round, full and very prominent. The plumage is downy and of creamy or snow-white throughout, and the bill yellow. The "standard" weight of the adult drake is eight pounds and the adult duck seven pounds; that of the young drake and duck, each one pound lighter. The average market weight is about five pounds each. White Pekin Ducks An illustration of two ducks. Next to the Pekin in popularity is the White Aylesbury, a famous English variety, similar in general appearance, excepting the special Pekin effects of carriage and tail, and averaging a little heavier in weight. Other well-known types are the Colored Rouen -- the name probably from Rouen, a city of Normandy, which is famous for its poultry--with the heavy domestic duck shape but with plumage closely resembling that of a wild Mallard duck; the Black Cayuga, a purely American variety, and the Colored and White Muscovy. Ducks are sent to market both dry-picked and scalded, opinions being divided as to the better method. Ducklings are generally in the market from May to November. The older birds then take their place from December to April. The general tests for age and conditions given under the head of POULTRY apply in buying ducks. An additional test for age is found in the windpipe, which can be easily squeezed and moved in a young duck, but which becomes fixed and stiff in older birds. Wild Ducks. The best known varieties of wild ducks are the Canvasback, Mallard, Redhead, Ruddy, Green-winged Teal, Blue-winged Teal, Pintail, Black, Grey, Widgeon and Wood. See Color Page of Canvasback, Mallard and Ruddy, opposite page 218. The epicurean value of the cooked wild duck depends principally upon its diet during life. The delicious flavor of the Canvasback is attributable to its feeding principally upon the eel grass called "Wild celery," which grows plentifully on the Chesapeake shores and along the Great Lakes and western rivers. The proof of this statement is in the fact that the Canvasback when found in parts where the wild celery does not grow, offers no choicer flesh than the more ordinary members of the wild duck family. The delicacy of the flesh of the other varieties named is due to their feeding principally on grain, aquatic plants, small mollusks, etc., avoiding the fish diet which gives the rank taste to the Merganser duck. The last named, the Merganser--also variously known as the Sheldrake or Saw Bill--should always be avoided. Its adherence to a fish diet makes its flesh rank and unpleasant. It may be known by its hooked and saw-toothed bill. The descriptive items of plumage given in the following paragraphs refer, be it understood, only to especially characteristic markings--a fully detailed description of the elaborate costumes of the wild ducks of American habitat would require a good-sized volume exclusively devoted to the subject. Furthermore, in some varieties the plumage varies considerably with the season. The Canvasback takes its name from the plumage of its back--of ashy white, marked with zigzag black lines. It is further distinguished by a very short bill, and a rather long narrow head sloping back from the bill. The crown of the head is a rich chestnut color, with parts nearly black. The average market size is from five to six pounds a pair, sometimes going as high as eight pounds. The female is somewhat smaller than the male. The Mallard is the ancestor of a majority of our domestic ducks of colored plumage. The head and neck of the male are a glossy green and the back brown and grey, shading to black, with blue and white markings on the wings. The female is principally dark brown and buff. The average market weight is five pounds a pair, though it often goes higher. The Red-Head resembles the Canvasback in general appearance, but it averages a little smaller and it also differs from it in several details--the black and white lines on the back are nearly equal in width, giving a silvery appearance; the head is well rounded instead of sloping back from the bill, and there is no black in its coppery chestnut crown. The upper part of the female is a greyish, mottled-looking brown. The Ruddy is again smaller than the Red-Head. The crown of the head and neck are glossy black and the sides of the head are dull white. The upper part of the body is encircled by a band of red brown and the lower part of the back is white with brown bars. It is also distinguished by the stiffness of its tail quills. The upper part of the female is a grey-brown. The Green-Winged Teal is one of the smallest of the wild duck family. The head and neck are chestnut color with green on the sides of the head; the upper back and sides are marked with waving black and white lines, and the lower parts are dark grey-brown. The wings are distinguished by the green patches which give the bird its name. The upper part of the female is mottled brown, with head and neck streaked with light reddish-brown. The Blue-Winged Teal is a little larger than the Green-Winged. The head and neck are dark grey with a white crescent between the eyes, and the back and wings reddish-brown with purple tints. The female is brown and buff in colors. The Pintail is so named because of its long greenish-black tail feathers. The head and throat are of greenish-brown, the neck is especially long and slender, the back is marked with waving black lines and the breast and under parts are white. The upper part of the female is mottled grey, yellow and brown. The tail is shorter than that of the male but the central feathers are sharp-pointed. The Black Duck is about the same size as the female Mallard. The head is a rich brown and the upper part of the body dark, rather dull brown. The Grey Duck has a head streaked with black or brown, the upper part of the back a brownish-grey and the lower part changing to black. The female is smaller and darker. The Widgeon has a black of grey-brown mixed with black and a head white or buff on top and green on the sides. The female is smaller and darker. The Wood Duck is a bird of such elaborate plumage that it would be difficult to name any one or two points as particularly distinguishing it. It is so beautiful that many sportsmen advocate its complete and entire protection as a bird of plumage. DULCIN: (1) a highly sweet coal-tar product of the same character as SACCHARIN (which see). (2) a crystalline sugar compound, resembling that from manna, obtained from several plants. Canvas Back Ruddy Mallard WILD DUCKS A color illustration of three ducks hanging by their feet, each with its own caption. DULSE: an edible red seaweed found on the North Atlantic coast, being especially abundant in New England. It is rough dried in the sun and eaten dry as a relish, cooked with butter to be eaten with fish, etc., or boiled in milk to be served as a vegetable. DUNFISH. See sub-head in article on COD. DURIAN: one of the most important of Malay fruits. It is greenish in color, inclined to oval in shape, about the size of a large cocoanut and the thick skin marked with spicules. Its odor is unpleasant to the novitiate, but the pulpy flesh has a pleasant taste, and the seeds also make good eating when roasted. Durian An illustration of a large round fruit attached to a branch with thin leaves. "DUTCH STANDARD 16 ": is a sugar standard used in the custom-house, in conjunction with the polariscope, to determine the quality of sugar imported and the duty payable. Sugar below it in grade is subject to the Raw Sugar duty; that above it, the higher rate for Refined Sugar. The "16" corresponds to one of a set of sixteen glass bottles or tubes of sugar of various grades of purity and color, originally used by the Dutch government for classing sugars, and generally so employed by other nations also until the introduction of the POLARISCOPE (which see). DYES, Aniline: are put up in convenient packages for dyeing a great variety of articles, from Easter Eggs to clothing and household furnishings. They are based on Aniline, a coal-tar product discovered in 1856. A majority of aniline colors are soluble in water, some in alcohol and some in oil. A few of the water-soluble can be made into oil-soluble. If alcohol or oil soluble colors are desired, it should be designated when ordering. Certain of these dyes are now largely employed as very effective and harmless colors for confectionery, etc. (see COLORS AND COLORING MATTERS). EDAM: one of the best known of Dutch cheeses. See CHEESE. EELS: are found in all countries and climates and in both fresh and salt water, and are in season the year around. The most general classification is into River or "silver," and Sea or "conger." The three best known types are "snig," "sharp-nosed," and "broad-nose." All kinds are very much alike in appearance, and have the same black tough skin. The principal difference is in size, the sea or conger eels sometimes reaching enormous proportions. A small illustration of an eel, shown from the side. EGGS: one of the most generally valuable of food products, because of the many ways in which they are utilized. When lighly cooked, eggs are easily digested and are well suited to sick or delicate people. Boiled hard or fried, they are more difficult of assimilation. A fresh egg is said to equal in nourishment one and a half ounces of meat and one ounce of bread. In ordinary parlance, hen's eggs are always understood when "eggs" are mentioned, but the omnivorous human diet includes also those of various other creatures. There is, for example, a limited consumption of the eggs of ducks, geese and guineafowls, and in some sections of gulls and other wild birds, those of the plover being considered a great delicacy. The eggs of turkeys and, in California, of ostriches are also occasionally eaten, but they are ordinarily too valuable for hatching to use them for the table. Again, terrapin eggs are served with the meat, the eggs of the sturgeon as caviar, those of the shad as "shad roe," etc. These, however, are topics foreign to the article following, which refers to the eggs of domestic hens. There is a great similarity in the proportion of shell, white and yolk in fowls' eggs. Roughly speaking, the shell makes up one-tenth, the yolk three-tenths, and the white about six-tenths. The white is nearly seven-eigths water. The solids of the white are practically all nitrogenous matters, principally albumen. The yolk is about one-half water, one-third fat and the remainder principally nitrogenous matter. The egg meat varies though somewhat in different seasons and conditions. Those received in the spring are generally firmer and fuller than those gathered later in the summer and the thickness of the shells varies in different sections--those of Ohio and Indiana, for example, being generally harder and thicker than those of Michigan and New York--owing, perhaps, to the difference in the gravel of the soil. All eggs are examined by "candling." The process, in a cold storage house, is performed in a dark room where electric light spots glow inside dark green metal shades, each with a single open space or hole. The egg is placed against this hole and an electric ray penetrates its very being. For months during the egg gathering season, a force of men stand at these light holes, candling eggs with marvelous rapidity and grading them in boxes which an elevator is carrying ceaselessly to cold storage rooms. New-laid eggs appear semi-transparent, of a uniform pale pinkish tint, with only a very small air-chamber--a separation of the skin from the shell, filled with air. If incubation has begun, a dark spot is visible, increasing in size in proportion to the length of incubation, and the entire contents appear cloudy, becoming worse as the egg grows older. Other similar spots are caused by fungus growth. A rotten egg is dark-colored, almost opaque. The air-chamber also becomes larger with age. There are various degrees of badness classified in the trade by different colors. Those absolutely unfit for food are used in the tanning industry. A great many eggs are not "full"--the fact does not mean that the egg is not a good product, but it must not be rated as either a "fancy fresh" or a "fresh-gathered extra." Again there are "checks." A "check" is an egg that has met with an accident that has cracked the shell so slightly that the crack is ordinarily invisible--the egg is not necessarily bad, but it must not be sold at the same price as a perfect one. A writer in the New England Grocer says of the egg trade: "The original owners of the eggs know as little about the history of their distribution as do the men and women who finally devour them. "To these first and last persons who handle the product, the eggs are either good or bad, and there's an end on't! But to the man who handles them between the farm and the breakfast table there are Fancy Fresh, Fresh Gathered, Storage Packed. Storage, Limed, Known Marks, Extras, Firsts, Seconds, Dirties, Checks, etc. The distinctions become very necessary when one realizes that practically the whole enormous egg business is conducted by telegraph and that the dealer who purchases a carload of eggs has no opportunity to examine them until they arrive." With the exception of those which, because of their proximity to a large city, can profitably be shipped by express, eggs always travel in refrigerator cars--winter as well as summer, for the heavy construction of the perambulating ice-chests is equally serviceable for protection against cold and heat. One carload contains four hundred cases, or one hundred and forty-four thousand eggs. On large poultry farms, eggs are produced and handled very much as the product of any other factory--the poultry man knows his cost of production by dozen or case, the operative cost, etc., etc., just as does his contemporary in any other line of business--but the greater part of the country's egg supply is still represented by accumulations from thousands of general farmers scattered all over the country. "The history of one of these farm eggs reads like 'a gathering of the clans.' The hen that laid it may be the property of a small farmer in a Western state, located fifty or a hundred miles from the nearest good-sized town. The egg is one of a dozen that the farmer takes to the nearest village store and either sells for a small sum of money or barters for sugar, calico, tobacco or some other commodity that he needs more than he needs eggs. "Other farmers in the neighborhood are doing the same and the store is thus the recruiting station for a goodly company of eggs that must necessarily find a market somewhere else. These eggs are sent to a larger center, where they pass into the control of a large, or small, shipper who mobilizes them, to continue the figure, no longer by companies but by battalions, regiments and armies--i.e., carloads. "When the shipper has a carload of eggs ready for the eastern market, he telegraphs the fact to an eastern dealer. A certain amount of dickering goes on over the wire, and the eggs are finally sent East. The eggs are not though for immediate consumption, hence the necessity for the refrigerator car and the storage warehouse to retain the condition in which they were purchased. "Comparatively few eggs are found to be bad, and all shipments are now sold 'at mark,' a technical way of saying that a case of eggs at wholesale is supposed to be within a small percentage of the requirements or standard of each grade, and there is no rebate for damaged eggs. Formerly there was a rebate during a part of the year that was called the 'loss off' season, because a certain percentage of the eggs were not expected to come up to the standard of the various grades. "There are very few disputes between shippers and dealers that are not settled peaceably between the persons directly concerned, but occasionally they form the basis of expert examination by either the Chamber of Commerce or Fruit and Produce Exchange inspectors, sometimes indeed getting as far as the Arbitration Committee." There is a wide difference in the weight of eggs--although all cooking receipts say "take two eggs," or whatever number seems suitable, without any allowance for variations in size! The breeds that lay the largest eggs, averaging seven to a pound, are the Black Spanish, Light Brahma, Houdan, La Flèche, and Crève Cœur. Eggs of medium size and weight, averaging eight or nine to a pound, are laid by the Leghorn, Cochin, Minorca, Red Cap, Poland, Dorking and Games. Hamburg eggs average about ten to the pound. There is thus a difference of three eggs in one pound weight. The average weight of twenty eggs laid by different breeds is 2 1/8 pounds. The most popular types of fowls for egg-producing are Leghorns, Minorcas, Black Spanish, Hamburgs and Red Caps, their average total output being larger than from other varieties. The size of the egg varies also with the care and treatment of the fowls. Those from the South formerly averaged small for all breeds, but a marked improvement has been noticeable during recent years. A bulletin of the North Carolina station of the U. S. Department of Agriculture gives the following figures as the results of tests made to ascertain the comparative values of eggs from a number of Southern-bred standard fowls, both as pullets and mature hens. The first named type, Single Comb Brown Leghorn Pullets, is taken as the starting point--the eggs from the others following being found of higher food value to the extent of the percentage named. For example, if eggs from the Single Comb Brown Leghorn Pullets were at that time worth 30 cents a dozen, and those from Single Comb Brown Leghorn Hens were worth 20% more, or 36 cents a dozen, and those from the Light Brahma Hens, 60% more, were worth 48 cents a dozen. These averages are subject to variations as a result of differences in feeding and locality. Per Cent. Greater Value Single Comb brown Leghorn Pullets............. *** Single Comb Brown Leghorn Hens................ 20.7 Silver-Laced Wyandotte Pullets................ 23. Light Brahma Pullets.......................... 30. Late-hatched Barred Plymouth Rock Hens........ 30.4 White Wyandotte Hens.......................... 30.4 White Wyandotte Pullets....................... 30.4 White Plymouth Rock Pullets................... 31.1 Per Cent. Greater Value Buff Cochin Hens.............................. 31.8 Black Langshan Pullets........................ 31.8 Barred Plymouth Rock Pullets.................. 34.8 Barred Plymouth Rock Hens..................... 40. Buff Cochin and Black Langshan Pullets........ 47.2 Black Minorca Pullets......................... 47.2 Black Langshan Hens........................... 51.4 Light Brahma Hens............................. 60. By far the greater part of the eggs held over for future use are kept in condition in cold storage, but when this is impossible they may be preserved by immersion in a solution of water-glass ( Sodium and Potassium Silicate ). Experiments, both in a practical way and in laboratories, have demonstrated that a 10% solution of water-glass will preserve them so effectively that even at the end of three or four months they will appear fresh. In most packed eggs, the yolk soon settles to one side, and the egg is then inferior in quality, but in those preserved for three and a half months in water-glass, the yolk retained its normal position. One gallon of the solution is sufficient for fifty dozen eggs if they are properly packed. Eggs varnished with vaseline or preserved in limewater also keep well but the former is too laborious and the latter sometimes communicates a disagreeable odor and taste. Eggs in cold storage are held at temperature ranging between a little below and a little above the freezing point. They are seldom kept longer than six months, but under good conditions they will retain a fairly fresh flavor for a year or more, losing however in weight from the evaporation of the whites. Eggs enter into commerce in many forms in addition to those in the shell--including whole eggs removed from the shell and stored in cans at a little below the freezing point, powdered yolks, crystallized whites, desiccated eggs, etc. Large quantities of egg substitute are consumed in mining camps and desert regions. Some of these consist chiefly of starch, others are of animal origin. They are of varying degrees of value. Fresh eggs should be kept in a dry, cool place free from any strong or objectionable odor. If packed in salt or sawdust they will remain fresh longer than if exposed to the air. Boiling Eggs. There are other ways of boiling eggs than by their immersion for a certain number of minutes in boiling water. A more pleasing result can be obtained, EGG PLANT A color illustration of a single whole eggplant and several horizontal slices of eggplant. An inlaid cut shows three rows of cultivated eggplants that have not yet been harvested. (1) by placing them in cold water and gradually bringing it to a boil, removing them when the boiling point has been reached, or (2) by placing them in boiling water and then turning the gas flame out, or setting the pot well back on the range, removing the eggs in from seven to ten minutes. By either procedure, the white will be tender and jelly-like instead of the somewhat tough and leathery consistence of the ordinary boiled egg. Gathering Eggplants A man in an eggplant field bends over one plant to remove the fruit. A greenhouse and several other buildings can be seen in the distance. EGGPLANT (see Color Page ): a fruit-vegetable which is growing in popularity in this country. In many parts of the tropics it is a staple and important article of diet. There are several varieties of the plant, yielding fruit of varying qualities and of different colors, shapes and sizes. The best known type is somewhat egg-shaped, three to five inches in diameter and from light purple to black in color. It is generally fried in slices, but is even more palatable when cut in one-inch cubes. It is also excellent stewed. ELDER: a bush bearing flat clusters of berries of a deep purlple color. Elderberry Wine is prized for its medicinal properties, and is also employed in the manufacture of imitation Port. ELEME: a Turkish word for "selected," as Eleme figs (see FIGS). EMERY: an impure hard black or greyish-black granular corundum, employed in pulverized form for polishing and grinding metals, etc. Emery Cloth or Paper is coated with a mixture of emery powder and glue. The colored varieties of corundum include the sapphire and several other precious stones. ENDIVE, Cichorium Endivia: a salad plant of the Chicory family and closely allied to the dandelion, originally brought from China to Europe in the sixteenth century. The two principal types under cultivation are those known to gardeners as "Curly Endive," with narrow, feathery leaves, and "Broad-leafed" or "Batavian" Endive, with leaves large and rather broad, generally twisted and waved and with thick white midribs. In Eastern markets, Curly Endive and other small leafed varieties are generally known as Chicory (which see) because of their resemblance to Common Chicory, and Broad-leafed Endive by the French title of Escarole. The title Endive is reserved for the winter-grown heads of the Witloof or Brussels Chicory, a sub-variety of the "Escarole" An illustration of a large leafy vegetable. Madgeburg Large-Rooted Chicory, which onsist of a number of a number of thick creamy-white leaves from four to six inches in length and one to two inches in width, pressed tightly together and generally tapering to a point. Curly Endive, or Chicory, is grown both for summer and winter markets, generally blanched more or less in cultivation. Broad-leafed Endive, or Escarole, is more highly considered as a winter than a summer salad but it is raised for both seasons, its natural tendency to blanched centers being accentuated by gardeners. Witloof Chicory, or Endive, is a winter salad exclusively and is obtained by cutting off the summer tops of the plant, setting the roots in sand in cellars, etc., and forcing the desired new growth. It is eaten both raw and cooked. For salad purposes it should be very crisp as otherwise it is liable to be too bitter. The greater part of the Eastern supply is imported from Europe. "Endive" An illustration of a stalky vegetable. ENTREE, ENTREMET. See list of Culinary Terms in APPENDIX. ERBSWURST: an important army ration, originated in Germany. It consists of a mixture of pea-pulp, bacon and seasoning. ESCAPERNONG: an Indian name from which is derived the title of the best known Southern grape, the SCUPPERNONG (which see). ESCAROLE. See article on ENDIVE. ESPAGNOLE: one of the pricipal fundamental sauces in cookery and used as a basis for many brown sauces. It contains the essence of a variety of articles--ham, veal and beef, several vegetables, a number of herbs and spices, fowls (old birds are taken for the purpose) and wine. The proper cooking, preparation, etc., require several hours . ESSENTIAL OILS, or Volatile Oils. See general article on OILS. EVAPORATED FRUITS, Etc. See DRIED AND EVAPORATED FRUITS. EXTRACTS: as familiar to the average retailer and consumer, consist of a certain percentage of true extract or essence, or its chemical imitation, in an alcoholic solution. The aromatic principles of a great many spices, nuts, herbs, fruits, etc., and some flowers, are thus marketed, among the best known of true extracts being almond, cinnamon, cloves, ginger, lemon, nutmeg, orange, peppermint, pistachio, rose, spearmint, vanilla, violet and wintergreen. A majority of natural essences are obtained by extracting the essential oil from the blossoms, fruit, roots, etc., or the whole plants, by expression, absorption, distillation, or maceration. The first method, that of Expression, can only be employed when the oil is very plentiful and easily obtained, as in lemon peel (see LEMON OIL). The second, Absorption, is generally accomplished by steeping in alcohol, as vanilla beans (see VANILLA EXTRACT). The third, Distillation (which see) is sometimes comparatively easy, as when following Maceration in making peppermint extract, etc. (see MINT), but in many cases it requires expert chemical knowledge and the erection of costly stills. The distinctive flavors of nearly all fruits, in the popular acceptance of the word, are very desirable adjuncts to many food preparations, but unfortunately there are only a few from which it is practicable to obtain a concentrated flavor extract of the necessary strength. Among those which lend themselves readily to the manufacture of "pure" extracts the most important are lemons, oranges and vanilla beans. A majority of other, concentrated fruit flavors, as banana, cherry, currant, peach, pineapple, raspberry and strawberry, are produced by chemical combinations of compound ethers, together with special oils, etc, the desired colors being generally obtained by the use of coal-tar dyes. Among the ethers most generally employed are Acetic and Butyric (which see). The chief factors in the production of artificial banana and pineapple extract, and also important in the maufacture of strawberry extract, are amyl-acetate and amyl-butyrate, Amyl Alcohol being the principle constituent of that part of the alcohol obtained by the distillation of grain and potato starch, etc., which is popularly known in this country as "fusel oil" and in Europe generally by the title of "potato oil. " Artificial extracts do not as a rule possess the delicacy of the fruit flavor, but they get sufficiently close to it to be of real service and convenience when true essences are unobtainable. EXTRACT OF MEAT. See special article on MEAT EXTRACT. FALERNIAN WINE "Falernian Wine" is a familiar expression--the reference is to the famous wines of ancient Rome produced in the district of Falernus, near the Massican Hills. FARINA. The word Farina indicated properly the flour of any grain, starch, root, etc., but as used generally in this country it signifies either a coarse "flour" from corn (maize), used principally for making puddings and desserts, or a wheat "cereal" for breakfast purposes, etc. Wheat "farina" corresponds to the product known in Europe as Semolina or Semola. It consists of very fine wheat "middlings"-- the small particles of wheat left in the bolting machine after the flour has been passed through its meshes. The best is that obtained in the milling of the very hard-grained wheats. Semolina is perhaps most popular in France where it is used in a great many ways, including a favorite variety of fine wheat bread known as pain de gruau, etc. In Italy it is used with other grains and meal in making POLENTA (which see). It is the original macaroni "flour." FEME SOLE TRADER: is the legal term applied to a woman who secures a license to carry on business in her own name without liability for the debts of her husband and without rendering her husband liable for her own. FENNEL. Common Garden or Sweet Fennel is a plant chiefly cultivated for its leaves which are consumed both fresh--for garnishing, as a salad, etc.--and cooked as a vegetable, in the latter case generally tied in bunches and boiled with fish and certain other foods. It is very popular in Italy, especially in the vicinity of Naples. The seeds are also used for seasoning and in the manufacture of liqueurs. Florence Fennel is a different variety, grown principally for the bulbous lower parts of the leaf stalks, which are usually eaten boiled. In flavor it somewhat resembles celery but is sweeter. Florence Fennel An illustration of several bulbous vegetables, arranged in two rows. FENUGREEK: is a herb which resembles clover. Its seeds are used as an ingredient of curry powder. Separately, they are strong, bitter and of unpleasant flavor. FERMENTATION: in its broadest sense, is the chemical change by which organic substances are decomposed and re-combined in new substances or compounds. Ferments are of two clasess--"organized," or living, as yeast fungi, lactic bacteria, etc., and "unorganized," as diastase, pepsin, etc. In its most widely used significance, fermentation is the chemical change produced in substances, more or less liquid, containing some sugary solution, by which the latter is converted into a liquid, alcohol, and a gas, carbon-dioxide (see article on YEAST). Wine and beer fermentation is called Vinous. Under favorable conditions of temperature, etc., fermentation continues until the growth of the yeast cells is stopped by the exhaustion of the particular chemical components adapted for their subsistence, or by the formation of other substances in quantities inimical to their growth. As already noted, alcohol is one of the chief results of vinous fermentation, but it is itself adverse to yeast growth, and will stop it entirely, and with it fermentation, if a sufficient quantity is added to the liquid, or formed in it. Vinous fermentation is followed under certain conditions by acetous fermentation --a class of acetic bacteria oxidizing the alcohol and producing vinegar. The "souring" of milk is lactic fermentation --the milk sugar being converted by the action of lactic bacteria into lactic acid. See article on BACTERIA. Putrefaction of meat, etc., is Putrefactire Fermentation. FETTICUS: one of the many names for CORN SALAD (which see). FIG: the fruit of the fig tree, of which there are several hundred varieties. It consists of a pulp containing about 60% sugar, enclosed in a thin skin varying in color from nearly white to dark purplish or black. Figs are best known to the average consumer in their dried condition. Next in point of popularity are those preserved in syrup, brandy, maraschino, etc., and in FIG Tree and Fruit (fresh and dried) A color illustration of a tree with a curving trunk. An inlaid cut features two illustrations of a pear-shaped fruit--one still attached to a leafy twig and one cut in half to show the interior of the fruit--and an illustration of dried fruit. "marmalade" form. There is also a fair demand for Stuffed Figs, filled with nut meats mixed with chopped figs or with any of the materials used in the stuffing of dates. The fresh fruit is too perishable an article for handling by any other than "fancy" fruit stores, except in districts with a large Latin population. Some choice qualities of both the "plain" and "stuffed" are put up in fancy boxes, baskets, jars, etc., but the greater part of the supply, from the very finest "Smyrna Extra Fancy 3-in Layers" to the more ordinary types, come in bulk, chiefly in boxes, but also in drums, bags, etc. The greater part of the consumption of dried figs is of the imported variety, chiefly from Asia Minor, of which Smyrna is the principal seaport--hence the name "Smyrna Figs." Greece and Italy supply a minor quantity and there is a constantly increasing production in California and the South. figs can be kept without deterioration for from eight to twelve weeks if stored temperature of about 40° Fahr. are in Europe utilized in large quantities in the manufacture of Germany, as a substitute for coffee. The Two principal types of "Smyrna Figs"--which set the quality all fig-producing countries--are those classed as Eleme, the best known pulled figs," and called also "Layer Figs" because of the style of packing, and . "Eleme" is a Turkish word signifying "selected." "Locoum" figs are those packed in the shape of cubes--Locoum being the Turkish name for a square-shaped sweetmeat. The title also stands for quality, because only thick and meaty figs can be packed in Locoum style. "(Smyrna) Naturals" are the inferior fruits, shipped loose in bags and boxes. The term "natural" is applied because they are not compressed in packing. In packing Eleme Figs, the fruit is first "pulled" and drawn between the fingers and thumb into a flat disk-like form, and then the back part is split to allow still more spreading. In "pulling," the "eye" part is brought into the center of the disk. The "pulled" figs are then placed in "layers" in boxes and the piling up of the boxes on each other presses the contents. A few bay leaves are generally placed on top of the filled boxes, partly for the flavor and partly to exclude insects. Eleme or Layer Figs are graded from "choice" to "extra fancy," etc., and by size, 1 3/4 in. to 3 in., etc. Locoum Figs--American style (rounded) An illustration of square sweets with rounded corners packed in a square box. Locoum Figs--London Style (squared) An illustration of square sweets packed in a square box. Layer Figs An illustration of round, flat sweets packed overlapping each other in a square box. A Smyrna Fig Packing establishment A large group of people sit at tables in a room with high ceilings, packing small fruits from bowls in front of them into square boxes. For Locoum Figs, the fruit is merely pressed between the fingers to somewhat cubical shape. The square-shaped Locoum-packing shown in the center box in the illustration at the foot of page 233 is generally known as the "English" or "London" style. It has the advantage that the absence of air-passages is an additional safeguard against the deterioration of the fruit. The round or "American" packing is also frequently known in the trade by the specific title of "Pulled Figs." The English style is usually preferred in New England markets, but elsewhere the American is the best selling type of Locoum figs. The greater part of the basket and carton output is further generally described as "washed." Most of the fig trees grown in Asia Minor are of the varieties which require "caprification." They bear only female blossoms, and these are hidden inside the immature fruit. The only method of fertilizing the fruit is by means of the fig wasp, a little insect which is found abundantly in the fruit of the wild fig, known as the "Caprifig." When the wasp emerges from the ripened caprifig in which she has developed to maturity, she seeks an immature caprifig to enter for the purpose of depositing her eggs in it. If a cultivated fig tree is nearby, she may enter its immature fruit by mistake--and as she is covered with the pollen of the caprifig, she unwittingly fertilizes its numerous blossoms by piercing their bases and thus brings the fruit to maturity. Where caprifigs grow in the vicinity of "Smyrna" trees, the wasps will of their own accord fertilize the fruit of the latter with more or less thoroughness, but to insure complete and uniform fertilization of the entire crop, growers take charge of the caprification themselves by attaching caprifigs to reeds and suspending them over the fruiting branches of the cultivated trees. Grecian Figs are chiefly of varieties similar to the "Smyrna" and require caprification. The fruit is generally of inferior quality. After drying, it is usually strung on reeds, bent into "wheels," of various shapes and containing each from fifty to several hundred, and packed in large cases. Italian Figs are principally of types which do not need caprification. The drying is frequently by artificial heat and is facilitated by splitting the fruit. A popular style is to insert an almond or piece of citron in the pulp after drying. Grecian and Italian figs are cut as they ripen, instead of being allowed to fall as in Asia Minor. A "wheel" of Greek figs An illustration of a mandala-shaped pendant made of figs. California Figs. Fig culture has become an industry of considerable importance in California. The greater part of the crop is dried, generally in the sun, and the variety chiefly grown for that purpose is known as the Adriatic. The best qualities are packed in small cartons with fancy ribbons. Next in importance are Preserved Figs, generally the fruit of the "Magnolia" or Brunswick Fig. The self-pollinating trees which until recently have been exclusively cultivated in California, do not produce fruit to compare in quality with the fine imported Smyrna product, but during the last few years a considerable number of true Smyrna Fig trees have been successfully grown there. Owing to the necessity of caprification, it was formerly impossible to fertilize the blossoms of these trees in California, but a number of Caprifig trees have been imported and a few of these are planted in each "Smyrna Fig" orchard, in order to breed the necessary supply of fig wasps, and to afford them a suitable place to sojourn during the winter. Southern Figs are most familiar to consumers in the form of skinless fig preserves put up in syrup. The skin of the fruit is removed by chemical or mechanical means--during the entire process of preserving, the fig is not touched by human hands after the preparatory processes of sorting and inspecting the fresh fruit. The variety known locally as the "Magnolia," though really of the Brunswick type, is the most widely cultivated in the South. It begins to ripen about the middle of June, continuing until frost. The last decade has seen thousands of acres of land sold in Texas on the strength of its adaptability for the Magnolia fig crop, and millions of the trees have been planted. Other figs grown to a considerable extent in the South are, in Texas, the Mission Black, known locally as the "Brunswick" or the "Black California," and, in Louisiana, the Brown Marseilles, known locally as the "Celeste," and the White Marseilles, known locally as the "New French." FILBERTS or Hazel Nuts ( See Color Page Opposite 414): the fruit of the Hazel bush or tree, growing in clusters, each enveloped in a husk which opens as the nut ripens. Filberts, "full-beards," are those with fringed husks extending beyond the nuts; Hazels, "hoods," have husks shorter than the nuts. When ripe and deprived of the husks, only an expert can tell the difference, as there are several styles and sizes of each. In this country they are all classed as "filberts." The two chief varieties of the American nut are the "Common" and "Beaked." The former is the more desirable, its kernel being sweet and pleasing in flavor, but it is too small to be of much commercial value. The best known imported varieties are the Sicily and Naples, the bulk of the supply coming from Sicily. One Naples type is distinguished by its large oblong shape. "Barcelona-Nuts" are hazel nuts, generally kiln-dried, from Barcelona, Spain. FILLET or Filet: a market term for the Tenderloin (see BEEF and PORK). Also a culinary term for a strip or band of meat without bone. FINES HERBES: a French culinary term for a combination of Chervil, Chives, Parsley, etc. "FINGER ROLLS," Salt Sticks, Soup Sticks: Italian bread made in stick form, from twelve to eighteen inches long. The term is also applied to finger-shapes of crusty bread, cut in various sizes and thicknesses, to be eaten with soup. FININGS and Fining. See matter following title of CLARIFICATION. FINNAN HADDIE or Findon Haddie: the popular title for smoked haddock--the name being after the fishing village of Findon, Scotland. It is marketed in cans and boxes and is considered best during the winter months. It is an excellent breakfast dish. The supply was formerly almost entirely imported, but now some of the finest comes from New England. FIRKIN. See tables of Weights and Measures in APPENDIX. FISH. The annual catch of fish in the United States--sea, lakes and rivers--averages about 2,200,000,000 pounds, most of which is consumed in this country. To obtain the actual quantity of food represented, the figures must be considerably reduced, as the loss of weight in dressing varies from 15% to 50%. To the net total is added the importation of nearly 200,000,000 pounds--fresh, salted, canned, etc. The final figures sound very impressive, but when due allowance is made for the large per capita consumption by the general public. Public opinion has been enlightened from time to time by medical and other scientific advocacy of a greater consumption of fish as especially suited to the semi-sedentary habits and lives of a very large percentage of the population, and the result has undoubtedly been an increased appreciation and consumption, but it remains true that, by probably the majority, fish is still looked upon as an "extra" course, an exclusively Friday meat or, in the case of canned goods, as an emergency item. A more general use of fish would tend to decrease the cost of living by relieving the pressure of our ever-increasing numbers on the beef supply. It is somewhat curious to note the tenacity of certain erroneous impressions concerning fish as a food. It is still commonly believed that it is an especially good brain stimulant because of the phosphorus contained in the flesh. As a matter of fact, fish contains little if any more phosphorus than beef, and even if it did, there is no reason to believe that it would therefore exercise any perceptible influence on the brain. On the other hand, many people undoubtedly eschew fish because they fear ptomaine poisoning--yet, under conditions of proper care and cleanliness, there is no more danger of poisoning from fish than from many other articles of food. A Japanese Fish Market An illustration of a group of people standing around a pile of fish. One man stands on a pedestal among the fish, holding a long stick and looking official. Stripped of all prejudices and traditions, fish is very similar to lean beef in its food composition. The many varieties differ considerably in their proportions of the different elements, but they are all similar in that they supply the human system with a considerable percentage of protein--muscle and flesh building nutrients. The fish which most closely correspond with the average beef percentage of protein are the halibut, pollack, Maine salmon and sturgeon. Those exceeding the beef average in protein include: cod-steaks, smoked and salted cod, smoked and salted halibut, smoked and salted herring, mackerel, California salmon and canned sardines. A third list of those averaging a little below in protein percentage, takes in black bass, sea bass, bluefish, butterfish, cusk, fresh herring, fresh mackerel, yellow perch, pickerel, pompano, redsnapper, shad, trout, weakfish and whitefish. The average of protein of all fish sold, including the lesser varieties, is about two-thirds of that of beef. It will be noted that in the fourth paragraph fish was described as tallying closely with lean beef. The average cut of beef contains a considerable percentage of fat, but this element is found in similar portions in comparatively few varieties of fish--the majority having more water and less fat. There are, however, a number of fish which contain as much fat as such meats as young chickens, veal, etc.--among them being butterfish, smoked or salted halibut, smoked or salted herring, mackerel, salmon, canned sardines, trout and turbot--and a few which equal medium-fat beef in fat percentage, chief among them being California salmon, smoked and salted halibut and salted and canned mackerel--the last-named indeed frequently exceeding it in fat. The fat of beef is, though, generally more easily digested than that of fish. Other fish which contain a fair proportion of fat are alewife, striped bass, fresh-smoked haddock, fresh halibut, fresh herring, mullet, pompano, porgy, shad and whitefish. Shellfish, being treated under a separate head, have not been included in these comparisons. The digestibility of fish varies with the different varieties, but as a general rule it may be stated that those with the smaller amount of fat are the more easily digested, and that fresh fish, though less rich in food values, is more easily assimilated than that smoked or dried. Canned uncured fish corresponds very closely in digestibility with the fresh fish of the same variety. In buying fish, freshness should be insisted on as essential. The flesh should be firm and the skin and eyes bright. Avoid any whose meat is so soft that the pressure of the finger leaves a mark. Cleanliness both in storing and handling are very important. Most fish are at their best just before spawning time, except shad, which is considered the choicest when spawning; and when very fresh, except halibut, which improves in flavor with a little age. After spawning, fish loses greatly in quality--the flavor is less desirable and the flesh becomes soft. It should be remembered that the ordinary temperature of a cooling room or refrigerator is not cold enough to keep fresh fish in prime condition. It should instead be buried in fine cracked ice. For shipment and storage, it is frequently frozen into blocks of ice. All fish should be thoroughly cleaned before cooking. Dried, Salted, Smoked and Pickled fish should always be kept out of the sun and as cool as possible. If the brine dries out or leaks away in transit ot in the cellar, rebrine them at once. Keep the barrel covered and use a special fish fork for handling the fish. Smoked and cured fish of all kinds are best in cold weather. Canned fish, as also all other kinds of canned goods, should be emptied into a china or glass vessel or dish when the can is opened--it should never be left in the can. Of the fresh fish, striped bass, butterfish, cod, cusk, eels, haddock, halibut, kingfish, Spanish mackerel, pollack, Pacific salmon, imported sole and sturgeon are found in the eastern market all the year round. The others are, generally, in season in accordance with the following list: ANGEL, or Moon Fish --July and August. BASS: Lake or Black --June to December. Sea --May to October. BLACKFISH, or Tautog --April to October. BLUEFISH--May to October. BLOATERS--October to April. BONITO--June to October. CARP, Common or Buffalo -- Middle of July to October. German --October to April. CODFISH TONGUES AND SOUNDS--October to May. FLOUNDERS--Spring and Summer. FROST-FISH--October to March. GRAYLING--September to January. GROUPER--November to March. HAKE--See Whiting. HERRING--October to April. LAFAYETTE--Middle of August to November. LAMPREY--April to September. MULLET--June to October. MUSCALLONGE--June to December. PERCH--September to May. PICKEREL--June to December. PIKE--September to April. POMPANO--May, July, latter half of November and December. PORGY--June 15 to October 15. REDSNAPPER--October to middle of July. SALMON (Kennebec)--May 15 to September 30. SHAD--January to June. SHEEPSHEAD--June 15 to November 15. SKATE, or Ray Fish --September to June. SMELT--August 15 to April 15. SPOTFISH--August to May. TROUT, American --January to middle of July. English --January to March. Brook --April to August. TURBOT, American --January to March. English --January to March. WEAKFISH--May 15 to October 15. WHITEBAIT (imported)--March to August. WHITEFISH--November to July. WHITING, or Silver Hake --September to January. See also additional matter concerning the fish mentioned in their respective alphabetical positions. FISH CULTURE or Pisciculture. Propagation of the principal food fishes is conducted on a steadily expanding scale in the United States and the results long ago demonstrated the immense national profit derived. The salmon, the shad and many other important fishes would in all probability be practically extinct to-day if the hatcheries had not supplied billions of young fish to help take the place of those harvested from the waters for human consumption. Such assistance is especially necessary in the case of all fresh-water fish and such salt-water fish as the salmon and shad, which leave the ocean to deposit their spawn in river beds and thus make total extermination possible. The greater part of the work is now performed under the jurisdiction of the U. S. Fisheries Commission, supplemented by that of the State Fisheries Commissions and various sportsmen's associations and clubs. The U. S. Fisheries Commission maintains a number of hatcheries along the coast, in the chief shad and salmon rivers, at various points along the Great Lakes, etc. Their product is variously utilized--part of it is distributed in the natural spawning grounds of the immediate vicinity; great quantities are shipped, principally as "fry" and "fingerlings," to all parts of the country for the stocking and replenishing of ponds, rivers, lakes, etc., and a small percentage are brought to maturity for breeding purposes. The fish most extensively cultivated are the various varieties of salmon, shad, cod, flounder, whitefish, trout, perch, pollack, smelt, bass, lobster, oyster, clam and terrapin. In addition to helping replenish the natural supply, fish culture has resulted in creating new sources of food by introducing valuable varieties into waters in which they were previously unknown. Shad, for example, was formerly unknown on the Pacific coast, but it is now nearly as plentiful there as on the Atlantic. The eggs are obtained from many sources--purchassed from fishermen, taken from fish caught for the purpose, obtained from fish specially bred, etc. They are first Main Deck of the Fisheries Steamer Fish Hatch, equipped for hatching shad A man in a white uniform checks a row of tanks in a small room. fertilized and then placed in the hatchery. With some varieties, the hatching apparatus consists of wire trays held in troughs of varying size--a single tray of the kind generally used for salmon, about 1 foot wide and 2 feet long, will hold two gallons, or 30,000, of salmon eggs. Others, as for whitefish, shad, lobsters, etc., generally consist of glass jars, similar to those shown in the accompanying illustration, from which the "fry" as hatched are discharged into glass tanks. The "fry" may be distributed as such or, according to circumstances, held in troughs or artificial ponds or enclosures until six or seven months old. A seven months trough-raised "fingerling" salmon averages from 2 1/2 to 3 inches in length. During the year ending June 30, 1909, the U. S. Fisheries Commission distributed 724,558,703 eggs, 2,370,975,068 "fry" and 11,598,140 fingerlings, yearlings and adults. FISH GLUE. See general article on GLUE. FLAGEOLETS: shelled green young kidney beans, generally put up in bottles or cans, but also sold dried to a limited extent. The beans of the best grades are of special green-seeded varieties. FLATFISH: fish with flattened bodies and both eyes on the upper, more highly colored side, as the Flounder, Halibut, Plaice, etc. (1) Kingfish (2)Striped Bass (3) Sea Bass (4) Whiting (5) Flounder FISH A color illustration of five different fish, each labeled with a number. FLAVORS, or Flavoring Extracts. See EXTRACTS. FLAVORS OF FOOD. See sub-head in general article on FOOD VALUES. FLAX: is the soft silky fibre of the flax plant, an annual which grows to a height of about two feet and is widely cultivated in different parts of the world, principally in temperate climates. It is made into linen and employed also in the manufacture of fine writing papers, known as "linen" and "bond," and some varieties of cordage, etc. FLAXSEED: the small flat mucilaginous seed of the flax plant, better known as linseed --see LINSEED MEAL and LINSEED OIL. "Flaxseed tea" is a decoction of the boiled seed. FLIES: are the natural enemies of the grocer and his stock--and of the housewife and her peace. They destroy goods, discourage trade and transfer disease. Screen every door and window and then catch those which intrude by fly-paper--screened or covered if possible, for dead flies are never attractive. FLIP: a mulled beverage of spirits or ale, sweetened and flavored with spices, etc., drunk hot. FLITCH of Bacon: the English name for a whole side of salt pork. The term is also sometimes applied to any large piece of side meat. FLORENCE OIL: a title sometimes used for high grade Olive Oil (which see). FLOUNDER, or Flatfish ( See Color Page opposite 240): a common and well-known flatfish found at the mouths of rivers and along the coast. It varies in size from very small--five to the pound--to five pounds each. The spring and summer are the principal market seasons. The flesh is excellent--the fish being often skinned, filleted and served as "sole." The Common or Winter Flounder, is the variety generally known under the title of "Flounder," but there are numerous other types, prominent among them being the Dab, the Four-Spotted flounder and the California flounder. FLOUR: is grain of any kind ground to fine powder, as wheat flour, rye flour, etc. In general use, except when otherwise specified, the term signifies wheat flour. Flour is an article of prime importance to the grocer, as the quality which he furnishes has a direct effect on the growth of his trade, especially in country districts. Great care should therefore be taken to purchase reliable brands which do not vary in quality and of which the stock can be constantly renewed. In manufacture, the wheat is thorougly cleaned, crushed by steel rolls into meal ("whole meal") and sifted or "bolted" through silk cloths to separate the "flour" from the germs and bran (see WHEAT). The "flour" is then ground, sifted and purified--once or several times, according to the grade required. The following rules may be used as preliminary tests for flour: First, look at its color. If for bread making especially, it should be creamy-white, for this generally indicates a strong flour. If for pastry, a starchy-white color is acceptable, as this indicates a soft flour. If it is so white as to have a bluish or grayish cast, or if it contains small black or bran specks, it is not desirable for either purpose. Next, examine its adhesiveness. Make a dough by mixing a small quantity with water. If it works dry and elastic, it is good; if soft and sticky, it is poor. If when pulled apart it breaks short, it is deficient in gluten and therefore not suitable for bread making, though if it is good in other respects it may be satisfactory for pastry, etc. If the dough is tough and tenacious, it shows a large percentage of gluten. The place where flour is stored must be moderately cool, dry, well-lighted, airy and never exposed to a freezing temperature nor to excessive heat. An even temperature of 70° to 75° Fahr., is best if it is to be used within six months; that to be held longer, should be kept in a cooler temperature. Whether in barrels or sacks, etc., it should always be placed on a rack at least two inches from the floor in order to allow a current of air to pass under and prevent dampness and it should not be placed in contact with grain or other substances which are liable to generate heat. Flour is peculiarly sensitive to atmospheric influences--hence it should never be stored in a room with any material which emits an odor--any smell perceptible to the human sense will be absorbed by it. Damp cellars or close lofts are especially unsuitable. Flour of good quality improves in flavor and character up to about six months and under proper conditions will retain its merit for a considerable time thereafter. The three chief varieties of wheat flour are the "Patent" or "Standard Patent" (white), "Graham" and "Whole Wheat"--the last two containing part or all of the outer branny covering of the wheat. There are many grades on the market, but no one universally recognized standard. It is packed principally in sacks of paper, cotton or jute of various sizes, from 2 to 98 lbs. A barrel contains 196 lbs. Flour should be sifted that the particles may be thoroughly disintegrated before baking. If cold, it should be warmed before use. This treatment improves the color and baking properties of the dough. Bread sponge should be prepared for the oven as soon as the yeast has performed its mission, otherwise bacterial fermentation sets in and acidity results. Too cold a dough causes too slow fermentation. Average analyses of wheat flour show from 8 to 12% water; 8 to 15% protein, 1 to 3% fat, and 60 to 80% carbohydrates (See FOOD VALUES). White flour generally has a little more carbohydrates and a little less protein than Graham and Whole Wheat flour. In some sections, retailers find also a good demand for rye flour and those doing a "fancy" trade include in their stock such special varieties as barley, chestnut, potato, rice, "Boston Brown Bread," etc. The first four are chiefly imported. See also RYE, SELF-RAISING FLOUR, FARINA, etc. FLUKE: a northern sea fish resembling the Flounder (which see). FLUMMERY: a thick hasty-pudding made of oatmeal or rice, flavored with milk, bitter almonds or orange flowers, etc. It is known as Sowans in Scotland. FLY-PAPER: should not be kept in the cellar or any damp place. Warm upper floors are preferable. Three points should be remembered: keep it dry--keep it flat--keep it moderately warm. FOIE GRAS: signifies literally and actually "fat liver"--but it is applied particularly to the livers of fat geese. Those of fat ducks are similarly employed but the product is considered inferior and retails at lower prices. A fat goose liver An illustration of a liver. One of the most famous industries of Strasburg, Germany, and Toulouse, France, is the scientific fattening of geese for the enlargement of their livers. The birds are kept in special coops which prevent their taking exercise and are fed to the limit of their capacities. Their health is, however, carefully watched and the treatment is temporarily suspended in the case of any bird which shows even the slightest symptoms of sickening. Foie gras is imported in jars or tins in four forms-- Foie Gras au Naturel, Pâté de Foie Gras, Purée de Foie Gras and Saucisson de Foie Gras. Foie Gras au Naturel consists of full livers, plain cooked, put up in tins of several sizes. It is intended for use in the preparation of aspics, etc. Pâté de Foie Gras, the principal form, was invented at Strasburg toward the end of the eighteenth century by Clausse, then chef of the Governor of Alsace. The cooked livers, seasoned with wine, aromatics, etc., and with cut truffles added, are filled into earthenware "terrines" for Terrine de Foie Gras, or pastry shells or crusts for Pâté de Foie Gras en croûte, and surrounded and covered with a forcemeat made of liver trimmings and pork. In the best grades the livers are whole; the lesser qualities are of cut pieces. The terrines are made in two styles--the "flat," called "casseroles," generally light yellow in color, and the "high," brownish-red in hue--both styles in various sizes holding one-eighth, one-quarter, one-half and one pound. The Pâté is also sometimes packed in jars of elaborate richness of appearance. A good Pâté when opened should have, covering the other contents, a quanitity of white or yellowish fat, rendered from the liver itself during the cooking, and should give out an appetizing odor. If the liver appears dry and bare of grease and gives out an unpleasant odor, the jar should be returned to the seller to be exchanged for another. This condition may be found occasionally, no matter what care has been exercised in putting up the product. Only Pâté de Foie Gras made in the country or district in which the geese are reared and fattened is really worthy of the name, as a first-class product can only be made from fresh livers. A Pâté made from preserved livers is never as rich because the liver necessarily suffers by the second cooking. Pâté de Foie Gras should always be served very cold--only in that condition is the full fine flavor obtainable. It is best to set it on ice for several hours before serving. If ice is not obtainable, the terrine should be submerged in the coldest water obtainable and kept there as long as possible. This precaution is naturally most important in summer and in warm countries. Purée de Foie Gras is made of whole livers and liver trimmings with some pork added, well seasoned and cooked and then pressed through a fine sieve. Small pieces of truffle are added and the paste is then canned like other potted meats. Saucisson (sausage) de Foie Gras, put up in cans of cylindrical shape, consists of the liver cut in small pieces, pistachio nuts and pieces of truffle, etc., added, the whole mixed with liver trimmings and pork, then forced into casings and cooked. FONDANT: soft white candy made by boiling sugar, to the "ball" and working it till perfectly white. It is used for making bonbons, chocolate creams, etc., and, when softened by heat, for icing cakes, etc. FOOD VALUES -- the Foods we eat, their Characters, Comparative Values and Digestibility. There is much yet to be learned concerning the comparative effects of food taken into the human system and the processes by which they are converted into flesh, blood, bone, nerves and brain, but the advance of knowledge in these matters has been very rapid during the last few decades and sufficient has been ascertained to give the average individual a very fair idea of the needs and the requirements of the "machinery" which enables him to live and of the composition of the machinery itself. Many and complicated are the natural chemical processes by which food is transformed in the human stomach, intestines, veins, etc., but a general consideration of the subject is simplified by the fact that the beginning and the end-- i.e., the food put into the stomach and the body built and sustained by the food--are composed chiefly of the same chemical compounds. In other words, the human body is composed of water, protein (a term which includes the principal nitrogenous compounds), fats, mineral matter (phosphate of lime--the mineral basis of bone--and numerous compounds of potassium, sodium, iron, magnesium, etc.), and carbohydrates (starches, sugars, etc.). And all these components are found in varying proportions in the foods we eat, though in the human body the carbohydrates become principally fats, only a very small percentage being reproduced as sugar, etc. Water constitutes about 60% of the entire weight of the average person, protein forms about 18%, fats about 15%, minerals about 6% and carbohydrates a little less than 1%. After the large amount of water and the small amount of minerals, both of which are absolutely essential to life, the proteins are the constituents of the first importance for they are the chemicals which chiefly build the flesh, bone and muscle of the body. The principal protein compounds may be divided into albuminoids and gelatinoids (classed together as "proteids") and extractives. Of these, the albuminoids are the chief and the real body builders and the extractives are the least important except that they provide the flavor of meats, etc., and thus stimulate appetite and digestion. Protein is found in all human foods--but in greatly varying proportions. In this country, any lack in other foods is made up, and very often over-done in that respect, by the excess of protein in meats--lean meat consists almost entirely of protein and water--and by the consumption of eggs, fish, etc. In Asia, the insufficiency of protein in the rice diet is supplied in some parts by the use of beans and peas (dried beans being even richer in protein than meats, in addition to their great percentage of carbohydrates) or by the consumption of fresh or salted fish; or by both beans and fish. And similarly, in one way or another, as the result either of instinct or experience, has the balance been maintained with at least some degree of accuracy in every part of the world. We have said that the protein practically builds the machinery of the human body--but a machine needs fuel to operate--and, similarly, the human body requires the necessary chemicals to produce heat and energy. These it obtains to some degree from the protein but principally from two other forms of food-- fat and carbohydrates. Fat is the most condensed form of fuel but the average digestion does not take kindly to it in over-large quantities so the greater part of the supply is in carbohydrates-- practically "sugar" for the starches are converted into a form of sugar in the stomach and intestines, as a preliminary to their assimilation by the body. Be it understood that the term "fuel" is not used as a mere figure of speech--it represents the actual uses of the food, for fats and sugars are consumed in the body by chemical processes which are allied in general character to the consumption of coal in the fire which drives an engine. The sums of heat and energy engendered in the digestion, etc., of different foods have been carefully ascertained and recorded and are credited as many "calories' or fuel units to a pound of each kind of food. Butter, for example, being 85% fat, is a fine type of human fuel and is credited with 3,410 calories per lb. Sugar, 100% carbohydrate, contains 1,750. Beef varies from only 500 to 1,400--the principal value of beef being as already noted for its protein, or as a flesh and muscle builder, instead of for "fuel" purposes. The principal forms of fat for food are those in meats of all kinds, butter, cheese, a few fruits (as olives) and several kinds of nuts. The principal sources of carbohydrates are cereals of all kinds (wheat and rye flour in the form of bread and otherwise, corn, rice, oatmeal, tapioca, etc.), dried beans and peas, a few kinds of nuts, several varieties of dried fruits, potatoes, etc., and in a lesser degree some fresh fruits, as apples and bananas. Sugar is 100% carbohydrate--but the system can only take it in moderate quantities, not being fitted for the exclusive use of full carbohydrates any more than for the use of large quantities of fat--it prefers both mixed with other components as in sweet, starchy or fatty foods, or to produce them itself by conversion. The excess of fat and carbohydrates after supplying the immediate necessities of heat and energy, is stored in the body in the form of fat, which, except when excessive in amount, stands as a very real reserve store of energy when at any time the body requires more fuel than it can draw from the immediate supply of food. A person who for any reason does an unusually excessive amount of physical labor may lose several pounds in weight in a few hours--the energy and heat developed and utilized are necessarily drawn from the reserve force of the body as the food supply for the same period could not furnish so large an amount under such conditions of activity. A well-regulated diet for an average person of normal digestion must, therefore, contain a variety of foods sufficient to supply the system with an abundance of water (as a beverage or in food), a sufficient amount of protein to repair the waste of tissue and "energy foods" (fats and carbohydrates) in accordance with his manner of life--the more the labor required from the body, the greater should be the supply. Still further, the greater the proportion of hard physical labor in outdoor occupations, the greater, generally, the proportion of the "condensed fuel"--fats and sugars--that may be advantageously used. A diet principally of lean meat would supply too great a proportion of protein--one of fruits and vegetables, except dried peas and beans, peanuts, etc., would supply too little. Bread and good rich milk would make quite a satisfactory all-round diet--giving water, protein, fat and carbohydrates in very fair proportions and in easily digestible form, but, fortunately, we need not confine ourselves to such a very monotonous bill of fare! We can reach just as satisfactory a percentage by a judicious mingling of a variety of other foods with all kinds of delightful properties. It will be understood that all statements concerning human diet necessarily deal in averages--every individual must regulate the details of his diet to agree with the results of his own experience. Furthermore, all percentages of food components essential or desirable are subject to variation in different climates and countries and none is absolutely binding in the operation of the human machine--which is wonderfully adaptable in meeting exigencies. Lean meat, for example, contains very little fat and no carbohydrates, but the human body, when necessary, will obtain all its fats and carbohydrates by chemical transformation of the protein and a man might live for a long time on lean meat alone. But it would not be a safe or desirable diet! The tables following give the average percentages of a number of general food items, after discarding general waste, as skin, bone, etc. The body receives a large proportion of the values recorded in the cases of persons of good digestive organs, if the foods are properly prepared--which in most cases means properly cooked. The importance of good cooking cannot be over-estimated--incompetent preparation often means the loss of much of the value of the foods eaten. The valuable carbohydrates, for example, are chiefly very small starch grains enclosed in tiny cells with thick walls on which the digestive juices have little effect unless the walls have been broken by cooking--and this is only one of a great many examples that might be cited. The purposes of cooking are threefold--(1) to assist digestion by preparing the food for the action of the digestive juices; (2) to quicken the flow of the saliva and digestive juices by making the food pleasing to the palate and other senses, and (3) to destroy by heat any disease germs or parasites that it may contain. WATER PROTEIN FAT CARBOHYDRATES (STARCH, SUGAR, ETC.) "ASH" (MINERAL, SALTS, ETC.) BEEF ( fresh ) Chuck (rib) 67 19 13 .... 1 Loin (medium) 61 19 19 .... 1 Ribs 57 18 24 .... 1- Round (medium) 68 21 10 .... 1+ Shoulder and clod 69 20 10 .... 1+ Liver (beef) 72 20 5 1 1/2 1 1/2 CORNED BEEF 54 15 26 .... 5 VEAL Breast 68 20 11 .... 1 Leg Cutlets 71 20 8+ .... 1+ Liver (calf) 75 17 6+ .... 1+ MUTTON Leg 63 19+ 17+ .... 1 Loin (without kidney or tallow) 48 15 36 .... 1- LAMB Loin 53 18 28 .... 1 Leg 59 18 22 .... 1 PORK, salted and smoked Bacon 20 10 65 .... 5 Ham 40 16 39 .... 5 Salted Fat Pork 8 2 36 .... 4 PORK ( fresh ) Loin (chops) 51 16 32 .... 1- Hams (fresh) 50 16 33 .... 1- POULTRY Fowl (medium age) 60 20 19 .... 1+ Turkey 58 22 19 .... 1+ WATER PROTEIN FAT CARBOHYDRATES (STARCH, SUGAR, ETC.) "ASH" (MINERAL SALTS, ETC.) * FISH ( fresh ) Cod (dressed) 83 15 1/2 1/2 .... 1- Mackerel 74 18 7 .... 1- * FISH ( preserved and canned ) Canned Salmon 64 22 12 .... 2 Salt Cod 58 21 1/2 .... 20 1/2 † SHELLFISH Oysters 88 1/2 6 1+ 3 1/2 1- Lobster 79 1/2 16 2- 1/2- 2 EGGS (uncooked) 74 13 12 .... 1- DAIRY PRODUCTS Whole Milk 87 3+ 4 5 1/2 Skim Milk 90+ 3 1/2 1/2- 5+ 1/2 Cream 74 1/2 2 1/2 18 4 1/2 1/2 Butter 11 1 85 .... 3 CHEESE (Cheddar type) 27 1/2 27 1/2 37 4 4 FLOUR, CEREALS, Etc. Wheat Flour 12 11 1/2 1 75 1/2 Rye Flour 13 7 1- 78 1- Rice (ordinary or "polished") 12 8 1/2 79 1/2 Oat Breakfast food 8 16 1/2 7 66 1/2 2 Wheat Breakfast food 10 12 1 1/2 75 1 1/2 Cornmeal 14 9 2 74 1 Macaroni 10 1/2 13 1/2 1- 74 1 BREAD ( White Wheat ) 35 1/2 9 1 1/2 53 1 VEGETABLES Beans, white (dried) 12 1/2 22 1/2 2- 59 1/2 3 1/2 Beets (fresh) 88 1 1/2 .... 9 1/2 1- Cabbage 91 2 .... 6 1 Potatoes 79 1/2 1 1/2+ .... 18 1- Squash 90 1- 1/2 8 1/2+ Sweet Potatoes 71 1 1/2 1/2 26 1- Tomatoes 94 1/2 1- 1/2 3 1/2 1/2 ‡ FRUITS Apples (fresh) 85+ 1/2 1/2 13 1/2 Apples (evaporated) 27 2- 2+ 67 2 Bananas 77 1 1/2 20 1/2 1- Dates (dried) 15+ 2+ 3- 78 1/2 1 1/2- Figs (dried) 19- 4+ 1/2 74 9 1/2 Grapes 79 1 1/2 1 1/2 17 1/2 1/2 Oranges 87 1/2 1- .... 11 1/2 Prunes 22+ 2 .... 73 1/2 2 1/2 Strawberries 91 1/2 1- 1/2 6 1/2 1/2 ‡‡ NUTS Pecans 3 1/2 12+ 70 1/2 12+ 1 1/2 Peanuts 7 1/2 30 43 1/2 17 2 Walnuts 3 1/2 18+ 60 1/2 16 1 1/2 *See also article on FISH. †See also article on SHELLFISH. ‡See also article on FRUITS (FOOD VALUES). ††See also article on NUTS. In order to avoid incorrect deductions from a study of the tables given, we may add that, though the chief purposes of food are to build the body and supply it with the necessary warmth and energy, and that therefore the principal foods may be judged by their percentage of protein, fat and carbohydrates, etc., the limitations of the human digestive organs must always be borne in mind. Cheese, for example, is rich in both protein and fat, and the peanut in protein, fats and carbohydrates--either should apparently be most valuable as a leading article of diet, but the average digestion will accept and assimilate them only in small quantities. On the other hand, many vegetables which show but very small percentages of food value are of vital importance because of the salts they contain and because their special composition assists in the digestion of the main foods. Many fruits have this useful quality in addition to high food value. The average American diet is not so far from being correct as many critics declare and it could be made an excellent standard by decreasing the amount of meat generally consumed and increasing the proportion of green vegetables and fruits. An excessive consumption of meat means an over-supply of protein which doubles the work--and therefore the risks--of nature to dispose of it or to convert it into carbohydrates, in the latter case endangering the balance of health by giving the system too great a supply of fuel--for, as already noted, there is an ample supply of carbohydrates in all popular diets, the only lack in other than American being in the supply of diminutive size. The Flavors of Food. The distinctive flavors of different foods are attributable to a variety of causes. In fresh meats, they are due to the extractives which in varying proportions form part of the protein. Some "game" birds are especially rich in that respect--hence the high esteem in which they are held by epicures. The flavors of fruits and vegetables are usually attributable to similar components. The extractives are generally enhanced by the process of cooking--and in meats, birds, etc., are also developed by "aging" in a greater or less degree. In many other foods, the distinctive flavor, instead of being an essential part of their natural development, hinges on the special methods of their commercial preparation. In hams and other smoked meats, it is largely due to the acid in the wood smoke in which they are suspended. In black tea, cheese, butter and many other examples, it is the result of chemical changes brought about by the growth and respiration of microscopic plants during manufacture--for all plants, whether microscopic or visible, breathe as do human beings, producing the same chemical change of the oxygen of the air into carbon-dioxide. The difference between green and black tea is attributable chiefly to the fact that for the latter the tea leaves are allowed to ferment before they are "fired" or roasted. This, translated in the light of modern botanical knowledge, means that the microscopic plants in the moist leaves are permitted to respire for a time before they are killed by the heat applied in the firing machines. The difference between Camembert and Swiss cheese--or any other varieties--is similarly the difference in the microscopic plants which respired within them during the process of ripening--plants furthermore that can be transplanted in spite of their protein. See articles on BACTERIA, MOLD and YEAST. Time Required for Digestion. The table following gives the average time employed in the digestion of the foods named. No absolute deductions can be made from the (1) Cod (2) Halibut (3) Pollack (4) Hake (5) Halibut FISH A color illustration of five different types of fish, each labeled with a number. figures, but foods which take longer than four hours for the process are generally undesirable, except in very limited quantities. Hours. Min. Apples (raw)............................... 1 25 Apples (stewed)............................ 1 35 Beans (boiled)............................. 2 30 Beans (purée)....................... 1 30 * Beef (lean, rare, roasted)................ 3 00 Beef (stewed).............................. 2 45 Beef, fresh salted (boiled)................ 2 45 Beef, old salted (boiled).................. 6 00 Beefsteak (grilled)........................ 3 00 Beets (boiled)............................. 3 45 Bread...................................... 3 30 Butter (melted)............................ 3 30 Bread and butter with coffee............... 3 45 Cabbage (boiled)........................... 4 30 Chicken (boiled)........................... 2 00 Chicken (fricasseed)....................... 2 45 Chicken (roasted).......................... 4 00 Cheese, old................................ 3 30 Duck (roasted)............................. 4 00 Eel (roasted).............................. 6 00 Eggs, fresh (raw).......................... 2 00 Eggs, fresh (whipped raw).................. 1 30 Eggs, fresh (soft boiled).................. 3 00 Eggs, fresh (hard boiled).................. 4 00 Eggs, fresh (scrambled).................... 3 00 Fish (other than fat varieties, boiled).... 1 30 Fish (other than fat varieties, fried)..... 3 00 Hours. Min. Hashed Meat (warmed)....................... 2 30 Liver (calf's, fried or sautéed).... 2 30 Liver (beef, fried or sautéed)...... 3 00 Lamb (grilled)............................. 2 30 Lentils (boiled)........................... 2 30 Milk (raw)................................. 2 15 Milk (boiled).............................. 2 00 Mutton (boiled or broiled)................. 3 00 Mutton (lean, roasted)..................... 3 15 Nuts....................................... 5 00 Oysters (raw).............................. 2 55 Oysters (stewed)........................... 3 30 Onions (stewed)............................ 3 30 Peas (boiled).............................. 2 30 Pig, suckling (roasted).................... 2 30 Pork, fat (roasted)........................ 5 15 Pork, salt (boiled)........................ 3 15 Potatoes (baked)........................... 2 30 Potatoes (boiled).......................... 3 30 Rice (boiled).............................. 1 00 Sausage, fresh (grilled)................... 3 30 Sausage (smoked)........................... 5 00 Spinach (stewed)........................... 1 30 Salmon, fresh (boiled)..................... 1 30 Turkey (roasted or boiled)................. 2 30 Turnips (boiled)........................... 3 30 Veal (roasted)............................. 4 30 *Meat is generally more easily digested raw than cooked, but its consumption in that condition is attended with risk of intestinal disturbances from the parasite life it sometimes contains. Comparative Digestibility of Foods. The following list of foods considered from the standpoint of the ease or otherwise with which they can be digested by dyspeptics, is adapted from a folder entitled Diet and General Directions Suitable for Those Suffering from Indigestion, given by the authorities of Cambridge University, England, to each pupil on or shotly after his arrival: FIRST GROUP. Articles easy of digestion and most suitable for the dyspeptic. Chicken, eggs (lightly cooked), sweetbread, squab, mutton, venison, rabbit. Flounder, chicken halibut, smelt, whiting. Stale bread, biscuits, arrowroot, cornstarch, rice, sago, tapioca. Asparagus, cauliflower, sea-kale, string beans. Baked apples, grapes, oranges. Beef-tea, milk, mutton broth. Toast-water, black tea, Bordeaux wines (Claret and Sauternes), Rhine wines, dry sherry. SECOND GROUP. Articles moderately easy of digestion, but only admissible in the less severe cases of indigestion. Soups in general. Beef, lamb, hare, turkey, duck, guinea fowl, wild waterfowl, woodcock, snipe. Bass, cod, haddock, oysters (raw), perch, pike, pollack, porgy, pompano, Kennebec salmon, shad, trout, turbot, weakfish, whitefish. Artichokes, cabbage, potatoes, salads of lettuce or cress, tomatoes, turnips. Apples, apricots, goosberries, mulberries, peaches, pineapples. Cooked fruit in general, marmalade, jelly, richly made farinaceous puddings. Cocoa, coffee, malt drinks, Madeira and Burgundy. THIRD GROUP. Articles difficult of digestion. Few of the articles contained in this group should ever be taken by the dyspeptic, and those to which an asterisk is prefixed should be regarded by him more in the light of poison than food. Hard-boiled eggs, *pork, *veal, *goose, the brains, *heart, *liver and *kidney of animals, *hashed or *stewed meats, salt meat, *sausage. Cockles, crab, crayfish, *eel, herring, lobster, *mackerel, *mussels, cooked oysters, prawns, salmon, scallops, shrimps, skate, sprats, sturgeon and salted fish in general. New bread, cheese, *muffins, *mushrooms, pancake, *pastry in general, pickles, plum pudding, *suet pudding, buttered toast. *Nuts of all kinds. Cherries, pears, plums, dried fruits. Beans, beetroot, carrots, *raw cucumbers, endive, Jerusalem artichokes, onions, parsnips, peas. Chocolate, champagne, port, liqueurs. GENERAL DIRECTIONS. Dyspeptics should observe great regularity in the hours of meals--any changes in the time of meals should be gradually made. Solid food should be thoroughly masticated before being swallowed. FOOTS: the settling in oil, sugar, honey or molasses casks. All scrapings of sugar hogsheads and other refuse of sugar warehouses, etc., come under this name. It is also applied to industrial Olive Oil (which see), etc. FORBIDDEN FRUIT: another name for the Shaddock (see GRAPE FRUIT). FORCEMEAT: chopped meat mixed with herbs and condiments, used for stuffing fowls, for croquettes, etc. FOWL: a word which was originally used in the same general sense as "bird" but which is in modern language applied only to poultry, particularly the domestic cock or hen, and to-day generally signifies those too old for broiling. The word "chicken" is now almost universally used both in trade circles and in government reports to designate fowl of any size killed for eating. FRANKFURTERS. See sub-head in general article on SAUSAGES. FREEZING. Fruits, vegetables, etc., and nearly all liquids are very liable to damage by frost, and care should be exercised when ordering them in cold weather, as such goods are generally sent at the risk of the purchaser. In winter, the cellar is the best place for all goods in bottles, tin or wood, which are liable to freeze--a bottle of bluing or ink that freezes and cracks may ruin a whole shelfful of goods. FRENCH BEANS: the English name for String Beans (see BEANS). FRENCH BREAD: a popular title for long, very narrow loaves. See BREAD. FRENCH DRESSING: a term applied to several receipts for simple salad dressings. The correct formula consists of four parts of olive oil to one part of good vinegar, with a small quantity of fine table salt and ground pepper --two saltspoonfuls of salt and one-half saltspoonful of pepper being in correct proportion when four tablespoonfuls of olive oil are used. A little onion juice or chopped parsley, tarragon, chives or chervil may be added if desired. FRENCH ROLLS: a somewhat indefinite term popularly applied to almost any good-quality bread rolls, particularly those in special shapes. FRENCH WINES. Among the best known types of French wines are Champagne, red and white Bordeaux wines (see CLARET and BORDEAUX WINES, WHITE), Burgundy, Saumur, Cette, Hermitage and Rivesaltes, all of which are listed elsewhere in their alphabetical positions. FRIED CAKES: a local name for Crullers and Doughnuts. FRIEDRICHSHALL. See article on table and medicinal MINERAL WATERS. FRIJOLE BEANS. See sub-head in general article on BEANS. FRITTERS: a species of fried batter-cake, generally enclosing fruit, sweetmeats, poultry, meat, fish, etc., as Banana Fritters, Clam Fritters, etc. FROGS' LEGS. The hind legs of the common green frog are enjoyed in both Europe and the United States as a delicate food much resembling chicken. There are two varieties on the market--the small marsh frog and the large bull frog. The latter is A Pennsylvania Frog "Farm"--The masses floating on the surface of the pond are frog spawn nearly ready to hatch A man stands on a bridge spanning a still pond in a wooded area. An inlaid cut shows a frog putting just the tip of its head above the surface of the water. the more convenient for use and market purposes, but the smaller kind is more delicate in flesh. They are in season all the year, but are considered best from June to October. Frog farming has become a recognized industry, the output of the ponds having, in the neighborhood of large cities, a sure sale at fair prices. Among the devices for feeding them are boards smeared with honey or sugar, to attract insects which the frogs greedily devour. FROST-FISH or Tom-Cod: a small American fish varying in weight from five to a pound to a pound each. It is most plentiful in winter. FROSTING: a domestic term for meringue or icing for cakes. See ICING. FRUITS--Their Food Values, Etc. It is not so many years ago that the arrival of the "strawberry season" constituted as real and distinct a mark on the calendar as the commencement of school holidays. The season was short--and for that reason perhaps the berries seemed doubly delicious! Then, later on, the Raspberry reached the markets and the hucksters heralded its arrival through the streets. And so the spring and summer divided their honors among various fruits, sometimes singly and again in groups. But now, all bars are down! We can enjoy most fruits the year round--the prices vary, but there is seldom any "closed season." And many fruits formerly rare are now plentiful. The best example of this is the banana--a few years ago a rarity to the inhabitants of inland towns, but to-day found in every hamlet throughout the country. In the winter, it and the orange, pineapple and other tropical and sub-tropical fruits from California, the south and elsewhere, are supplemented with fancy melons, peaches, plums, etc., from various parts of the world--including southern Europe and South Africa--and early in the spring, long before they are ripe in the North, Florida and other southern points are shipping carloads of strawberries and other berries up through the states. Modern methods of refrigeration and transportation have revolutionized this branch of our food supply. The fruits of temperate climates can nearly all be divided into three classes-- stone, such as plums, peaches, etc.; pome, apples, pears, etc., and berries. The principal exceptions are melons, rhubarb and kindred fruits more nearly allied to what are popularly known as vegetables. Tropical fruits are more diversified in characteristics, but one family, the citrus, includes a number of the best known--as oranges, grape fruit, lemons and limes. In addition to the delicious and pleasing variety they give--or should be allowed to give!--to the diet, fruits of all kinds, because of their composition and components, greatly assist in the functions of general digestion and thus increase the value obtainable from what may be described as the "main" foods. The quantity that may be eaten raw, depends upon individual circumstances. An excess of unripe fruit may cause stomach irritation as the result of an excess of acid generated--and over-ripe sweet fruits may set up abnormal fermentation--but a moderate amount of fruit in fairly ripe condition will nearly always be found most advantageous. Cooked fruits can be used and enjoyed with equal benefit and still greater freedom. The composition of a majority of ripe, fresh fruits includes about 80% water, a fair percentage of carbohydrates--principally sugar and crude fibre--and a small percentage of protein compounds and mineral salts, ether extract, etc. The sugar percentage, considered particularly as food or nutrient value, is lowest in berries, as blackberries and strawberries, and highest in bananas, loquats and American persimmons. Next in degree below the last-named are cherries, medlars, pears, Japanese persimmons, pomegranates, sapodillas, scarlet haws and apples. It is, however, largely the combination of water, sugar and crude fibre and salts rather than their nutritive components which makes most fruits so desirable an addition to the diet and gives them their value as anti-scorbutics, laxatives, etc.--hence, as auxiliary foods, some fruits of minor food percentages (lemons and oranges, for example), are as desirable and useful as they are delicious. Lemons, limes and similar fruits popularly known as "acid" or "sour," hold most of their merit in their juices and consequently genuine lime or lemon juice is nearly as efficacious as the fresh fruit, but in a majority of other fruits it is the combination referred to which gives them their medicinal value. Remembrance of this fact will guard against many popular errors. It is a common supposition that it is the juice of the orange, for example, which contains the laxative value when the fruit is taken early in the morning, and hence many people express it into a glass to drink it--and are disappointed in its effects. Orange juice is a delightfully refreshing, cooling beverage, but it is the whole flesh of the orange which should be eaten--to get the combination of the sugar of the juice and the crude fibre, etc., of its containing matter. The flavor of fruits is due partly to the malic, citric and other acids which they contain, but chiefly to their ether extracts. The reason that some fruits, as very sweet apples and pears, seem sweeter to the palate than other fruits containing a larger percentage of sugar, is found in the fact that they may contain a larger average proportion of Fruit Sugar as distinguished from Grape Sugar. Both are "sugars" but the former is much the sweeter to the palate. Nearly all fruits are best held at a temperature of about 40° Fahr.--the temperature of the ordinary refrigerator. Anything below that, any approach to freezing, is dangerous to most varieties. Temperate-climate fruits, as apple, pears, etc., will under ordinarily good conditions keep fairly well in a temperature not exceeding 60° to 65° Fahr., but when the thermometer goes above that point, all stock except that for immediate sale or consumption should be stored in the refrigerator. Citrus fruits--oranges, lemons, limes, grape fruit, etc.--are generally safe up to 80° or 85° Fahr., but beyond that they are liable to shrivel and dry out. Fancy Fruits, such as hothouse grapes, fine peaches, green figs, etc., should always be kept at a temperature of about 40° Fahr., only the smallest necessary quantity being exposed for show, and must be carefully handled to avoid bruising. The exceptions to these rules are fruits which require ripening after receipt, as bananas (which see), some varieties of pears, etc. All fruits should be washed before eating. Dried fruits, such as prunes, figs, apples, etc., should be consumed more freely than at present, for they contain all the good qualities of the fresh fruit--the only loss having been of part of their water content. In some, prunes for example, the sugar value is increased by the process of drying. See article on FOOD VALUES and the matter concerning individual fruits under their respective headings. FRUIT BUTTERS: are preserves of fruits, made without retaining their form, less sweet than jam and of a consistence somewhat resembling butter. The trade usually buys them in large wooden pails and retails them by the pound. Many of the lesser grades are prepared from damaged fruits and the lowest quality of molasses. FRUIT CONCRETE: of lemons and oranges, is a term sometimes applied to terpeneless essential oils. FRUIT EXTRACTS, Essences, Flavors. See article on EXTRACTS. FRUIT JARS. See remarks under heading of JARS. FRUIT JUICES. High class fruit juices are simply the expressed juices of ripe fruits, sterilized before fermentation has commenced and carefully bottled. Among the most popular types are grape juice, lime juice and unfermented cider (apple juice), which are treated under their respective headings. If the fruits are sound and the process of manufacture carefully controlled, no preservatives of any kind are needed. The addition of sugar is permissible and also carbon-dioxide for carbonated fruit beverages, but if alcohol, preservatives or coloring matter are added, the label should disclose the fact. FRUIT SYRUPS. As generally understood in the trade, Fruit Syrups are divided into two classes, those bottled to be retailed for home use in making summer drinks, and those put up in various kinds of receptacles for sale to soda fountains, etc. The best types are pure fruit juices concentrated and heavily sweetened. Lower grades are liable to be artificial both in flavor and color. The home use of good fruit syrups is worth encouraging. They form an agreeable variation to the time-honored lemonade made from the fruit, and similar beverages, and are much less trouble--you merely pour a little syrup in the tumbler and fill with cold water, either plain or carbonated. There is no fuss with squeezers, sugar bowl, etc., and the result is deliciously refreshing. The visitor to Paris always notes with interest the great variety of fruit Sirops sold at all refreshment stands and at the syrup booths along the boulevards. Their popularity is due to the fact that, as a general thing, their purity and quality have been carefully guarded. They are drunk mixed either with plain or effervescent water. Some customers who wish the sweetness modified, procure a delightful drink by adding wine--or substituting it for the water. The Syrups most in favor are currant, raspberry, cherry, pomegranate (grenadin), and almond (orgeat). Skill is also displayed in the mingling of flavors. Sirop de groscilles, currant syrup, for example, generally consists of four parts of red currant and one part of bitter cherries. Sirop de groseilles framboisées, is four parts of currant syrup and one part each of raspberries and bitter cherries. FRUMENTY: a gruel made by boiling wheat in water until quite soft, then drained, thinned with milk, moistened with sugar and flavored with nutmeg, etc. When currants and eggs are added, the result is "Somersetshire Frumenty." FRYING. See sub-head in general article on COOKERY. FULLER'S EARTH: a non-plastic clay, used in "fulling" (cleansing and shrinking) cloth, to remove grease and for numerous other purposes. It is sold both in lump and powder, the latter obtained by soaking it in water. FUNGI: a botanical term applied to all vegetation which is unable to draw its nourishment from the chemical components of the earth, as do all the "ordinary" plants, and must live on "organic" substances--animal or vegetable matter, alive or decaying--resembling in that respect members of the animal kingdom. The order comprises a great number of species, differing widely in size, appearance and characteristics--some very valuable, others most pernicious. The higher Fungi include all mushrooms, some of which rank as very nutritious human food, truffles and kindred plants. The smallest, known as micro-organisms, or microbes, include the yeast-cells employed in the making of wine, and in numerous other ways; the molds which produce moldiness, mildew, etc., and bacteria of all kinds. See BACTERIA, MICRO-ORGANISMS, MOLDS, MUSHROOMS, TRUFFLES and YEAST. GALACTOSE: a variety of milk-sugar or lactose formed by boiling it with dilute acid, which is frequently employed in the ripening of cheese. Old cheese is a predigested food, largely as the result of the action of galactose, which will continue working at low temperatures in which bacteria are practically inert. GALANGALE: an aromatic root somewhat resembling ginger, imported from China. It is used, though less than formerly, as a condiment and medicinally. GALANTINE: a name applied to fowls, game, fish or other meat, boned, stuffed and roasted--or boiled or braised--then pressed and cut in slices or put in molds, covered with aspic jelly and decorated with truffles. "Goose Liver Galantine" and "Sweetbread Galantine" are also set in bases of well seasoned, fine chopped pork mixture in place of aspic jelly. GALLON. See table of Weights and Measures in APPENDIX. GAME: any wild bird or other animal used as food, such as grouse, rabbits, etc. The term is also applied in a limited sense to animals generally existing in a wild state even when partly or wholly domesticated. The State and Federal Game Laws in force are so numerous and so varying in character and detail, that any attempt to condense or quote from them would probably prove misleading--especially as they are liable to change at any time. A recent government publication consumed fifty-four pages to cover the subject. Copies of the current issues of this, and many other instructive books and pamphlets, can be obtained by writing to the Division of Publications, Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. GAMMON OF BACON: a local term of a leg of salt pork. GARBANZA or Chick Pea: a food widely used in Mediterranean countries and, probably, the "pulse" of the Hebrews. It is much larger than the common pea, grows singly in round pods and presents a wrinkled appearance when dried. It forms the basis of the Olla Podrida of Spain. GARLIC--the roots tied to a bundle of straw An illustration of a bundle of garlic bulbs. GARDEN BALM, Balm Mint, Lemon Balm: an aromatic herb of the mint family, with, generally, a marked lemon odor. It is used chiefly for household culinary purposes and in the manufacture of liqueurs and perfumes. GARFISH: an elongated spear-mouthed fish, which looks like a cross between a mackerel and an eel. It is prepared and served in any manner suitable for eels. GARLIC: a vegetable similar to a small onion but with the bulb divided into ten or twelve sections known as "cloves." At certain seasons it abounds in many pastures and imparts a very strong rank flavor to the milk and butter of cows which feed on it. Its main use in cookery is to flavor soups and sauces and in salads, pickles, etc. GARNISH: a term employed in general culinary parlance to include almost anything dainty in appearance or composition served with meat and fish dishes, etc. It may be merely a simple border of parsley, sliced beets, etc., or any one of a hundred mixtures, including mushrooms, truffles, crayfish tails, shrimps, cockscombs, vegetables cut into shapes, etc., with or without sauce. GARNISHEE: one in whose hands the property of another has been attached in a suit against the latter by a third person. He is "garnished," or warned, not to pay out any money, or deliver any goods, belonging to the party named, but to appear in court as having possession of such property. GARUM: a heavily salted and highly seasoned sauce or relish made from fish--principally from those of the Scomber family, as the tunny, mackerel, etc.,--in the state of fermentation, the flesh itself or the blood and gills being variously employed. The Garum of the Romans was generally prepared from the Anchovy (which see). GAS. The revolutionizing of general illumination by the substitution of gas for candles and lamps, is credited to a Scotchman named William Murdock. He conceived the idea in 1792 and demonstrated its utility by illuminating his home at Redruth, Cornwall, with gas drawn through seventy feet of piping from the place of manufacture. He also advertised his invention by carrying portable gas-lamps through the streets, the burners supplied by bladders filled with gas. This first product was poor in illuminating power, smoky and unreliable, but Murdock made many improvements in it, including in his process its partial purification by passing it through water, which is still one of the essential features of modern manufacture. The first illumination on a large scale was by a Murdock installation which lighted the Soho Engine Works at Birmingham, England, in 1798. The pioneer American gas plant was erected at Newport, R.I., in 1812, by David Melville. The first gas company formed to light the streets of an American city was that in Baltimore in 1816. Boston followed in 1822 and New York in 1823. The chief forms of commercial gas now utilized are coal gas, natural gas, water gas, producer gas, petroleum or oil gas and acetylene gas. Except where natural gas (1) American Grouse (Prairie Chicken) (2) American Partridge (Ruffed Grouse) (3) Woodcock (4) Quail GAME A color illustration of four birds hung by their feet, each labeled with a number. is obtainable, coal gas is the form chiefly employed for street and household illumination, household cooking, etc. Coal Gas, also known as Illuminating Gas, is obtained by the Destructive Distillation (see sub-head in general article on DISTILLATION) of coal, principally bituminous (or "soft") coal. When used chiefly for illuminating purposes, it is frequently enriched by the addition of petroleum gas or benzol, a coal-tar product. The crude product is most offensive in smell, but its odor is greatly modified and reduced by passing through a "scrubber"--falling water on a coke bed or perforated iron plates--by purification by oxide of lime or iron, etc. The storage tank or cylinder of the gas plant, familiar in general appearance to every consumer, is essentially a large "bell" set inside a circular steel framework. The bottom of the bell rests in a deep-water seal and is automatically raised as the gas is carried into it. When the tank is raised close to the top of the framework, it is full of gas; when it has shrunk low and the bare frame shows against the sky, the supply is very scant. Commercial coal gas varies greatly in components but an average analysis will show about 46% hydrogen, 40% marsh gas (the principal constituent of natural gas), 5% olefiant gas or ethylene, which is extremely luminous, and 5% carbon monoxide. It is the carbon monoxide which renders coal gas especially poisonous. Natural Gas, which flows freely from subterranean sources in various parts of this and other countries--generally from beds of coal or petroleum--varies considerably in composition, but marsh gas is its chief component. Pittsburg natural gas shows an average of 92% marsh gas and 3% olefiant. Petroleum or Oil Gas is obtained by passing oil through superheated pipes or retorts. It can be made from any fats, oils or grease--even from some city garbage. Producer Gas, so-called because made in various types of "producer equipments" or machines, is made largely from low-grade coal, hard or soft. Instead of being secured, as coal gas, by dry distillation, it is obtained by the destruction of the coal by its own partial combustion in closed furnaces, steam being introduced during the process. It was formerly employed chiefly in the iron industry. It is not suitable for household purposes but in recent years has become increasingly important as power fuel. Water Gas is manufactured from anthracite (or "hard") coal, or coke, and steam. The coal is placed in an air-tight cylinder, ignited and blasted to incandescent heat. The blast is then shut off and dry steam is blown through, the resultant gas being carried by pipes into the reservoir. As soon as the coal begins to cool, the steam is shut off and the blast again blows the coal to a white heat, the process being repeated every few minutes until the coal is exhausted. Water gas is excellent for heating purposes, but where it is desired for illumination it is necessary to enrich it by the addition of carbon or petroleum gas. Acetylene Gas is obtained by the action of water on calcium carbide. It gives a brilliant white light, but is too expensive for general use in competition with other commercial gases. Store Illumination. The retailer who relies on gas for store illumination, should use the best burners and mantles obtainable and see that both are always in good condition. With proper attention, a store lighted by gas can be made as brilliant as if wired for electricity. The efficiency and cost of illumination is also affected by the color and coverings of the walls and ceiling. If painted white or even tinted a faint grey-cream, and kept clean and fresh, fully double the illumination will be obtained from the same number of burners as in places where the walls and ceilings are badly soiled or are covered with paper or paint of blue, green, brown or red. Next best to the faint grey-cream mentioned, are very light-greenish, and light yellow. GASOLINE: a light inflammable oil obtained by the distillation of Naphtha. It has many uses, being employed in the household, etc., for illuminating and cooking, to generate power in automobiles, launches, etc., and for the cleaning of fabrics. When carried in stock, care should be taken to comply with all insurance requirements. GAUGE, GAUGE ROD. Gauging is the method of determining the quantity of liquid in vessels such as barrels, casks, etc. The exact capacity of any vessel or receptacle may be obtained by measuring the dimensions and then conducting the calculation upon geometrical principles. An approximate measurement can be obtained more easily by the average person by means of a gauge-rod suitably adjusted for the purpose. The instrument usually employed is a diagonal rod, the contents of the cask being inferred from the diagonal length, measured from the bung-hole to the extremity of the opposite stave at the head. On one face of a square rule is a scale of inches for taking the measure of the diagonal, the scale on the opposite face expressing the contents in gallons. Only approximate results are thus obtainable, yet with experience it is possible to measure the contents with sufficient accuracy to answer general requirements. GEDORT. See sub-head in general article on CHEESE. GELATINE: is made from various animal substances, but chiefly from the bones and the softer parts of the hides, etc., of cattle, by boiling them and treating with steam. The best gelatines are generally secured from selected calf's stock--the cheek and neck pieces, membranes, skin, fibres, tissues, etc., and the organic parts of the bones. The crude gelatine thus obtained is placed in lime water for several weeks until it becomes free from all gross matter. It is next washed thoroughly in fresh water until it becomes delicate, white and translucent and, when put in the kettle, melts under the slightest heat. The liquor is finally drawn off slowly, clarified, filtered and run into pans to be cooled, after which it is sliced, dried and granulated. It is difficult to test gelatine. Some manufacturers suggest a test with boiling water poured over soaked gelatine, attaching the highest importance to the absence of odor and color, but this may prove deceptive, as the very poorest gelatine can be made both odorless and colorless by bleaching the collogen with sulphuric acid or peroxide of hydrogen and many states forbid such bleaching. Gelatine, although not a life sustaining food, is used in considerable quantities in hospitals and is recommended by physicians as an article of diet, because of its quality of making some other foods more palatable or more easily digestible. Its uses in the ordinary household are many and varied, ranging from adding body to soups, to making candies, ice creams and desserts. GENOA CAKE: a fruit cake with chopped almonds on top. "Seed Genoa" has caraway seeds instead of the almonds. GEODUCK: a huge clam found on the Pacific Coast. One often serves as a full meal for several persons. GERVAIS. See sub-head in general article on CHEESE. GHEE: a sort of butter used by the natives of India, prepared generally from buffalo milk. The milk is boiled in large earthen pots for an hour or two, then allowed to cool, a little curdled milk called "dhye" being added in order to make the whole coagulate. After a lapse of some hours, the top five or six inches of the contents of each pot is taken off and placed in a larger earthenware utensil, in which it is churned, by means of a piece of split bamboo, for about half an hour. Hot water is then poured in, and the churning is continued for half an hour longer, by which time the butter has formed. The butter is allowed to become rancid and is then melted in an earthen vessel and boiled until all the water has evaporated. A little salt or betel-leaf is added and it is finally poured off into suitable vessels in which it can be preserved from the air, bottles being commonly used for the purpose. GHERKINS. Several varieties of the common cucumber, generally those with prickly skins, are specially cultivated for gathering while still small to pickle as "Gherkins." The original Gherkin, or Jamaica Cucumber, is a distinct variety native to Jamaica and locally used both fresh boiled and pickled. It is about half as thick as long, of light green color and prickly to a marked degree. Gherkins An illustration of two small cucumbers hanging from a vine. GIBLETS: a term which formerly signified only the entrails of poultry, but is now applied to parts and trimmings such as the heart, liver, gizzard, neck, and ends of the wings and legs. GIN. There are on the market an unfortunately large number of "gins" which are badly adulterated imitations of the original Jenever of Holland, and they have tended to lower the spirit in general public opinion, but the finer varieties, both domestic and imported, deservedly hold among the initiated as high position as any other liquor. The best gin is made from barley malt and rye, with generally a small percentage of corn. Practically all the product owes its flavor, either wholly or in part, to the use of juniper berries--its distinctive title being indeed due to this characteristic. In Dutch, French and Italian, the same words ( jenever, genièvre, ginepro ) apply equally to the liquor and the juniper plant, and the English "gin" is merely an abbreviated corruption of the Dutch "Jenever." The name "Geneva," often used to designate Gin, is attributed to a popular confusion of ideas caused by the similarity of the Dutch and French names for the juniper berry with that of the noted Swiss city. The city of Geneva has never claimed prominence in, nor given its name to, the manufacture of gin. The numerous varieties may be grouped in two general classes, one commonly known as "Holland" Gin, and the other as "British." Each is again divided into Unsweetened or "Dry," and Sweetened, the latter type of British Gin being commonly known as "Tom Gin." There are four principal steps in the manufacture of Holland Gin. The product of the first distillation is called "Ruwnat," or "low wines." It is low in proof and raw in taste and is re-distilled to form "Enkelnat," which is higher in proof and shows some gin character. The Enkelnat is re-distilled into "Moutwyn," which is the foundation of all Holland Gin. From it, by a fourth distillation, each distiller makes a number of varieties--coriander seeds and various roots being added to the juniper berries used in flavoring. Holland Gin is generally made in several strengths, the milder to be bottled without blending, the stronger to be used for blending with neutral spirits, the former being decidedly superior. The most famous variety is "Schiedam Schnapps," named after the city of Schiedam, where more than 200 gin distilleries are in continuous operation. To the composition of Schiedam water is attributed much of the high reputation of its gins. British Gin is made, both in Great Britain and this country, by first producing the highest grade of neutral spirits and re-distilling several times in a fractionating still, so as to eliminate practically all of the fusel oils, etc. When the spirit has reached the proper degree of purity it is drawn off into an old style "pot-still," and again distilled in conjunction with Juniper berries, and certain other flavoring berries and herbs--the latter varying in nature, as each manufacturer aims to produce a liquor of distinctive flavor. Many of the lower class "gins" sold are merely alcohol flavored with essences. Gin should be kept in a moderate temperature and always well corked. Cordial Gin: is flavored with spices and heavily sweetened. Orange Gin: is flavored with orange peel or its essential oil. Sloe Gin: is made by steeping sloes in strong gin for a number of weeks, then filtering the liquid and diluting to the desired degree by the addition of water. GINEP, or Spanish Lime: a fruit which resembles a plum in appearance, but of flavor suggesting the grape. Both the pulp and seeds are edible, the latter being sometimes roasted and eaten like chestnuts. GINGER: in its commercial form, is the root-stock of the ginger plant (see illustration in Color Page facing 580), a perennial reed-like plant with annual leafy stems, three to four feet high, which grows freely in moist places in all tropical climates. The root is gathered when the stalk withers and is immediately scalded, or washed and scraped, in order to kill it and prevent sprouting. The former method, applied generally to the older and poorer roots, produces Black Ginger; the latter, gives White Ginger. The natural color of the "white" scraped ginger is a pale buff--it is often whitened by bleaching or liming, but generally at the expense of some of its real value. White Ginger of the first grade should be large, light-buff throughout, soft and even in cutting and of strong characteristic flavor. The present supply comes chiefly from Jamaica, the Malabar Coast of India and the East Indies. "Cochin" and "Calicut" are titles borrowed from the two Indian cities of those names. African ginger is dark, but has an excellent, strong flavor. "Borneo" ginger is merely a former trade term for some white ginger--none is exported from Borneo. Japan Ginger, usually blanched or limed before shipment, is of fine appearance, large and smooth, but is much inferior in strength to the other varieties mentioned. Preserved or Conserved or Canton Ginger consists of young green roots boiled and cured in syrup and put up in pots and jars. The principal consumption is of the imported Chinese product, but there is an increasing sale of West Indian. Crystallized Ginger is also made from the younger roots. The best grades, from roots selected for uniform size and appearance, are called "stem ginger." Other well known articles which have the root, or extracts from it, as a foundation are Ginger Ale, Ginger Beer, Jamaica Ginger (an alcoholic extract of the root) and Ginger Tea. Medicinally, ginger--as Jamaica Ginger, etc.--is a grateful stimulant and carminative, being much used for dyspepsia, colic, etc. It is also frequently employed to disguise the taste of nauseous medicines. Ginger Tea is an old-fashioned remedy for colds. "Switchel" is a summer drink, once very popular in the haying fields, made from ginger, molasses and water, with a little vinegar added to give it acidity. U. S. Standard Ginger is ground or whole ginger containing not less than 42% of starch by the diastase method; not less than 46% of starch by direct inversion; not more than 6% of crude fibre; not more than 8% of total ash; not more than 1% of lime, and not more than 3% of ash insoluble in hydrochloric acid. U. S. Standard Limed or Bleached Ginger is limed or bleached ginger containing not more than 10% of ash; not more than 4% of carbonate of lime; and conforming in other respects to Standard Ginger. GINGER ALE: if of good quality, consists of distilled water, ginger, lemon and other flavors (such as sarsaparilla), the product being finally carbonated to give the effervescence desired. Inferior products frequently contain red capsicum ("red pepper") partly or wholly in place of ginger. Ginger Ale is greatly improved by adding a sprig or two of bruised mint to the glass shortly before drinking. GINGKO NUT: the nut of the maiden-hair tree. It is eaten roasted, principally by the Chinese. See also NUTS ( (Food Values). GLACé FRUIT: another title for CRYSTALLIZED FRUIT (which see). GLIADIN. See matter following title of GLUTEN. GLOUCESTER CHEESE. See sub-head in general article on CHEESE. GLUCIN: a very sweet coal-tar product resembling SACCHARIN (which see). GLUCOSE -- Natural: is a technical name given to a group of sugars found in fruit, honey, etc. The most important examples are Dextrose and Levulose, frequently called "grape sugar" and "fruit sugar," respectively. Invert Sugar, formed by the action of acid, digestive juices, heat, etc., on Sucrose --the technical name for the ordinary "sugar" of general use, commercially extracted from sugar cane, sugar beets, etc.--is a mixture of equal parts of Dextrose and Levulose, the best natural example being found in honey, which consists of from 50% to 90% of Invert Sugar. The principal forms in which "Glucose Sugars" occur as the result of commercial manufacture are: Commercial Glucose, also known as Corn Syrup, Starch Syrup, Liquid Glucose, Confectioners' Glucose, etc., and Commercial Dextrose, or Starch Sugar, Corn Sugar, etc. Commercial Glucose: the form most widely used as a food product, is in this country made from Corn Starch (see articles on CORN and CORN SYRUP); in Europe, chiefly from potato starch, there being known also as Potato Syrup. It is a thick, syrupy, mildly sweet, nearly colorless product and, as employed, gives much the same effect as Invert Sugar formed from Sucrose. Its principal food uses are in the form of table syrup (see SYRUP), in the manufacture of jams, etc., and in confectionery. It is especially valuable in candy making. It is not nearly as sweet as Sucrose or ordinary sugar, but it has certain distinct and valuable qualities of its own--it does not readily crystallize, does not "grain" or disintegrate and possesses the property of imparting softness and elasticity to special varieties, such as caramels. The principal ingredients of Commercial Glucose are Dextrose, Maltose and Dextrin. Dextrose has already been referred to. Maltose is one of the results of the action of acids or malt diastase on Starch--it is of special interest as being the form of sugar into which the starch of food is converted during the process of digestion. Dextrin, which resembles a gum more than a sugar (see DEXTRIN), is always found in connection with Maltose during the malting of grain, and in connection with Dextrose and Maltose in the manufacture of Commercial Glucose. Commercial Dextrose is manufactured in a manner similar to Commercial Glucose, except that the product is evaporated to solidity (see CORN SUGAR). U. S. Standard Starch Sugar or Brewer's Sugar contains not less than 70% of Dextrose; Climax or 80% Starch Sugar, not less than 80%; and Anhydrous Starch Sugar, not less than 95%. GLUE: is obtained from the hides and hoofs of oxen and a great variety of other animal refuse. The raw material is first steeped for fourteen or fifteen days in milk of lime, then drained and dried by exposure to the air. This constitutes what is called the "cleansing" or "preparation"; and, after being so treated, the "glue stock," as it is called, may be kept for a long time and transported to any distance without suffering decomposition. Before conversion into glue, the "stock" is generally again steeped in weak milk of lime, and then well washed and exposed to the air for twenty-four to thirty hours. It goes next to copper boilers, two-thirds full of water and fitted with perforated false bottoms to prevent burning, each boiler being filled and piled up with it. Heat is then applied and the whole is gently boiled or simmered until the liquor on cooling shows firm, gelatinous consistence. The clear portion is next run off, a very small quantity of dissolved alum being added, into another vessel, where it is kept hot by a water bath, and allowed to remain for some hours to deposit its impurities, then being passed into the "congealing boxes" and allowed to cool. The next morning, the cold gelatinous masses are turned out upon wet boards and cut horizontally into thin cakes with a stretched piece of brass wire, and then into smaller cakes with a moistened flat knife. These small cakes are placed on nettings to dry and are later dipped one by one into hot water and slightly rubbed with a brush wetted with boiling water, to give them a gloss. Finally comes a stove-drying process and the glue is ready for market. As soon as the liquor of the first boiling has drained off, the undissolved portion of the skins, etc., left in the copper is treated with fresh water, and the whole operation is repeated again and again as long as any gelatinous matter can be extracted--the product grading as second and lower qualities. Fish glue is made from fish-sounds and other parts of fish membrane. Liquid glue is made by dissolving dry glue and adding nitric acid in the proportion of one ounce to a pound, or by adding to it three times its weight of strong vinegar. Light, clear glues are considered the best and are always preferred, irrespective of strength, for special purposes such as joining light woods, etc., where transparency is of paramount importance, but the only certain means of ascertaining the comparative strength of glue of any color is by a practical test. GLUTEN: the principal protein component of wheat and other grains, is composed of vegetable fibrin and a small quantity of gliadin. It is greyish in color and extensible, while fresh and moist, like caoutchoue. It may be separated from wheat or rye flour, etc., by making a paste and washing in successive waters until all starchy matter is removed. It is the large proportion of gliadin in the gluten of wheat flour that is responsible for its special tenacity and, consequently, peculiar excellence for bread making among people who prefer light bread and for macaroni, etc. GOOBER, or Guber: the popular Southern name for the PEANUT (which see). GOOD-WILL. In purchasing or selling a store, a good rule for estimating the value of the "fixtures" and "good-will" is to allow one-half to two-thirds of their original cost for fixtures, and to take the net profits of the previous year or six months as the value of the good-will. There should be a written agreement that the seller shall not enter into the same business within a certain limit of distance, or for a certain period. It has been held that, by common law, when the territory so proscribed is reasonably limited in extent, its prohibition may be for life; when the time is limited to, say, five or ten years, the prohibition may be absolute for that period. Protection for five years in the city of location should be sufficient for an exclusively retail business. African and Toulouse Geese An illustration of four geese. GOOSE. Geese have been raised as pets or for the table as far back as history reaches and they are known and enjoyed to-day in every part of the world. They are, perhaps, the most popular in Germany, where they are eaten in a great many different forms--fresh cooked, smoked, salted, etc. Especially famous items are Smoked Pomeranian Goose Breast and Pökelgans--the latter being goose flesh, salted, stewed and preserved in fat. Goose fat is also highly regarded by many races. It is largely eaten in Germany in place of butter--particularly by Hebrews, as its use on bread, for example, is permissible with meat, whereas it is a violation of the Talmudian law to eat butter and meat together. It is also valued there, and elsewhere, for many culinary operations. In this country the most popular varieties of domestic geese are the Grey African and the Grey Wild Goose, which is "wild" only in name! The Grey African is a large bird, the market weight of the adult gander often reaching fifteen pounds. It is distinguished by a large head with a black knob in front and a heavy dewlap under the throat. The knob is seen only in this and the Chinese varieties. Its legs are set so far back that it carries itself almost erect. The neck, breast and under-parts are of varying shades of light grey, and the back, wings and tail are dark grey. The Grey African is especially valuable for market purposes because of its rapid growth, making eight to ten pounds in about ten weeks. White Chinese Goose and Gander An illustration of two geese, one seen from the front, the other (standing taller) from the side. The Grey Wild is a lighter bird. The head is black, with white on the sides, the bill and neck black, the neck shading to grey, the wings and back dark grey, the breast light grey, the under parts white and the tail feathers, shanks and toes black. Two other noteworthy varieties of large size are the Grey Toulouse and the White Embden. The Grey Toulouse, of light grey plumage shading to white, and of compact shape, matures later than the others and is often called the "Christmas Goose" because it is ready for the markets at about the time the holidays begin. It is of convenient and compact shape, but the flesh is coarser and less palatable than that of the two preceding types. It is named after the city of Toulouse, France, where it is bred in large numbers. The White Embden, with white plumage, blue eyes and orange-color bill, shanks and toes, offers a large square deep body with a round full breast. Two of the best known of the smaller varieties are the Brown and White Chinese Geese. They are not favored by large growers, but are an excellent type for the farmer who devotes only a portion of his time to his poultry yard, as they are hardy, easily fattened and good layers. The plumage of the White Chinese is pure white on all parts, with knob and bill of orange-color and shank, toes and web of orange-yellow. The Colored Egyptian or Nile Geese are the most beautiful of their race, but they are bred solely for ornament and therefore are entitled to no consideration among their more useful cousins which offer up their succulent goodness to the appetites surrounding the dinner table. Mixed grey and black predominate in their upper plumage, the breast shading to chestnut, the wings relieved by white epaulettes, and the tail feathers of glossy black. The under-bodies are light buff or yellow with black pencilings. Geese under favorable conditions will live to a great age, but for table purposes one year is quite old enough! The age can be tested by the upper bill--if it will bend or curve in the middle, the bird is young. The firmer it is, the older the bird. Young geese--variously known as "green geese" and "goslings"--are in season from July to November. See also FOIE GRAS, made from goose livers. Concord GRAPES Catawba A color illustration of two bunches of grapes hanging on the vine. Wild Geese. The best known varieties of wild geese are the Canada and Brant. The Canada is so much the most abundant variety that it quite generally carries the title of "Wild Goose" without respect to the other varieties which belong equally within the classification. It is also the largest, weighing from eight pounds upwards. The head and neck are black with a white band underneath, the back is of grey-brown, and the under parts vary from grey to white. The Brant is a much smaller bird. The head, neck, upper breast and shoulders are blackish streaked with white, the back is of brownish-grey shading to white at the tail, and the under parts are ashy grey to white. GOOSEBERRY (See Color Page of BERRIES and also accompanying half-tone illustration): a fruit of the same general family as the currant but much larger--attaining in general cultivation here to a diameter of three-fourths of an inch. The skin of the wild berry is hairy or prickly, but this characteristic has been reduced by cultivation to almost perfect smoothness or, at most, a few soft hairs. In this country, very little of the ripe fruit is consumed, but the green berries are popular in pies, etc. They also make good sauce because of their peculiar tartness. Green gooseberries are very easily preserved. The best method is to cook them until the skins burst and then put them up in fruit jars, no sugar being used until shortly before serving. They can also be preserved for a considerable length of time without cooking--carefully sort out those bruised or otherwise damaged, then place the sound fruit in bottles until the latter are nearly full, fill with water so that all the berries are covered, cork well and store in a cool cellar. English gooseberries show a greater variety of color--white, green, red, yellow, etc.--and average larger than the American, often reaching a full inch in diameter and Gooseberries An illustration of a branch full of berries. an inch and a half in length, but the American are generally firmer and therefore better for preserving. GORGONZOLA: a cheese of Roquefort style. See general article on CHEESE. GOULASH or Khilash: a kind of meat stew which originated in Hungary and is now popular here, both as a restaurant item and in canned form for home use. It consists generally of beef garnished with potatoes, onions, paprika sauce, etc. GOURD: a genus of plants which includes pumpkins, squashes, cucumbers, etc. In popular usage, the term is applied principally to the calabash from which water dippers are made, and the many non-edible but ornamental gourds of fancy gardening. GRAHAM BREAD. See sub-head in general article on BREAD. GRAHAM FLOUR: "unbolted" flour, containing part or all of the branny covering of the wheat. It takes its name from a Sylvester Graham, who first claimed for it great nutritive value. GRAIN. (1) Any small, hard seed, such as a grain of corn or wheat, and hence taken to express the whole class of edible seeds. (2) Any small particle, as a grain of sand or a grain of sugar. (3) A measure of weight, the smallest used--1 lb. avoirdupois equals 7000 grains. GRAM. See Metric System in Tables of Weights and Measures in APPENDIX. GRANADILLA: the fruit of several varieties of the passion vine. The largest type, a native of tropical America, is an oval fruit, sometimes reaching a size of six inches in diameter, with a soft sweet-acid pulp. GRAPES: the fruit of vines of many species, both American and European. They are largely consumed as a fresh fruit, expressed for grape juice, dried as "raisins" and made into wines, brandy, vinegar, etc. The fermented juice also gives CREAM OF TARTAR (which see). The vines live to a great age under favorable circumstances, attaining, if permitted, enormous size--a single vine often giving an annual crop of several tons. The general rule is, though, to confine them to close and moderate growth of "bush" size. The juice and flesh of the fruit contain from 12 1/2% to 25% grape sugar, 1% to 3% of nitrogenous substances, some potassium and other salts and some tartaric, malic and citric acids; the seeds contain tannin, starchy matters, fat and oil; and the skins, tannin, cream of tartar and coloring matter. It is the combination in fermentation of the volatile substances in the grape which produces the bouquet of wines. A huge California grape vine, supported by sixty posts and covering a third of an acre. It frequently produces 5,000 bunches a year, the bunches often weighing 6 to 8 lbs. each and measuring 12 to 14 inches in length. An enormous grapevine laden with numerous bunches of grapes, supported by a wooden structure. Niagara GRAPES Delaware A color illustration of green and red grapes hanging from the vine. The quantity of grapes now consumed annually for food is enormous, yet one need not be very old to remember when a bunch of grapes was a rarity in the city save upon the tables of the rich. How much has been done for American health, and thus indirectly for American civilization, by the cheapening and popularizing of the small fruits during the past thirty years, can hardly be estimated. Best of them all is the grape. It appeals to the aesthetic taste as well as to the palate; it is grateful to the eye as well as the stomach, and at four or five cents a pound is within the reach of the leanest purse. In California alone more than 250,000 acres are under grape cultivation. About 125,000 acres are devoted exclusively to wine making. The product of another 100,000 acres is dried as raisins or made into brandy. The remaining 25,000 are devoted to table grapes, shipped principally to Eastern markets. The total investment in the industry in California is estimated at considerably more than $100,000,000. Thousands of acres are also under grape cultivation in many other states, especially New Jersey, Western New York, Ohio, Missouri, Michigan and Wisconsin. Grapes are the only fruit which is plentiful and cheap during times of extraordinary drouth. A wet season is what the grower fears. In dry weather, the vines bear abundantly and the fruit is large and well-flavored. In this country it reaches its highest perfection in parts of California, where not a cloud is seen in the sky from May till October, and many kinds unknown to Eastern vineyards are cultivated there from stocks brought from Europe. GRAPE-GROWING UNDER GLASS.--The vine in the lower picture held eleven clusters with a total weight of 60 lbs. The two clusters shown weighed 7 1/2 lbs. Each. An illustration of a large grapevine growing in a greenhouse. An overlaid cut shows a line of grapevines growing up a slanted trellis structure. There is not much variety in the East. The growers believe it most profitable to make no experiments, and confine their efforts to the standard types with which the public is familiar. The four best known Eastern varieties are the Concord (black), Niagara (green), Delaware (reddish) and Catawba (reddish), illustrated in the Color Pages facing 270 and 274. Of these, the Concord is the most important from the standpoint of quantity consumed--its various types and offshoots constitute 70% or more of all the table grapes consumed in the East and are found to a greater or less extent in every part of the country. They are largely employed also in the manufacture of grape juice and wine of claret style. The popularity of the Concord is due to its long season and all-round reliability. It is the first to appear on the fruit stands and it stays the longest. It seldom fails to give a good crop and the fruit is nearly always of good size and color and attractive bloom. The low price made possible by its abundance compensates in the general market for any inferiority in flavor and composition to choicer varieties. It should though be "turned over" as quickly as possible, as it does not keep well after ripening. The Niagara is the best known American green grape. It is a showy berry of fair quality and low price, ripening soon after, or together with, the Concord. The Delaware, reddish in color and the smallest of the four varieties, is a grape of especially fine quality--both for table purposes and high class wines. It comes into the market a little later than the first Concords. Its fine sweet aromatic flavor makes it a prime favorite in spite of its small size, but it is not a prolifc bearer and its market price is generally double that of the Concord. The Catawba, the latest in the market, is particularly interesting as a native American grape and equally esteemed for table purposes and wine making--especially of the finer types, as domestic "champagnes," etc. It takes its name from the Catawba River, N. C., its original home. The berry is medium in size, oval to roundish in The stunted trunks of grape vines resulting from constant pruning to increase the crop An expansive field full of grapevines. shape, of a dull purplish red with lilac bloom and of excellent flavor. It is, however, often picked when immature, before its best qualities have developed, and other grapes of similar appearance are too frequently sold under its name. The Catawba is an especially good keeping variety, with care often being held for sale until March or even later. The best known of the California products for table purposes are the Muscat or Muscatel, a large, sweet and fine flavored green or "white" grape, and several choice "black" grapes--among them, the Hamburg, Gros Colman, Black Morocco, Tokay and Empress --the berries generally large, varying in color from red to almost black and very "fancy" in appearance, the bunches occasionally weighing up to twelve pounds each. The Seedless, or Thompson Seedless, a small slender green grape, is the variety sold dried as California Sultanas (see RAISINS). The most important of Southern grapes is the Scuppernong (which see). The imports of fresh grapes consist chiefly of the large meaty Spanish "white" berries commonly known as "Malagas," from Malaga, the principal port of shipment, and "Almerias," the latter being generally the larger and of finer flavor. They reach our markets during the Fall and Winter months, packed usually in cork dust in kegs weighing about forty pounds. Because of their firmness and excellent keeping qualities, they occupy an unique position in the trade. When unpacked, they should be carefully brushed with a soft brush to remove the cork dust. The title "Malaga" is frequently but incorrectly applied to any large oval white grape. There is also a smaller but regular importation of fine hothouse grapes from England and Belgium, principally of the Muscat of Alexandria, Hamburg and Gros Colman types. They are generally packed in boxes containing six to seven pounds each, the boxes strapped together in pairs--two boxes being known in commercial parlance as a "strap." Fancy grapes can be kept in good condition for several weeks by wrapping each bunch in oil or tissue paper, encasing with cotton wool and tying each end, and keeping in a cool place. For shipment, the bunches are further packed in wood-wool in cases. More common varieties may be held without injury for from six to eight weeks by packing in dry sawdust in boxes and storing in a temperature averaging 38° to 40° Fahr. See also AMERICAN WINES and general article on WINES. A bunch of Grape Fruit An illustration of a pile of round fruits. GRAPE FRUIT, or Pomelo ( Color Pate opp. 282). The Spaniards introduced the Pomelo into Florida, but recognition of its value was deferred for a long time, partly because its peculiarity of flavor was not at first acceptable to the American palate, and partly because of lack of care in its culture and poor judgment in marketing. Now, however, it has conquered the market completely, both North and South, and is to-day the prime favorite, though the highest-priced, of breakfast fruits. The species of the citrus family to which the Grape Fruit or "Pomelo" belongs, includes also the Shaddock, which it supplanted in the general markets. The Pomelo obtained its present name of "Grape Fruit" because of the clustering, grape-like groups in which most varieties grow. Going further back, the name Pomelo comes from the Dutch Pompelmoes, and Shaddock from Captain Shaddock, who first carried it into the West Indies. To the Shaddock belongs the variety known in Europe as the "Forbidden Fruit." Grape Fruit is often misjudged because of a mistaken but rather widespread habit of eating it before it is ripe--it should be allowed to mature just as fully as any other fruit. Most varieties do not attain their full richness until December--and from then on, through April and even into May, they are generally found at their best. The Grape Fruit does not contain as much citric acid as the lemon, but it is decidedly antiscorbutic, and possesses some of the bitter tonic quality of cinchona. To obtain its full medicinal value, it should be eaten without wine or sugar, but the addition of either, or both, makes it very delicious. The present supply comes principally from Florida, California and the West Indies. Increasing quantites are imported each season from Porto Rico. GRAPE JUICE. Pure grape juice is simply the expressed juice of the fruit, carefully filtered and promptly sterilized to prevent fermentation. Its principal components are grape sugar and small quantities of albuminoids, potassium tartrate and tartaric and other acids. Grape juice can be easily made at home. Press the grapes, heat the juice to not under 170° Fahr. nor over 190° Fahr. in any form of a double boiler, settle for twenty-four hours, bottle carefully, and then heat the filled bottles by immersing them to their necks in hot water and gradually increasing the heat until they are nearly at the boiling point. Then cork and seal or paraffin the tops. Careful filtration will improve the appearance of the product. A Grape Fruit Tree An illustration of a tree laden with large round fruits. The color of the grape juice thus secured will nearly always be white or yellowish instead of the purplish red of the greater part of the commercial product, as there are only a few grapes which have pink or red juice. The red color can be obtained by pouring the hot juice, before the final immersion, into a receptable containing the skins of red grapes--almost any shade of red may be thus secured, according to the variety of grape used and the length of time the juice is allowed to remain on the skins. This process also adds other substances, chiefly tannin, to the product, the advantage or disadvantage of which depends upon individual tastes--the result more closely resembles ordinary sweet red wine, though it is still non-alcoholic. As many people find grape juice too sweet, it is often better enjoyed when served diluted with water--either plain or carbonated. GRAPE SEED OIL: closely resembles olive oil. It is used in Europe both for culinary and illuminating purposes. GRAPE SYRUP: formerly a popular item, is grape juice evaporated to syrup consistence. GRAPE SUGAR. See matter under general title of GLUCOSE. GRAPPA: an Italian brandy. GRAVES WINE. See BORDEAUX WINES ( White ). GRAYLING: a Southern fresh-water fish of fine flavor, generally weighing from one to five pounds. It is in season from September 1 to January 30. GRECQUE: a sieve or apparatus placed in coffee pots for holding the grounds. The term is also applied to a coffee-pot furnished with a Grecque. GREEK WINES. Centuries ago, Greek wines were considered the finest in the world and they still hold a prominent place in the favor of European connoisseurs, but they are little known in this country. They are generally much stronger and heavier than French wines and some are treated with resin and flavored with spices. Among the best known varieties are St. Elie (Santorin), of sherry style; Mavrodaphne, also light and delicate; "Morea" and Camerite, dry and red; Nectar, dark red, sweet and light; and a number of richer sweet types as Malvasia or Malvasier (Malmsey), red and gold; Red Santorin, one of the world's finest sweet red wines; Hymettus, white and ruby, resembling the Gironde wines; Achaier, in sherry and sweet-white-port types, and Santo, a syrupy spirituous "Muscat," white and purple. On the Morean peninsula--especially the vicinity of Corinth, Nauplia and Patras--large quantities of red and white wines are made from the small seedless Corinth grapes when the weather conditions are unfavorable for drying the crop for export as "currants." The term Patras, from the gulf of that name, is frequently employed as a general title for several varieties--among them a red wine resembling spirituous natural Port; a white wine, both still and sparkling, of Rhine Wine style; and several Muscats and Corinth Wines. GREEN KERN: is dried green wheat. It is used chiefly for soups and in stews. GREENGAGE: a famous variety of sweet plum (see PLUMS). It originated in France, where it is known as Reine Claude, from Claudia, Queen to Francis I. Its English title is after a clergyman named Gage who introduced it into England. GREEN GOODS. A term sometimes employed to cover all fresh fruits and vegetables. See article on VEGETABLES. GREENS: a general term for any leaves, either cultivated or wild, served as a cooked vegetable, as Spinach, Dandelion, etc. GREEN SLOKE: a green-spored seaweed of the same type as LAVER (which see). GREEN TURTLE: the most highly considered species of large TURTLE (which see). GRENADIN SYRUP: the general title of Pomegranate Syrup. See FRUIT SYRUPS. GRISKIN, of Pork: the loin, the choicest lean part of the hog. GRISSINI: an Italian-style stick bread. See FINGER ROLLS. GRITS: a name applied to any of several varieties of coarsely ground grain, such as Hominy Grits, Wheaten Grits, Oaten Grits, etc. They are generally consumed as a breakfast dish, but during the winter some families serve them for supper. GROATS: the hulled grain, whole or broken, of wheat, oats, barley, etc. In the household, it is used for preparing gruel for invalids and sometimes for thickening broths and soups. GROCER. Since the Grocer as we know him in America is directly descended from his English compeer, the early history of the latter may properly be considered as also belonging to the Western branch of this ancient trade. Prior to the opening of the twelfth century, established shops for the sale and barter of commodities were little known in England. Pedlars, or chapmen, traveled from hamlet to hamlet with packs of fine cloth, jewels, wine, salt, spices, tallow and wax, but, as may be judged from their stock, the traffic of these men was confined almost entirely to the nobles of the castle and the priests of the monastery. Such necessary articles as salt and tallow were sold to the common people, but these pedlars found most of their profits in the sale of luxuries to the wealthy. Later, as pedlars became more numerous, the Market was developed in town, while the Fair supplied the country districts with a means to sell and exchange goods. This latter institution served the double purpose of providing a place where goods that could not be obtained in the town markets were procurable and also a wider opportunity to dispose of ordinary commodities. The shops of that fore-runner of the Grocer, the "Pepperer," or "Spicer," were undoubtedly established in London many years previous to 1180, as a mention of a Pepperers' Guild of London is found as early as that year. These tradesmen dealt in pepper, cloves, nutmegs, mace, ginger, frankincense and other spices then brought across Europe from remote India. Spiced drinks and richly spiced foods were greatly in vogue among people of wealth, as food at that early period was coarse and not always wholesome. This guild of Pepperers ceased to exist shortly after 1338, in which year a heavy loan was extorted from it by Edward II. The earliest use of the word "Grocer," or "Groser," occurs in 1310 in the city record report of London. The term Grocer probably originated through certain mediaeval traders who "engrossed" large quantities of merchandise. It has also been attributed to the leading merchants of that time who bought only "in gross" ( en gros ), or in large quantities. The fifteenth century in England finds nearly all of the various trades formed into guilds, and these guilds were in many cases provided with full authority to rule GRAPE FRUIT A color illustration of grapefruits growing on a tree. An inlaid cut shows a grapefruit split in half to show the interior of the fruit. the affairs of their occupation. This power was received either directly from the King through a special charter, or, if in London, by a delegation from the Lord Mayor. Each trade was supposed to be responsible for, and preserve, its "good name and fame." That greatest of all guilds, the Grocers' Company of London, was founded in 1345, and the history of this organization is to a large extent the history of the grocery trade in England for over four hundred years. In 1427 this guild was given the exclusive privilege of superintending the public weighing and such management of the King's Beam remained long with them. As far back as 1394 the Grocers were empowered to "garble" (inspect and cleanse) all groceries in the city of London. They were given the right to enter any store and inspect the merchant's stock and when these official garblers found goods that were impure or spoiled they had full authority to arrest, try and punish the offender. And punishment of offenders under the Pure Food Laws of that period, and later, did not always stop at a fine; it was often found more effective to place the guilty one in stocks and then burn his corrupt wares in such propinquity to his nose that the full offensiveness of his misdemeanor was made powerfully evident to him. The Grocers' Guild retained this office of garbling up to the end of the eighteenth century. In 1562, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth, a statute was passed which prohibited any person from engaging in any craft or occupation unless he had served a seven year apprenticeship in the particular trade which he intended to enter. This law retained its power until about the middle of the eighteenth century. From the early days of the guild down to the opening of the past century the Grocers appear to be the most prominent and influential of all trades-bodies in England. The great Levant trading company was an off-spring of the Grocer's Company, and in 1600 a number of the leading grocers of London formed the famed East Indian Company and were thus responsible to a large extent for the building of the Anglo-Indian empire. From 1231 to 1898 no less than eighty grocers held the office of Lord Mayor of London and all but about fifteen of these eminent men were knighted, some of them on the field of battle. The annals of the English grocery trade are replete with names of notable Lord Mayors, magistrates, clergymen and soldiers. England has had a grocer Lord Chancellor and at least one of her national poets, Abraham Cowley, was a son of this ancient trade. And as evidence that great grocers are still being produced it is only necessary to skip to the twentieth century, and Sir Thomas Lipton. It was in the latter part of the sixteenth century that the now famous school of Rugby was founded by Lawrence Sheriff, the favored grocer of "Good Queen Bess." Many other prominent grocers of this period interested themselves in education with the result that numerous schools for both the poor and the prosperous were established. In the fifteenth century the grocery trade is described as the "trade of gentility," as the city companies drew many apprentices from the younger sons of the country gentry. The famed pageantry of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries was largely the work of the Grocers' guild. These pageants were often very costly and elaborate. Gorgeous floats were built, the best actors employed and on many occasions poets of national reputation were engaged to write the verse. Figs, dates, raisins and many other luxuries were thrown to the people by negro boys on the backs of "stage" camels. Such celebrations were usually given on the occasion of a grocer's election to the exalted office of Lord Mayor of London. Until 1617 the grocery trade maintained full supervision over all drugs and other goods sold by apothecaries--in fact, the apothecaries were part of the Grocers' guild. The separation of these two trades in that year was the result of a long period of agitation on the part of the physicians and many dissatisfied members of the drug trade. The division was finally brought about by King James who was inimical to the Grocers' Company and a friend of the apothecaries. The introduction into England, about 1650, of tea, coffee and chocolate resulted in a great impetus to the grocery trade. The demand for tea, and later for coffee, increased with remarkable rapidity and in a very few years these beverages--in spite of the denunciation with which they were first greeted by both the doctors and the clergy--became, with sugar and spices, the chief staples of the trade. Owing to the failure of the National government to provide the kingdom with an adequate supply of small coinage, the grocers of England, from 1648 to 1679, and again for fifty years beginning in 1767, coined their own money, or tokens. This coinage was mostly in small denominations, though many of the larger companies made gold pieces. These pieces were given in change for the King's money, and as most of the grocers struck off their own coins one can readily imagine the merchant of those times preparing for a day's business by having his apprentices stamp out a quantity of small change. Many of these coins were highly artistic indicating that much pride was felt in their appearance by the issuing grocer, who in many instances had his likeness, a reproduction of his store front, or his own, or the Guild's, coat of arms stamped on the face. It was in the latter part of the eighteenth century that the Grocer first began to advertise. The newspaper was quite extensively used by many merchants, while "trade cards" were popular with all grocers of the time. Besides the name, address and announcement that the issuer was a "tea dealer, grocer and cheesemonger," these cards usually bore illustrations of Chinese tea drinkers, and various other subjects of direct bearing upon the grocer and his stock. It is in the early years of this century that record is found of the practice of selling sugar at cost, and also at an actual loss, a fact that may be of interest to the modern grocer! With the nineteenth century came many trade innovations that directly affected the Grocer. One of the first department stores was established in London in 1849 by Henry Harrod, a grocer. The multiple shop or chain of stores idea dates from 1885 and when first carried out brought much hardship to the small dealer, as even at the very beginning these large companies sold most staples at a loss. The first journal of the trade, "The Grocer," was established in London in 1862 and was immediately recognized as supplying a long felt want. A recent estimate places the number of grocery stores in the United States at 141,600. And thus the Grocer, who was anciently a purveyor to the rich alone, has as the centuries passed, developed and expanded into the broader dignity of dispenser to all classes of the necessities as well as the luxuries of life. GROUND CHERRY, also known as Alkekengi, Husk Tomato, Strawberry Cherry, Strawberry Tomato, and Winter Cherry: the fruit of a very productive plant which grows wild in many parts of the world--in this country, most freely in the cornfields of the lower Mississippi Valley-and has recently been added to the list of cultivated crops. It is about the size of a cherry, generally orange-yellow or red, but also sometimes green and purple in color, and juicy and slightly acid in flavor. It matures inside a bladder-shaped calyx and, if left in the husk, can be kept through the winter. It is equally good raw and in the form of preserves. GROUND NUT: another name for the PEANUT (which see). GROUPER: a Southern fish found in three chief varieties--Black, Red and White. In weight it ranges from five to ten pounds, and even as high as twenty pounds, and in shape is a cross between a carp and a bass. The flesh is firm but coarse, and of only second quality. It is in season from November to March. GROUSE. The title "Grouse" is applied to a large family of American game birds, the most important of which are the Ruffed Grouse, Prairie Chicken, Sharp-Tailed Grouse, Dusky Grouse, Black Heath Cock, Sage Grouse, Capercailze and Ptarmigan. In the East, custom generally reserves the title "grouse" for the Prairie Chicken and applies the name "(American) partridge" to the Ruffed Grouse. Both of these birds are shown on the Color Page facing page 260. The market "Grouse," or Prairie Chicken, the latter name due to its resemblance to the domestic hen, averages about 3 1/2 lbs. a pair. Its upper plumage is brown with blackish and white markings, and the breast and under parts are whitish with brown and black marks. The market "Partridge," or Ruffed Grouse, also called "pheasant" in some parts of the country, takes its true name from the "ruffs" of feathers at each side of its head. It is the most prized member of the grouse family because, generally, the most delicate in meat and corresponds closely to the Gelinotte of Russia. It is larger than the English or Scotch Grouse. The plumage on the upper part of the bird is of chestnut varied with yellowish-brown, white, black and grey; the breast is buff-colored, the under parts whitish with brown marking, and the tail, long and of grey-brown or yellowish color. It feeds principally on fruits, herbs and seeds--to which diet is attributed the excellent flavor of its flesh. The average market weight is 2 1/2 lbs. a pair. The Canadian Ruffed Grouse is similar in general appearance except that grey instead of chestnut is the predominating color of the plumage. The Sharp-Tailed Grouse, also called "Prairie Hen" in some parts of the country, is a little larger than the Prairie Chicken, of lighter color and with longer, more pointed tail. The Dusky Grouse, also called "Blue Grouse," "Grey Grouse," "Wood Grouse," etc., has the upper plumage blackish-brown mixed with lighter brown and grey, and the under parts bluish-grey and white. It is also distinguished by its rounded tail of broad dark brown feathers. The adult attains a weight of two and a half to three and a half pounds. The flesh is exceptionally delicate and as white as that of a domestic hen. The Black Heath Cock, or "Spruce Grouse" or "Canada Grouse," is a rather smaller bird than the Ruffed. The name "Spruce Grouse" refers to its favorite winter diet of spruce tree shoots. Its upper plumage is greyish, with shining rich bluish-black markings and its under side black and white. The tail is black, tipped with a reddish-yellow brown. The under part of the female is reddish-brown with black markings. The flesh is rather darker than that of the other varieties named. The Sage Grouse is the largest American Game fowl, excepting the wild turkey, attaining occasionally a weight of eight pounds. It is distinguished by its grey back, with darker markings, black breast and long tail. Its favorite diet is composed of the leaves and shoots of the sage brush, and when this is adhered to exclusively the result is an over-strong sage flavor in the flesh. Its food is, however, generally varied and its flesh consequently as pleasing and delicate as that of the more highly rated prairie chicken. The Capercailze is a bird of large size and glossy black plumage. The hen is smaller than the cock and mottled in color. The Ptarmigan is the extreme northern variety of the grouse family, making its habitat in Alaska and other parts of the Arctic regions. During the summer its plumage is generally grey and brown with black feathers in the tail, but the costume is changed for white with the approach of the winter snows. The best known, largest and most abundant type is the White Ptarmigan, also called Willow Ptarmigan and Willow Grouse. The flesh of the young bird is white and delicate, but that of older specimens is generally rather dry and sometimes bitter when willow buds have formed too large a share of its diet. The Rock Ptarmigan is a smaller variety. It has the same general appearance, but is distinguished by a black line from its bill to the eye. The White Tailed Ptarmigan is an exceptionally handsome bird formerly slaughtered in great quantities to obtain its feathers for millinery purposes. GRUEL: coarse meal or groats boiled with water to a proper consistence and strained. It is variously flavored to suit the palate, but the addition of a little white sugar and finely powdered Jamaica Ginger, with or without a glass of sherry, is the least likely to offend the stomach. Nutmegs, cinnamon, etc., frequently disagree with invalids. Milk or butter is also sometimes added. GUANABANA: the West Indian name of the SOUR SOP (which see). GRUYèRE: the French form of "Swiss Cheese." See general article on CHEESE. GUARANA, or Brazilian Cocoa: is prepared from the seeds of a climbing plant. When roasted and ground, the resultant flour is made into small rolls which resemble chocolate. The infused result is closely allied to Tea, as the seeds are rich in theine. GUAVA ( see TROPICAL FRUITS facing page 588): the fruit of the guava tree, of which there are about one hundred species, growing abundantly in tropical America, Mexico and the West Indies. That of the cultivated varieties average about the size of a hen's egg or larger and is of many colors and shapes. It is almost equally delicious raw, cooked and canned; as jam, jelly, "cheese" and syrup. The raw fruit is eaten with sugar and cream, the yellow-fleshed White Guava being generally preferred for dessert purposes. It is, though, very seldom for sale fresh except in the South as it is extremely perishable--when mature, it will not remain in good condition for more than three or four days, and it is not practicable to gather it green and ripen it afterwards as in the case of some other fruits. The most common varieties for preserving are the red apple-shaped and the yellow pear-shaped. The former is usually rather small, but is of exceedingly fine flavor. Both are heavy bearers--under favorable conditions a single tree will produce annually several bushels of fruit. Guava jelly is usually marketed in screw-capped glasses or in neatly wrapped white wooden boxes. The product generally rated the highest is that made in Florida from Brazilian fruit--it is firm, of choice flavor and brilliant color. Guava cheese is the fruit reduced by boiling, the minor grades consisting principally of the pulp residue left after the extraction of the jelly. It is yellowish or reddish in color and of a glutinous texture. It should be solid enough to slice well and is most appropriately served with the cheese course. The best qualities are very fragrant and delicious. Guava syrup is generally dark in color, thick in consistence and very rich. Guava wine may be best described as a "lady's wine"--delicate in flavor, mildly sweet and generally of a golden amber hue. Guava vinegar is sometimes prescribed for digestions that do not readily accept other vinegars. GUILDS. The guilds so prominent in the early history of Europe, were societies organized for mutual aid in sickness, social amusement, religious purposes, trade regulation and protection, etc. They played a noteworthy part in ancient Greece and Rome but they attained their fullest development in Teutonic countries--especially in England--during the Middle Ages. The most influential of all were the Trade Guilds, which may be divided into the Guilds Merchant and the Craft Guilds. The former included merchants and land owners generally. The latter were confined to special trades or crafts and were most prominent in the larger cities, as in London. They exercised a general supervision over their respective trades and many of their rules and decisions have been perpetuated in modern statutes. The authority vested in the London Grocers' Guild, the "Grocers' Company of London," is described in the article on the GROCER (which see). Reference is there also made to the Levant Trading and East Indian Companies, to whose enterprise was largely due the great expansion of England's commerce and the foundation of her Eastern empire. Similar in aims and scope were the great Dutch Trading Guilds which carried their commercial ventures over the entire globe and still exist in China, Japan and the Pacific. GUINEA FOWL. The guinea fowl, a native of Africa but now found in nearly every part of the world, is, compared with the "chicken," a new arrival in the poultry yard. It belongs to the same natural order, Gallinae, as the common domestic fowl. It was raised as a table bird by the ancient Romans, but later was apparently entirely overlooked, not coming into vogue again for centuries. It is not as thoroughly domesticated as some other kinds of poultry, but both supply and demand, particularly for high class trade, have been steadily increasing of late years. Its popularity is due both to the excellent quality of its flesh, especially in young and caponized birds, and to its slightly "gamey" taste, resembling somewhat that of the partridge. It serves as an acceptable substitute for game when that is unobtainable or out of season. The "Pearl" guinea fowl, the most common poultry type, has purplish-grey plumage evenly dotted with white, the ears and sides of the head white, the helmet horn-colored, sometimes replaced by a crest of feathers, the face and neck bare, the wattles bright red and the legs reddish-yellow. The "White" guinea fowl is another highly prized bird and some judges claim superiority for crosses between the "Pearl" and "White" varieties. In general appearance the guinea fowl retains nearly all the characteristics of the wild bird, the only marked difference being the change of the legs from dull-grey or brown to reddish-yellow. The birds are of marketable size commencing with the early autumn, the usual age being from five to eight months. A "Squab Guinea" should weigh from three-quarters of a pound up to one and a quarter pounds; a "Guinea Chick" from one and a half to two and a quarter pounds. They are generally sold, like game birds, unplucked or with only the breast feathers removed, their handsome plumage making them conspicuously attractive. As their feather coats are very thick, this method also makes them appear larger than they really are. The tests for age given in the article on POULTRY apply to the guinea fowl, except that a purplish breast is to be expected. The breast meat is lighter in color than that of other parts of the body, but the flesh throughout is darker than that of chicken. Good market birds should have full breasts and fleshy limbs. The birds may be cooked and served in almost any way employed for poultry or game birds of similar age and size. The food value is about the same as that of chicken. Boiled cereals, such as "hominy," are an acceptable accompaniment in place of potatoes. Many connoisseurs allow the guinea fowl to hang for some days until just before the moment of "turning" in order to accentuate the gamey flavor. Guinea fowl eggs--rounder than hen's eggs and about half the size--are not generally appreciated by the American consumer, but they are highly esteemed in Europe, where they are classed as little inferior to the very delicate eggs of the plover. GUINEA PEPPER: a name sometimes applied to Cayenne Pepper (see PEPPER). GUINEA PIG: a small animal native to South America, best known in this country and Europe as a domesticated cage pet. The wild animal is generally orange and black on the upper parts, shading to yellowish underneath. Domesticated specimens are usually orange, black and white in marking. Those who have experimented with it as a table delicacy pronounce it "good eating," the flavor resembling 'possum. GULL: a name popularly applied to a genus of natatorial or swimming birds which includes a great many varieties, the plumage of most of them white, with a slaty or greyish upper mantle. The most common American types are the Great Black Head Gull and the Herring Gull. Their fish diet renders their meat too rank and coarse to be generally popular, but their eggs are in some sections an important item of local consumption. GUM: viscid matter exuded from various trees and plants, extensively used in the arts, medicines and manufactures--in the making of "gum" or mucilage, confectionery, etc. Among the principal varieties are Gum Arabic from the stems of the Acacia tree, Gum TRAGACANTH (which see) and Chicle (see CHEWING GUM). DEXTRIN (which see) is used as a substitute in various lines of manufacture. GUM SYRUP, or Plain Syrup: retailed in bottles for sweetening fruit and alcoholic beverages, is made by dissolving sugar in boiling water. GUMBO. See OKRA. The title "Gumbo" is in the South also applied to a rich Creole soup of mixed vegetables, meats, herbs, poultry, shellfish, etc., which generally contains Okra as one of its ingredients, the compound title of each style bearing the name of the chief character ingredient, as Chicken Gumbo, Shrimp Gumbo, Okra Gumbo, etc. GUMBO FILé: is any Gumbo Soup to which "Filé," the dried powdered young leaves and leaf buds of sassafras, is added just before taking the soup from the fire. GUNNY BAGS. Gunny is coarse jute or hemp sacking, used for wrapping cotton bales, etc. The bags are employed for shipping raw sugar and similar commodities. GUNPOWDER: is an explosive formed by a mechanical mixture of Saltpetre ( Nitrate of Potassium ), Charcoal and Sulphur or Brimstone, the proportion of these ingredients varying slightly with different manufacturers. With minor modifications, the best grades of modern make consist of 75% Saltpetre, 15% Charcoal and 10% Sulphur. It seems extraordinary but it is a fact that the earliest known formulas correspond closely to those of the standard powders of to-day. It has been found difficult to obtain accurate information as to when Gunpowder was invented, or by whom. The combination of saltpetre with other substances for making fire-darts, Greek-fire, and other explosives resembling gunpowder, is said to have been known in the earliest ages, principally among the Far Eastern nations. The "Gentoo" laws supposed to have been formulated about the time of Moses, 1500 years before the Christian Era, refer to cannon and guns, in the use of which gunpowder or some explosive substance must have been used. History also relates that during the Macedonian conquest about 400 years B. C., King Philip used "field artilery." Some authorities credit the Chinese with being acquainted at a very early period with substances resembling gunpowder. It is doubtful though if gunpowder was used to any great extent before the introduction of firearms about 1320 A.D. "Black" gunpowder has recently been superseded by smokeless powder to a great extent, but, because of its comparatively low cost, it is still largely used for shotgun ammunition and in rifles and pistols. The three standard grain sizes are Fg, FFg and FFFg, from coarse to fine. For shotgun ammunition, FFg and FFFg are recommended, the finer size giving the greater velocity to the shot. Fg is suitable for rifle cartridges containing 40 grains or more to a charge; FFg for the smaller sizes of rifles. FFFg is the quickest, and is especially adapted for revolver and pistol cartridges, where all the power must be developed in a short barrel or cylinder. Gunpowder is ordinarily packed in metal kegs, half-kegs and quarter-kegs, containing respectively 25, 12 1/2 and 6 1/4 pounds avoirdupois, and in tin canisters containing one pound, one-half pound and one-quarter pound. Some manufacturers are also using a paper "Keg" holding one pound of powder--this style of packing making an attractive and handy container. The oldest gunpowder manufacturer in the United States is the Du Pont Company of Wilmington, Delaware, which was established in 1802. Its mills have continuously supplied the United States Government with explosives since that date, besides furnishing sportsmen with a standard article for their enjoyment. Only limited quantities of gunpowder packed in kegs or canisters may be stored on the premises. Insurance companies generally allow 25 pounds to be stored without additional premium. In some states a special license is required before it can be handled. The restrictions on the carrying, selling and shipping of the commodity, have caused the majority of dealers to meet the demands of their customers with loaded shot shells and metallic ammunition for rifles and pistols. Ammunition of this character may be carried in stock in any quantity without affecting insurance and without special license. Smokeless Gunpowder, is manufactured in two principal classes, "bulk" and "dense." Bulk powder gives equal strength to an equal bulk of Black or common gunpowder, the weight though being only about one-half. Dense is so manufactured that it occupies only about one-third the space of its equivalent in black gunpowder. The respective merits of these two types is a matter of individual opinion, each having its adherents. The up-to-date manufacturer produces both varieties and the shooter takes his choice. Smokeless gunpowders of both types are manufactured for use in shotguns, rifles and pistols. It must be borne in mind, however, that those designated for shotguns must not be used in rifles, and vice versa. In composition, the various smokeless powders differ but slightly, the bulk type being chiefly made from a mixture of nitro-cellulose and metallic salts with a moderating agent, while the dense powders are generally composed of nitro-glycerin and nitro-cellulose. Like black powders, smokeless gunpowder is packed in kegs, fractions of kegs, and canisters. As in other lines of merchandise, unscrupulous powder manufacturers are constantly offering inferior products to the unsuspecting public. It is wiser to stock only regular and reliable brands than to risk life and property by purchasing unknown and unstable powders. HACKBERRY or Sugarberry: the fruit of the Nettle Tree. It is of pleasing sweetness and aromatic flavor, and, like the American persimmon, is at its best after it has been touched by frost. HADDOCK ( See Color Page facing 250): a silvery-grey sea fish, varying from one and a half to seven pounds in weight, of the same genus as the cod and very plentiful in the North Atlantic, off both the American and European coasts. It is in season all the year. "Deep sea" catches are generally considered the best. Large quantities are cured by drying, smoking and salting. Smoked Haddock is best known as "Finnan haddie" (which see). HAGGIS: a national Scotch dish which consists of a well cleaned sheep stomach filled with the minced, blanched and cooked sheep's heart, liver, lungs, etc., mixed with oatmeal, onions, beef suet, herbs, etc., cooked from two to three hours before serving. Haggis is now sold in can form, for this purpose being cooked first in well buttered molds instead of in the stomach. (1) Virginia Ham (2) Bacon (3) Boned Shoulder (4) Westphalia Ham An illustration of four different hams, each sliced to show the interior of the ham, and each labeled with a number. HAKE ( see Color Page facing 250): a fish of the cod tribe, plentiful along the coasts of Europe and eastern North America, large specimens attaining a length of four feet. The meat is coarse, flaky and white. It is consumed both fresh and salted in the same way as cod, but is considered less choice. HALIBUT (see Color Page facing 250): a large flat-fish, longer than the flounder, covered with scales and showing brown above and white on its under side. It is very abundant on most northern coasts from Norway to the United States, and is often of great size--some specimens have weighed five hundred pounds. It is in season all the year and is largely eaten both fresh--generally broiled in the form of steak--and cured by salting and smoking. In England it is known as the "workhouse turbot" because of its cheapness. "Chicken Halibut," much the best eating, is the young fish, averaging two to ten pounds in weight. Halibut is often substituted for turbot. It can, however, be readily distinguished in the whole fish as the turbot has spots on the back and the halibut has not. The turbot is also much wider for its length than the halibut. HAMS ( see SMOKED MEATS facing page 292): are the hind legs of the pig, above the hock joint. They are generally sold salted and smoked, but also salted only, being then used generally for boiling, and fresh-boiled, in the last-named condition chiefly for retailing in slices or by the pound as "Pork Steak," "fresh pork," etc. The curing process in the best qualities consists substantially of trimming, chilling, immersing for from forty to sixty days in a brine composed of table salt, granulated sugar and a trace of saltpetre (the last-named to fix the color), washing, drying by hanging in steam-heated apartments and smoking, the hams remaining in the smoke-house at a moderate temperature for about three days. Hickory wood or mahogany sawdust are considered the best for smoking, but other woods are occasionally employed, as for example, Juniper Brush in Germany for Westphalia Ham, to impart a distinctive flavor. The final step is wrapping the hams and sewing into canvas or burlap bags. In the manufacture of the cheaper qualities, the salting is more speedily performed by "pumping" the brine into the ham. The time allowed for smoking is also considerably reduced, a higher degree of heat being maintained in the smoke-house. A Skinned Ham is a large ham with the skin and fat cut off down to the shank. It is purchased principally by retailers who wish to sell it in small quantities. A Boneless Ham is a cured ham, soaked, boned, the fat trimmed off and tied in a cloth and boiled for several hours. An American Short Cut Ham is one cut short so as to expose the marrow, and well rounded on the butt, most of the fat being taken off the face down to the shank. A Long Ham is cut from the side by separating the hip bone from the rump, the foot unjointed at the joint of the knee. A Manchester Ham is the same as a Long Cut Ham, except that it is cut shorter on the butt. A Stafford Ham is the same as a Manchester, except that the hip bone is taken out at the socket, thus exposing the knuckle. What was formerly known as a "Picnic" or "California" ham is the shoulder with from five to eight pounds of the butt trimmed off. As ham, like all other cured pork, loses considerably in weight by the natural evaporation of moisture and grease, it is advisable for the retailer to purchase only in small quantities so as to make as quick a turnover as possible. Some hams, as Virginia, are sold by their first weight as stamped on the canvas, irrespective of loss in weight while being held. They should always be kept in a cool dry place--never exposed to the sun in window displays, etc. Among the best known of imported hams are: Westmoreland and York (English); Westphalia (Germany); Bayonne (France); Sprague (Hungary) and Spanish. In purchasing a ham, it is best to choose one that is moderately fat and that weighs from twelve to sixteen pounds. Fat is essential to a good ham--if it is lean, it is nearly always lacking in flavor and tenderness. The famous Virginia hams from lean Virginia hogs are exceptions to this rule, but their delicacy is attributed to the animals' forest diet of roots and acorns and other nuts. A ham much under the weight mentioned is generally lacking in flavor, as the meat is ordinarily too immature. It can be used for boiling, but it is not even for that as desirable as a part or whole of a larger ham. On the other hand, if the ham is very large, the muscle is liable to be a little tough. For the average small household, the best way of using a ham is to reserve the center for broiling and frying in slices, and to boil the remainder. Sliced ham should never be cut more than one-quarter of an inch thick--one-sixth of an inch is still better. It is not necessary to saw through the bone--with a sharp knife, cut clean to the bone and divide the slices in the center. The broiling or frying should be done over a hot fire, but it should not be sufficiently fierce to scorch the meat. It should always be eaten fresh cooked, as broiled or fried ham will speedily toughen. To properly boil ham, first brush it off thoroughly to remove every particle of mold, soak for an hour in cold water and then wash thoroughly. Next, with a very sharp knife, shave off the hardened surface from both the face and butt. Place over the fire in cold water, let it come to a moderate boil and keep it steadily at that point, allowing it to cook twenty minutes for each pound of meat, replenishing the supply of water as fast as it boils away. When cooked, remove the skin--it will easily peel off if it has been properly boiled--and dish with the fat side up. The service is improved by dredging black pepper in spots on the upside, sticking in a few whole cloves and garnishing with parsley. A roasted ham is merely a boiled ham nicely browned in a hot oven. It can be rendered more appetizing in appearance by spreading egg-moistened bread crumbs or cracker dust over the fat side before putting in the oven. The ham should rest in a pan with a wire bottom, or, if that is not possible, should be so blocked that the flesh does not rest on the pan. HARD TACK, Ship Biscuit, Pilot Bread: large hard biscuits of plain dough, kiln-dried. They are prepared principally for army and navy commissaries, but in some places there is a steady private demand for them, the broken biscuit being relished when added to soups and stews. HARE: a class name for a large family of small game animals, including all of the Leporidae except the rabbit. There are from thirty to forty different varieties, including the "Common Hare," Polar Hare, Marsh Hare, Mountain Hare, etc., a number of them native to North America. The hare is generally bigger than the rabbit, with longer ears and feet and wider muzzle. The common European type averages larger than the American and has still longer ears, feet and hind legs. Some varieties of the hare and rabbit are very similar in appearance, but the division is a natural one and the two types can always be distinguished by their young--those of the hare are born highly developed with full coats of fur and their eyes open; those of the rabbit are born blind, naked and helpless. The most common type of American hare is known in many sections as the "Jack-rabbit." It has always been a more or less popular article of game food, eaten fresh, but it is not as a rule sufficiently plentiful to encourage commercial packing. The Belgian Hare is a large variety of RABBIT (which see). The points given for the selection of rabbits apply equally to hares. HARICOTS FLAGEOLETS. See FLAGEOLETS. HARICOTS VERTS: young string beans bottled or canned, imported from France. HASLETS: the liver, lungs, heart, etc., of food animals, especially of swine and sheep. HAWS: the fruit of the Hawthorn, known under various names and found in numerous varieties all over the world--the English "May," the Summer Haw or Yellow Thorn, etc. The berries--yellow, orange, purple or red in color--are more useful than is generally known. They vary in size and flavor, but there are a number which make a pleasing breakfast or dessert fruit, and as such are popular in the south of Europe. They are also used in the manufacture of Hawthorn Liquor, an intoxicant, and cooked for various pastry and dessert items. In some parts of the United States the term "haw" is applied to the SLOE. HAZEL NUTS. See matter under title of FILBERTS. HEAD. The most generally desirable head for home cooking is that of the calf, but lamb's and pig's are also popular. With the exception of those from black sheep, they should be thick and white. HEAD CHEESE, or Brawn: pickled meat trimmings, principally of pig meat, variously spiced and flavored, retailed in bulk, canned (then generally encased in jelly) and in large sausage casings (see SAUSAGES). HEART. Beef heart is an economical and pleasing dish if properly prepared. In purchasing, see that the fat around the top is clear and lively in appearance. Calf's heart is smaller but more tender and delicate in flavor. Lamb's heart is generally sold with the lights. HEMP: the inner fibre of several plants, the various grades being used in the manufacture of cordage, sheeting, etc. The most widely cultivated are the numerous varieties of the Cannabis Sativa, an annual of the nettle family which attains an average height of from four to eight feet, grown chiefly in India, Russia, Argentine, and the United States. Manila Hemp is the fibre of a plant of the banana family, grown almost exclusively in the Philippine Islands. The finest grades are made into shawls and the coarser into ropes, etc. Hemp Seed: as it concerns the retailer, is best known as a food for canaries and other cage birds. Hemp Seed Oil: is a green oil extensively employed in Holland in the manufacture of soft soap. In Russia, it is used for food purposes by all classes. HERBS. A great variety of plants belong under this heading and their uses are very numerous--(1) as vegetables, (2) for flavoring soaps, sauces and pickles, (3) to make herb or medicinal teas, etc. Those used principally as vegetables are frequently termed Pot Herbs, or are designated by the still wider title of "greens." Those employed chiefly for flavoring purposes--the varieties particularly considered in this article--are generally known as Sweet Herbs. Among the most popular types are Basil, Bay-leaf, Chervil, Dill, Marjoram, Mint, Parsley, Sage, Savory, Tarragon and Thyme. All of these, and a number of others of less common use, are described in their alphabetical positions. A "bouquet" or "faggot" of herbs is a bunch tied together for ready sale. Dried Sweet and Medicinal Herbs, both whole and ground, are largely prepared by such farming communities as the Shakers. They are sold chiefly in cans or packages, in the latter case being first pressed into cakes of various sizes, principally 1-oz. and 1/2-lb. and then securely wrapped. They should be kept in a dry place as they readily absorb moisture and become moldy. HERMETICAL SEALING: the closing and sealing of a can or other vessel so as to render impossible the admission of air. HERMITAGE: the wine produced in the hilly Hermitage district bordering on the river Rhone, north of Valence, France. The name is taken from a hermit's cell or hermitage built on the summit of a hill near Tain in 1225 by Gaspard de Sterimberg, until then a chevalier of the French court. The section is divided into twelve districts known as Mas, the most noted of which is the Mas de Greffieux, at the foot of the hills. Next in order are the Mas de Méal, Mas de Bessar, and Mas de Baumes. The wines are generally known by the names of the districts--Mas Méal, etc.--but the true Hermitage wine which first made its reputation is a blending of the grapes or wine of the first three--Greffieux, Méal and Bessar. The product of the other eight districts--Cocoules, Murets, Dionnières, l'Ermite, Péléat, la Pierrelle, du Colombier and Varognes--is generally considered of comparatively inferior quality. The best known Hermitage is the "red" which is a rich deep purple, soft and delicate in flavor and of fine bouquet, suggesting the raspberry. The white wine of the best grades is also very choice--full bodied, smooth and aromatic. HERRING. There are several species of this favorite and much used fish, the chief being the Clupea Harengus of Northern Europe and America and the Clupea Mirabilis of the Pacific Coast of the United States. The principal American fisheries are located along the New England coasts and in British-American waters. In Europe, the main herring grounds are those of Great Britain, Ireland, Scandinavia, the Netherlands and the North of France. The domestic catch is supplemented by the annual importation of from fifty to seventy million pounds of pickled or salted herring, chiefly from Holland, Great Britain, Norway and Canada. The fish are usually caught in gill nets or scoop nets, the yearly harvest amounting to many hundreds of millions. The average size is from eleven to fourteen inches. The principal season in the eastern market is from October 1 to April 30. On the North American coast in the winter, the catch is frozen solid and thus easily shipped fresh to the markets for packing. When recently caught and cooked by boiling or broiling, herring are both wholesome and agreeable for consumption fresh, but the principal demand here is for the smoked or pickled fish, as the fresh herring if fried, or if kept long, becomes strong and oily and is apt to offend the stomach. The best grades of the cured fish are on the other hand highly esteemed as a relish, and salted herring is credited with diuretic properties by many physicians--perhaps because of the free quaffing of water or other liquids which generally follows its consumption. Bismarck herring is the whole fish put up in a pickle flavored with spices, pieces of red pepper, onions, etc. Bloaters (which see) are half-cured whole herrings. Boneless herring, other than that in cans or jars, is the dry cured fish ready prepared for the broiler. It comes packed in boxes with glass tops and is a quick-selling article in a grocer's stock. Kippered herring is the fish split, salted and mild-smoked. Milchner herring is the pickled soft-roe fish, the roe being converted into a sauce by rubbing through a sieve. Red herring is English herring salted and smoked. The title is of English origin, distinguishing the smoked fish from the "white" herring, preserved by salting only. Soused herring is another title for Pickled herring. More fancy types include "Delicatess" or Filet (filleted) Herring in Wine Sauce or in Oil; Roll Mopse (pickled rolled fillets); small fish in Tomato Sauce, etc. As an article of food, herrings are of vast importance to a large proportion of the population of Europe and the preparation of the cured fish furnishes employment for thousands. The Dutch herring fishery is conducted by steam and sailing vessels, which use tanned cotton gill nets, 360 meshes deep and 720 meshes long, the mesh being two-inches stretch. They are set about six feet below the surface, being held in position by leads and corks. From 80 to 150 nets are carried on each vessel. A thousand barrels are often taken at one haul of the seine. An instantaneous photograph of a few members of a "school" of herrings An illustration of a group of fish swimming in water. The fish are dressed and salted immediately after the nets are hauled on to the vessel--this point is considered of great importance. The Dutch fisherman, when dressing herring, is equipped with a short knife, attached to the fourth and fifth fingers of his right hand by a string tied to the handle. He takes the fish in the left hand, with the belly up and the head forward, and thrusts the knife crosswise directly through the gill cavities, entering the left side and emerging from the right. The knife, with edge turned upward or outward, is then pulled directly through the tissues, cutting and tearing away the gills. There is little apparent effort made to remove anything except the gills and pectorals as the other organs come away incidentally. The men become very expert in cutting--some of them can handle an average of twelve hundred fish an hour. The removal of the gills and heart results in opening the large blood vessels and free bleeding ensues, leaving the flesh pale or "white." The fish are next rolled in salt and then carefully packed in barrels in straight rows, backs down, each layer at right angles to those above and below and with salt between layers, a barrel of salt being required for each four barrels of fish. The barrels are finally headed up and stored in the hold until the end of the fishing trip. On reaching port, the catch is unloaded and sold at auction. The shore buyer generally repacks the fish in order to sort them by size and grades of quality, no sorting being attempted on the vessels. Some purchasers or agents Thousands of kegs of Scotch herring, ready to ship, Aberdeen, Scotland An illustration of a shipyard filled with stacks of barrels. prefer the sea-packed, unsorted fish, but as a rule dealers or jobbers wish to know how many fish are in a barrel and what their quality is. For repacking, the herring are first emptied into large vats or tanks, the original brine, called "blood brine" or "blood pickle," being carefully saved and poured back after re-barreling. Fresh salt is added in the proportion of one barrel to eight. Dutch herring barrels, in which the bulk of the catch is marketed, contain about one hundred and twenty-five kilograms (about 275 pounds) of fish. Smaller receptacles--one-half, one-quarter, one-third, one-sixteenth and one-thirty-second barrels--are also used, but are in less demand than formerly. In Holland there is no official regulation for packing or branding, but the packers have a standard which is generally observed, as it is to their interest to have the fish properly packed and labeled. Both Dutch and Scotch herring are graded according to the spawning condition of the fish. Ripe or full herring are branded "Full" or Vol; those in which the roe is undeveloped, as "Matties" or Maatjis, and the spent herring as "Shotten" or Ijlen, (or Ij or Ijle ). There are several qualities of each of these classes, designated No. 1, No. 2, etc., and also numerous other grades, as "Mixed" or unassorted, etc. HICKORY NUT ( see Color Page opposite 414). There is an almost innumerable variety of hickory nuts, but all the types of noteworthy food value can be classified under the name of Pecans, Thick Shell Shagbarks, or "Western Hickory," and Thin Shell Shagbarks. Pecans are treated under a separate heading. Of the other two classes, the Thin-shell are considered the more desirable, the meat being whiter as well as more easily obtainable. The Thick-shell or Western Hickory often though bears very large nuts--frequently to a length of two inches. The hickory-tree is a species of the walnut family and is found only in the United States. Hoarhound An illustration of a plant with round leaves, shown from the root to the top of the leaves. HOARHOUND, or Horehound: a bushy plant of the mint family native to the south of Europe and Eastern countries, growing about a foot high, and with round, wrinkled, almost hairy ("hoary") leaves, which contain a bitter principle and volatile oil of aromatic but not very agreeable smell. It is used as a flavor for candy and also in medicinal syrups for its curative properties for coughs and other affections. HOCK. See RHINE AND MOSELLE WINES. HOE CAKE: originally a plain cornmeal cake, so named because the old-time plantation "mammy" often cooked it on a hoe on hot embers in front of the wood fire. The term is now applied also to a richer "biscuit bread" of cornmeal, baked either on a griddle or in an oven. HOG AND HOMINY: a recent addition to the list of canned goods. The title given was formerly employed in slang phraseology to describe the diet of some country sections of the United States. HOGSHEAD. See table of Weights and Measures in APPENDIX. HOKEY-POKEY, the Italian Occhi-Pocchi: (1) a term applied to mixed colors and flavors of ice cream, in cake forms, (2) an inferior grade of ice cream sold by peddlers. HOLLANDS. A term applied to Holland Gin (see article on GIN). HOMINY or Granulated Hominy or Grits: is, essentially, white Indian Corn kernels with the rough fibrous part removed, broken into particles of uniform size. It is similar to Granulated Cornmeal, but considerably coarser. A grade of Grits, somewhat lower than that handled by the grocery trade for table purposes, is used in large quantities by brewers. Pearl Hominy is a larger size Hominy. It is also known as Samp, Coarse Hominy and Coarse Grits. Hominy is prepared for use by boiling with water or milk. The larger sizes are eaten as a dinner vegetable, the finer product as a breakfast dish. When boiling for frying, always add some flour just before finishing as that will prevent it from breaking and splitting when fried. HONEY: is the sucrose secreted by the glands of flowers, extracted by the proboscides of the working bees and inverted in their crops or honey bags into Invert Sugar or Dextrose and Levulose sugars (see article on GLUCOSE). At the hive, the bee disgorges his burden into the cells of the comb as a reserve supply of food for the colony. As thus at first deposited the honey is a thin liquid--it attains its later syrupy consistence by evaporation. A hive of fifty to seventy-five thousand bees will yield an average of about one pound of honey daily during the season, the quantity rising to two to three pounds a day at the height of the season. If left to their own devices, the bees begin their annual work by building the combs, the process taking about half their time. After many failures, bee-keepers have found that they can supply thin transparent layers of pure wax stamped into foundations for the cells in such a way as to be acceptable to the bees, who complete the cell portion much more quickly and proceed sooner to actual honey gathering. Man can make more foundation in a minute than the bees in a dozen hives could draw out all summer. Taking a swarm of bees from a tree. A man climbing a ladder beneath a tree lifts a large honeycomb into a basket he is holding under one arm. Comb Honey is that straight from the hives. The little square or oblong frames familiar to the consumer are fitted with the comb foundation referred to, and then placed in the hives for the bees to work in. The bees not only make the honey we eat, but also put it up in packages for us! Virgin Honey is that which flows spontaneously from the combs. The term was formerly applied to that made by the younger bees before swarming. HONEY An illustration of two honeycombs: one round and covered with bees, the other square and dripping with honey. Two clover blossoms fill the space between the two combs; one is being harvested for nectar by a bee. Strained Honey is that extracted from the combs, generally by centrifugal process--the rapid revolving of the combs inside mesh-cylinders causing the honey to exude. If the honey has been allowed to ripen sufficiently in the hives, or is properly evaporated after extraction, "strained honey" compares favorably in flavor and quality with Comb Honey. Candied Honey, as marketed, is strained honey evaporated to solidity. It is a confection classed with Maple Sugar, etc. Ninety per cent. of the honey consumed is sent to market extracted or "strained." It is shipped in cans which hold five gallons, or sixty pounds, two cans making a case. Comb Honey and the better grades of Strained Honey, are sold for table use, while dark and coarse honey is used by bakers, confectioners, cracker makers and druggists. Hundreds of tons are annually consumed in the manufacture of sweet biscuits, as it has the peculiar quality of keeping them fresh and moist. The famous "Honey Bread" of Germany and France, lebkuchen, pain d'épice, will keep a year or eighteen months without drying out. Honey has been employed as food from the remotest times. In moderation it is nutritious and laxative, though some dyspeptic persons find that it aggravates their symptoms. Its composition varies according to the food of the bees, their age, the season, etc. The invert sugar (dextrose and levulose) ranges from 60% to 90%; sucrose (corresponding to "ordinary" sugar) from nothing to 10%. It was formerly adulterated to a considerable extent by the addition of commercial invert sugar and commercial glucose, but the presence of either of these adulterants is easily ascertained on analysis, and the enforcement of Federal and State Food Laws has practically eliminated the fraud. The flavors of honey before blending vary as much as, or more than, those of fruits. Mountain Sage is very mild; Buckwheat is so strong as to be almost biting to the palate; Basswood has a pronounced mint taste; White Clover is milder than Basswood and stronger than Mountain Sage; Alfalfa resembles White Clover, with usually a slight mint taste. The wild honey of Cuba, Mexico, etc., is generally highly aromatic. The comparative merits of honey flavors is largely a matter of individual taste. In the East, to describe any honey as "equal to White Clover" is to style it as equal to the very finest, yet many judges and all Western consumers consider Alfalfa superior to White Clover. Other points for judgment are color and density. In this country, light colored or "white" honey is generally considered the best, but the rule does not hold good everywhere as the famous Scotch "Heather Honey" is as dark in color as our Buckwheat--which is in most sections rated as a decidedly inferior product. The greater part of our present supply consists of Alfalfa Honey, from the alfalfa regions of the Western States, where bee-keeping is conducted on a large scale, the product amounting to an annual value of several million dollars. Southern California honey comes chiefly from Sage and Sumach blossoms, excepting in the San Joaquin Valley, where the bee-keepers depend principally upon the Alfalfa flower. Texas furnishes large quantities of Mesquite, Guajilla (pronounced wah-he-lia ), Catclaw and Horsemint honey; the Eastern States, north of the Ohio River and east of the Mississippi, principally Clover and Basswood, and the States south of the Ohio, Tupelo, Mangrove and a good deal of Clover. In all of the honey States, white honey is produced in greater or less quantities, but it is usually mixed with other honeys, so the flavor cannot be distinguished. In Utah, Colorado and parts of Nevada and Idaho we get a pure White Clover without any other flavor being added, but only a few carloads are produced. England and Northern Europe generally, produce a honey similar to the Scotch Heather, but of lesser quality. Narbonne Honey, from the vicinity of Narbonne, France, is similar to our White Clover. Rosemary Honey is also very popular in Southern Europe, and the famed honey of Mt. Hymettus, Greece, is from Wild Thyme. "Poisonous Honey" is found near Trebizond, in Asia, its toxic effects being due to the bees having collected it from a poisonous plant. Honey should always be stored where it is dry and warm--almost hot. It will not be too warm with the temperature at 100° Fahr. If one is fortunate enough to have a dry warm garret next to the roof, no better place for storing it can be found. Where salt will keep dry, honey is safe. A cellar is one of the very worst places that can be found for storing honey. There are few cellars in which the air is not somewhat damp, and honey attracts moisture very readily. Strained Honey will become thin and will often ferment. Comb Honey will lose all of its attractiveness--the beautiful white surface becomes watery and darkened and drops of water gather on the cappings and run over the surface. If honey, particularly Strained Honey, is kept for a great length of time, especially during cold weather, it is apt to change from its original liquid or semi-liquid consistence to a semi-granular condition. It is then called "granulated" or "candied" honey, and the flavor is somewhat changed. Some people prefer it in this condition, but it is not, as a rule, so readily salable. The tendency to "candy" is, however, fairly good proof of purity. Honey Bread. See general article on BREAD. Honey Cakes. See LEBKUCHEN. Honey Mead. See MEAD. A pole of choice Hops, Oregon An illustration of a leafy plant growing up a pole. HOPS. The hop plant is a climber found wild in America, Europe and Asia. It has been cultivated in Germany since the ninth century and is now also an important crop in the United States, the chief producing sections being New York and the Pacific Coast states. It is famous for the property of its blossoms in preserving beer from bacterial action, while also imparting to it an agreeably bitter taste, and it is medicinally valuable as a sedative and narcotic, whether taken internally or applied externally in the form of pillows, fomentations, etc. The ancients ate the young hop shoots as we do asparagus, and this custom is still prevalent in parts of England and Germany. The roots of the vine are perennial, the top only dying in the winter. The vines, which twine with the sun, from right to left, are now generally trained on drop-wires or strings or on wire trellis work, the old-style poles being employed in comparatively few sections. The blossoms are harvested in the latter part of August and the beginning of September. They are cured and kiln dried and then baled. In the choice of hops, care should be taken to select those which are full of lupulin (the essential principle), free from mold, and bright and silky in appearance--that are the most powerfully odorous, and the most free from leaves, stems, scaly fragments and sticks, and which, when rubbed between the hands, impart, in the greatest degree, a yellowish tint and glutinous feeling to the skin. It is best also to select those which are tightly packed, as, unless they are very firmly pressed together and quite solid, they soon spoil in keeping. Weighing Hops An illustration of a group of men suspending a large sack on a tripod structure. HOREHOUND. See HOARHOUND. HORSE RADISH: a plant allied to the nasturtium or cress family, naturalized in many temperate countries. It is grown for its white, fleshy, very pungent roots, which are generally grated and mixed with vinegar for use as a condiment with oysters, meat, etc. Grated Horse Radish is best when freshest--if exposed to heat and air, it rapidly loses its pungent characteristics. Jars and bottles in which it is put up should be hermetically sealed. When used without vinegar, it is best grated just before serving. Horse Radish Sauce is made by placing the sliced root in a bottle or similar receptacle and covering with alcohol. The sauce can be used without any other addition than a little fresh mustard and a little red pepper, or may be added drop by drop to any white sauce until the desired flavor is obtained. Horse Radish Vinegar is the grated root, together with a small quantity of shallots, onions or garlic, red pepper, etc., steeped for a week or so in vinegar, and then strained and bottled. Horse Radish Powder is prepared by grinding the grated root, and drying by gentle heat or exposure to a current of dry air. When grinding the root, it is advisable to use a meat chopper in order to save the eyes! Prepared Horse Radish of any kind should always be kept in a dark, cool place. Horse Radish An illustration of a gnarled plant root. The roots may be left in the ground over winter and dug as needed. If dug, they may be kept fresh for some time by burying in cool sand. An excellent winter salad may be obtained by sprouting the roots. If they are dug in the late autumn, the crowns being left intact, and then buried upright in moist but not wet, earth in a dark, warm cellar, the leaves will grow white and tender and of a sweet pungency. They should be cut when about three or four inches long and may be used singly or mixed with other plant salads. Darkness during growth is essential, as if exposed to the light the leaves grow green and tough and too strong in flavor. HUCKLEBERRIES. The huckleberry, blueberry, bilberry and cranberry constitute the principal members of a large family of edible berries, botanically classed together. CRANBERRIES (which see) are easily and naturally distinguished by their red color, but the titles of Huckleberry, Blueberry and Bilberry are variously and contradictorily employed in different localities. By New England custom, those of bluish color are popularly known as Blueberries; those black or nearly so, as Huckleberries. West and South of New England, the general tendency is to group all varieties under the common name of Huckleberry, in spite of the fact that the market supply is chiefly of blueberries. Botanically, blueberries and bilberries are now ascribed to the Vaccinium genus and huckleberries to Gaylussacia. Physically, blueberries and bilberries are generally sweeter, milder and larger than huckleberries, and the seeds, though more numerous, are so much smaller as to be scarcely noticeable in eating. They are also generally bluer than the Common Huckleberry ( G. Resinosa), but the color distinction is not absolute because of the bluish tint of the Blue Huckleberry or Dangleberry (G. Frondosa) and the nearly black hue of a few kinds of Blueberries. The name "Whortleberry" is in the United States applied to the Huckleberry, and in Europe to the Bilberry. The numerous varieties of huckleberries, blueberries and bilberries range in size from that of a currant to a small grape, and in color from light blue to black, and ripen from the first of June to the last of August, remaining in the market until about the middle of September. They are picked in enormous quantities for use fresh as an edible fruit and (both fresh and canned) for pies and puddings. In Southeast Maine, vast areas are covered with the bushes. Cultivation is at present resorted to in only a few parts, as the wild bushes generally supply enough to meet the demand, but it is probable that the future will see greater attention directed to the improvement of these berries and their more extensive production. As marketed, two or more varieties are often mixed together. The first to ripen is the Dwarf Blueberry, borne by a small shrub from six to fifteen inches in height, which grows and bears abundantly on the sand barrens and hills of Pennsylvania. The fruit is also known as Sugar Berry, Sugar Huckleberry, Blue Huckleberry, Early Sweet, Blue Sweet, Low Sweet, Early Blue and Early Huckleberry. It has a bluish coat, which looks as though dusted with flour. Blueberries An illustration of a branch laden with blueberries. A small ruler drawn in one corner of the illustration shows the size of the blueberries. The High Bush Huckleberry An illustration of a sparsely-foliated bush laden with berries. Next come the Low Blueberry, also known as the "Blue Huckleberry," the Canada Blueberry and the Dwarf Bilberry. The Low Blueberry grows on dry sandy ground West of the Alleghanies. The bush resembles that of the Dwarf Blueberry except that the plant is more erect. The fruit is large, blue and covered with bloom. The Canada Blueberry, found in the Pennsylvania mountains and regions further north, is a shrub from one to two feet in height, bearing round or oblate blue berries, covered with bloom and pleasing in flavor, but not as sweet as the fruit of the Dwarf Blueberry. The bush is also known locally as the "velvet leaf." The Dwarf Bilberry, found in northern Maine and Canada, is a small shrub from two to twelve inches in height, with large blue berries covered with bloom. The latest in the market are the fruits of the High Bush Blueberry of the northeast states and the High Bush Huckleberry, both of them widely known as "Swamp Huckleberry," from their preference for moist woodlands and swampy ground. The bushes are tall--from four to twelve feet in height--and ragged or straggling in growth. The fruit of the High Bush Blueberry is a dark purplish; that of the High Bush Huckleberry is nearly black. The crop is gathered mainly with steel rakes, similar to those frequently used in cranberry picking, a skillful "hand" sometimes collecting more than fifteen bushels in a day. Both men and women are employed for the work. The berries are afterwards winnowed in a machine which blows out the sticks, leaves and defective fruits. The poorer grades are in some sections popularly called "crackers," because their tough skins crack when eaten. The term is also applied to the true huckleberry, because the bony covering of the seed "crackles" between the teeth. HUMBUGS. The trade is perpetually annoyed by humbugs. We warn grocers against all preparations for preserving perishable articles, all schemes for mixing goods so as to cheat the buyer, and especially against goods which pretend to grade with the best and are offered at the lowest figures. HUMIDOR: a term somewhat generally applied to any device for keeping cigars moist. A stricter trade acceptance confines it to boxes or chests especially constructed for keeping cigars in good condition--accomplished by insulation from contact with the outside air and the inclusion of a slab or tablet of porcelain, clay or other porous material which is moistened from time to time. Devices, whether of clay or metal, in perforated tubes and other forms, which are set in cigar cases to keep the air moist, are best known as "cigar moisteners." HUNGARIAN and AUSTRIAN WINES. Hungarian wines hold high reputation for their tonic qualities, as they contain an unusually large proportion of iron. The most famous of all is TOKAY (which see). Szamorodni is a noteworthy soft, full, white wine made from the same grapes as Tokay, but without the selection, or addition, of vine-ripened berries. Among other good varieties are Ruszti or Ruster, also of Tokay type; the red and white types of Méneser, Villanyi and Ofen, or Ofner, Adelsberger; the red Budai, Egri and Szegszarder; the white Magyaráter, Nesmélyer, Badacsonyer, Pesti and Somlauer; Karlowitzer, of Port style; several Muscats; Hungarian Vermouth and a number of Croatian wines. Austrian wines resemble Hungarian in general character. The best known are divers Muscats; Gumpoldslkirchner, of Sauternes style; Luttenberger, rich and syrupy; Voslauer, red and white, and several varieties from Dalmatia--among them the sweet Maraschino (made from the grape of that name and having no connection with Maraschino, the liqueur) and aromatic Muscats. HUNYADI JANOS. See article on table and medicinal MINERAL WATERS. HYSSOP: a small bushy herb with leaves of aromatic and stimulant properties which grows wild in the south of Europe. The tops and flowers are used in making "Hyssop Tea." ICE AND REFRIGERATION. Various methods of freezing water have been in use to a small extent for some hundreds of years, but the modern industry of ice manufacture and refrigeration, now of considerable magnitude and great importance, dates from about the year 1870. At that time there were four plants in operation in the United States as against nearly 2000 now engaged in the production of ice for general sale, in addition to the very large number of ice and refrigerating plants used in the meat, cold storage, brewery and other lines. Artificial ice was formerly soft and consequently of poor keeping qualities, but the present standard product is both hard and lasting. The great reduction in the cost of manufacture is attributable to the high efficiency of improved machinery. Marking ice for cutting An illustration of three men working with a horse and a two-handled tool on a sheet of ice. The principal methods of modern use are the Compressor, Absorption, Vacuum and Cold Air. Nearly all American plants are operated either by the compressor or absorption system, the former being the more popular, and anhydrous ammonia is the gas most generally employed. In the Compressor system, the gas is condensed by pressure and then reduced to a liquid by chilling in cooled "coils" or pipes. This liquid is released into another coil, known as the "expansion pipe," where it again becomes gas and in so doing absorbs heat from its surroundings--converting water into ice, or reducing the atmosphere in cooling rooms, refrigerator cars, etc. The expanded gas goes back to the compressor to be used over and over again in the same way. By the Absorption method, liquid ammonia is employed as the fundamental agent, the gas being released by heating to about 200° to 210° Fahr. The course of the gas produced is similar to that in the Compressor method, being chilled into a gaseous liquid in a condensing coil and going then to the Expansion Pipes, where its action is identical. It is later sucked back into the mother-water tank and the process repeated. In commercial operation, the process is practically continuous. Sawing ice Two men use long saws to cut through blocks of ice. The action of the Expansion Pipes may be either Direct or Indirect. By the former, they come in close or complete contact with the water or atmosphere to be frozen or chilled. By the latter, their direct action is on strong brine or on air-coils, which are employed as the immediate agents. The brine may be made with common salt, but preferably with calcium chloride. The principal forms of manufactured ice are Can, Plate and Block. Can Ice is obtained by setting cans of water, previously distilled and filtered to remove both impurities and air bubbles, in brine freezing tanks. It is generally good in quality but has a tendency to be soft in the center. Plate Ice is made in oblong tanks in which the water is agitated by air-jets to remove the air particles and assist the freezing action to drive the impurities to the center, which remains uncongealed and is later run off. The sides of the tanks consist of iron plates in contact with Expansion Coils. The ice forms on these plates--hence its name. As removed from the tanks, it is obtained in blocks, generally about sixteen feet long, eight feet wide and one foot thick, weighing three tons and upwards. Block Ice is made in the same way as Plate Ice, except that it is formed in cells or plate-tanks which are frozen solid, or direct on the Expansion Pipes. "Floating in" the cut ice An illustration of a man using a long pole to move a block of ice across a body of water. Impure and Poor Ice. It is incumbent upon municipalities and individuals to protect themselves against the sale of ice, whether natural or artificial, produced from contaminated water, as under certain conditions it may prove most unwholesome. The increase in population and the growth of manufacturing industries has so extended the pollution of lakes, rivers, etc., that in the larger towns and cities the consumption of local natural ice is often fraught with considerable danger. The use of artificial ice from water which has undergone thorough preliminary purification is then the only safe recourse, unless natural ice from unpolluted sources can be profitably imported. Ice should always be thoroughly washed before placing in the refrigerator, both for hygienic reasons and to avoid clogging the pipes. Cheap ice, like most "bargains," is very wasteful. Clear, hard, non-porous ice lasts longer and is cheaper in the end. For its economical use, good insulation in the construction of refrigerators and cooling rooms is essential (see REFRIGERATORS). The color of pure ice is deep blue, but this is only discernible when it is seem in large quantities, as in glaciers. See also article on COLD STORAGE. Filling the local ice-house An illustration of a building on stilts in a snowy landscape. ICE CREAM: originally signified a frozen mixture of sweetened milk or cream, but the term has for many generations been applied to a wide range of frozen delicacies of widely differing composition--varying from the original plain milk or cream basis to the most fancy French and Italian mixtures, and including alike within its popular significance those enriched with eggs and mixed with fresh and preserved fruits, nuts, etc., and the types cheapened or modified by a liberal use of cornstarch, etc., for the tastes and demands of the public vary widely. In its various forms it is consumed more generally in the United States than anywhere else on the globe. In commercial manufacture, a small quantity of gelatine or vegetable gum is generally included to add "smoothness" and prevent crystallization or graining. The manufacture of ice cream has become an important industry. The former type of machine freezer, similar to the household freezer, has to a very large extent been superseded by self-charging and self-emptying freezing apparatus in which mechanically refrigerated brine in sealed coils or chambers takes the place of the open tub of ice and salt. In all of the larger factories, and in many of the smaller, mechanical mixers have also taken the place of the open vats and kettles, and mechanically refrigerated dry cold-storage rooms have succeeded the old ice and salt pack for hardening the ice cream after it leaves the freezer. The output for 1910 of factories selling at wholesale alone reached nearly 125,000,000 gallons. In all of the bigger cities, the large companies not only deliver ice cream to grocers, but also furnish the cooling cabinets in which to keep it. For household purposes, junket prepared from pure milk, mixed with whatever cream can be spared, is an excellent material for the making of ice cream, giving a smooth, delicate article at minimum expense. The junket process renders the product more easily digestible while at the same time thickening and improving its body. ICE FISH: a delicate fish of the Great Lakes. See SMELT. ICELAND MOSS: a nutritious lichen gathered chiefly in Norway and Iceland, but common also in more southern countries. In Iceland, the "moss" is often dried, ground into flour and made into bread, but elsewhere it is generally made into a decoction or jelly and as such is considered a valuable article of diet for invalids and children, and a useful and popular demulcent and emollient in throat and pulmonary affections. The bitter taste noticeable in some kinds is removed by a preliminary cooking in hot water or by steeping it in several waters before cooking. It contains about 80% of Lichen Starch. Alcohol is locally distilled from fermented lichen starch. ICING: for the ornamentation and "filling" of cakes, consists of very fine sugar worked into a soft paste with egg-white or corn syrup, and variously colored and flavored--as chocolate, lemon, maple, orange, pistachio, strawberry or vanilla. It is generally retailed in glasses or jars. ICING SUGAR: very fine pulverized or "Confectioners" sugar. INDIAN CRESS. See article under the popular title of NASTURTIUM. INDIAN MEAL: ground Indian Corn or Maize. See CORNMEAL. INDIGO: a vegetable dyestuff of much value, obtained from several plants native to India and America. The fresh plant juice is colorless, but when the plant is steeped in water and fermentation sets in, the coloring matter dissolves in the water, forming a yellow solution, which is drawn off from the rest of the vegetable matter and agitated and beaten to bring it freely into contact with the air for about two hours. This treatment causes the indigo to form and settle down as a blue precipitate, which is cut while soft into cubical cakes and dried by artificial heat. To hasten the formation of the indigo, a little lime water is sometimes added to the yellow solution. Indigo A cutting of a fernlike plant with round leaves. Indigo is used in the manufacture of inks and for laundry purposes. The best quality has the deepest purple color, will float upon water, is glossy, and when rubbed by the nail produces a bright coppery or purple-red streak. When the streak is dull and wrinkles, the quality is poor. Commercial indigo of good quality contains about 50% of pure indigo. The common varieties are very numerous, some merchants recognizing sixteen distinct grades. Brown and red indigo are also manufactured. Artificial indigo is now produced in enormous quantities from Coal Tar. See also BLUING. INK. The composition of the ink used by the ancients is not well understood, but their products excelled ours in blackness and durability. The necessary components of ordinary black Writing Ink are gall, sulphate of iron, known generally as green vitriol or green copperas, and gum. The gum is added to retain the coloring matter and to give the mixture the necessary consistence. Copying Ink is more concentrated and contains more sugar, which keeps it moist longer. The Marking Ink used in marking boxes for shipment, etc., is a thin paint, made of lamp-black and spirits of turpentine. INSECTS: of various kinds trouble the grocer, and great care should be taken to keep stores free from them, as they destroy stock and drive away customers. Various remedies are given under the headings of ANTS and COCKROACHES (which see), but without scrupulous cleanliness no permanent relief can be expected. INSURANCE. No dealer deserves credit who does not keep his goods insured. Every merchant should be as certain to keep up his insurance as he is to lock up his store, and should avoid keeping oils, alcohol, gunpowder, benzine, gasoline, etc., on the premises in larger quantities than are permitted by his policy without making special provisions, and paying the extra premium. INVERT SUGAR: the uncrystallizable sugar of honey, treacle, etc.--a form of GLUCOSE (which see). IRISH MOSS: a popular title for the seaweed better known as CARRAGHEEN (which see). ISINGLASS: is, properly, gelatine prepared from the air or swim bladder of the sturgeon, cod and similar fish, Russia, Brazil and the United States furnishing the bulk of the world's supply. It is employed in fining liquors and the manufacture of fish glue, etc., and in the household in the preparation of jellies, blanc-mange and similar desserts. Gelatine from animal tissue has, however, largely supplanted it in cookery on account of its lower price (see GELATINE). Japanese Isinglass or Gelatine is prepared from a seaweed (see KANTEN). ITALIAN PASTE: another name for macaroni, spaghetti, etc. See MACARONI. ITALIAN WINES. Italy ranks second in the production of wine, its estimated yield being nearly a billion gallons a year. The greater part of this is retained for domestic consumption, and of the export the United States receives only a comparatively small percentage, the bulk going to South American countries, but the demand here is increasing--especially for Chianti as a general table beverage of low price, and for some of the finer varieties, particularly of the Sparkling Wines. Chianti is a light wine, ruby-red in color, agreeably sub-acid, and, in the best varieties, of a very delicate bouquet. It is distinguished by being bottled in attractive straw-dressed, belly-shaped flasks. It is in its prime during its fifth or sixth year, but is palatable at half that age. There is also a steady sale of Italian VERMOUTH (which see), and a limited market for Marsala, a wine resembling Madeira, but lighter both in body and color, which originated in Sicily. It was at one time very popular, especially as a "ladies' wine." Sicily also produces a noted Malmsey. Other well known Italian Wines are Lacryma Christi, from Southern Italy, the choicest being produced on the slopes of Mt. Vesuvius--both "white" and red in the "still" types, and the white also in "Spumante" or sparkling (champagne) style; Capri, still--red and "white"--from the Island of Capri at the entrance of the Bay of Naples; Asti, red, dry, both sparkling and still, from Tuscany; Falerno, still--red and "white"; Barolo, still, resembling Burgundy, but somewhat dryer; Barbera, resembling Barolo; Malvasia (Malmsey) and Malvasia Spumante; the red Nebbiolo and Nebbiolo Spumante from the Nebbiolo grape, and several white Moscato (Muscat) wines, including Siracusa, or "Moscato di Siracusa," Moscato di Stramboli, and Moscato Spumante, resembling Sparkling Moselle. Vino Santo is a very sweet wine made from dried grapes of varieties especially heavy in sugar. The bunches are hung on strings until shortly before Easter, being then pressed for use as an altar wine at that season. It is also popularly consumed as a liqueur wine. JAGGERY: a coarse brown sugar made from the juices exuded by various palms in India which are tapped as our sugar maples are, the sap being collected in vessels attached to the trees and crystallized into sugar by boiling. Jaggery when fermented becomes Palm Wine, and this distilled furnishes the East India Rum known as ARRACK (which see). JAM. The title "Jam" is generally applied to that class of preserve in which the whole fruit pulp is cooked together with water and sugar without regard to the preservation of the shape of the fruit--differing from "preserved fruits" or "preserves," which retain in some measure the original forms, and from "jellies," which are distinguished by the removal of the pulp tissues and are also generally more "solid" in body. The highest class jam contains no other ingredients than the particular fruit of its title, cane sugar and water. Those of popular use and moderate price contain large proportions of apple juice or pulp and commercial glucose, in addition to the "character" fruit. When manufactured under proper supervision to insure the use of good stock and pure glucose, correctly labelled so as to avoid misrepresentation and sold at a commensurate price, such jam compounds are just as wholesome and to the average palate nearly as pleasing in taste as "pure" jam. They are a distinctly desirable addition to the food supply, as they offer to people of moderate incomes a plentiful supply of sweet "spreads" at, in many cases, less than half the cost of manufacturing "pure" jams. To some people, furthermore, the apple-glucose product is more acceptable as being less cloyingly sweet than many varieties of pure jams. Though the use of fresh apple stock and pure glucose in the manufacture of "strawberry" and "raspberry" jams, etc., is entirely permissible under proper conditions, supervision by competent authorities is necessary to avoid the use of apple or other stock of poor quality, as it is easy to disguise such use by the addition of saccharin, artificial colors, etc. The presence of a considerable amount of the pulp of the fruit after which the jam is named, does not always warrant the assumption that it is a high class product--for large quantities of more or less exhausted fruit pulp of all kinds are commercially obtainable as the result of the manufacture of extracts, high class jellies, etc. The fruits chiefly used for jam and jelly making are Apples, Apricots, Cranberries, Currants, Oranges, Pears, Plums, Quinces, Raspberries and Strawberries. JAMAICA GINGER. See article on GINGER. JAMAICA PEPPER: a name frequently applied to ALLSPICE (which see). JAPANESE ARTICHOKE, or Chinese Artichoke, or Crown of Japan: a root of the Jerusalem artichoke order, native to Western Asia, now cultivated in Europe and also lately to a limited extent in this country. Its manner of growth is shown in the accompanying illustration. The divided tubers are small, inclined to shell shape, with a thin skin of whitish-brown or ivory-white. The flesh, under proper cultivation, is white and tender. It is in season generally commencing with October, and is cooked in any way that is suitable for the Jerusalem artichoke. It is used as a vegetable, in salad compositions or as a garnish, principally in the last-named manner. Japanese Artichoke An illustration of a bulbous root vegetable, segmented, each segment becoming longer and pointier near the end of the root. JAPANESE GELATINE or Isinglass. See article under the title of Kanten. JAPANESE PERSIMMON. See article on, and Color Page of, PERSIMMONS. JARS: glass or earthenware receptacles for liquids, preserves, etc. The ordinary glass preserving jars should be stocked by the grocer about the middle of May, before the early berries arrive. They continue in demand until all the fresh fruits are out of the market. JELLY: the juice of fruits or meats, evaporated or thickened to a semi-solid consistence. High class meat jellies thicken principally from the gelatine extracted from the bone in cooking; high class fruit jellies from the "pectin" in the fruit juices. The best fruit jellies are made by cooking the fruit in a small amount of water, then pressing the juice from the pulp, adding sugar to the juice, evaporating it to the proper consistence, pouring it hot into the glasses and sealing. In many cases the juice is clarified during the evaporating process. For some kinds, as the finest apple jelly, no sugar is added. Cheaper jellies are made principally from minor grades of apple juice--from cores and parings of canning establishments, etc.--commercial glucose and a varying quantity of the juice of the "character" fruit, together with coloring matter, citric acid, or similar articles, to help give the jelly consistence, and frequently saccharin, etc., for increased sweetness. In addition to the many brands put up in glass, etc., by well known manufacturers, very fair qualities of some types are in certain sections sold to the trade in five and ten pound pails to be retailed by the pound. Care should be taken to keep such goods closely covered, for if one fly can spoil the ointment of the apothecary, it can also ruin a grocer's good name! A wooden spoon should be used for dishing out, as metals are apt to turn the bright color of the jelly to a dull, undesirable hue. JELLY POWDERS: consist generally of powdered gelatine, sweetened and artificially flavored and colored. The most popular flavors are chocolate, lemon, orange, raspberry, strawberry and vanilla. JERKED BEEF: beef dried in the air after a brine immersion. The industry originated in Uruguay, where the beef so preserved is known as "Tasajo." JERUSALEM ARTICHOKE: the tuber of a species of sunflower, somewhat resembling the potato in general characteristics, but sweetish in flavor and more watery and less nutritive in composition. There are two principal types--one long and with red skin, the other round, knobby and white. They are generally boiled and pickled or eaten with vinegar, but some people enjoy them raw, eating them with salt, like radishes. They make excellent soup. The name "Jerusalem" is a queer twist from the Italian word Girasole, meaning "Sunflower." Jerusalem Artichoke Two plant illustrations, one depicting tubers on the root of a plant beneath the earth, the other showing the flowering stem of a plant. JEWELERS' RED or ROUGE: a fine powder of metallic oxide, used for polishing gold and silver. It is obtained chiefly by calcining either yellow oxalite of iron or sulphate of iron. The coarser, darker residue of the calcination of sulphate of iron, used for the same purpose, is known as Red Crocus. JOHNNY CAKE: a popular term for any kind of plain corn bread. It originally signified a cake of cornmeal, salt and water, baked in the ashes or on a board before an open fire. JUJUBE: the fruit of a spiny shrub of the buckthorn family, in some parts eaten uncooked, but more often dried and sold as a sweetmeat. It looks somewhat like a date and is generally red, though sometimes yellow in color. It contains a large percentage of nutrients and is highly rated medicinally for its demulcent properties. The jujube has given its name to the famous confection "Jujubes," or "Jujube Paste," but the latter is generally made of gum-arabic and sugar. Jujube The stem of a plant bearing small oval fruits. JULEP: is a word which came into our language from the Persian, its Eastern prototype signifying "sweet drink." As "Jalap" it was formerly used in medicine to describe a mixture compounded to make some drug more palatable or convenient. In this country it now means a beverage in which either whisky or brandy are mixed with sugar, cracked ice and some flavor, generally mint. JULIENNE: a term applied (1) to shredded potatoes, (2) to a garnish of vegetables such as carrots, turnips, cabbage, celery, etc., cut in thin strips, and (3) to clear soup or consommé containing shredded vegetables. Dried "Julienne" for soups is retailed in packages. The name is from a famous chef, Jean Julienne. JUNE BERRY, or Service Berry: the edible purple fruit of the Shad Bush, a small tree found in several varieties in many parts of North America. The "Service Berry" is of peculiar interest in the West, for it often formed the sole food of the Mormons and other pioneers in their days of hardships and privations. It is also known as the "Bilberry" in some sections. The name Service Berry is occasionally applied also to the edible fruit of several shrubs and trees of the Mountain Ash family, the berries resembling tiny apples. JUNIPER BERRIES: the dark blue, pungent, aromatic berries of the evergreen Juniper shrub, commercially important because of their use for flavoring gin. A nice flavor is given to corned beef by adding a muslin bagful of crushed juniper berries to the brine. JUNKET: is made of sweet, luke-warm milk quickly turned by the addition of a little rennet (dissolved junket tablets). Sweetened and flavored with vanilla, or dusted with cinnamon or nutmeg, or eaten with berries, fresh or preserved, it is a pleasing dessert. The addition of a very small amount of sherry improves its flavor. JUTE: the fibre of a tall, slender herb of the linden family, native to Asia but naturalized in many countries. It is used in the manufacture of carpets, bags, etc. The greater part of the sugar, raisins, spices, etc., from the Indies, both East and West, come to us in Jute "gunny-bags." KAI APPLE: a large South African fruit which makes a very good preserve. KALE or Borecole: a variety of cabbage differing from the common cabbage chiefly in the open heads of leaves, used in the household as "greens." The different types show a great diversity in leaf form--some are plain, others are waved or curved, many of them being beautifully patterned. The coloring varies from green to red-brown or purple. Emerald Isle Kale An illustration of a vegetable with a bare stem and branching leaves resembling broccoli. KALSOMINE. See CALCIMINE. KANGAROO TAILS. The flesh of the various members of the Kangaroo family--the big grey Kangaroo, the Wallaby, etc.--is an important food item among the natives of Australia, and hunting the larger animals is a favorite sport of white residents. Kangaroo meat proper seldom reaches the United States, but there is a limited importation The exquisite leaves of four varieties of striped and variegated Kale An illustration of four leaves of various sizes and shapes. of canned Kangaroo Tails. When preparing for the table, first warm the can, then draw off the jelly and gravy and make it into a hot sauce with port wine and seasoning, strain, add the pieces of tail and serve with croutons of fried bread around. KANTEN, Japanese Gelatine, Vegetable Isinglass, Agar Agar: prepared in great quantities in Japan from the Gelidium family of seaweed. It is pearly white, semitransparent, tasteless and odorless and is marketed in stick and block form--"Slender Kanten" and "Square Kanten." On analysis, it shows about 60% carbohydrates and 7% protein (see FOOD VALUES.) Kanten is used by the Japanese in the preparation of jellies, soups, etc., and for clarifying Saki or Rice Spirit. The two to three million pounds which are annually exported to this country and Europe are employed in the manufacture of food products--to thicken jams, jellies, ice cream, etc.--in gin distilleries, and in the textile, silk and other industries. Under the name of Agar Agar it is used in making culture media in bacteriological work. Bar or "Square" Kanten Nine rectangular bars of Kanten stacked in a criss-cross pattern. Bengal Isinglass, Ceylon Moss and Chinese Moss are similar, related products. Gelidium seaweed grows abundantly on the Pacific Coast of the United States and at some points along the Atlantic, and apparently offers a good opportunity for the manufacture of domestic vegetable isinglass. A bundle of "Slender Kanten" An illustration of a thick bundle of a strawlike substance tied at both ends. KEG: a small barrel or cask, made in various sizes. As manufacturers' customs differ, kegs should not be accepted as five, ten or twenty gallons, etc., without gauging them. KELP or Bladder Weed: an edible seaweed distinguished by its streamer-like leaves, found on both Northern coasts. The largest variety, known as the Giant Bladder Weed, has leaves which average from thirty to forty feet in length. Kelp is in this country used almost exclusively as a fertilizer, but following Japanese methods of preparation--drying, shredding, etc.--it would undoubtedly meet with favor as a food product--for use in soup, or boiled as a vegetable for service with meats, etc., or moistened with milk as a breakfast food. In Japan, the various preparations of Kelp are known as "Kombu" and are largely consumed. KEROSENE or Coal Oil: a mixture of liquid hydrocarbons distilled principally from PETROLEUM (which see). If of good quality, it is nearly colorless. It is closely related to the British Paraffin Oil and in England is sold as "American Paraffin Oil." As kerosene is of a highly inflammable nature, laws have been passed in different states which restrict its sale for illuminating purposes to certain degrees of "flash" or fire-test. It is safe at 130° flash, and is said to lose some of its qualities when further refined. Its boiling point should be above 170° Fahr. It should always be kept in a cool dry place and, so far as possible, closed against contact with the atmosphere. To Test Kerosene Oil, put a small quantity of the oil in a cup, set in a tin of water and slowly warm the water, noticing the degree of heat in the oil by keeping a thermometer immersed in it. When the temperature rises, put a lighted match, or better still, an electric spark, quickly over its surface at intervals. As soon as the gas or vapor given off by the heated oil "flashes" or burns, its test is determined--that is, if it ignites when the mercury stands at 120° Fahr., it is oil of 120° flash test. KETCHUP: one of several styles of spelling CATSUP (which see). KHULASH: a Hungarian beef stew. See under title of GOULASH. KIDNEYS: Beef, Veal, Lamb. A good kidney is light in color and firm to the touch. If dark red, it is less choice. If dark and soft, it is probably from an old or poorly fed animal. Veal kidney is the most delicate. KILKIES. See matter under title of SPRATS. KINGFISH (See Color Page opposite 240): one of the finest of American fishes, found along the Atlantic coast, both north and south, and in season from May to October. It averages one to two pounds in weight, larger specimens attaining a length of fifteen inches. The variety caught off the Northern States is distinguished by darker, more pronounced stripes than those of its Southern relations. The head of both types resembles that of the mullet. KING, or King of Siam, ORANGE: a large rough-skinned tangerine type (see ORANGES). KIN-KAN: another name for the Kumquat (which see). KIPPERED: applied to herring or salmon, means that they are split, salted and smoked. The word "kipper" is a Scotch term to describe a salmon after its spawning period, at which time, not being valuable as fresh fish, it is generally smoked or pickled. KIRSCH or Kirschwasser: a liqueur distilled from fermented sweet black cherries--the finest types from the sweet aromatic small black wild cherry. The pulp of the KUMQUAT LOQUAT A color illustration divided diagonally down the center of the page, showing a branch laden with oblong fruits in the upper half, and some similar fruits on a branch with long, pointed leaves in the lower half. fruit is first crushed and allowed to ferment, then a certain quantity of the cherry kernels is added and allowed to steep, the juice being finally expressed for distillation. KIRSCHMUSS: a thick unsweetened jelly made from the juice of sweet black cherries, in common use in Switzerland. It is eaten with sweet butter and bread. KISSES: a popular name for meringue, and some other, candies. KISSINGEN. See article on MINERAL WATERS. KIT: a term chiefly applied to a wooden vessel containing one-tenth of a barrel, used in the packing of salt mackerel, but also, in some sections, to containers for other fish, salted butter, etc. KOHLRABI: a variety of cabbage with a turnip-like thickened stem, or "root," growing just above the ground. The leaves, when young and tender, are eaten as greens, but the "root" is the better part. The plant is also called the "cabbage turnip." Kohlrabi An illustration of a beet-like vegetable with a bulbous root and rounded irregularly-shaped leaves. KOLA NUT: a brownish bitter seed or nut, about the size of a chestnut when fully matured, growing in pods, bean style, on a small West African tree. It is credited by the natives with the property of allaying thirst and promoting energy. It is also said to be efficacious in purifying water and in counteracting the effects of over-indulgence in intoxicating liquors. Analysis shows that the Kola Nut contains from two to three times as much caffeine as the coffee bean and it is for this stimulating property that it is principally used commercially in extracts, tonic beverages, etc. KOLCANNON. See CALECANNON. KOONTI or Indian Bread Root: a Florida plant whose roots give a meal or flour resembling arrowroot. KOSHER, or Kasher, MEAT: is primarily meat from an animal or bird that has been killed by a Shohet, an expert meat inspector, under the laws of the Jewish Talmud. A strictly Kosher butcher must buy all his stock alive, the animals being generally killed in the slaughtering house by a Shohet. Great care is taken to avoid exciting the animal to be killed, for its death must be as calm, speedy and sudden as possible. Bullocks, calves, sheep, etc., are killed by cutting their throats with a special knife, the blade of which is about twenty inches long and two inches wide and is kept as sharp and highly polished as a razor. The cut almost severs the head from the body and the carcass is allowed to bleed as freely and as long as it will--the object being to clear the flesh of blood as completely as possible, the consumption of blood being forbidden by the Jewish law. Chickens, geese, etc., are decapitated with a similar knife and are allowed to bleed in the same manner. When the bleeding has ceased, the carcass is opened and a most minute examination of the lungs, entrails, etc., is made. The slightest defect will result in the shohet condemning the entire animal as Tref (Terefah, Treife) --unfit for food. If the animal is pronounced Kosher, the meat undergoes the next operation of Porging --the removal of all bloody veins and gristle. Because this operation involves a great deal of labor if applied to the hindquarters of bullocks and sheep, that part of the animal is in this country generally classed as Tref, even when the carcass in general is Kosher, and is sold to Gentile butchers. The hindquarters of calves and lambs are retained and treated like the remainder of the carcass. The Porging is properly followed by applying salt to complete the extraction of the blood. It is because of these special precautions that Kosher Meat ordinarily commands prices higher than the average of the retail markets. Kosher Corned Beef is Kosher Beef prepared by, first, a thorough soaking in fresh water, next bedding for some time in dry salt and then a second washing before immersion in the brine, where it must remain for twenty-four hours. All fresh fish of the scaly varieties may be eaten without the intervention of the Shohet, but the ordinary salt and dried fish of commerce come under the ban, because of the possibility that some matter not Kosher may have been employed in preparing them. Swine, hare, frogs, snails, fish without scales or fins, as eels, etc., are among modern foods which come under the classification of Tref. The refusal of all meat that is not Kosher is a matter of religious principle with the orthodox Hebrew, but the practical advantage is that the careful personal inspection by the Shohet guarantees him flesh in absolutely healthy condition, his religious law thus protecting him against the many diseases liable to result from the consumption of the flesh of unhealthy animals. As applied to other foods, as "Kosher Bread," "Kosher Butter," etc., the term signifies special care and cleanliness in preparation and manufacture. The vessels and utensils used in handling them must never be allowed to serve for any other purpose and should be cleansed and inspected with great exactness. Kosher Sausage is sausage in which the meat used comes within the definition of Kosher. KUMISS, Kumyss, or Koumiss: was originally fermented mare's milk prepared by the Kalmucs, but for European and American purposes it is made from cow's milk. Yeast cultures and a little sugar-syrup are added to the milk--the sugar because cow's milk does not contain as much lactose as mare's--and it is allowed to ferment for about twenty-four hours. The result is a slightly sour milk, effervescent from the carbon-dioxide and very slightly alcoholic. Its use, both as a beverage and in the sick room, is largely increasing, as it is refreshing and nourishing. When drawn from the bottle and poured a few times from glass to glass, it becomes thick like whipped cream and is then most palatable. Matzoon, or ZOOLAK (which see), is a similar preparation of cooked whole milk. KUMMEL: a noted liqueur, the most esteemed varieties being those of Russian and German manufacture--among them Allasch, Eckau, Getreide and Gilka. The essential ingredient is caraway seed extract, but the finest types also include bitter almonds, orris-root, angelica, anise, etc. See general article on, and Color Page of, LIQUEURS. KUMQUAT, or Cumquat: a very small orange, native to China and Japan, now under general cultivation. The fruit is generally oval in shape and the size of a small plum (see Color Page of KUMQUATS, opposite 320). The rind is sweet and aromatic, and the pulp acid--the entire fruit, rind and all, is eaten by many people. It also serves, quartered or sliced, as an excellent and very ornamental addition to fruit and nut salads, and is very good candied or otherwise preserved whole, and as jelly, marmalade, etc. The Kumquat tree grows naturally to a height of six feet, but is usually dwarfed to two or three. At state dinners in China, and occasionally at fashionable banquets here and in Europe, the little trees are placed before the guests that they may pluck the fruit direct from the branches. LABELS. Every year improves the grade of the labels on all kinds of food and other grocery items, and by judicious purchases of suitable packages and good arrangement on the shelves, the appearance of a store can be very much improved. Some standard goods are put up under very plain labels, generally the original designs under which they were first sold, but poor labels, and especially those of slovenly appearance, generally indicate equal neglect in preparing the contents. A dealer who desires to build up a lasting trade should never allow a misleading label to bear the name of his establishment--if it is not "Pure Maple Syrup," be wise and honest at the same time and label it "Prime Syrup--Maple Flavor." Loud colors and flashy designs offend the best buyers, and with the present facilities for color-printing and good artistic designs there is no excuse for a label less creditable than the article which it covers. The American Grocer says: "Some manufacturers have taken a very brave and commendable stand in this matter by so defining their products that the exact character is indicated on the label. When, for instance, honeycomb has been put up in jars with corn syrup, the fact of its presence and the reason therefor has been stated on the package. Where a preservative has been used, this has been indicated. Such a course clears the atmosphere and begets confidence all around." Experience teaches that consumers are quick to decide whether an article is wholesome or not, and if the exact nature of a food product is defined, a conclusion is much sooner reached than if its true character is concealed. A manufacturer should not be required to disclose formulas, and it is a question whether he should be obliged to make known the character of special products, if they are not prejudicial to health; but so long as there are questions in dispute, the easiest way and best way is to be frank with the public and to win confidence by plainly stating on the label the true character of the product. LACTOMETER: an instrument employed to test the specific gravity of milk. By "specific gravity" is meant its weight in comparison with that of water, which is taken as a standard for all solid and liquid substances. Unadulterated milk is heavier than water--a can full of milk, for example, may weigh three pounds heavier than if full of water. The use of the lactometer or other test rests on the fact that a body will sink deeper into a light than into a heavy liquid. When a standard at which milk may be considered unadulterated is adopted, milk into which the lactometer will sink deeper is said to be of low specific gravity--which may mean that water has been added to it. LACTOSE: the chemist's title for MILK SUGAR (which see). LAFAYETTE: a small light-colored panfish, weighing up to half a pound, found along the Atlantic coast. It is in season from the middle of August to November. LAGER BEER. See general article under heading of BEER. LAKE TROUT: a large American fresh-water fish. See article on TROUT. LAMB: is generally understood to be the meat of sheep under twelve months old. It is much more difficult to keep it in good condition than mutton and it also varies greatly in quality--lambs being very tender animals, their flesh is easily injured by rough treatment, by storms, or by poor food. The color and quality of the fat on the back and around the kidneys affords the best test of quality--it should be white, even-colored and hard. The cuts are known by the same titles as mutton cuts. See diagram in article on MUTTON and also Color Page opposite. Ordinary spring lamb comes into season during March, but is best from May to July. "Hot House" Lamb is very early spring lamb obtained generally by stimulating breeding by transferring the sheep from cool to warmer climates. LAMB'S FRIES: lamb's testicles. They should be parboiled, cut in halves and skinned, before seasoning and cooking. LAMB'S LETTUCE, LAMB'S QUARTER: local names for the salad plant described under the title of CORN SALAD. LAMPBLACK: soot that is produced by burning rosin, turpentine, pitch, oil or other substances in ways that produce the maximum volume of smoke. It is used principally in the manufacture of paints, blacking and marking inks. Its quality depends upon its lightness of weight and intensity of color. LAMPREY: an eel with some of the characteristics of the finned fishes, which reaches a length of one and a half to two and a half feet. It is in season during April and May, leaving the sea at that time to ascend the rivers to spawn. Its flesh is soft, glutinous and delicate, but most people find it very difficult to digest--hence the popular credence in the legend of the death of King Henry I from eating too many lampreys. In England, it is popular in the form of Lamprey Pie and Potted Lamprey. LANDRAIL: a kind of SNIPE (which see). LARD: is hog's fat separated from the tissue by boiling or rendering. The residue is known as lard stearin. Lard is put up in kegs, barrels, tierces and small cans. Its quality varies very much with different houses. If pure, it should be white, of the consistence of ointment and free from any disagreeable taste or smell. Leaf Lard is that made from the leaf fat which lies around the kidneys. The next best in quality is that from the back, and the poorest that from the small intestines. The greater part of that marketed is obtained by the melting together of the whole fat, except the leaf fat. Compound Lard is generally a mixture of lard stearin and cottonseed oil. (1) Short Saddle (2) Loin Chop (3) Rib Chop (4) Forequarter LAMB A color illustration of four cuts of meat, each of which is labeled with a number. The most common fraud in the sale of lard is the substitution of "compound" for pure lard. New tierces will soak from two to three pounds when filled with hot lard, but if they weigh over that amount claim should be made on them. The most honest of packers are liable to have trouble with tares. Lard should be stored in a dry, cool, dark place--moisture, light and high temperature affect its quality. LARD-OIL: a valuable lubricant for machinery. If of good quality, it is pale-yellowish or nearly colorless, of slightly fatty odor and bland taste. It becomes opaque at or below 32° Fahr. Admixture of cotton-seed oil is not readily detected, if only refined and very pale grades are employed, but any deep-colored lard oil, or one having a pronounced yellow tint, is open to suspicion. LARK. The common lark is seldom eaten in this country, but in Europe it is looked upon as a wholesome and delicate game bird. In France it is most popular in the lark-pie which has helped to make the reputation of the city of Pithiviers. LASAGNE: a kind of MACARONI (which see) in the form of ribbons. LAVENDER: a perennial plant now grown principally for its flowers, which are used in making perfumes or for sale dried for sachet bags, etc. It was formerly very popular as a pot-herb and for flavoring jellies. LAVER: an edible seaweed found on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts. It is a food item of importance in Asia and in some parts of Europe. In Scotland and Ireland, under the name of "Sloak" or "Slook," it is boiled and served with butter, pepper, vinegar, etc., or fried in bacon fat after boiling. It is especially good as an accompaniment for cold meats. It is best to cook it in a porcelain saucepan, as it is liable to act on metals. Laver is rich in protein, averaging from 30% to 35% (see FOOD VALUES). LEAKAGE: the waste of any substance as a result of an opening or defect in a containing vessel of any kind. Allowance is made for leakage only when it can be proved that the goods were not shipped in proper condition. LEAVEN: dough which has become sour. It was formerly employed in breadmaking, a small quantity being added to new dough to excite fermentation and cause it to "rise." Its use is, though, liable to produce a disagreeable taste and odor in the bread, and it has been almost entirely superseded by yeast. See BREAD. LEAVENED BREAD: any kind of "raised" bread (see BREAD). LEBEN: a form of fermented milk, the raw milk being raised to blood-heat before adding the ferment. LEBKUCHEN or "Sweet Cakes" or "Honey Cakes": a famous variety of German cake, composed of a great diversity of ingredients, the most important being flour, honey, sugar, spices, alcohol, almonds, citron, orange peel, etc. A characteristic feature of its manufacture is that the dough is allowed to "rest" for a considerable time before baking, so as to permit a better amalgamation of the flavors and other properties of its components--many makers hold it in cool, dry places for several months before sending it to the ovens. The best known varieties are White Lebkuchen, Brown Lebkuchen, Bremen Pepper Cake, Thorner Lebkuchen, Baseler Lebkuchen and Nuremburg Lebkuchen. Both imported and domestic lebkuchen are sold here, the principal demand being during the winter holidays. Good lebkuchen will remain fresh for a year or eighteen months, the honey used in its manufacture keeping it moist. LEEK: a form of onion cultivated for the blanched lower parts of the leaves, commonly called the "stems," and the bulbous roots, both of which are used in cookery, chiefly in soups and stews. In flavor they resemble a very mild ordinary onion. Leek An illustration of a plant with long leaves and a spherical flower. LEGUME: a word applied botanically to the one-celled, two-valved seed-pod of plants of the Leguminosae order, to which belong the many varieties of beans, peas and lentils. In popular usage the title has been extended to the fruits of the plants. Legumes, also sometimes classed as "Pulse," are among the most valuable of vegetable foods. LEICESTERSHIRE SAUCE. See general article on SAUCES. LEMON ( Color Page opp. 332). The lemon is a member of the citrus family, which includes oranges, grape fruit, etc., and is probably native to the north of India. The fruit is usually oval, wrinkled or furrowed, of various shades of yellow and, generally, with concave oil-cysts in the rind. Its chief merits are the abundance of citric acid contained in the pulp and the quantity of oil yielded by the rind. California produces an ever increasing quantity, but not yet enough to supply the demand, from 135 to 180 million pounds being imported from Italy every year. The fruit is gathered, while still green, as soon as it has reached a marketable size, irrespective of the stage of maturity--if allowed to ripen on the tree, it becomes coarse and of poor quality. A flourishing grove is ordinarily picked once every month. The picker is frequently provided with a steel measure or gauge attached to his thumb, all fruit as large as, or over, the size of the gauge being clipped from the tree and placed in a bag suspended by shoulder straps (see opposite page). After picking, the lemons are washed and then sorted according to their color--dark green (unripe); silver green (partly ripe) and yellow (ripe). The unripe and partly ripe are placed in storage, separately, to "cure," i.e., to color and mature. The A California lemon orchard, showing irrigation ditches An illustration of an orchard of fruit trees, with narrow lanes running through the trees. tree-ripened fruit are usually shipped at once, because of their poor keeping qualities. The curing of the unripe fruit covers from two to four months, their keeping quality depending largely on the care exercised in the control of temperature and humidity during the process. Picking lemons--clipper in his right hand and steel measure attached to his left thumb A man in a cap and apron works with clippers underneath a fruit tree. For market purposes, California lemons are generally sorted into two or three, and sometimes four, grades, based on the general texture of the skin--on appearance, whether scarred or not, color, form and general "style." Size is not considered in this grading. The best or Fancy fruit must have good color, fine texture, normal form and no scars, and be heavy and juicy. Thin-skinned lemons are generally considered the best. The next lower grade is called Choice. The third, Standard, includes fruit which may be irregular in shape and badly scarred and discolored but is still of fair fruit value. The fourth or lowest quality is known as Culls. After grading, the lemons are sized by hand, ranging from 180 to 540 to the box, running generally from 240 to 490. The most desirable sizes are those ranging from 300 to 360 to the box. The life of the lemons after leaving the packer depends also upon the care exercised in handling--they readily deteriorate if damaged by bruising or other abrasions of the skin. The only practicable method for holding them in large quantities for any considerable length of time is by cold storage. At a temperature of 40° Fahr., they will remain unimpaired in quality for eight to twelve weeks. For household purposes, if refrigerator space is not available, they keep much better when immersed in fresh cold water than if left to dry out on a shelf. The photograph on page 332 is of some of the huge, rough-skinned lemons frequently seen in Italy. They sometimes reach eight and nine inches in length, with weight and width in full proportion. LEMON BALM (herb). See matter following title of GARDEN BALM. LEMON EXTRACT. First class lemon extract consists of lemon oil (which see) distilled in strong alcohol, or lemon oil and lemon peel macerated in alcohol, filtered and bottled. In the former case, the extract is generally colored by the addition of a small amount of yellow coloring removed from the lemon peel used. Terpeneless lemon extract is made from terpeneless lemon oil, i. e., by lemon oil from which the terpene or hydro-carbon components have been extracted. The claim is made that the terpene, which constitutes the major portion of lemon oil, is of little importance as regards flavor and odor and is in many respects undesirable, as extracts prepared from oil containing it are liable to acquire an unpleasant odor with age and exposure to the air because of its oxidation products. Terpeneless oil has the additional advantage that it is to a greater extent miscible with water solutions than the unmodified oil. The characteristic odor and flavor of lemon oil, both unmodified and terpeneless--and hence also of lemon extract--are due chiefly to the citral contained, together with some citronella and a small quantity of other related bodies. Picking Lemons near Palermo, Sicilly An illustration of a group of men in a grove of fruit trees. Many of the cheaper "lemon extracts" are merely weak washes made by shaking unmodified lemon oil in diluted alcohol, about 25% to 30% pure, and then removing the oil which separates. Such extract may smell fairly good in the bottle, but it is of little value in flavoring articles to be cooked, for when alcohol falls below 40% in volume it will take up only a very small percentage of the unmodified lemon oil. Imitation lemon extract is largely made from oil of lemon grass, a grass-like plant, widely cultivated, especially in India and Ceylon, which has an agreeable smell and a warm, bitter, pleasing flavor. LEMON JUICE. In addition to its wide use in making lemonade and for general flavoring purposes, lemon juice is a valuable article medicinally, particularly for use as an anti-scorbutic, and it is so recognized by the U. S. Pharmacopeia and all other medical publications. Its chief component is citric acid, in an average proportion of about 7%. Bottled Lemon Juice, if of good quality, is the pure clarified juice of fresh, sound lemons, and retains all the properties of the juice freshly expressed. It should always be kept in a cool place and the contents of the bottle should be consumed as soon as possible after opening. LEMON OIL. Almost the entire supply of the oil of the lemon rind is produced in Sicily and is still obtained by hand processes--the small factory output, which is darker in appearance, being principally employed to heighten the color of the hand-made oil. The two most widely used methods are known as the "two-piece sponge" and the "three-piece sponge," the Large rough-skinned lemons of Southern France and many parts of Italy The branches of a tree laden with large ovoid fruit. LEMONS A color illustration of a lemon branch, bearing both fruits and flowers. An inlaid cut displays a lemon that has been cut in half to show the interior structure of the fruit. distinction referring to the number of pieces into which the rind is cut. The former generally produces oil with the smallest percentage of water to be afterwards separated, but that from the latter is said to filter more rapidly and keep clean longer. For the three-piece method, the lemons are cut lengthwise into three slices. The pulp is first removed--the juice to be expressed and sold to the manufacturers of citric acid, and the residue to be used for animal food--and then the peel is put into large baskets and stored in a cool place for some hours until it is considered in the proper condition for pressing. Each workman engaged in extracting the oil has in front of him a tin-lined copper bowl and holds in his left hand a medium-sized sponge of superfine quality, which has previously been very carefully washed. He also holds other small sponges between the fingers of the same hand to prevent the loss of any of the oil, which is very volatile. With the right hand he takes a piece of peel from the basket and squeezes it against the sponge, thus forcing the oil through the pores of the rind into the sponge. When the sponge is full of essence it is squeezed into the bowl. In order to make sure that the peel has yielded all the essence that can be pressed out by hand, the overseer from time to time tests the rejected peel by squeezing it close to a flame. If there is any essence left, it is forced through the flame and produces a flash of light. (Children try the same experiment with orange peels.) The used peel is put into brine and sold to manufacturers of "candied lemon peel." When the bowls are full, they are set aside for a short time to permit the impurities to settle and then the contents are carefully decanted, the clear essence going into large tin-lined copper vessels. Before shipment, the product is passed through filter paper to purify it and give it limpidity, and is finally transferred to copper bottles of various standard sizes. The quantity and quality of essence yielded varies according to the season. During November, December and January, when the greater part of the supply is manufactured, one thousand lemons will give about one and a half pounds of essence. Lemons not fully ripe are preferred, as they yield a larger quantity and more fragrant quality than those fully matured. A small amount of essence is made during the spring and summer, but the product lacks the delicate fragrance of that made in the winter. LEMON PEEL: is commercially most important for its use in the manufacture of lemon oil, lemon extract, liqueurs, etc., but considerable quantities are also retailed plain-dried for culinary purposes and preserved in sugar as "candied lemon peel," the best grades of the latter being prepared in much the same way as citron peel (see CITRON). LEMON SYRUP: if of the first quality, consists of lemon juice, fresh lemon peel and sugar. The juice is first boiled with the peel, cooled and filtered, then a little water is added and finally the sugar is put in and dissolved. A lesser grade consists of syrup with citric acid and lemon extract added in the proportion of 2 to 1. LEMONADE: a beverage made from the lemon, popular both as a means of allaying thirst and for medicinal purposes, being in the latter case drunk either hot or cold, according to the complaint. Itinerant venders of lemonade formerly employed citric or tartaric acid, or even a few drops of sulphuric acid, to make their mixture, only slicing a few lemons to float on top and please the eye. This practice is not as common as it used to be, but in some sections caution is still advisable. Many "lemonade powders" declared to be pure were made in a similar way. Reliable brands of lemon or lime juice are the best substitute when the fresh fruit is not obtainable. In England, lemonade is known as "Lemon Squash." LENTIL: a nutritive legume, the pods containing each three or four seeds of similar circumference to the ordinary pea, but flat and thin in shape. On analysis it shows an average composition of Starch 50 1/2%, Albuminoid material 30%, Sugar 3 1/2%, and Moisture, etc., 16%. Large quantities are consumed in Europe in the form of soups and stews, much of the supply being imported from Egypt, and it is steadily growing in favor in this country. Lentils An illustration of a plant with small leaves and long branching stems. For soups, the tough outer skin is, after boiling, removed by straining, and meats are added as a flavor. A considerable proportion of the present domestic supply of lentils is still imported, but it is probable that the near future will see the market fully supplied by growers in the Southwest sections. Revalenta Arabica, which has been sold as a dyspeptic food, consists of lentil meal, and the lentil probably formed the "red pottage" for which hungry Esau sold his birthright. LETTUCE: the chief salad plant of modern days, is probably native to the Greek Islands. In England, the type generally known here as Romaine still bears the name of "Cos Lettuce," after the Island of Cos, which now belongs to Turkey but was formerly under Greek rule and is noteworthy as the birthplace of Hippocrates and several other famous men of ancient Greece. It was first used in England in 1520, and King Henry VIII conferred a special reward upon the gardener who devised the combination of "Lettuce and Cherries" for the royal table. Growing lettuce under glass--20,000 heads under this one roof The interior of a large greenhouse, filled with leafy plants. The many varieties under cultivation are capable of general classification into three principal types--(1) Cabbage or Head lettuce, the most widely cultivated form; (2) Romaine (which see) or Cos or Leaf lettuce, and (3) Cutting lettuce, which forms no head, being instead cut while the leaves are small and giving in that manner two or more crops. If the leaves are washed for salad making, they should be thoroughly dried afterwards with a towel or napkin. If the head is close and good, no washing is necessary after the removal of the outside leaves, as the inner leaves will be quite clean. The heart of a head lettuce should be firm, crisp and bleached--a rusty red tinge is an indication of overlong keeping. Lettuce will keep fresh longer when the roots are left on the plant. LICHEN: a moss which grows on trees or rocks. It has many colors and forms, from the grey or green covering on stones, and the larger and more bushy types attaching to trees, up to the edible forms such as ICELAND MOSS (which see), which grows over large areas and is an important food for man and beast in the Arctic. LICORICE or Liquorice. The black licorice rolls or sticks familiar to the consumer, consist, when pure, of the condensed juice of the root of the licorice plant, mixed with a little starch to prevent it from melting in warm weather. The word "licorice," through its Latin form Glycyrrhiza, is derived from the Greek words for "sweet root." The licorice plant is a small shrub of light green foliage, attaining a height of about three feet and favoring localities near rivers (see Color Page opposite 338). When dug, the root is full of water and the drying process frequently takes from six months to a year. It is then sawed or cut into small pieces, six inches to a foot long, and carefully sorted, the good and sound pieces being pressed into bales for shipment. The bulk of the licorice rolls, paste, etc., of domestic consumption is manufactured in this country from the imported dried root, the principal sources of which are Asiatic Turkey and Russia. The sale of licorice as a candy is merely incidental. It finds its principal use in medicine and it is also extensively employed in the manufacture of tobacco and liquors, to give color and flavor to Stout, etc. LIGHTS: a term applied to the lungs of animals. LIMA BEANS: a native American product. See sub-head in article on BEANS. LIMBURGER CHEESE. See description in general article on CHEESE. LIME (fruit). The lime is a fruit of the lemon species, grown abundantly in the West Indies, India and some parts of Europe. It is almost globular in shape and is much smaller than the lemon, averaging only from one to one and a half inches in diameter, but its skin is thin and its juice very abundant. As the use of limes is steadily extending, the trade can profitably recommend them as good substitutes for lemons and as possessing a peculiarly agreeable aromatic flavor. Dominica and Jamaica, of the British West Indies, send us our main supplies of the fresh fruit. Limes A sprig of a plant laden with round fruits. Fresh limes are, however, very perishable and they should be kept in a cool, dry place. If to be held for a considerable length of time and refrigerator facilities are limited, it is a good idea to cover them with dry sand. The whole limes are also put up in syrup as a dessert dish, and "candied" as a confection, and the rinds are boiled in sugar and dried in the same manner as candied lemon peel. Lime Juice, in which form the lime is best known to the general public, is put up in bottles of attractive appearance and makes a desirable article for all fancy grocers. The best qualities come from Dominica and Montserrat, West Indies. Besides making a delicious beverage, it has been for a long time recognized as a useful medicinal agent, almost identical in composition with LEMON JUICE (which see). The color of good sound lime juice should be a very pale straw--if it tends toward red, the product should not be accepted at first-class prices. It is advisable to select only guaranteed brands, as a considerable percentage of the commercial supply consists of juice pressed from fruits in all sorts of conditions. The juice is offered in this market as low as twenty cents a gallon, and though this may possess good appearance and flavor when fresh, it is liable to acquire a moldy flavor in a year or two, and, if the bottles are not hermetically sealed, it will finally turn red. Low grade varieties also frequently contain preservatives and artificial coloring matter. LIME: is commercially made from limestone or other forms of mineral calcium carbonates by the action of heat, as by roasting in kilns. When pure, it is a white, brittle substance. "Unslacked lime" is the dry product before the addition of water or its absorption from the atmosphere. The addition of water, if not in excess, produces great heat. Its chief use is in mortars and cements, but it is also employed as a fertilizing agent, in the purification of coal gas, in tanning and for numerous medicinal purposes and laboratory processes. Lime is found in many foods and is essential to the formation of the human frame. Lime Water, when mixed with an equal or greater quantity of milk, is an excellent remedy for vomiting caused by irritability of the stomach. A solution of ordinary strength is obtained by dissolving a piece about the size of a hen's egg in a pint of water. LIMITATIONS, Statute of. On account of the frailty of human memory and the uncertainty attached to long-deferred claims, all civilized countries have established limits within which rights may be litigated, the law defining them being called the Statute of Limitations. The statute begins to run when the right is complete, i. e., when the money claimed is due and payable, subject to certain exceptions in favor of minors, persons beyond seas and those non compos mentis. After it begins to run, it is not stopped by anything except a payment on account, or an acknowledgment of the debt accompanied by an express promise to pay it, which, in some States, must be in writing. In either event, the debt is said to be "revived" and the statute commences to run anew from the date of such revival. The limitation, being regulated by the various State Legislatures, differs widely throughout the United States. LING: a fish resembling the whiting, found on the northern Atlantic coast. LICORICE. (foliage, root and finished product) A color illustration of several trees with oval-shaped, compound leaves. An inlaid cut shows two short cuttings of a plant root and a stick of black licorice, which is stamped with the letters "Y & S" at one end. LINSEED MEAL or Flaxseed Meal: is usually ground flaxseed oil-cake, but for medicinal purposes should be ground flaxseed from which the oil has not been extracted. LINSEED OIL or Flaxseed Oil: is produced from flaxseed by crushing and pressing. It is amber in color and of a peculiar, rather disagreeable, odor and taste. It is sold mainly by weight, seven and a half pounds being reckoned to a gallon, and is used in the manufacture of paint and varnish, linoleum, patent leather, printing inks, etc. The cake from which the oil has been expressed is commercially known specifically as OIL-CAKE (which see). LIPTAU CHEESE: a goat's milk product. See general article on CHEESE. LIQUEURS, or Cordials. The numerous beverages classed under this heading differ widely in character. Some of them are prepared direct from fruits by fermentation and distillation, but the majority may be described in a general way as highly sweetened brandy or other spirit, flavored and aromatized with one or more spices, herbs or fruits, or with a combination of all three. Their attractiveness is frequently enhanced by coloring with vegetable or harmless coal-tar extracts and putting up in bottles, etc., of fanciful design. It is the great care exercised in their preparation that has held the best known liqueurs so high and so long in public esteem--principally among good livers who are capable of discrimination. It is, however, so easy to manufacture grossly inferior imitations which resemble the original products closely enough to deceive the inexperienced, that caution should be exercised in buying. Compound liqueurs are made (1) by bringing the aromatic properties of the fruits, herbs, etc., in contact with vaporized, generally alcoholic, liquor; (2) by distillation of the liquor following the addition of essences or essential oils (see remarks on Natural Essences in the article on EXTRACTS), or (3) by dissolving essences in strong rectified spirits of wine. Ingredients, as sugar syrup, which are not volatile, are added after distillation. The production of liqueurs or cordials is at least as old as the records of civilization. Long before the Christian era, similar fragrant beverages were made both for human use and as offerings to heathen gods. Later, "cordials"--still of the same main characteristics, but improved by distillation and the advance of knowledge--were prominent in medical practice and graced every festival and celebration. In the Middle Ages, their use was fostered by the various orders of monks and nuns. To-day, France, Italy, Germany and the United States have large interests involved in their manufacture. Confusion occasionally arises from the indiscriminate use of the terms Eau de ("water of") and Crème de ("cream of"). Properly applied, Eau de (as, for example, Eau de Cédrat ) means that the liqueur, though sweetened, is not syrupy. Crème de (as, Crème de Cédrat ) means that sufficient sugar has been added to give it syrupy consistence. Extrait de ("extract of") and Elixir de ("elixir of"), are used in the same way as Eau de. Baume de ("balm of") and Huile de ("oil of"), are used in the same way as Crème de. Ratafia (which see) is a generic term often applied to simple, light liqueurs, such as Apricot Ratafia, Cherry Ratafia, etc. Rosolio, in addition to its specific use, is sometimes employed to signify special choiceness. The liqueurs most popular in this country are Absinthe, Bénédictine, Chartreuse, Crème de Menthe, Curaçao, Kirsch, Kümmel, Maraschino and Vermouth. The term is also frequently applied to fine old Cognac brandy, choice well-aged Schiedam Schnapps (gin), rich old wines such as Tokay, Vino Santo (Italian) and Rivesaltes, and very sweet rich wines such as Constancia and the Swiss Glacier, when they are used as "liqueurs" at the end of a dinner--but they are not properly in this class. Liqueurs should be served at, or a few degrees above, the temperature of the average dining room. With occasional exceptions, the small liqueur glasses should be used, as little more than a mouthful is required--the idea being, with most varieties, merely to obtain a "fillip" to digestion after a meal and to leave a pleasant flavor in the mouth. Many liqueurs include a number of different spices, herbs, etc., in their formulas, but there is generally one principal item which supplies the distinctive character. The following supplementary list names these "character ingredients," or other special features, in lieu of more lengthy description. The full titles include in many cases one or other of the terms "Crème de," etc., previously referred to. ABRICOT--apricots. ABSINTHE. * ALDABO (a Cuban imitation of Curaçao)--bitter orange peel. ALKERMES--bay leaves and mace. ANISE, ANISETTE--aniseed and coriander. APRICOTINE--apricots. AQUA D'ORO--an Italian cordial similar to Eau d'or (see below). ARGENT, EAU D'--similar to Eau d'or, substituting silver for gold. BANANE, BANANINE--bananas. BARBADOS--orange juice. BéNéDICTINE. * CACAO--roasted cocoa beans with vanilla flavoring. CAFé--coffee extract. CANNELLE--cinnamon. CASSIS--fresh black currants. CéDRAT--citron. CéLéRI--celery. CERISES--cherries. CHARTREUSE. * CHESKY (cherry whiskey)--cherries. CITRONELLE--orange and lemon peels. CHOCOLAT--cocoa. CORIANDRE--coriander seed. CRèME DE MENTHE. * CURAçAO. * EAU DE VIE DE DANTZIC--brandy aromatized with spices, and containing particles of gold leaf floating in it. EAU D'OR, or "GOLD CORDIAL"--Angelica, raisins, figs, licorice, etc. So named because gold leaf was formerly, and is still sometimes, added, as in Eau de vie de Dantzic. FRAMBOISES--raspberries. FRAISES, FRAISETTE--strawberries. GENTIANE--gentian flowers (Swiss). GINGEMBRE--ginger root. GOLDWASSER--a German product similar to Eau d'or. GRENADE, GRENADIN--pomegranates. KIRSCH. * KüMMEL. * LIMONES--fresh and dried orange and lemon peel and seeds. MACARON--oil of bitter almonds. MANDARINES--mandarin oranges. MARASCHINO. * MASTICA DE CHIOS--Turkish Mastic (which see). MAZARINE--wild cherries. MOKA--coffee extract and oil of bitter almonds. MûRES--blackberries. NOYAU or NOIX--oil of bitter almonds. ORANGE--fresh oranges and orange rind. POMERANZEN--oranges. PARFAIT AMOUR--lemon rind and vanilla essence. PEKOE--black tea. PERSICOT--peach flowers and seeds. PRUNE COGNAC--similar to Slivovitz (which see). PRUNELLE--sloes. RAKIA (Hungarian)--very aromatic grapes. ROSES--rose essence. ROSOLIO--rose and orange-blossom essences, spices, etc., colored pink. Also, a cordial made chiefly from raisins. SLIVOVITZ. * TRAPPISTINE (yellow and green)--absinthe and various spices and herbs. VANILLE--vanilla extract. VERMOUTH. * VINO PINO (Cuban)--pineapples. VIOLETTE--violet essence. YVETTE--violet essence. ZWETSCHENWASSER. See Slivovitz. *See description in alphabetical position. (1) Bénédictine (2) Curaçao (3) Crème de Menthe (4) Russian Kümmel (5) German Kümmel (6) Liq. des Pèrux Cannereux (7) Maraschino LIQUEURS A color illustration of seven different liquor bottles, each labeled with a number. LIQUID MEASURE. See tables of Weights and Measures in APPENDIX. LIQUORICE: another widely accepted way of spelling LICORICE (which see). LITCHI, or Lichi: a nut grown in Southern China and sold in a dried state in this country. As seen here, it is nearly round and from one to one and a half inches at its widest diameter, with a very thin but tough shell, dark brown and granulated in appearance, enclosing a dull reddish-brown pulp of raisin-like sweetness, with a round flat stone in its center (see Color Page opposite 414). The fresh nut looks like a strawberry, and the sweet pulp enclosed in the rough red skin is then whitish and watery. LITHIA WATER. See article on table and medicinal MINERAL WATERS. LITRE. See "Metric System," in Tables of Weights and Measures in APPENDIX. LIVER. The livers of animals, such as the bullock, the calf and the sheep, contain a large amount of nitrogenous matter, but they are generally regarded as indigestible articles of diet and are therefore to be avoided by dyspeptics. Good, fresh liver should be clear, bright and of a yellowish red. Calf's liver is so much in demand by the hotel and restaurant trade that there is often none left for the casual domestic buyer. Beef liver is, consequently, often substituted for it if the purchaser is uninitiated. The order of quality is (1) calf's liver, (2) beef liver, (3) pig's liver and (4) sheep's liver. Sheep's liver is generally poor and hard. See also FOIE GRAS (Goose Livers). LOBSTER: a fish of the crab species which is rated by many people as the most delicate and delicious of all sea food. In addition to its consumption fresh, its meat is canned in immense quantities, the smallest of the catch retained being generally used for the purpose. Lobster Pot An illustration of a cylindrical basket sealed with mesh at either end submerged in a body of water. Lobsters weighing from fifteen to twenty pounds are not uncommon. It is the weight for size that indicates the quality--a large, light specimen is never as good as one smaller but heavier in proportion. A nine-inch lobster generally weighs about one pound. Lobsters are preferably sold alive, so that there can be no doubt as to their freshness, and the use of improved shipping packages makes it possible now to deliver them alive and in good condition to almost any part of the country, but large quantities are boiled as caught and thus shipped. The enormous consumption and the difficulties experienced in safeguarding natural propagation have resulted in a steady diminution of the supply, but energetic measures are being taken by the Government to offset the conditions, and in the United States "Sea Nurseries" artificial propagation has already proved so successful that it is reasonable to hope for a long and large supply for the future. One of the most difficult problems is to prevent the baby lobsters from destroying each other, their cannibalistic tendencies making doubly arduous the care required to raise them. The lobster of the Atlantic Coast is distinguished from others of the family by its immense claws (see Color Page opposite). The native "spiney lobster" of the Pacific Coast, and the Cuban and French lobsters have no claws, but are characterized by their "horns," or remarkably well-developed antennæ. On the Atlantic Coast, lobster fishing is conducted all the way from Labrador to Delaware, but the coasts of Maine and Nova Scotia are the most fruitful sections. Nova Scotia is also noted for its large canneries. Lobsters hug the shores of rocky coasts during the summer and are then more easily obtained than in the winter, when they go farther to sea. They are caught by means of "pots" or traps--box-like affairs, averaging four feet long and two high, made of laths or iron bars. The entrance, on the end, is funnel-shaped and of netting or wood, so formed as to make ingress easy, and egress practically impossible. The pot is baited with fish, weighted and sunk to the bottom of the lobsters' feeding ground, generally about a half mile from shore, its location being marked by a buoy bearing the owner's name. The fisherman empties the pot through a door at the top, and throws back into the water the lobsters under the legal size--which is regulated by state legislation and varies from time to time. It is estimated that but two lobsters out of every ten thousand reach maturity, but to counteract this alarmingly small percentage, a ten-inch lobster produces about ten thousand eggs at a time, and doubles her product with every additional two inches of length. The young lobster casts his shell four times before the characteristics of the adult are assumed, and until the fifth change, which is reached at the age of from three to six weeks, it remains near the surface of the water and is destroyed by the million, both by storms and surface-feeding fish. After this period, its habitat is the bottom of the sea, where it feeds principally on fish, alive or dead indifferently. It grows only during, or immediately after, its annual moulting or casting of its shell, but at that time the rapidity of its development is wonderful. Lobsters are very voracious in their habits, and frequently have very animated combats among themselves, during which one of the combatants is reasonably sure to lose some part of a leg or claw--another member grows in its place, but it is always smaller than the original. Shellfish, and especially lobsters, afford more phosphorus than any other food. They are perhaps, unconsciously, on this account much eaten by the nerve-racked workers of the great cities. Lobster Butter or Paste: is cooked lobster "coral" or roe, pounded to a paste, mixed with butter, etc., and rubbed through a sieve. The term "coral" had its origin in the appearance of the lobster eggs after cooking. LOCKSOY: rice boiled to a paste and drawn into threads, imported from China. It is used to thicken soups. LOGANBERRY: a California product, a cross of the black and red raspberry. LOGWOOD: a tree cultivated principally in the East and West Indies. The wood yields a principle which is employed as a dye, generally darkish-red in color. LONDONDERRY-LITHIA. See article on Table and Medicinal MINERAL WATERS. (1) Lobster (2) Crab (3) Crayfish (4) Shrimp (5) Prawns (Cooked) (6) Cooked Lobster, Crab and Crayfish. A color illustration of different crustaceans, some cooked and some live. Each is labeled with a number. LONGAN: a fruit-nut resembling the Litchi, but generally smaller, much esteemed in China and Malaysia. The interior, when fresh, is a sweetish pulp enclosing a single large seed. It makes excellent preserves and is exported both in that form and plain dried. LOOFAH. See TOWEL GOURD. LOQUAT: a yellow, generally oval, plum-like fruit, a near relative to the medlar and sometimes, but incorrectly, called the "Japan Plum." It is very agreeable to the taste when fully ripe. It can be eaten in almost any manner, raw or cooked, that serves for other fruits. The down should be carefully wiped off before serving to eat raw. See Color Page opposite page 320. Loquats An illustration of a leafy bush laden with oblong fruits. LOVAGE: an aromatic plant, now used chiefly in the manufacture of confectionery. The blanched stalks were formerly consumed as a salad vegetable of the same type as celery and are still popular for that purpose in some parts of Southern Europe. Scottish Lovage, a similar plant of the same species, grows wild on the Shetland Isles, north of Scotland, and is there used as a popular article of diet. LOVE APPLE: the former name for the TOMATO (which see). LOZENGES: are made in many different styles and shapes--square, circular and oval. They are composed of farinaceous matter, sugar, gum or gelatine, etc., variously flavored, and are employed both in medical practice and as candy. They were formerly the main candy supply of the country villages. LUCCA OIL: a trade name for fine OLIVE OIL (which see). LUNCH TONGUE: a trade name for canned tongue (see TONGUE). LYE: is, in strict parlance, water impregnated with an alkali, but in general usage the word is applied to all forms of soap-making alkalies, from the "mother lye" of wood ashes, formerly used in farm life to make soft soap, up to the metal drums of caustic potash and soda imported from Europe. MACARONI: is considered by the general public as a typical and peculiarly Italian food, and Italy is probably entitled to the credit for her early appreciation of its virtues and her fidelity to it after adoption, but history credits its invention to the Chinese and its European introduction to the Germans. The Italians are said to have learned the art of making it from the latter. History, however, also informs us that, by the time the fourteenth century had rolled around, Italy was the only European nation enjoying macaroni, and that she held for a full hundred years the secret of the method of its manufacture. Later, some enterprising Frenchman introduced it into France, and with great success, for it is on record that King Louis XIII ordered a dish of it from an inn-keeper at Tours who had made a great reputation for its preparation. The above is briefly the European idea of the history of macaroni--but it is disputed by the Japanese, who claim priority in its use by hundreds of years. The Japanese delight especially in a very fine kind of vermicelli, cut into lengths of six to ten inches and tied in bundles. This variety is also peculiar in that it is flexible. The essential point in the manufacture of macaroni is that the meal or "semola" be from hard, very glutenous wheat, the kind known as "macaroni wheat" in this country. The best imported macaroni is made from the blending of various grades of semola obtained from Taganrog wheat--a very hard Russian variety, both imported from Russia and raised from Russian seed in Southern Italy and France. By the original European method, the wheat is first steeped in water, then dried by heat, ground and sifted--both the husks and a considerable percentage of starch flour are thus separated, leaving a coarse meal, high in gluten and corresponding closely to the wheat "middlings" marketed here as wheat "farina" for consumption as a "cereal." The lessening of the starch proportion is advantageous, as in cooking its expansion tends to break the pipes or make them stick together in a pasty mass. In general modern manufacture, coarsely ground flour is moistened with the smallest possible quantity of boiling water, and thoroughly mixed, by machinery, until smooth and "tough" and then kneaded in a special machine kneader known as a "gramola." The completed dough goes into the cylinders of the press, where tremendous pressure is brought to bear on it by means of revolving screws, and it is slowly passed out at the bottom of the cylinder through the small holes of the "trafila," as the perforated plate is called. Cutting off the macaroni strings as they come out of the "trafila" An illustration of a man working at a pasta-making machine. The form of the trafila fixes the character of the product--for "macaroni" and similar varieties, there is in each hole a steel pin which gives the "pipes" their well-known hollow or tubular form. With smaller holes without pins, the trafila produces "spaghetti" and similar solid types. For flat, noodle-like or "ribbon" MACARONI AND SIMILAR PASTES (1) Vermicelli (2) Spaghettini (3) Spaghetti (4) Forantini or Maccheroncelli (5) Forati or Perciatelli (6) Mezzanelli (7) Mezzani or "Macaroni" (8) Zitoni (9) Mezzani Rigati (10)Zitoni Rigati (11) Taglarini (12) Linguine (13) Trenette (14) Fetuccelle (15, 16) Lasagne Ricce (17, 18) Lasagne Lisci (19, 20) Tubetti (21, 24, 25) Ditali Lisei (22, 23) Ditali Rigati (26) Rigatoni (27) Bombollotis (28 to 49)--"Fancy Pastes"--seeds, stars, alphabets, animals, &c. (50) Curled Vermicelli A color illustration of a variety of different pasta noodles. varieties, a flat opening takes the place of the round hole. Drying Spaghetti on canes An illustration of a group of men standing among racks of limp pasta. The short kinds are cut off by automatic rotary knives as the paste comes out of the trafila. The long varieties are cut off at the proper lengths by hand. Next comes the drying--in Italy generally accomplished by outdoor exposure. The long solid pastes are looped over canes, the others are generally spread on frames. When sufficiently dry, they are carefully inspected, sorted, weighed and packed. When outdoor exposure is not possible, as, for example, in paste manufacture in the Eastern United States, a special drying room is used, the frames or canes being placed in tiers. The proportion of profit in paste manufacture depends to a considerable extent on the care in drying--on the vigilance exercised in ensuring an unvarying temperature of the proper degree. If the air is allowed to become too moist, the entire batch may be ruined by mildew or souring; if too hot, it may spoil by over-rapid drying and consequent cracking or damage to its texture, and if the room is draughty, loss by cracking is again the result. The average American consumer has no idea of the number of forms, a hundred or more, in which the paste is made by Italian manufacturers. They range from lasagnes, short, flat pieces from one to two inches wide, cut out, and sometimes molded, by hand, to fidellini, long thin threads, the finest of which are many times smaller than vermicelli, which is the smallest type generally known here--and, in between, a great variety of forms and sizes--tubular, solid-round and flat, long and short, stars, dots, crescents, little animal shapes, etc., the last-named varieties being cut from thin sheets of the dough. See Color Page, opposite page 350, illustrating a number of different types. Macaroni should be kept in a dry, cool place. Under proper conditions it will remain good for a long time, but it is not generally advisable to risk deterioration by laying in a large stock. In cooking, be careful to put it into boiling, and salted, water. Cold water will spoil the best macaroni. The water must be kept fully boiling for from twenty to thirty minutes until the macaroni is tender. When done, drain well and season or dress to suit individual Drying the "pastes" in the open air near Naples, Italy A large courtyard filled with racks draped with pasta. Two men are standing near the pasta racks. tastes. The idea is to have every tube thoroughly tender, but each tube whole, separate and without pastiness. In Creole cookery, macaroni, spaghetti, etc., is freely added to many soups. If macaroni, after proper and careful cooking, is pasty or does not retain its shape, it is of poor quality and probably made from the wrong variety of wheat. Cooking is the only really conclusive test, consequently it is not good policy to stock heavily any macaroni by a new or unknown manufacturer until you have tried it by cooking some. MACARONI BREAD: that made from Macaroni Wheat. See BREAD. MACARONI WHEAT: another name for Durum Wheat, so called because it is accepted as the most suitable of American-grown wheats for the manufacture of Macaroni (see articles on MACARONI and WHEAT). MACAROONS. There are two leading varieties of the sweet biscuits known as Macaroons--those made of almond meal, and those of shredded cocoanut. They should be handled as fresh as possible, and should be kept in a dry, moderately cool place, protected from the air. Macaroons were first made by an order of nuns at St. Emilion, France. MACASSAR OIL: is, properly, the product of a tree of the Sapodilla family, grown in the Macassar district of Celebes, one of the East Indian Islands, but the trade article frequently consists of, or contains, cocoanut and safflower-seed oil. Its chief use is in the perfumery trade. MACE: is the inner covering which envelopes the nutmeg ( see Color Page of SPICES). It closely resembles a lacerated membrane, being blood-red and somewhat fleshy when fresh. It is prepared for the market by being carefully flattened out and dried for several days in the sun, much of it becoming red-yellowish during the process. It is used both in "blade" and ground form to spice soups, sauces, puddings, etc., its flavor closely resembling nutmeg, but being, to many tastes, even more pleasing. It also furnishes a strong, yellow, volatile oil, and a red, buttery, fixed oil which, mixed with other substances, is known as Nutmeg Balsam. The bulk of the supply comes from Banda (the best), Penang, Singapore, Celebes and, though only to a comparatively small extent, the West Indies. Care should be be taken to choose that with a deep orange color and clear, transparent, wax-like appearance. Dull looking parcels are not desirable. "Macassar," "Papua," and "Bombay" mace are fictitious titles sometimes given to a wild product, the mixing of which with cultivated mace is rated as adulteration. U. S. Standard Mace contains not less than 20% and not more than 30% of non-volatile ether extract; not more than 3% of total ash; not more than 5% of ash insoluble in hydrochloric acid and not more than 10% of crude fibre. Mace should be always kept in air-tight glass bottles or tin boxes. MACéDOINE: a mixture of cut fruits or vegetables of different colors. Vegetable Macédoine is now retailed in bottles, tins, etc., for use in soups, as a vegetable dish and for garnishing. MACKEREL ( see Color Page opposite 504). The Common Mackerel, considered by many the most beautiful of all fish which find their way to our markets, make their appearance in early spring in immense shoals or "schools" off the coasts of Virginia and Maryland. Striking northward, they visit successively Cape May, Sandy Hook, Block Island, Cape Cod and various other points. They can be traced as far as Labrador. How much farther they go, no one can tell. They are, for the most part, caught in drift nets, shot into the sea from fishing smacks, but seines or single nets are often used. The mackerel ranges in length up to seventeen or eighteen inches, the average market size being twelve inches and the weight from three-quarters of a pound to one pound. It varies in color from multi-hued to white, with dark-blue stripes on the back. It is full grown at about four years. The young fish are known as "spikes," "blinkers" and "tinkers." "Spikes," the smallest marketed, are five to six inches long and five to seven months old. "Blinkers" are a size larger. "Tinkers" are those approaching, but under, nine inches in length and are supposed to be about two years old. The fresh fish is in season only from April to about September, but the greater part of the catch is consumed salted, smoked and canned--whole or filleted, "soused" or pickled, in oil, wine sauce, etc. Salt mackerel are shipped first in barrels, to be later repacked according to the demands of the trade. They are carefully graded for the market as 1, 2, 3 and 4. No. 1 quality must not be under thirteen inches, free from taint, damage and rust, and fine, fat fish. No. 2 must be fat and free from rust, and not less than eleven inches. No. 3 consist of the best left after the selection of Nos. 1 and 2. No. 4 is the result of the three preceding assortings, but must be entirely free from damage or taint to pass muster. The location in which mackerel are caught has an influence in determining their commercial value. The finest European catches are those taken off the coasts of Ireland and Norway. The best sold here are from the New England shore waters, the June catch being considered superior to the spring and fall crops. In addition to the home supply, from twenty to thirty million pounds are imported annually, principally from the United Kingdom, Norway, Canada, Holland and Sweden. The packing and re-packing of mackerel is an extensive business, and the result of the repacking is not always satisfactory to dealers or consumers. A barrel of mackerel should weigh two hundred pounds. Two half-barrels, then, should weigh one hundred pounds each, but it happens sometimes that half-barrels, scale fifteen to twenty pounds under that amount. The same remark applies to repacking in smaller quantities. A "kit" is a fifth of a half-barrel and ought to contain a full twenty pounds. Retailers should carefully weigh packages or contents and refuse their custom to firms which violate the principles of business honesty. The mackerel is much esteemed, its flesh having an agreeable flavor, but, as usually prepared for the table, it is not readily digested on account of its large proportion of oil. This difficulty vanishes with proper cooking--by simmering it after boiling for a considerable time--three or four times as long as for any other fish, except salmon. In preparing it for cooking, it is nearly always preferable to wipe it dry with a clean cloth instead of washing it. See also SPANISH MACKEREL and FOOD VALUES. MADEIRA: a "white" wine of fine flavor and rich quality, usually fortified by the addition of clear spirit, produced in the Island of Madeira, a Portuguese possession, situated about 300 miles from the Coast of Morocco. It was at one time a very fashionable wine and has again increased somewhat in vogue. It is consumed in considerable quantities in Great Britain and Continental Europe. A hand Wine Press, Madeira An illustration of several men standing near a large machine. Madeira is exported in both casks and bottles. If circumstances warrant, it is generally preferable to purchase in casks, and bottle the wine after its receipt here, as, with the exception of very old stock, it is apt to throw a considerable sediment when shipped to colder climates. Among the varieties most worthy of notice are Verdilho, in both rich and dry styles; Malmsey, very sweet and soft; Sercial, or "Serceal," very dry with a nutty flavor, and Bual, or "Boal," which in the best qualities possesses an exquisite bouquet. It should be stored in a moderately warm place and it generally ripens better in demi-johns than in bottles. It should be served at about the temperature of the average dining room and can be decanted without disadvantage if so desired. Large quantities of spurious "Madeira" are made in France, Spain and elsewhere, but an abundance of the genuine wine is easily obtainable by those who specify it--the annual production of the Island having for many years averaged 10,000 pipes, as against a total annual export of between 6,000 and 7,000 pipes. Transporting wine from the courtyard, Madeira Two men and an ox stand in a room filled with wine casks, which are stacked against one wall. One wine cask is loaded onto a wagon behind the ox. The name "Madeira" is applied to numerous sauces, cakes, etc., but in actual practice other wines, such as sherry, are generally used. MAGGOTS. These destructive pests are the larvæ of flies. They are found feeding upon many foods, especially the carcasses of animals (see article on MEAT). If they appear in vegetables, the only proper method is to discard them entirely. MAIGRE: a term applied in cookery to dishes prepared without meat, poultry or game, and in which butter is used to the exclusion of lard, beef suet, etc. They consist chiefly of eggs, fish, vegetables, etc., and are eaten by Catholics on occasions which interdict the use of meat, as the term is generally understood. The word originally signified "lean," "poor," "scanty." MAITRANK. See item under heading of MAY WINE. MAIZE: the distinctive title of the grain generally known in the United States as CORN (which see) or Indian Corn. MAIZENA: another name for CORNSTARCH (which see). MALAGA GRAPES: Spanish grapes exported from Malaga. See GRAPES. MALAGA WINE: a delicate wine from Malaga grapes. See SPANISH WINES. MALDIVE FISH, or "Mummalon": an East Indian fish, sold canned at fancy grocery stores. MALLARD. See DUCKS (Wild). MALMSEY, Malvoisie, Malvasia: are titles correctly applied only to wines from the Malvasia grape--which takes its name from the Greek island of Malvasia, where the type was first produced. So highly was it then esteemed that Virgil described it as "New Nectar." "Malvasia" grapes were later cultivated in many parts of the world--in Spain, the Canary Islands, Madeira, France, Italy, Greece in general, etc.--chiefly nowadays in the first three. They are of fine flavor, though less strongly characterized than Muscats, and yield a soft and pleasing wine of delicate bouquet, which with age develops a liqueur style. The wines vary in tint from light to purple or brown, being subject both to differences in methods of manufacture and in vine selection, the Malvasia grape being found in numerous varieties and in white, purple and black colors. MALT: grain in which Diastase has been developed by allowing it to sprout. It is used in large quantities in the manufacture of beer, whisky, malt extract, etc. The grain is first steeped in tubs of water for from forty-eight to seventy-two hours until it starts to germinate and is then spread on floors in a layer from eight to twelve inches deep, being turned over every twenty-four hours during the four days of the process in order to prevent "heating" and to ensure even growth. It is next kiln-dried and screened to remove the sprouts and is then ready for the market. When made by the "drum" system, the desired uniformity is even more thoroughly assured by putting the steeped grain in large revolving drums which keep it constantly moving as it grows. Barley is the grain chiefly malted, but rye, oats, etc., are also so treated in considerable quantities. Caramel Malt is that roasted especially dark. The great commercial value of the Diastase thus developed is its property, in solution under high temperature, of transforming starch, first into dextrin and then into a fermentable sugar. One part is capable of converting 2,000 parts of starch. Malted Barley or other grain contains only 1/800 part of the substance, yet this is sufficient to convert the starch of cereals of twenty times the bulk of the malt, as well as that of the malt, into fermentable sugar. The grinding of the grain in the manufacture of beer, whisky, etc., is to bring the Diastase more readily into contact with each minute particle of starch content. The Commercial Diastase employed in baking and for some other purposes, instead of the malted grain itself, is a hard, white, solid substance obtained by digesting the germinated grain in a mixture of three parts of water and one part of alcohol, then pressing and filtering. MALT BREAD. See sub-head in general article on BREAD. MALT EXTRACT: a nutritious and invigorating beverage growing in public favor. So many varying qualities are offered, some of them differing little from ordinary beer or ale, that merchants are best guided by the reputations of the firms marketing them. True malt extract is a syrupy liquid obtained by the maceration and digestion of malt, generally barley malt, followed by filtration and concentration. It should contain from 70% to 80% residual extract, chiefly maltose, including about 2% diastase. MALT LIQUORS. Within this classification come Ale, Beer and Stout (or Porter ), described under special headings. All malt liquors should be stored in a clean, dry place--a cellar preferably--with a uniform temperature of 44° to 50° Fahr. MALT VINEGAR: is obtained from barley malt, beer, ale, etc. See VINEGAR. MALT WINE: a tonic beverage obtained by the fermentation of a mixture of sugar syrup, brewer's "wort" (see article on BEER), hops and raisins. MALTED MILK: is milk combined with extract of malted grain, reduced to a powder by the vacuum process. It is used as a pleasant and nourishing beverage, both hot and cold, as an addition to broths, etc., for invalids, and in many other ways. MALTOSE: one of the "sugars" obtained by the action of malt or diastase on starch. See GLUCOSE. MAMMEE, or Mammee Apple, or St. Domingo, or South American, "Apricot": a tropical fruit about the size of a small grape fruit, sometimes round and sometimes angular in shape. The thick outer rind and the central seedy pulp are bitter in flavor, but the intermediate flesh is aromatic and agreeable. It is eaten both raw and preserved. It is related to the Mangosteen, but not to the Mammee Sapota in spite of the resemblance in name. MAMMEE SAPOTA or Mammee or Sapota: a large, generally oval-shaped, fruit of the Sapodilla family. Good specimens average a pound and upwards in weight. The skin is coarse in texture and light coffee-colored and granulated in appearance; the flesh is salmon-crimson in color, a good deal like that of a soft musk-melon in texture, and enclosing one, two or three long, generally shiny-black, seeds. Mammee Sapota A plate containing one whole oblong fruit accompanied by two pieces of the same fruit sliced to show the fruit's interior. MANDARIN ORANGE: a small variety of the tangerine type (see ORANGES). Two Types of MANGOES A color illustration of three pieces of fruit. Two of the pieces are two halves of the same round fruit, one showing the outside of the fruit and the other showing the interior. The third piece is a similar fruit, but larger and different in shape; it is also cut in half to show the fruit's interior. MANGO ( see Color Page ): a fruit believed to be a native of Southern Asia but now grown in nearly all sub-tropical and tropical countries and found in many different shapes, sizes and colors. The kidney shape is the form most generally seen, but some are nearly round and others long and narrow, either crooked or straight. The size ranges from a little larger than the biggest plum up to a weight of four pounds or more. The color may be either red, green or yellow. Picking Mangoes, Mexico A man in a sombrero reaches up into the branches of a tree to pick fruit. The quality varies as greatly as the other characteristics. The seed-stone of inferior grades is large and the flesh is so fibrous as to be of very little value, but in the best types the fibre is a negligible quantity and the stone is surrounded by a large mass of juicy, aromatic, generally orange-yellow pulp. In addition to its use as a fresh fruit, the mango forms the basis of most Chutneys of East Indian type and is also canned and otherwise preserved. A majority of the mangoes imported until quite recently were of the poor, fibrous kinds--which compare to properly cultivated varieties as a crab apple to a Seed of mango of fine quality--the fibres reduced to a short, felt-like covering Seed of fruit of medium grade, but with fibres long enough to be somewhat objectionable Seed of common wild mango, with fibre running through the entire pulp Three illustrations of fruit pulp, each with its own caption. Spitzenberg!--but there is to-day a constantly increasing supply of the choice fruits. The principal season is from April to the end of June--the fruit from Mexico, the West Indies, etc., arriving first and the Florida product a little latter. The best are those from India-style trees. The best way of preparing a fine Mango for consumption An illustration of a fruit with its skin being peeled back. A little practice is needed to acquire the art of eating a mango gracefully, yet without losing any of the aroma which distinguishes it. The fine fibreless varieties are the most easily eaten. Such fruit is best prepared by cutting through the skin and turning it back in a broad band, as shown in the accompanying illustration, or by making an X cut on each side, peeling the corners back as far as possible, and temporarily laying the skin in place again to prevent the aroma from escaping. The pulp can then in either case be eaten with a spoon, like a cantaloupe, turning the skin back as necessary. A third method sometimes employed, but requiring considerable deftness and only appropriate for immediate service and consumption, is to halve the fruit lengthwise with a sharp knife, remove the stone and serve the two halves as one would cantaloupe. With a less delicate fruit, a better way is to cut the skin in a circle around each end and make seven or eight lengthwise incisions from circle to circle. The skin can then be easily lifted in strips and the flesh cut off in sections, lengthwise, as, or just before, eating. To slice a mango and let it stand before serving, as is customary for peaches, is to lose much of its delicate flavor--and to try to eat it out of hand in the nonchalant manner and care-free mind with which you tackle an apple, for example, is to wish you had gotten into a bathtub to perform the operation! The principal objection that the fruit merchant has to the mango is that it is rather easily damaged in transportation. MANGO MELON, or Vegetable Peach: a small round melon with yellow skin and white flesh, cultivated chiefly for domestic "Mango Pickles" and preserving. MANGO PEPPER: a mild sweet pepper, yellow and waxy in appearance, highly esteemed in the South for pickling. "MANGO PICKLES": a popular domestic title for pickled stuffed young melons (preferably Mango Melons), mango-peppers or cucumbers. MANGOLD-WURZEL, or Mangel-Wurzel: a large coarse type of beet, grown principally for cattle food. MANGOSTEEN: the fruit of a tree native to the East Indies, distinguished by long oval leathery leaves and a flower like a single rose. Many travelers award it the title of "the world's choicest fruit." It is generally about the size of a small to medium orange, and in exterior appearance slightly suggests the pomegranate. Inside the thick pulpy rind, the flesh--a soft, juicy, rose-tinted or creamy pulp, enclosing the seeds--is divided orange-style. Its flavor, best uncooked, is sweet and slightly tart--enthusiasts says that it combines all the good qualities of the pineapple, grape, peach and strawberry, and physicians consider it especially wholesome. It unfortunately does not lend itself readily to transportation. See TROPICAL FRUITS facing page 586. MANGROVE: a tropical fruit of sweet and pleasant flavor, eaten both fresh and preserved. A mild light wine is made by fermentation of the juice. MANIOC or Cassava: a large, woody tropical plant botanically known as Manihot, whose roots furnish the Cassava-starch and Tapioca of commerce. It is variously known in the West Indies and South America as Manioc, Mandioca, Cassava and Cassada, as well as by various other titles, and as Ubi Tanah in Java and the Malay Peninsula, now the principal United States sources. The roots range in size from a diameter of one and a half to eight inches, and from eighteen inches to four feet in length, growing in clusters which average from five to ten pounds each but often reach thirty pounds and upwards. Manioc Roots A pile of thick, tuber-like roots. There are two principal types, the "sweet" and "bitter." Tapioca (described under its own heading) is generally made from the former, but both are equally valuable for the production of the commercial starch or "flour," which is the form in which the bulk of the importations is utilized in this country--in the manufacture of compressed yeast, as a sizing material, in the textile industries, for glazing twine, etc., as a laundry starch and in various other industries. The Manioc Plant An illustration of a man grasping the branches of a sparsely-foliated shrub. The Manioc root is an important native food in several tropical countries. In South America, a meal obtained by drying and grating is baked in thin cakes which are both nutritious and pleasing in taste. An interesting fact is that no water is added to the meal, sufficient adhesion being secured by the softening of the starch particles by the heat applied. The Sweet Manioc is cultivated to a limited extent in Florida and other Southern States. The juice of the Bitter Manioc gives Cassareep (which see). MANNA: a species of sugar extracted chiefly from the Manna Ash, native to the mountainous parts of Southern Europe, by making small incisions in the stems. It is principally used medicinally. The best quality is known as Flake Manna. The name "Manna" has also been applied to numerous special food preparations. MANNACROUP, or Manna Groats: a kind of semolina or FARINA (which see). Another more expensive variety consists of the seeds of the aquatic Manna Grass. MAPLE SUGAR and MAPLE SYRUP: are made from the sap of several varieties of the maple tree, native to the northern United States and Canada. The three chief varieties are the Rock Maple, which contains the largest percentage of sugar in the sap; the Hard Maple and the Soft Maple, the last-named containing the least. The sap is collected by "tapping" the trees about three feet from the ground. The tap hole is bored about an inch deep with a three-eighth inch bit; the spout is driven into this, and a covered tin sap-bucket is hung on the spout. It is the wood immediately under the bark which gives the sap--the largest amount coming from the ring made by the growth of the tree during the preceding year. The gathering season commences in the spring, generally during the month of March, just as the winter is breaking up and the general rule is thawing days and freezing nights. It ends when the trees begin to bud, as at that time the sap undergoes a change and the sugar content decreases. The percentage of sugar varies form 1% to 4%, being affected by many circumstances--the variety of the tree, its location, the character of the soil, climate, etc. There are usually three or four "runs" during a good season and the first is generally the sweetest, averaging then from 3% to 4% of sugar. Each succeeding run is generally less sweet and in consequence the product is of a darker color because of the longer boiling required. The quantity of sap depends to a great extent on the growth of the tree during the preceding summer and upon the weather conditions during the tapping season. Under good conditions, a tree large enough for two spouts will yield enough to produce three or four quarts of syrup or six or seven pounds of sugar. After its receipt at the sugar-house, the sap is evaporated in sap-pans and syrup-pans to a syrup. For Maple Syrup, this product is strained, filtered and clarified by the addition of milk, cream or egg white and is then ready for the market. Maple Sugar is made by condensing the syrup until of the proper consistence. It is then stirred and "grained" and poured into molds or tin pails and allowed to cool. Tapping a Sugar-Maple Tree An illustration of a man bending over a tree that will be tapped for sap. A stack of buckets (presumably for catching the sap) lies to one side of the tree. The evaporators vary in size according to local requirements--a machine two feet wide by eight feet long will handle the sap from three hundred trees. The largest made is six feet wide and twenty-four feet long, and will boil the sap from four thousand trees. The average Vermont sugar camp has from twelve to fifteen hundred. Maple Sugar making now and Maple Sugar making as it used to be, are very different things--what the industry has gained in facility, it has lost in picturesqueness. The old style camp with its primitive appliances is no more. The kettle was long ago superseded by the "pan" and the latter again by the evaporator, and the trough has become a mass of crumbling decay. The women and children are kept at home and no longer know the old-time delights of "sugaring off," though in the Arcadia of the past their services were not despised and the whole household set up its abode in the woods. Gathering the Sap in a Sugar-Maple orchard An illustration of a man and a carriage in a grove of trees. The sap was collected then in troughs, each about three feet long, hollowed out of sections of poplars, and was conveyed to the kettles in barrels, from which it was transferred by scoops. There were five or more kettles, from ten to thirty gallons in capacity, and each was filled with sap and kept at the boiling point, the larger kettles being filled from the smaller as evaporation reduced the contents. When the sap was sufficiently reduced, the hot syrup was dipped out and passed through a flannel strainer into uncovered tubs, from which it was again poured into a large, thick-bottomed kettle for the process of "sugaring off," some milk and the whites of several eggs being added to it. Thus prepared, it was placed over a slow fire, and kept below the boiling point until the sediment and all foreign matter had floated to the top and been removed, becoming temptingly translucent. It was then exposed to a greater heat and gently boiled, the evaporation gradually bringing it to the point of granulation. Then the sugar-maker became all watchfulness, and it fared ill with those who distracted him, for if the golden liquid seething in the kettle boiled the least bit too much, it would become too dry, and if it boiled too little, it would be "soggy." He tested it constantly, plucking threads of it from his stirring-stick, and trailing them around in cups of cold water. While the threads yielded waxily to the touch, the sugar was not yet ripe; but as soon as one broke crisp between his fingers, the moment had come to take the kettle off the fire. As the sugar cooled, it crystallized round the sides, and gradually the whole mass, under a vigorous stirring, became granular. In that way was Maple Sugar made years ago and when the sap flowed profusely the operations were continued through the night and the fires cast strange shadows in the woods. But to-day everything is "improved." In place of the hut of logs is a permanent sugar-house, furnished with many elaborate devices to prevent waste and deterioration. The sap collections are made with letter-collection regularity and if the grove is on a hill and the sugar-house is in a hollow, the sap, as it is gathered, is emptied into a "flume," down which it flows into a large reservoir within the building. A scoop or ladle is as anachronistic as a javelin! See Color Page opposite 368. MARASCHINO: a famous liqueur which takes its name from the small wild black Marasca cherry, native to the Dalmatian Mountains, Austria, but found also in Italy, Greece and parts of Provence. The fruit is very sweet and aromatic and the kernel resembles the filbert in flavor. There are numerous commercial types of Maraschino which have departed from the original formula, but the true liqueur, the kind that made the name famous, knows no constituents except the Marasca cherry, white honey and clear syrup. The pulp and kernels of the thoroughly ripe fruit are crushed together and the mixture is emptied into vats, where it is diluted with a certain quantity of white honey. Fermentation quickly sets in and is followed by distillation--which produces the crude Maraschino. This is allowed to rest for about a year and is then rectified several times until absolutely clear, mixed with clear white-sugar syrup and again sent to the cellars to mature, a full three years being required to produce the natural mellow strength so highly prized. The liqueur thus matured is the best quality ordinarily retailed. It continues, however, to improve in quality, and ascend in price, with still greater age, genuine old Maraschino being worth, even at the distillery, from two to three dollars a bottle--and at retail is of course very much more expensive. The bulk of the output of the best grades is produced in the city of Zara, the capital of the province of Dalmatia, by distillers who receive the fermented mixture from various points in the cherry growing districts. It is generally marketed in wicker-covered bottles. A great quantity of imitation Maraschino is made from other varieties of cherries, miscellaneous fruits, peach leaves, etc., but it does not possess the delicate flavor, or aroma, of the true product. In this country, Maraschino is a popular liqueur for the preserving of whole fruits, as cherries, figs, etc. See also general article on, and Color Page of, LIQUEURS. MARGARINE: the English name for OLEOMARGARINE (which see). MARIENBAD. See article on table and medicinal MINERAL WATERS. MARINADE: pickle liquid, generally flavored, as with aromatic herbs, spices, etc. The term is best applied to vinegar and lemon pickle, but is also extended to brine. MARJORAM: a garden herb of the Aster family. There are numerous varieties, the most desirable being the Sweet or "Knotted," Winter Sweet and Pot. Both the tops and leaves, green and dried, are used to flavor soups, dressings, etc. For drying, the branches are cut before the flowers open. Common, or Wild, Marjoram grows wild in many parts of the country in the open fields. It resembles the cultivated types but is coarser in flavor. MARKETS. The public market or fair is one of the links which connect 20th century civilization with the early history of the human race. Its origin is found in the first concerted attempt at commerce, and its initial history antedates the oldest records, yet the essential principles of the primitive market were the same which underlie the modern Exchange, and even the details of its operation were in all probability not unlike those of the fine modern markets of Continental Europe. The employment of the terms "market" and "fair" overlap at many points and in general usage, but they are perhaps best differentiated by applying the word "market" to a public selling-place continuously open during all, or a considerable portion of the year and devoted chiefly to the sale of provisions. The term "Fair" may then be specialized to signify a public selling-place for all classes of commodities--clothing, jewelry, etc., in addition to provisions--open only for a limited time--as the periodic Fairs which constituted so important a feature of life during the Middle Ages, and the famous modern fairs at Leipsic, Nijni-Novgorod, etc., referred to in the closing paragraphs of this article. Halles Centrales, Paris--the market buildings on each side A cityscape centering on a wide street with ornate buildings on either side. The recognition of the desirability of a common interchange of goods seems to be instinctive among all races. When the Aztec country was disclosed to European eyes by the Spanish invasion of 1521, it was found that the greater part of the trade between city and country and the bulk of all classes of the retail business of large cities was transacted in markets and fairs. In his African explorations, Stanley found fairs in periodic or continuous operation in parts to which no white man had ever before penetrated, the natives journeying to them from considerable distances to exchange goods. The public market was in former generations a noteworthy feature of American life, but it has in recent years lost its first significance. There are few communities in which the free open market-places are patronized by the general public, and no covered markets to which the general producer has access, the stalls of those still in operation being occupied by tenants much in the same way as are ordinary retail stores. The wholesale or commission merchant, together with the retailer, have absorbed the place the market formerly held in public service. New York retains several of its old markets--Fulton, West Washington, etc.--and meat, fish and general produce merchants do a big business in them, but the character of the custom has changed from exclusively retail to largely wholesale. The same remarks apply to Philadelphia and Boston. A considerable percentage of the sales in the Baltimore and New Orleans markets are at retail, but their accomodations are not accessible to the general producer. American conditions are paralleled in England, but a strong contrast is found in Continental Europe, where markets of general use are found in all important cities. The finest markets in the world are those grouped in the Halles Centrales of Paris--ten large halls, covering a total of 365,000 square feet and divided according to the character of the supplies--butcher's meat in one, fish in another, etc. About one-third of the space is devoted to wholesale and the balance to retail purposes. Lining the thoroughfares between the halls--some of the spaces open and some covered--are stands for fruits, vegetables, flowers, etc., and underneath are cold storage cellars for the use of producers on payment of a small fee. The annual sales reach large figures--an average of 100 million pounds of meat, 50 million pounds of poultry, 70 million pounds of fish, 50 million pounds of butter and cheese--and other items in proportion. The Halles Centrales retain the first feature of the market or fair in that the producer and consumer are brought in direct contact. There are a great many permanent tenants, titulaires de places fixes, as in English and American markets, but in Paris they have no exclusive possession--ample space is reserved for all occasional or periodic vendors--any producer who desires may, by conforming with the regulations and paying the very moderate fees, occupy space and sell his goods. If he cannot spare the time to come into the city, he can ship his goods to any of the official salesmen, to be disposed of at auction, the only charge being a small commission on the sales. These salesmen are appointed by a municipal official and their methods are rigorously inspected and controlled. Numerous smaller markets in other parts of the city supplement the service of the Halles Centrales. The famous old Butter Market at Cork, Ireland, is another institution worthy of mention as one of the best regulated of its kind. All the butter exposed for sale The Fish Market, Halles Centrales, Paris An illustration of a high-ceilinged room filled with tables spread with fish. A group of people can be seen back by the far wall of the room. Collecting the Sap of the SUGAR MAPLE A color illustration of a grove of trees, some of which have buckets hanging from their trunks to collect sap. A small hut stocked with tools and barrels and a horse-drawn sleigh can be seen beneath the trees. An inlaid cut displays a block of maple sugar. is tested, in bulk and without any name attached, and branded First Quality, Second Quality, etc., by a market committee, whose members also belong to the Common Council. No favoritism can be shown, as the committee are ignorant of the ownership of the butter they inspect. Merchants residing in any part of Great Britain can forward their orders for so many packages of certain qualities to local brokers, who buy on the market, charging the purchasers a commission of about fifty cents for each one hundred and twelve pounds--the fee being regulated by the same committee. On the following day, the prices of all qualities are published in all the morning papers of Great Britain, the grocer being thus informed of the correct price of the quality he buys. The greatest Fairs in the world are the Easter and Michaelmas Fairs at Leipsic, and the Russian Fairs at Irkutsk, in Siberia, in June, and at Nijni-Novgorod, in European Russia, in July. At Irkutsk, Russian and Tartar merchants gather to exchange and sell skins, iron, clothing, coffee, spices and a great variety of other articles. At Nijni-Novgorod, merchants from all parts of the world assemble to traffic in every imaginable commodity, the selling accommodations there including more than 2,500 booths. MARMALADE: is a semi-liquid preserve, made by boiling the pulp or juice of thick-rind fruits, such as oranges, pineapples, lemons, etc., with portions of their rinds. The most popular is that of oranges, the Seville or Bitter orange being employed for a majority of the best types. In the manufacture of orange marmalade, the fruit are first prepared by picking off the eyes, washing in large tubs and halving and pulping by machinery. After the separation of the rind and pulp, the latter is placed in machines which express the juice, and the rind goes to the cutting machines, where revolving knives slice it into thin rings and drop it into vats of cold water, which, as filled, are boiled by means of the steam coils in the bottom of each vat. Peel and juice next go together into huge copper pans, half full of thick syrup of white sugar, and are boiled until the desired consistence has been reached. This process requires both care and experience, for if the fruit is over-boiled, the syrup will harden into candy, and if under-cooked, the product will mold. Cans, glasses and stone jars are all employed as containers, but the last named is the most characteristic form. The first record of the use of marmalade is found during the reign of Henry VII, the original "marmalade" having been made from the quince, the Portuguese name for which is Marmelo. It was in those days a choice rarity, served as one of the sweets which concluded the enormous ceremonial banquets of the age. MARMITE: a brown extract of which yeast juice is the principle. It resembles beef extract in flavor, color and stimulating properties. Petite Marmite (which see) is a popular French soup. MARRONS: a variety of chestnut extensively cultivated in France and Italy. They are best known here in preserved form, either bottled in brandy or syrup or "iced" dry (in the latter case being known as Marrons Glacés ) and are used in the making of various frozen and other fancy desserts, in fruit salads, etc. Syrup Marrons are readily transformed into Marrons Glacés by exposing to the atmosphere for a few hours to allow the syrup to crystallize on them. MARSALA: a famous Sicilian product. See ITALIAN WINES. MARSHMALLOW: a plant native to both Europe and Asia which grows most freely in marshes near the sea. A decoction of the roots and other parts of the plant gives a tasteless, colorless gum, used medicinally as a demulcent for children, etc. The candy known as "Marshmallows," originally made from the plant gum, is now manufactured of sugar, corn syrup and gelatine. Marshmallow A sprig of a plant with aceriform leaves and small five-petaled flowers. MARSH MARIGOLD, called Cowslip in the Eastern States: a common swamp or water plant which grows from eight to ten inches high. The flowers may be used for flavoring soups, stews, etc. The leaves, when young, make acceptable "greens," and the flower buds, pickled in salt and vinegar, are an acceptable substitute for capers. MARTYNIA, or Unicorn Plant: a vegetable whose pods, distinguished by their long curved hooks, are pickled in the same way as cucumbers. Martynia pods The stem of a plant bearing a line of curved pods. MARZIPAN PASTE: a kind of almond paste used in the manufacture of fancy cakes and pastry novelties, for sale separate or mixed with high-grade candies, etc. MASTIC: a very fiery brandy, distilled in various parts of Greece and several Oriental countries from the fermented residue of grapes or currants after the juice has been expressed for wine, the astringent flavor due to the crushing of the seeds, skins, etc., being enhanced by the addition of gum mastic, a product of the Mastic tree, a member of the pistachio family. The Peruvian Mastic is the "Pepper Tree" of California, so named for the peppery flavor of its berries. MAT: properly speaking, a texture formed of barks, rushes or reeds. Coffee and various other commodities are shipped in bags of such material--hence the term "mats" of coffee, etc. Part of the date supply is similarly packed, but the coverings are then known as "frails." MATCHES. Prior to the beginning of the nineteenth century, matches were unknown. We read in Virgil, who lived in the Augustan period, that two centuries before the dawn of the Christian era, fire was obtained by rubbing decayed wood together with a roll of sulphur between two stones. Several centuries later, we have record of the use of a primitive tinder-box with flint and steel, and this method of producing a spark of light, elaborated and perfected, remained in vogue until comparatively recent years. Phosphorus, the dominating ingredient of the composition employed for the heads of matches, was first discovered in the eighth century by an Arab named Bechel, but, owing to the lack of mechanical and chemical appliances, it could not then be made of commercial or industrial value, and the utilization of its wonderful light-giving power was lost to the world until in 1669 a German named Brandt again brought it to the attention of mankind. Chlorate of potash, a great oxidizing agent, which, when utilized in conjunction with phosphorus, makes possible the production of the modern match, was discovered by a Frenchman in 1786. Burning glasses, dipping and match sticks, were all used in the onward march of progress, and in 1830 John Walker, a chemist of Stockton-on-Tees, England, produced the first successful friction match of which we have authentic record. These matches, named "Congreves," were sold in boxes of fifty for sixty cents, and their success soon led others to experiment in match manufacture, with the result that improvements were rapidly invented--the efficiency and reliability of the match increased and the cost of manufacture and the selling price decreased. The match-making industry affords a striking example of the great economy in cost and excellence of product which has been accomplished, particularly of late years, by the development of labor-saving machinery. Of the many articles that are necessary to the comfort of modern existence, none is more nearly indispensable and there are few that are sold so cheaply. The rapidity and magnitude of manufacture may be judged from the fact that the largest factory in the United States, located at Barberton, Ohio, can produce two hundred million a day. The process of match making, as conducted in a typical American factory, consists of the feeding of clear-grain white pine blocks to automatic machines, which cut the wood into smooth match sticks or "splints," and transport them for tipping through paraffin and composition chests, drying the chemicals by contact with the speedily tempered air, ultimately packing the matches into boxes, and, in some cases, even wrapping the boxes into packages ready for the trade. Matches of present manufacture can be divided into three general classes: (1) Ordinary Strike-Anywhere Wood Splint Matches, known to the trade as "Lucifer" Matches. (2) Safety Matches. (3) Miscellaneous and Fancy Matches. CLASS NO. 1 may be subdivided into the following styles: Double-Dip Parlor Matches, Safety-Head -- capped with a sensitive, "strike-anywhere" tip, but with the head of "safety" type. Although new, they represent about one-half of the total domestic output. Double-Dip Parlor Matches -- with both the head and the tip made of the "strike-anywhere" phosphorous composition. These can usually be detected by the very high gloss of the composition. They are considered a dangerous product, owing to the percentage of combustible material incorporated in the head and they also have a penetrating odor, which affects many goods with which they are necessarily brought into contact. Parlor Matches -- with single, untipped head. This is the "old reliable" variety that has stood the test of time and still holds undisputed sway in certain sections of the country. Sulphur Matches -- with heads dipped first in sulphur instead of paraffin. They are still in demand in some places, but they are rapidly decreasing in popularity, because of the disagreeable odor engendered in burning. They are made in blocks, cards or combs and loose in ordinary boxes. They are sure lighters and while the sulphur is burning on the splint it is difficult to extinguish them. SAFETY MATCHES are not supposed to ignite except by friction on a specially prepared amorphous phosphorous surface, obtained by painting one side of the match-box. They are sold principally in small boxes and are used in large quantities by hotels, railroads, etc., and the smoking public. MISCELLANEOUS & FANCY MATCHES include Wax Matches, "Book" Matches and such varieties as "Flamers," "Blazers" and "Vesuvians," matches which cannot be extinguished by wind or water, etc. Wax Matches are splints made of stearin and copal gum, capped with Parlor or Double Dip composition. They are not manufactured in the United States, but large quantities are produced in Great Britain, Belgium, France and other countries. They are more expensive than wood-splint matches and are sold here only to a comparatively small extent. Book Matches are usually of the safety type, made of cardboard, or thin wood splints, enclosed in a cardboard cover. They are frequently distributed free for advertising purposes. Under proper conditions, matches are not a dangerous article to handle or store, with the exception of Double-Dip Parlor Matches. If packed in well-constructed cases, they will stand a vast amount of abuse without ignition, and if ignition should occur, the gases generated smother and effectively extinguish the fire. Danger arises only when an accident results in a case being broken and the contents scattered. They are accepted by all railroad companies as an average risk. With the same exception (that of the Double-Dip Parlor), modern, well-made matches of the best type and manufacture, do not materially affect by odor other materials stored in their vicinity, or even in direct contact with them. The daily consumption in the United States is about 750 millions. The largest single match factory in the world is the Vulcan, at Tidaholm, Sweden. It employs more than sixteen hundred men, and manufactures daily two and a half million boxes of matches. MATé, or Paraguay Tea: the leaves and young shoots of a species of holly, Thea Paraguayensis, used universally in Brazil and also extensively in other parts of South America, in the brewing of a beverage which corresponds to the "tea" of other countries. The leaves are ground to a coarse powder and the shoots or twigs are broken into small pieces. Their collection and preparation is an important industrial occupation in both Brazil and Paraguay. The title "maté," now generally employed, was applied originally to the vessels in which the tea is infused. These vessels, or bowls, are generally dried gourds, which in many cases have been carefully developed into a variety of curious forms. A small quantity of the leaves, properly called Yerba Maté, is put into the gourd, and it is then filled with boiling water. Each person holds a small tube called a "Bombilla," and with this he sucks up the infusion and passes the bowl back to be filled again for the next guest. One end of the Bombilla is finished with a small bulb of delicate basket work or perforated metal, which acts as a strainer to prevent the powder or other particles from being sucked up into the mouth. The beverage is very hot--much too hot indeed to be generally pleasant for novices! The effect of the maté beverage is stimulating, restorative and diuretic, and because of these properties it is frequently prescribed for hospital use in countries in which it is otherwise practically unknown. An average analysis shows components very similar to that of tea and coffee, including an important percentage of their stimulating principle (Theine and Caffeine). More than 120,000,000 pounds of Maté are exported annually from Brazil, and 5,000,000 pounds from Paraguay, to other sections of South America, but it has never found favor as an article of general consumption in other parts of the world. MATZOON: a fermented milk product. See ZOOLAK. MATZOTH. See Unleavened Bread in article on BREAD. MAW-SEED: a title frequently applied to POPPY-SEED (which see). MAY APPLE: the fruit of the Podophyllum peltatum, a woodland plant of the barberry genus, commonly known as the American Mandrake. The latter title is unfortunate, as the Mandrake proper, a plant growing in Mediterranean regions, is poisonous and the connection of names has resulted in the May Apple also being popularly so considered--quite incorrectly, for it may be eaten freely with impunity. It deserves to be more generally known and used, its characteristic flavor being especially suitable for marmalades. MAYONNAISE: a sauce or salad dressing composed of raw egg yolks beaten up with olive oil to the consistence of thick cream and flavored with vinegar, mustard or lemon juice, etc. MAY-POP: the fruit of a small variety of the passion vine, growing wild in the South. It is excellent preserved, especially in jelly form. It is also known as the "May Apple," but that title is better reserved for the fruit of the "American Mandrake" (see MAY APPLE). MAY-WINE, or "Maitrank": a German drink of white wine, sugar and sliced oranges or pineapple, flavored with woodruff. In May and June it is a feature of country entertainments, prepared in a punch bowl with fresh woodruff or "Waldmeister." MEAD, or Honey Mead: a fermented liquor or "wine," formerly held in very high esteem but now seldom seen, made from a mixture of honey or syrup and spices, herbs, etc. MEAL: is any kind of grain coarsely ground, such as oatmeal, cornmeal, etc., described elsewhere under their respective headings. MEAL-WORM: the larva of a winged insect which frequently does much damage in granaries, mills and stores where meal and flour are stored. It is generally shiny in appearance and of pale brown color. Cleanliness and care are the only preventives against its depredations. Meal-worms are a favorite food for caged singing birds. MEASURES. See tables of Weights and Measures in APPENDIX. MEAT. In no one thing has the general consumer gained over his predecessors more than in the matter of fresh meats. It is not so many years ago that residents in small towns and country districts were dependent for fresh meat on an uncertain and fluctuating supply from the occasional or periodic slaughtering of one or two animals by local butchers--the result being that dried or salted meats were the mainstay of a large percentage of the population. To-day, owing to the many improvements in transportation, the invention of refrigerator-cars and other commercial developments, fresh meat can be obtained all the year round even in the most remote sections. Groceries and meats are a good combination for a retailer, provided that the store is so arranged and equipped that the two lines do not conflict. People must buy general groceries frequently, and if they can secure their meats at the same place, there will be a saving of time and convenience, which must, if well managed, result profitably to the merchant. It is, however, very unwise for a grocer to attempt to sell meats unless he has his store well fitted with proper refrigerators or cooling rooms, so that he can carry them without risk of deterioration. The arranging and handling of the stock in order to make the most favorable impression on the buyer, is also of the greatest importance. Nothing is more detrimental to an establishment doing a critical business than dirty hands, bloody or soiled apron, greasy cloths and general untidiness on the part of the meat salesman. It is essential to hold in persistent remembrance the fact that the goods he is selling are those which customers expect to eat and that they should therefore be handled with scrupulous care and cleanliness. The dealer who slights or overlooks these leading principles, will find his better class of trade going to other stores where employees endeavor to please a customer's eyes as well as his palate. As a rule, it pays the grocer best to handle only the finer grades of meat. In selling, it is advisable to get the poor cuts disposed of as speedily as possible--the prime parts usually sell without special effort. From the standpoint of profit, the customers who buy the cheaper parts are just as important as those who pay high prices for the best cuts. The correct temperature for the meat refrigerator or cooling room is a trifle above the freezing point--the result being "chilled" meat, which will remain in prime condition for a long time. Freezing or placing the meat in direct contact with the ice, results in loss of flavor. When meat has been frozen, it is best not to thaw it until near the time of actual use, as it spoils more easily than chilled meat. In hot weather, the great enemy of the butcher is the fly, which leaves its eggs in moist crevices of unprotected meat. The eggs hatch and become maggots with surprising rapidity, hence a keen watch is necessary in order to arrest their development. Their presence does not necessarily signify that the whole piece is bad, but it is imperative to cut off the part into which they have obtained access and to rub all the exposed surface with brine or vinegar. The best preventive is to keep all, or nearly all, the stock in the refrigerator, only taking it out as required to show or cut. The housewife who in warm weather finds that her meat has become tainted, can restore its freshness by cutting off and throwing the fat away and washing the lean in a solution of borax or bicarbonate of soda and cold water --a teaspoonful to a quart--and then sponging off with fresh water. A summer household preventive of taint is to wash all meat as received in vinegar or to rub it over with salad oil. Following are the U. S. Department of Agriculture definitions of the various classifications of meat: Fresh meat is meat from animals recently slaughtered or preserved only by refrigeration. Salted, pickled and smoked meats are unmixed meats preserved by salt, sugar, vinegar, spices or smoke, singly or in combination, whether in bulk or in packages. Manufactured meats are meats not included in the preceding definition, whether simple or mixed, whole or comminuted, in bulk or packages, with or without the addition of salt, sugar, vinegar, spices, smoke, oils or rendered fats. See also articles on FOOD VALUES, BEEF, LAMB, MUTTON, VEAL, etc. MEAT EXTRACT: a term which in popular usage embraces several products differing considerably in character. That best known and most widely used in the preparation of "beef tea" is the commercial meat or beef extract obtained by simple boiling, straining and evaporation without the addition of other ingredients. It consists principally of "extractives," or meat flavor, together with a certain proportion of mineral salts. The fat is removed, as it would in time render the extract rancid, and nearly all the valuable albuminoids are also lost--they coagulate during the stewing of the meat and are strained off together with the fibrine, etc. Dry albumin is added to some preparations in the final processes, but no attempt is made to carry through the natural beef albumen as, under the conditions in which meat extract is ordinarily made, marketed and used, it would readily decompose and spoil the product. The extract should furthermore contain as little gelatine as possible--gelatine is so much lower in value that it is not profitable to buy it at the extract price! This loss is, though, not of much moment, as gelatine has comparatively little nutritive value. Meat extract of the type described, was formerly rated as a condensed food product of high nutritive value. That position has been entirely abandoned and it is now acknowledged that it is entirely inadequate to support life, but it has retained great importance in both the medical and commercial worlds on the more solid foundation of its indisputable merit as the basis of an agreeable and thoroughly wholesome beverage of mildly stimulating properties. Physicians find it a valuable adjunct in the care of invalids and convalescents, and its meaty taste often lends zest to the necessarily restricted diet of the sick room, exercising a highly beneficial effect by enabling the digestive organs to extract more nutriment from other foods. It is especially useful for mixing with milk--persons who cannot assimilate plain milk can nearly always digest it when flavored with a little beef extract. Its other uses include its employment in large quantities to give a relish to the condensed foods, such as those made with pease-meal, carried by army commissaries, and its similar familiar employment in the kitchen to enhance the flavor of soups, sauces, etc. It is worth remembering that extract of meat contains those flavoring properties to which is principally due the higher market value of the choice cuts. Many almost worthless preparations are, however, sold as "meat extracts" and it is advisable to confine purchases to houses of known reliability. For a number of years after its first introduction, the greater part of both the European and American supply came from the Argentine Republic, in which country the Liebig Company, the original manufacturer, established its first factory. The United States is now one of the principal producers. Home-Made Beef Tea, Meat Juices, etc. In contrast to that from commercial Meat Extract, home-made "beef tea," as generally prepared, is entitled to rank as both food and stimulant, as it contains a fair percentage of protein and fat, in addition to the gelatine and "extractives." Somewhat similar value attaches to properly made commercial preparations of meat juices or "meat extracts," obtained by pressure of the raw meat and then preserved without cooking. A third class contains the soluble albumoses (peptoses) of the meat predigested-- i.e., digested by artificial means. The best of these offer food values in important percentages, but their use should be regulated by medical advice. In spite of the fact that most people enjoy--or at all events do not object to--the strong flavor of the best extracts, their taste and odor are sometimes found quite offensive by those possessing especially delicate palates. When this objection is found by a patient, it can be obviated to a considerable extent by putting a little butter, a piece of toast and plenty of salt in the hot beef tea. Beef tea should always be served hot--if drunk cold, or nearly so, its stimulating property is much reduced. Following are the standards for meat extracts and similar products adopted by the Association of State and National Dairy and Food Departments and the Association of Official Agricultural Chemists. (1) Meat Extract is the product obtained by extracting fresh meat with boiling water, and concentrating the liquid portion by evaporation after the removal of fat, and contains not less than 75% of total solids, of which not over 27% is ash and not over 12% is sodium chloride (calculated from the total chlorine present), not over 0.6% is fat and not less than 8% is nitrogen. The nitrogenous compounds contain not less than 40% of meat bases, and not less than 10% of creatin (a compound found in muscular flesh) and creatinin. (2) Fluid Meat Extract is identical with meat extract, except that it is concentrated to a lower degree, and contains not more than 75% and not less than 50% of total solids. (3) Bone Extract is the product obtained by extracting fresh trimmed bones with boiling water and concentrating the liquid portion by evaporation after removal of fat, and contains not less than 75% of total solids. (4) Fluid Bone Extract is identical with bone extract, except that it is concentrated to a lower degree and contains not more than 75% and not less than 50% of total solids. (5) Meat Juice is the fluid portion of muscle fibre, obtained by pressure or otherwise, and may be concentrated by evaporation at a temperature below the coagulating point of the soluble proteins. The solids contain not more than 15% of ash, not more than 2.5% of sodium chloride (calculated from the total chlorine present), not more than 4% nor less than 2% of phosphoric acid and not less than 12% of nitrogen. The nitrogenous bodies contain not less than 35% of coagulable proteins and not more than 40% of meat bases. MEAT PASTES: are used for sandwiches and similar purposes. See POTTED MEATS. MUSKMELON A color illustration of a muskmelon on a vine. A second muskmelon, lying next to the first, has been cut in half to show the interior structure of the fruit. MEDLAR: a fruit which belongs to the apple and quince family, but looks more like a plum. It has the unusual characteristic that it is not edible until well past the ripe stage--the pulp is tender and of an agreeable sub-acid flavor when it commences to decay, whereas it is hard and bitter when ripe. It is eaten both raw and cooked. Medlars An illustration of a leafy branch laden with fruit. The juice of the raw fruit makes an excellent cold drink, and the flesh, cut up, is a pleasing addition to many mixed fruit and other beverages. MELON. The principal divisions of the melon family are Watermelons, Citron melons (for preserving) and Muskmelons or "Cantaloupes." The Watermelon, which is supposed to be native to Africa, is very extensively cultivated in all warm climates, in this country flourishing best on the warm soils of New Jersey and the Southern States. The numerous varieties differ considerably in coloring, shape and quality, but less attention is paid to such matters than in almost any other fruit. All that the average consumer desires is fair size and red, ripe flesh. Gathering Cantaloupes, near Buffalo, N. Y. A man stands in a field next to a wagon, which is filled with fruit. For consumption in the neighborhood of their growth, the thin-rind varieties are especially desirable, but for general market purposes the thick-rind types are preferable, as they stand transportation better. See Color Page facing 388. The watermelon is popularly known by its green exterior and red flesh. There are, however, several kinds distinguished by their bright yellow flesh, the flavor and other characteristics being practically the same. The white inside rinds are in the West largely prepared as a sweet pickle. The Citron Melon is small, nearly round, with variegated shell and seedy flesh. It resembles the watermelon in the general appearance of the outside rind. It is not edible raw, but it forms a good base for preserves when boiled in syrup strongly flavored with lemon or ginger or both, etc. Muskmelons were formerly divided into Cantaloupes, which term included only the furrowed, hard rind varieties, and Nutmegs or Netted melons--the netted soft rind types. General usage now tends to use the word "cantaloupe" as a class title for all kinds, distinguishing different types by style or locality prefixes. The best varieties are the result of much experimentation in crossing. The "Rocky Ford" is, perhaps, the most noted of the present types. It originated in the vicinity of Rocky Ford, Otero County, Colorado, but it is now extensively grown elsewhere, especially in the Carolinas and Georgia. A perfect Rocky Ford Cantaloupe should be about four and a half inches long and a little less in diameter. The Color Page opposite page 378 gives a good idea of its general appearance. The silver-gray netting should stand out like thick, heavy lace, almost entirely covering the melon, excepting only the strongly marked slate-colored stripes running the entire length and terminating in a small "button." The groundwork of the skin should be light olive-green, turning slightly yellow as it ripens. The flesh should be thick, firm and smooth--never watery in appearance--and rich and melting in flavor. Near the rind the flesh should be dark green, shading lighter towards the seed part, which should be orange or salmon in color. The flesh is often mottled with the salmon hue and sometimes assumes it altogether. The seed cavity should be small and well filled with seeds or it will not ship or keep well. Among other well known varieties are the Nutmeg, Osage and Baltimore. The last named is one of the most popular of the especially long varieties found in season in a majority of the best hotels, restaurants and homes of the larger cities. It is a thick, green, fleshy type of oval form and excellent flavor. The first outdoor cantaloupes begin to reach the northern markets from Florida during the latter part of May. The crops from other Southern States follow in succession northward, immense quantities coming from Georgia, Texas, Arkansas, Carolina, Virginia, etc. The first Rocky Fords from Colorado are generally shipped about the first week in August, the season from that place lasting about two months. As the cantaloupe is very perishable, it should be carefully handled. In purchasing, the housewife should avoid overripe, soft and bruised specimens. Imported and Winter Melons. Among the "fancy" varieties of melons sold in the East are the: "Golden" or "Egyptian" melon -- imported from Egypt and received usually during the months of November, December and January. It weighs from ten to twenty pounds and is shaped like a long, narrow watermelon but has a yellow skin and flesh somewhat like that of a Rocky Ford cantaloupe. Spanish Melon -- imported generally from November to February, principally from the West Indies. It weighs from five to ten pounds and is rather more oval than round, the skin dark-green with bronze marks and the flesh yellow and very sweet. French Melon -- imported from June to September. It is shorter and broader than the Egyptian melon, weighing up to seven pounds, the skin rather heavily ribbed and netted like a nutmeg melon, with yellowish flesh. Canadian Melon -- received from August to the end of October. It is similar to the French melon, but weighing up to ten pounds, and the flesh varying from green to yellow. The choicest are grown in the vicinity of Montreal, their delicacy being attributed to special soil characteristics. California Melon -- in season from December 1 to the middle of January. It is similar to the Canadian melon and of about the same size. The inside flesh is generally a light green. English Queen -- a hot-house variety from England, weighing up to seven pounds, the skin netted and both skin and flesh yellowish. Pomegranate Melon: a small, green-rind mottled melon about the size of an orange. The inside is pink and contains a plentiful supply of small seeds. MELON D'ORPAGON, or Petit Melon d'Orpagon: a tiny seedless green melon about the size of a walnut, grown in Orpagon, France. They are put up in vinegar and have an agreeable sweetish-sour flavor. MELON FRUIT: a local title for the North American PAPAW (which see). MELON PEAR: another name for the PEPINO (which see). MELON THISTLE, Melocactus: a cactus which takes its name from the resemblance of many varieties to huge muskmelons--the plants consisting of deeply ridged, round bodies, one to two feet in height. It is also called the Turk's Cap, as in the center of the top is a crown of spines filled with woolly fibrous matter, the flowers appearing half-way through the upper surface. The small pear-like fruit is in many cases edible and of agreeable flavor. The body of the "melon" is full of succulent matter, which is eagerly sought by cattle in times of drought. MENHADEN: a fish somewhat resembling the shad, very plentiful along the North Atlantic coast. It is seldom eaten but is valuable commercially for the oil extracted, marketed as Menhaden Oil, and the residue is in demand as fertilizer. Menhaden A small illustration of a fish. METRIC SYSTEM. See tables of Weights and Measures in APPENDIX. MEXICAN STRAWBERRY: the fruit of a member of the Echinocactus or Hedgehog Cactus family, of salmon color, about two inches long and one inch in diameter. It is much sweeter than the ordinary cactus fruit and the entire pulp is readily eaten, as the seeds, unlike those of the Prickly Pear, are as small as strawberry seeds. The Hedgehog Cactus takes its name from the long spines which cover its generally globose or oval body. The plants often reach enormous size and many of them bear large showy flowers of great beauty. The spines are used in Mexico as toothpicks and for various other purposes. MICRO-ORGANISMS or Microbes. Within the scope of this subject come a large number of minute forms of vegetable life of the fungi order. Those which affect human foods and digestion may be divided into three classes under the titles of Molds, Yeast and Bacteria. The appearance of Molds, or moldiness, is familiar to everyone. Yeasts are too small for single specimens to be seen without the aid of a microscope, but in a mass, of hundreds of thousands or millions, they are handled by the general public in the form of yeast cakes. Bacteria are still more minute and the average consumer never attains a personal acquaintance with them, but the effects of their existence are observable all around him. Molds propagate by means of spores or seed dust; Yeasts produce new cells by "budding," and Bacteria principally by the division of mature cells. With a few exceptions, Molds seem to serve no good purpose in the human food supply. Yeasts are responsible for all kinds of fermentation (as popularly understood), both desirable and otherwise. To Bacteria is due much of the enjoyable flavor of many of our foods, but their uncontrolled presence is the cause of all real putrefaction and decay. Mold spores and Yeast and Bacteria cells are present everywhere--the middle of the ocean, the center of a desert and regions of extreme cold alone excepted--and are especially numerous in the vicinity of human habitations. Any food into which they fall, if it affords suitable soil and temperature, is speedily rendered unfit for human use--in spite of their value under certain conditions--hence the danger of exposing foods to the atmosphere, the advisability of the speedy consumption of fresh foods and the importance of the cold-storage and canning industries. It is not any poisonous quality in the microbes themselves that accomplishes the damage--for with a few exceptions they are entirely harmless to the human system--but their growth, multiplication and life in food, change and break down its chemical structure and render it unsuitable and finally unfit for use. Cold storage retards the growth of all micro-organisms, and canning may be briefly described as the science of destroying by sterilization all those contained in the food used, and preventing by hermetical sealing the entrance of any others. Special articles on each of these three classes of microbes will be found under their respective titles-- Bacteria, Molds, Yeasts. The word "mold" is not an accepted botanical expression, but it is employed as a useful term, widely used and understood, for describing the thread-like, branching fungi, the largest of the micro-organisms referred to in this article, which produce "moldiness." "Yeast" and "Bacteria," as here employed, are true botanical terms. MIDDLINGS: coarse particles of the wheat grain, the residual product in the "bolting" of flour. It was formerly used only as stock feed, but is now recognized as the most valuable part of the grain because of its high percentage of gluten. See FARINA. MIGNONETTE PEPPER: a term applied to peppercorns coarsely ground. MILK. The value of milk as an article of food is clearly shown by the fact that it is sufficient to support, and to increase the growth of, the young of every species of mammalia. Examined by a microscope, it is seen as a transparent fluid in which float numbers of extremely minute transparent globules, consisting of fat surrounded by an albuminous envelope--its whitish, almost opaque appearance is an optical illusion. Cow's milk--which is in this country exclusively understood by the general title of "milk," though in some parts of the world the milk of goats, ewes, mares and various other animals forms an important part of the human diet--varies in composition from 84% to 90% water and 10% to 16% "solids." The solids include from 2% to 7% fat, 2 1/2% to 4 1/2% casein, 2% to 6% sugar, a small amount of albumin, and small quantities of "ash" or salts of various kinds. A Milk Pasteurizer An illustration of a man standing next to a machine in a room, one wall of which is lined with shelves stacked with large jugs. The Fat when extracted is what we know as Butter. The Casein is the main principle of Cheese. The Sugar, or "lactose," has the same chemical composition as the ordinary sugar of commerce, but is not so sweet. The law generally requires from 3% to 3 1/2% fat, and 8% to 9% of other solids. U. S. Standard Milk contains not less than 8 1/2% of solids not fat, nor less than 3 1/4% of milk fat. Some milks will reach a fat percentage of 10%, but this is very unusual, the amount rarely exceeding 7%. The mixed milk of a large creamery seldom goes above 5% or below 3%. Pasteurized Milk is milk that has been heated--below boiling but to a degree sufficiently high to kill all pathogenic bacteria--and immediately cooled to 50° Fahr. or lower, to retard the development of any remaining organisms. Sterilized Milk is milk that has been heated to the temperature of boiling water, or higher, and held at that point long enough to kill all organisms present, or that has been repeatedly pasteurized. Modified or Blended Milk is milk modified in its composition so as to have a definite and stated percentage of one or more of its constituents. Cream is milk containing a large percentage of the fat globules, generally from 15% to 25%. It is obtained by centrifugal separation or by permitting the globules to rise by leaving the milk undisturbed for a number of hours. Skim Milk is that from which a part or all of the cream (fat) has been removed. U. S. Standard Skim Milk contains not less than 9 1/4% of milk solids. "Sour Milk" is the result of the formation of lactic acid by the development of lactic bacteria (see article on BACTERIA). In spite of the general prejudice against it, it is a thoroughly wholesome drink, for the lactic acid prevents for a time the action of other bacteria which would speedily bring about putrefaction. In Europe, milk is commonly soured in cellars for use, especially in summer, as a popular and refreshing beverage. Buttermilk (which see) is the product that remains when butter is removed from milk or cream in the process of churning. Milk Tests. Generally speaking, pure milk is of a slightly yellowish-white color, with little or no odor, and of a distinctly sweet and fresh taste. If allowed to stand for several hours, cream should rise naturally and should form from one-eighth to one-fifth of the total volume, and no sediment should be left in the vessel. In "rich" milk the proportion of cream may be as high as one-quarter. When poured from a tumbler, the milk should cling to the glass a little instead of running off clean like water. Artificial coloring generally consists of annatto or coal-tar dyes. If any considerable quantity is used, its presence can generally be detected by noting the appearance of the milk when the cream has risen in the bottle. The natural color of milk is confined largely to the cream and there is consequently a noticeable difference between the color of the pure cream and that of the milk below it--the latter presents a bluish tinge. Artificial colors will generally tint also the milk below the cream. There are several instruments in use to detect adulteration and ascertain the comparative richness of milk, prominent among them being the LACTOMETER and the BABCOCK TEST (which see), but trained judgment is necessary to obtain conclusive results because of the variation in milk from different sources and at different seasons. Care of Milk. Milk should be kept at a low temperature, below 50° Fahr., and apart from all articles of strong smell. Every receptacle employed in handling it should be scrupulously clean. The necessity for absolute cleanliness in its care should be impressed particularly upon those who have the care of children. Many glass jars are sent to the grocer's for milk with a dingy coating on the inside--this is inviting sickness. Glass receptacles of any kind which have held milk, should be first thoroughly rinsed in cold water and then washed in hot water to which a little ammonia has been added. See also article on CONDENSED MILK. MILK CHOCOLATE. See article on COCOA AND CHOCOLATE. MILK POWDER: is desiccated milk, either "whole" or "skim," sold in bulk and canned. It is used principally by bakers and manufacturers of milk chocolate. "Whole milk" powder contains from 25% to 27% fat, 30% to 32% protein and 30% to 32% milk sugar. MILK SUGAR: is made from the whey obtained from cheese factories, or by coagulating skim milk. The whey is digested with aluminum hydroxide and chalk and then filtered, the liquid obtained being concentrated to a syrup and stood in copper-lined tubs to crystallize, chips of wood being added to and immersed in it. The crystals which are deposited on the chips are considered the finest quality; those forming on the sides of the vessel are secondary in commercial importance. Milk sugar is produced principally in Switzerland and is largely used in the preparation of homeopathic remedies and in infants' foods. MILK WEED or Milk Vetch: the general title of a widely distributed family of plants, growing wild in many sections, whose young shoots and leaves are excellent cooked as "greens." The shoots are generally marketed in bundles like asparagus. They are best in the early spring and are especially tender if blanched or grown in shady locations. MILLET: is the smallest of the grains but is very abundant in product, each plant having a number of stalks and a single head sometimes giving two ounces of seed. Common Millet, the variety chiefly cultivated in this country, is broadly divided into Brown and Yellow grain. The former, used in the same manner as rice, makes good puddings, but the greater part of the domestic crop of all types is used as green fodder. The ripe seeds are also valuable as poultry food. Millet An illustration of a wheatlike plant with long, thin leaves and heads of grain at the ends of its stems. Imported millet--in Germany and Italy consumed in large quantities in soups and other forms--is of smaller grain types than Common Millet. The Yellow Italian is used here to some extent for puddings, but the bulk of the supply is retailed as food for cage birds. Another variety, known as Guinea Maize, is common in Peru, furnishing there white flour of very pleasing flavor. MILT: the soft (male) roe of fish. MINCE-MEAT. The season for mince-meat opens about October 1, and continues as long as the cold weather. It is important to have a supply on hand before the actual demand sets in, rather than after it. In common with all mixed articles, it may be variously prepared, and much that is offered is so poor that most families prefer to prepare their own supplies. Several leading manufacturers, however, put up goods which cannot be excelled--their fruit is cleaned and handled by machinery and the other components also are selected and prepared with scrupulous exactness. Such products may be recommended as a great convenience under many circumstances. MINERAL WATERS: are waters which contain unusually large quantities of the ordinary mineral ingredients, or contain minerals not generally found in ordinary water. They are roughly divided into "table" and "medicinal," but the division is not exact, as many of the milder and more delicate types are used for both purposes. Table Mineral Waters are those which have little or no pronounced flavor and are only sufficiently alkaline to counteract to a certain extent the acids of wines, etc. Among the best known are Apollinaris, Clysmic, Poland Spring, Perrier, White Rock, etc. A greater proportion of mineral ingredients detracts from the palatable flavor of the water and also renders it unsuitable for mixing with wines, as it gives the beverage a "flat" taste. Table mineral waters generally constitute an especially satisfactory line for retail grocers, both in margin of profit and because they draw a good class of trade. They are easy to handle if kept in a cool place and laid on their sides. Medicinal Mineral Waters are those employed in the treatment of various disorders and diseases. They have been used as remedial agents from a very early period--the old Greek physicians had great faith in their curative powers, and the temples erected to Aesculapius were usually in close proximity to mineral springs. They may be generally classed as Alkaline-Saline Carlsbad, Marienbad, etc.; Alkaline, Vichy, etc.; Muriated, Saratoga, Kissingen, etc.; Muriated Alkaline, Selters, etc.; Lithia; "Bitter," Pullna, etc. (named from the flavors of their chief ingredients, sulphates of soda and magnesia), Chalybeate (containing iron) and Earthy (bicarbonates of lime and magnesia predominating). The medical qualities of various mineral waters are undeniable--plainly so in the case of purgative waters and those containing lithia and iron--but the apparent efficacy of many kinds is attributable chiefly to the fact that in "taking the waters," visitors to the "springs" are drinking large quantities of innocuous liquid--stimulated to its free use by the example of others, local medical advice, etc. The result is frequently a very desirable improvement in physical condition, but the same purpose might have been achieved at home by the consumption of an equal quantity of ordinary pure water! Artificial Mineral Waters are, if properly made, chemically correct reproductions of the waters whose names they bear. If from a first-class house they can be fully recommended, but it is wise to avoid dealing with irresponsible "mineral water" concerns, for their product is too often a fraud on both dealer and consumer. The following list names the sources and principal ingredients of a majority of the best known waters, both table and medicinal: AIX-LA-CHAPELLE, from warm springs at Aix-la-Chapelle, Prussia. Contains a considerable percentage of common salt and other sodium salts and sulphur. AIX-LES-BAINS, from warm springs at Aix-les-Bains, Savoy, France. Contains magnesium, calcium and sodium (sulphates and carbonates). Employed externally for skin diseases, gout, rheumatism, etc. APENTA, an aperient water from the Apenta Springs, near Budapest, Hungary. Its principal constituents are sulphates of magnesia and soda. Sold both sparkling and still. APOLLINARIS, an effervescent table water from the Apollinaris Spring, Ahr Valley, Rhenish Prussia. Drawn from a rocky source at a depth of 50 feet. BALLSTON SPA, from Ballston, N. Y. An effervescent water, tonic and cathartic, containing common salt and carbonates of magnesium and calcium. BEAR-LITHIA, from Bear-Lithia Springs, Va. Contains carbonates of calcium and magnesium, etc. Used both as a table water and in the treatment of kidney trouble. BETHESDA, from Waukesha, Wis. Effervescent and mildly impregnated. Used as a table water and as a diuretic. BLUE LICK, from Blue Lick Springs, Ky. Contains sulphur and salt and possesses cathartic properties. BOKERT, from Bokert Springs, De Soto County, Missouri. Used in the treatment of kidney trouble. BUFFALO LITHIA, from Buffalo Lithia Springs, Va. Contains sulphuric anhydride, lithia, etc. Used in the treatment of digestive and kidney disorders, etc. CARLSBAD, from warm springs in Carlsbad, Bohemia. Sulphated and strongly charged with carbon-dioxide. Employed for rheumatism, gout, etc. CLYSMIC, from Waukesha, Wis. A sparkling table water of which calcium carbonate is the chief ingredient. Also used as a diuretic. CONTREXéVILLE, from Contrexéville, France. A light mineralized water, containing sodium, magnesium and calcium. Used as a laxative and diuretic. FRIEDRICHSHALL, from Saxony, Germany. Contains sodium, magnesium and calcium. Used as a tonic and mild purgative. HATHORN. See Saratoga. HUNYADI JáNOS, from Budapest, Hungary. Contains sodium and magnesium sulphates and possesses cathartic properties. JOHANNIS-LITHIA, from Zollhaus, Rhenish Prussia. Contains an average of two grains of lithia to a quart. Used in the treatment of kidney disorders, etc. KISSINGEN, from Kissengen, Bavaria. A slightly laxative water used for disorders of the liver and the alimentary canal. LONDONDERRY-LITHIA, from Londonderry Lithia Springs, N. H. Used as a table water and in the treatment of kidney troubles. Sold both sparkling and still. MANITOU, from Manitou Springs, Colo. Impregnated with alkalies and iron. Used as a tonic and cathartic. MARIENBAD, from Marienbad, Bohemia. Used in the same way as Carlsbad. PERRIER, an effervescent table water from springs near Vergaze, in the south of France. POLAND SPRING, from South Poland, Me. Only slightly mineral. Used as a table water and as a diuretic. PULLNA, a strongly purgative Bohemian water. RHENS, an effervescent, mildly alkaline table water from Rhens-on-the-Rhine. RICHFIELD SPRINGS, from Richfield Springs, N. Y. Contains sulphur and is used in the treatment of skin diseases, rheumatism, etc. RUBINAT-CONDAL, from the Spanish Pyrenees. The principal ingredient is sodium, with minor quantities of magnesium and calcium. Used as an aperient. SARATOGA, a general name for a number of waters from Saratoga Springs, N. Y., including Hathorn, etc., some used for tonic and others for laxative purposes. SELTERS or SELTZER, from Nieder-Selters, Prussia. Contains chiefly common salt and smaller quantities of carbonates of magnesium, calcium and sodium. SHARON SPRINGS, from Sharon Springs, N. Y. A sulphur water used for the treatment of skin diseases, rheumatism, etc. ST. GALMIER, an effervescent table water form St. Galmier, Canton of Loire, France. The principal mineral ingredients are sodium and calcium. WATERMELON A color illustration of a watermelon on the vine, with a small wedge sliced out of it to display the interior of the fruit. TAUNUS SPRING. Sometimes used as a class name for a number of mineral waters from the Taunus Mountains, Germany, including Ems, Wiesbaden, Selters, etc. TEPLITZ, from warm springs at Teplitz, Austria. The most noteworthy principle is carbonate of sodium, with traces of magnesium and iron. VALS, from Vals, France. Contains sodium, calcium and magnesium. Used in the treatment of dyspepsia and skin diseases and as a diuretic. VICHY, from warm springs in Vichy, France. Contains sodium, potassium and calcium, etc., and minute quantities of arsenic and iron. Used in the treatment of rheumatism, kidney and intestinal disorders, etc. VITTEL, from Vittel, France. Used both as a medicinal water and for special baths. There are three main springs--the water of La Grande Source is used as a diuretic; that of Marie, as a purgative, and of Des Demoiselles, as a tonic. WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, from White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. A sulphur water employed in the treatment of skin diseases, catarrhal disorders of the digestion, etc. WIESBADEN, from warm springs in Wiesbaden, Prussia. Contains a considerable percentage of saline matter and is employed for skin diseases, gout, etc. YELLOW SULPHUR SPRINGS, from Yellow Sulphur Springs, Va. A cathartic water containing lime salts and sulphates. WHITE ROCK, an effervescent table water from Waukesha, Wis. Spearmint An illustration of a plant with thin, compound leaves and small flowers lining the top of the main stem. MINT: a general name for a large number of perennial plants, the best known of which are Peppermint, Spearmint and Pennyroyal, cultivated chiefly for the essential oil which contains their aromatic and medicinal principles. About 90% of the supply of Peppermint and Spearmint oils is produced and distilled in an area which has the city of Kalamazoo, Mich., for its center and within a seventy-five miles radius from that city. Their chief uses are in medicine, confectionery, chewing-gum, liqueurs (as Crème de Menthe ), etc. The annual consumption of Peppermint is about 300,000 pounds; that of Spearmint about 25,000 pounds. Spearmint leaves are also used for mint-sauce and other culinary purposes and for the flavoring of beverages such as Mint Julep. Pennyroyal was at one time extensively employed medicinally, but it is now grown only in comparatively small quantitites and is used almost exclusively for seasoning. For oil extraction, the plants are cut down when mature and in full bloom, and allowed to cure like hay. They go next into large wooden vats through which steam is forced, the heat rupturing the oil cells and permitting the oil to escape with the steam. The oil is separated after the condensation of the steam. Dried Mint is retailed in packages, bottles and cans. It should always be kept in a dry place. Mint is easily grown under almost any conditions and is a heavy producer--a bed three feet square will give a surprisingly large quantity. If to be used as a dried herb, it is best to cut the stalks just prior to full bloom and to spread them out in a shady location where they can dry slowly. Mint Extract. U. S. Standard mint extract contains not less than 3% of mint oil. MIXED-PICKLES: a vinegar pickle which includes a variety of vegetables, as cauliflower, onions, etc. MOCK-TURTLE (thick): a strong flavored soup now sold in cans, containing diced calf's head meat, etc., in a thickened brown soup stock, flavored with various vegetables, herbs and spices, lemon juice, Madeira or sherry, etc. Clear Mock-Turtle is similar in flavor and character ingredients, but the liquid is of consommé type. MOLASSES: is the syrup, or, as it is termed in the districts where it is manufactured, the "mother-water," that is separated from the crystals or grains of "raw sugar" in the process of manufacture (see article on SUGAR). It is also widely, but incorrectly, applied to burnt Sugar-house Syrup or "black-strap," the uncrystallizable residue left after boiling molasses to extract additional sugar from it. U. S. Standard Molasses contains not more than 25% water nor more than 5% ash. The quality of molasses depends on the color, strength and treatment of the raw sugar from which it is obtained. The best is that from sugar made from the first crops collected previous to the copious periodical rains which occur where the cane is cultivated. It is generally of dark-brown color, but the best grades, those produced in St. Croix, Barbados, Antigua, Porto Rico and Louisiana, are of bright amber tint. The choicest qualities are listed commercially by the name of the place of production; ordinary types are graded as "open-kettle," prime, good, fair, common, etc. In addition to its consumption in its natural condition and in various degrees of refining, large quantities of molasses are used in the manufacture of rum. MOLASSES SUGAR: a trade term for the sugar obtained by boiling the molasses separated in the first manufacture of "raw sugar" (see article on SUGAR). MOLD, or Mould: the common name for several varieties of minute, thread-like fungi which reproduce themselves by spores or seed dust. They grow on almost anything that is moist or damp and secluded from direct light-rays, but they flourish best on soft articles, such as bread, cheese, fruits, etc., which permit the threads to strike down into them. On harder substances, such as leather, they achieve only a stunted growth and are then popularly known as "mildew." Dampness, warmth and seclusion are the principal incentives for their growth--so dryness, low temperature and good air circulation form the best preventives. Molds especially favor acid foods, hence their predilection for many fruits and the fact that even pickles put up in strong vinegar will mold if exposed to the air, though they are, until "moldy," entirely exempt from the growth of yeasts or bacteria. Absolutely dry foods, as flour, crackers, etc., kept in a dry temperature, afford no soil for Molds--but any moisture in the air will speedily render them liable to invasion. Special varieties of Mold are used in the ripening of Brie, Camembert, Gorgonzola, Roquefort, Stilton and similar cheese, but with this exception, they are not generally employed in the manufacture or preparation of food. Their propagation and growth--as of all micro-organisms--should always in any event be prevented by retailers and in the household. During their first growth, Molds are generally soft and fluffy in appearance and white in color. As they develop and the threads stretch down into the article in which they have taken root and branch out in all directions, the surface and other parts most affected soon present a dense mass. When they commence to "fruit" and form seeds, the general surface is changed to various colors--blue, brown, white, etc.--the most common being the bluish-green of the Blue Mold which particularly affects bread, cheese and other foods, as well as many other articles. If allowed to continue its growth, Mold destroys the food by its own consumption and with the aid of bacteria, but in its early stages it does not render it unwholesome. The appearance of decay and the musty smell are unpleasant to the eye and nose, but Mold has not the putrefactive qualities of bacterial life and if the affected part is removed before the growth has continued too long and the remainder is subjected to baking or boiling, according to individual circumstances, the food can often be saved for use. Mold spore is present everywhere. Moderately dry food can be saved from its growth by the exercise of proper care, unless the climate or surroundings are especially damp, but articles such as fruits, which are inherently moist and which cannot be frozen without injury, are very difficult to hold in a raw condition for any considerable length of time. Cold storage is the only sure protection, and then in many cases for only a limited term. Thick-skinned fruits, such as apples, oranges, etc., may be kept for a comparatively long time without cold storage facilities if the conditions are favorable--if they have not been bruised, so as to let the mold get through the skin, if the cellar or other storage place is dry, cool and well ventilated, and if imperfect fruits are promptly removed and others are occasionally wiped off to remove mold spores and sweat. All these precautions are, though, insufficient for thin-skinned fruits, and the last is, of course, impracticable in the case of berries and other small fruits, the only recourse being to consume them as fresh as possible or to make them into sauces, jams or some other form of preserves. MOLLUSCA: a division of the animal kingdom, which includes all invertebrate shellfish (see SHELLFISH). MOOR-FOWL: a bird of the grouse family, also known as the Red Grouse. It is about the size of a small bantam hen, with upper plumage a deep varying olive-brown, front of scarlet and under-parts of grey and white, shading to pure white under the tail. MOREL: an edible fungus, botanically of the truffle family, but from its habit of growth generally classed as a mushroom (see MUSHROOMS). MORTADELLI: a large, smoked Italian sausage. See SAUSAGES. MOSELLE WINES. See article on RHINE AND MOSELLE WINES. MOSS: a class of small herbaceous plants, the term being generally applied to a number growing together in a mass. The title is also popularly extended to similar growths of other types, particularly to some Lichens and Seaweeds. Among the "mosses" valuable as food, the best known are Iceland Moss (which see), a lichen; Ceylon Moss (see KANTEN) and Irish Moss (see CARRAGHEEN), the last two being seaweeds. "Moss" or "Sea Moss" Farina is a prepared granulated food in which lichen or seaweed is the principal ingredient. Moss is also employed by cooks and confectioners instead of isinglass, and by painters to make their size. MOULD: a popular spelling of MOLD (which see). MUCILAGE: an adhesive substance prepared from the exudations of various trees and plants (see GUM), from linseed, marshmallow roots, onions, etc., by the addition generally of an alkali solution. The same result can be obtained by long boiling in water. A very serviceable mucilage can easily be made from onion juice--after a short boiling, a good-sized Spanish onion will readily yield on pressure a large quantity of very adhesive fluid. This product is used extensively in various trades for pasting paper on tin or zinc or even glass, its tenacity being surprisingly great and equalling the result of many of the more costly patent cements. Some of the cements sold by street fakirs at ten cents a bottle consist of nothing but onion juice and water--the bottle and cork cost a great deal more than the contents! MUGWORT: a tall perennial herb with woolly leaves, formerly popular, both fresh and dried, as seasoning and for flavoring beverages. French Black Mulberry A bundle of leafy branches laden with fruit. MULBERRY: a berry very popular in Europe and very plentiful, but not quite so highly considered in this country. It is both wholesome and agreeable eaten raw, and is excellent for cooking, especially when mixed with some more acid fruit as apples, rhubarb, etc., in pies and puddings. The Common or Black Mulberry, of which the big French Black Mulberry, is the highest type, is a low tree of bushy growth, the fruit purplish-black, with dark red juice, decidedly aromatic and of sub-acid sweet flavor. Another desirable variety is the cultivated Red Mulberry. The White Mulberry has not the fine flavor of the other two varieties, but it is widely grown for silk worm food, its leaves being generally preferred to those of the Black and Red trees. MULLET. There are two principal varieties of the fish known as Mullet--the Red and the Grey or "Striped." The former, so named for the coppery color of the upper part of its body, is found most plentifully in the Indo-Pacific, but also to some extent in Europe, where it is so highly considered for its firm, lean and delicious flesh that it brings high prices. It has indeed always been esteemed one of the epicure's greatest luxuries--in ancient Rome it was held in the most extravagant regard among wealthy patricians, good-sized specimens frequently fetching the value of their weight in gold. The Grey Mullet, with upper body of grey or greenish hue, is less delicate in flavor and larger in size, averaging from five to six pounds market weight and reaching ten to twelve on maturity. In this country it is found on the Atlantic Coast and is in season from June to October. MULLIGATAWNY: a highly seasoned, thick, East-Indian-type soup, of which curry-powder is the essential "character" ingredient. Meats, vegetables, mango chutney, cocoanut flesh, rice, cayenne pepper, etc., are variously employed and blended to suit the ideas of the cook or canner. The title is derived from two native words signifying "pepper water." MUM: a strong sweetish beer, named after one Mumme, a brewer of Brunswick, Germany, who introduced it in the year 1492. It was a beverage of general European popularity until toward the close of the seventeenth century and is still largely consumed in Germany, especially in Brunswick. MUSCADIN, or Bullace Grape: the cultivated Fox Grape, the largest variety of American grape, growing freely in the Southern States and Mexico. The highest type is the SCUPPERNONG (which see). MUSCALLONGE, Maskalonge, Maskinonge: a large fresh-water fish resembling the pike, frequently weighing forty pounds and upward, in season from June to December. The White Muscallonge is generally considered the choicer, but some people prefer the somewhat coarser flesh of the Yellow variety. A small illustration of a long fish. MUSCAT, Muscatel: a rich grape, variously employed--for table purposes, both fresh and as raisins, and in wine and brandy manufacture. There are many varieties under cultivation, both "white" and red, the former being the more common. The title is also applied to numerous sweet, strong, generally aromatic wines, varying in color from pale to tawny, prepared either wholly or in part from Muscat grapes--in France (see RIVERSALTES), Italy, Austrian-Hungary, Greece, Spain, United States and many other countries. There is also a fine variety of pear known by the same title. MUSCOVADO SUGAR: a trade designation for the "raw sugar" separated from cane juice other than by centrifugal machines (see article on SUGAR). MUSH: the name generally given to cornmeal porridge, either eaten hot or left to cool and afterwards fried in slices. It is now prepared and supplied to the trade in tin pans holding about five pounds each. As the store article insures against lumpiness, burning, etc., the product enjoys a good sale in some sections. MUSHROOMS: both in their own varieties and by general custom, in this country especially, present a curiously interesting study in contradictions. By the quantities which grow wild, and by the ease with which they may be raised, they would seem to be a food especially useful to the poor--instead, it is chiefly the well-to-do who eat them. They are overlooked or distrusted by country residents who can have them for the picking--yet epicures and the wealthier classes in the cities pay high prices for them and consider them delicious luxuries! The general explanation is, that the majority are afraid of mushrooms because of the poisonous fungi which resemble them--yet many tribes of savages who are certainly not more intelligent in other respects, appreciate them and devour them in great quantities--the natives of Terra del Fuego, for example, live almost exclusively on mushrooms and fish. Again, though mushrooms have been cultivated for at least two thousand years, and have been for generations raised in enormous and ever-increasing quantities in France, Italy, Russia, Australia, New Zealand and other countries, for home consumption and export, it is only within recent years that intelligible information concerning their growth has been generally obtainable here--there existed formerly an air of mystery on the subject, as though mushroom cultivation were a cross between accident and magic! England has been under a similar blight of misinformation and prejudice, though not to quite the same extent as this country. Eastern countries are the greatest per capita consumers, with Japan and China well in the lead. Japan made an attractive exhibit of many varieties at the Chicago World's Fair, and both Japan and China export dried mushrooms to the United States and Europe. The general title of "mushrooms" is here used, as popularly employed, to cover all kinds of edible fungi except truffles, though they vary considerably in shape, size, and color. They are found in nearly all temperate regions and in every part of the world, growing wild most freely in the spring and autumn--in forests, or chards, vineyards and pastures. Many varieties are agreeable in flavor and rich in food value. The mushroom is not, as generally understood, the plant or fungus itself--it is the fruit of the growth which produces it and which remains underground--a white or bluish mold called mycelium or "spawn," a network mass of thin thread-like roots or underground stems. The mushroom or "fruit," when mature, diffuses a quantity of the powder or "spores," generally dark in color, by which the fungus extends its propagation. Artificial cultivation of the mushroom by "spores" is slow and uncertain, so the "spawn," which is sold in both "cake" and "flake" form, is used instead. Any place is suitable for cultivation which is moderately cool and moist, even in temperature and away from direct sunlight. A cellar is the best ordinary example, but growing on a large scale is generally done in caves, closed tunnels, abandoned quarries or specially constructed "mushroom houses"--usually wooden buildings partly below and partly above ground. The spawn is planted in beds of mixed manure and earth, with a final covering of the latter. When the crop is well under way, the beds are picked once or twice a day for every mushroom large enough for market, as they are choicer for eating before fully matured and while the "veil" over them is still unbroken--after that time they are generally used for catsup, etc. The following list briefly describes the principal edible varieties. The Orange, Brick Top, Rodman, Peppery Lactarius, Parasol, Ink Cap, Fary Club and Oyster Mushroom are shown on the half-tone page illustration opposite--as also the Puff FAIRY CLUBS RODMAN'S MUSHROOM OYSTER MUSHROOM INK CAP ORANGE AMANITA BRICK TOP PARASOL MUSHROOM GIANT PUFF BALL PEPPERY LACTARIUS EDIBLE FUNGI--see also Color Page opposite 398 An illustration of nine different varieties of mushroom, each with its own caption. Ball described under its own heading. The Common Mushroom, Boletus, Cantharellus or Chanterelle, Fairy Ring, Morel and Vegetable Beefsteak are depicted on the accompanying COLOR PAGE. COMMON OR CULTIVATED MUSHROOM ( Agaricus Campestris ): the most generally acceptable type in this country and England, and the common Champignon Comestible of the French canned product. It is found wild during the late summer and fall in grassy places, manured ground, etc.--never in thick woods. The wild types grow either singly or in groups, but the cultivated often form large tufts. The fruit consists of a central stalk, generally cream or white in color and from two to three inches in height, supporting a rounded, table-like cap, varying in the color of its upper surface from white to a deep brown. The under surface of the cap is marked with gill-like projections, generally pink in the white or cream cap varieties, and grey-brown in the brown kinds, changing in the former to brown and in the latter to brownish-black--in dried specimens to almost or quite black. The flesh is white. It is served in many ways, both raw and cooked--being considered especially delicious broiled. BUTTON MUSHROOM. The most highly valued of this class is the French Mousseron, the true type of which is the Champignon Muscat, of the Agaric family. It is of medium size, the stem short, thick, full and swelling at the base; the cap thick, whitish-yellow on top and covered with a very dry skin. It grows most freely in greensward and on the outskirts of woods, and is one of the first to appear in the early spring. It is gathered when in the "button" or round stage and generally when the cap is quite small. On maturity it becomes bell-shaped. It is very pleasing in flavor and is marked by a distinct musk aroma which it retains even after drying. Large quantities are imported, both dried and canned, in oil, etc., and there is an increasing output of the home-grown product. Care should be taken to avoid over-cooking, as that destroys the musk odor. For lesser grades of "button" mushrooms, many other varieties of both Agarics and Gymnopes are gathered in the button stage. ORANGE (the French Oronge ) or ORANGE AMANITA ( Amanita Caesarea ): a large variety with cap usually nearly flat on maturity and of orange color. It is found generally in the sandy soil of thinly wooded districts during the summer and early fall and is distinguished from nearly all other edible varieties by the yellow color of its gills. The flesh is white with occasional yellow stains and of delicate and pleasing flavor. It grows abundantly in Southern Europe and is imported here canned in oil. The Orange Amanita has been accounted a delicacy for centuries--as far back as the days of the Roman Empire. BOLETUS (the French Cèpes ). The several varieties of the Boletus family of fungi are distinguished from the ordinary mushroom principally by small tubes or holes taking the place of the gills under the cap. They find much favor in France and Germany, and grow freely in this country also. Among the best of the types commonly found are the Granulated Boletus, named for the small brown granules dotting the stem--the cap, which is from one and a half to four inches broad, varying widely in color; the Rough Stemmed Boletus, the stem roughened with small prominent reddish or blackish dots or scales, the cap varying from white to nearly black, and the Edible Boletus, one of the largest kinds, the cap, of varying color, ranging up to six inches broad. All three types find much favor in France and Germany, and the last-named is imported in considerable quantities, chiefly from France, (1) Common Mushroom (2) Morel (3)"Vegetable Beefsteak" (4) Cantharellus (5) Boletus (6) "Fairy Rings" Mushrooms WELL KNOWN EXAMPLES OF IDIBLE FUNGI A color illustration of six different varieties of mushroom, each of which is labeled with a number. preserved in olive oil, sauces, etc., being generally known by the French title of Cèpes. It is noted for its strong flavor. CHANTARELLE: a variety of the Cantharellus family, which grows in nearly every part of the world and has always been highly esteemed in Europe. Its cap, generally convex but sometimes flat and even centrally depressed, is of varying and irregular shape, but it is distinguished by its beautiful, rich reddish-yellow or egg-yellow color, which extends to all parts of the plant except the white inner flesh. The gills are in the form of shallow folds growing down the stem. It is most commonly found in the woods in groups, but also often in open grounds. MOREL, Morchella (the French Morille ): most frequently found in forests and woodland swamps. It is known by its rather conical, deeply honey-combed, light yellowish-brown head, growing darker with age. It is excellent--tender and sweet--either stewed as a vegetable or in sauces, etc. Its principal types are the Common, Delicious, Two-Spored, Conical and Narrow Cap. Though here described among mushroom types, the "morel" botanically is more nearly allied to the truffle type of fungus. BRICK TOP OR REDDISH MUSHROOM ( Hypholoma Sublateritium ): resembling the Common Mushroom somewhat in general contour, but with stem generally longer and top more rounded and of a reddish color with pale yellow border. The gills change from creamy to olive. The flesh is creamy and of a pronounced almond flavor. RODMAN'S MUSHROOM ( Agaricus Rodmani ): similar in many respects to the Common Mushroom. The cap is creamy, with brownish spots; the gills change from white to pink and then to dark brown; the stem is short, fleshy and thick, and the flesh is white with pinkish tint and of pleasing flavor. It is most frequently found during May, June and July in grassy grounds. LACTARIUS: a genus marked by the milky or colored juice which exudes from the gills when broken. The Peppery Lactarius has a creamy-white fleshy cap, from three to ten inches in width, depressed toward the center. The gills are creamy white and exude a white milk when bruised. The flesh is lighter in color than the surface of the cap and is peppery in flavor and somewhat aromatic. Its favorite habitat is woodland during the summer. Another common type is the Orange Milk Mushroom or Delicious Lactarius, found in woods and damp mossy places. When young, its cap is convex, but as it matures it becomes flat and sometimes funnel shaped. In color, it is a mottled orange. The flesh is white tinged with orange, firm, delicate and nutritious, and the "milk" is orange colored. In size it varies, in the cap, from two to five inches in diameter. HORSE OR FIELD MUSHROOM ( Agaricus Arcensis ): resembles the Common Mushroom, but averages larger and may be distinguished by its hollow, somewhat bulbous stem. The cap when dried is apt to assume a yellowish hue. PARASOL MUSHROOM or TALL LEPIOTA ( Lepiota Procera ). The cap, on top of a long stem with a bulbous base, is shaped like an open umbrella, the upper surface, three to five inches in diameter, covered with small scales and of a brownish, spotted appearance with a dark center. The flesh is thin, white and soft. INK CAPS or INKY COPRINUS ( Coprinus Atramentarius ). The genus Coprinus are readily distinguished by their oblong caps, which do not open until they are about to dissolve into the inky fluid which gives them their popular name. They should be gathered before they show any sign of expanding and must be cooked without delay, their flesh then being decidedly palatable. They are harmless even in the inky stage, but they do not present an attractive appearance by any means! The life of the Ink Cap above ground is very brief--it pushes through the soil in great numbers and develops and dissolves very rapidly. FAIRY RING MUSHROOM, Marasmius Oreades (the French Mousseron d'automne ): a small variety found principally in the autumn, in meadows, on lawns, etc., in wet weather or after heavy rains. It is so called because of its habit of growing in rings or circles. When young, the cap, from one to two inches in diameter, is reddish, yellowish-red or yellowish-brown, becoming paler in maturing or as its moisture evaporates. When dry, it is generally of a buff color. Its flesh is inclined to be tough except when fresh or young, but careful cooking makes it very palatable--broiled, pickled, in sauces, etc. In many parts of France, the Fairy Ring is popularly known as the "False Mousseron" or "Fall Mousseron," because of its similarity in shape of cap to the Mousseron type (see BUTTON MUSHROOMS, preceding). FAIRY CLUBS and CORALS. The genus Clavariaccae includes a number of fleshy, club-shaped and coral-like fungi, many of which are edible. Some of them are very beautiful, showing the most delicate shades of pink, yellow, violet, etc. They range from very small to several inches in height. Tree Mushrooms. The most famous of tree fungi is the LIVER FISTULINA ( Fistulina Hepatica ), commonly known in Europe as "Oak Tongue," "Beefsteak Fungus," "Vegetable Beefsteak," "Beef Tongue," etc. Its cap, varying from two to six inches and more in breadth, has, when young, a rough reddish surface which reminds one of beef tongue, and the flesh is streaked with red and gives a reddish juice. Its taste when cooked bears a distinct resemblance to meat, and it yields a rich, brown gravy. Another valuable variety is that known as the ELM TREE PLEUROTUS, which grows, attached by a side stem, most freely on stumps and dead branches, etc., of elm trees, though also found on other trees, such as the maple and poplar. Its cap, two to five inches broad, is generally whitish, often with a central tinting of reddish or brownish yellow. The flesh of young fruits is white, moderately tender and of agreeable flavor. Of the same family is the OYSTER MUSHROOM ( Pleurotus Ostreatus ), somewhat shell shaped, white or ashy or light brown on the upper surface and white or ashy on the under-parts, with white, rather tough, flesh. It grows on dead trees and wood, generally in the early fall, attached by a short side stem or directly to the wood without any stem at all. The shells vary in size, with a maximum width of about four inches. A fourth important fungus of similar character is the SULPHURY POLYPORUS, growing on wood and trees and in the open country. It is easily recognized by its clustered mode of growth and orange or yellow color. The caps are often five to six inches broad, overlapping each other in tufts or clusters. The flesh is about half an inch thick and soft and juicy when young. Gathering, Preparation, Etc. It is easy for the experienced person to distinguish edible from poisonous fungi, but it is well for the novice to confine himself to those types with which he is familiar, even at the cost of rejecting some good varieties. It is wisest, in spite of the exceptions noted in the foregoing list, for him to discard all those which are brightly colored, which change color considerably when cut or broken, which have yellow gills or give a milky juice. He should also always avoid any specimen of any kind which is infested by insects or in any degree decomposed, and should not collect mushrooms in the "button" stage, as when undeveloped it is more difficult to distinguish between those which are edible and those which are not. Morels and puff balls are safe to experiment with, as there are no poisonous varieties resembling them. Receipts for preparing the "ordinary" mushroom are given in all cook-books. Agarics, which include the Common, Rodman's, Horse, or "Field," and choice qualities of Button mushrooms, and Orange Amanitas, require only moderate cooking. Chantarelles and Morels, on the other hand, require long cooking--Chantarelles should also previously be soaked in warm milk for several hours. Lactarius should be soaked in a vinegar solution for several hours before cooking. MUSKMELONS. See descriptive matter in general article on MELONS. MUSKRAT: a small aquatic rodent found generally throughout North America, resembling the common rat in general appearance and the beaver in many of its habits. It averages the size of a small rabbit, its body attaining a length of 10 to 12 inches. Among its distinguishing characteristics are its partially webbed hind feet and its long scaly tail, laterally flattened. It is commercially valuable for its skin--dark brown fur above and greyish on the under-parts--which within recent years has risen greatly in market value, the supply seldom equalling the demand for its manufacture into overcoats, etc. Its flesh also is worthy of consideration, for, properly prepared, it makes an agreeable dish. The most generally acceptable method is to soak it in salt water for an hour or so, or overnight, then to cut it up and slowly stew it with a small quantity of pork, cut in dice, a little onion, etc. A considerable number of the little animals are marketed in the larger cities, especially in Canada, under their own name and various other appellations. MUSSEL: an almond shaped shellfish, cheap and plentiful, found along the coasts. Many connoisseurs consider it as palatable as the oyster, but it has never yet attained full popular favor. It can be eaten raw like the oyster, but is generally cooked. Bottled pickled mussels have recently found some demand. MUST: the expressed juice of ripe grapes, before fermentation. The term is also sometimes applied to the newly fermented juice or young wine. MUSTARD. The mustard of general use as a condiment consists of the crushed seeds of the mustard plant, native to England but capable of almost universal cultivation. The mature plant ranges from three to six feet in height and has bright yellow flowers. There are two chief varieties--the White, producing smooth, pale-yellow seeds, and the Black, with seeds smaller, more irregular and dark brown on the outside--though also yellow inside. In trade circles, the products are distinguished as "Yellow" and "Brown," but there is little difference in composition, and the retail product is generally a mixture of the two. Mustard was used medicinally by the most celebrated physicians of antiquity. As a condiment, it dates from the latter part of the sixteenth century, but it was little known until the year 1729 when an old woman of the name of Clements, residing in Durham, England, began to grind the seed in a mill and to pass the flour through the several Black Mustard An illustration of a plant with long, serrated leaves and a cluster of flowers at the top. processes necessary to free it from the husks. She kept her secret for many years, selling large quantities throughout the country, especially in London. The product obtained the name of "Durham Mustard" from her residence in that city. The manufacture of mustard at first consisted essentially of grinding the seed into a very fine flour, a bushel of seed weighing sixty pounds yielding twenty-eight to thirty pounds of Flour Mustard. Manufacturers, however, soon discovered that they could please the public palate better by modifying the pungency of the flavor, and the result is that to-day it is made in a great variety of styles, each establishment following its own formula for mellowing, blending, mixing, etc. Genuine mustard is easily obtainable, but it does not please the general taste as well as the prepared modified article. In moistening or "mixing" dry mustard, or mustard flour, two main objects must be kept in view--first, to obtain the desired consistence; second, to make it perfectly smooth. To produce these effects, add the liquid in small quantities and rub and pound the mustard well with a spoon. The simplest form of preparation consists of mustard flour, moistened with sufficient water to produce the consistence of thick batter, with half a teaspoonful of salt added for each two ounces of mustard flour. Some people like fine powdered sugar included in the same proportion as salt. Vinegar and olive oil can be used according to taste, but some cold water is necessary for the first mixing in order to develop the pungency. If for immediate use, milk or milk and cream may be employed in place of either vinegar or oil. The greater part of the prepared mustard now enjoying popular use and favor, consists of from 50% to 75% vinegar, flour-thickening and various condiments. U. S. Standard Ground Mustard is mustard containing not more than 2 1/2% of starch by the diastase method and not more than 8% of total ash. U. S. Prepared Mustard, German Mustard, French Mustard, Mustard Paste, is a paste composed of a mixture of ground mustard seed or mustard flour with salt, spices and vinegar, and, calculated free from water, fat and salt, contains not more than 24% of carbohydrates, calculated as starch, determined according to the official methods, not more than 12% of crude fibre nor less than 35% of protein, derived solely from the materials named. Mustard and Cress: a salad, popular in England, made of young sprouts of the mustard and cress plants (see CRESS). The larger leaves of the mustard plant are sometimes used as "greens." MUTTON: is the dressed flesh of the sheep. It is best from animals three to five years old. If too young, it lacks flavor; if too old, it is tough. It is best liked in the spring, as it is generally more juicy then and less liable to be marked by any "woolly" or "sheepy" taste. All mutton, in order to avoid this taste, should be hung up for at least two days before use--and should thereafter always receive close attention and be kept as much as possible from exposure to the air. The quality depends both on the breed and the feeding of the sheep. In England and France these two points have received more attention than in the United States, but the domestic product is steadily improving and sheep raising is now an important industry in several states. Much of the objection which many Americans feel to the use of mutton is due to the poor stock formerly sold here--many of the animals slaughtered were ill-fed, (2) Hind Quarter (1) Shoulder (3) Leg MUTTON A color illustration of three cuts of meat, each labeled with a number. badly cared for and old. The meat of a young, well-fed sheep kept in a good refrigerator will seldom have any disagreeable flavor. The most famous English product is the "Southdown mutton," the fine flavor of which is attributed to a little insect which flourishes in the fine pasture of the South Downs. In France, the best is the Pré salé ("Salt Field"), so-called because the sheep pasture on the salt marshes along the sea coast. In purchasing carcasses, the grocer must take into account the loss of weight which will ensue from drying out while it hangs in his store. The better his refrigerating facilities, the smaller will be the loss. In selecting, he should see that the meat is fine grained and firm and of darkish, clear red color, and the fat firm and white. If the flesh is flabby, or the kidney fat small, the carcass should be avoided. Diagrams 1 and 2 show a division of the carcass practised in many parts of the country. Diagram 3 is a well recognized Eastern method. DIAGRAMS 1 AND 2 1 Neck 2 Chuck 3 Shoulder 4 Flank 5 Loin 6 Leg Two illustrations: one of a sheep with lines drawn through it, and the second an outline of a butchered sheep hanging from its hind legs, also marked with lines. Each section of the two sheep is labeled with a number. DIAGRAM 3 1 Neck 2 Shoulder 3 Rack or Chops 4 Breast 5 Loin 6 Leg Forequarter --1, 2, 3, 4 Hindquarter --5, 6 An outline of a butchered sheep hanging from its hind legs, with lines drawn through it to indicate sections. Each section of the sheep is labeled with a number The description in the Department of Agriculture Bulletin accompanying Diagrams 1 and 2 comments on the fact that the cuts in a side of lamb or mutton generally number only six, three in each quarter. The Chuck includes the ribs as far as the end of the shoulder blades; the Loin reaches from the chuck back to the leg, and the Flank is made to include all the under-side of the animal. Some butchers, however, make a larger number of cuts from the forequarter, taking a portion of the Loin and Chuck to make a cut known as Rib; and part of the Flank and Shoulder for a cut designated as Brisket. The term "Chops" is ordinarily used to designate portions of either the loin, ribs, chuck or shoulder, cut or "chopped" by the butcher into pieces suitable for frying or broiling. The so-called "French chops" are cut from the "Rack," a term sometimes applied to the Chuck and Ribs. See also Color Page opposite page 404. MYRTLE: a small evergreen tree, whose sweet, pulpy and aromatic black berries are dried for use as a condiment, in addition to their consumption fresh. Both leaves and wood also yield an oil used in perfumery manufacture. The Chilian Myrtle is one of the most highly esteemed varieties. The tree giving "Myrtle Wax" (see WAX), which is locally known as the "Tallow" or "Candleberry" Tree, is of a different species. NAILS. There is no date in history fixing the first use of nails, but it is of curious interest that up to only a century ago they were still exclusively hand-made, and even as late as 1850 it was the general custom in this country for the nail maker with his forge and anvil to come with the carpenter to make the nails needed in the erection of a building. Iron has been the material chiefly employed for many hundreds of years, but bronze, brass and copper nails have been found in very ancient work. The terms "4d," "6d," "10d," etc.--a mystery to many people!--originated when nails were sold by the hundred. When 100 nails nails weighed 2 pennyweights they were called 2d; when 100 weighed 20 pennyweights they were called 20d, etc., and the names have been retained although the comparative weights of the various sizes have changed greatly. The first nail-making machinery was originated in Massachusetts in 1810 to make "cut nails" from steel or iron plates. Cut-nail machinery is to-day very similar to that first used, except that the plate, which must be reversed as each nail is cut, is now turned automatically instead of by boys as originally. The use of cut nails has been greatly reduced in late years by the introduction of Wire Nails, the first machinery for their manufacture reaching the United States from Germany in 1875. Wire Nails are in many ways superior to the square Cut Nail--they are easier to drive and cheaper to make--but it was discovered shortly after their introduction that they did not possess as great holding power. This defect was overcome in 1882 by Ira Copeland, of Whitman, Mass., who conceived the idea of coating them with vegetable gum, the result being to give them even greater holding power than the cut nails. Coated nails are to-day much used where exceptional strength is required, as in packing-boxes and other styles of shipping packages. The word Nail is applied specifically to those of moderate length and weight, with flat heads of considerable diameter. Very small nails are known as Tacks. Those longer than six inches, or of exceptionally heavy shank, are called Spikes. Those with heads so small that they can be sunk beneath the surface of the wood in order to conceal the nailing, are classed as Brads --sub-divided into Flooring Brads, Finishing Nails and Casing Nails. NAPTHA, Naphtha. See PETROLEUM. NASTURTIUM, or Indian Cress: a plant native to South America, which is cultivated here principally for its brilliant blossoms. It possesses considerable merit as a salad plant, especially for blending with other salads, the leaves, young shoots and flower buds having an agreeably pungent flavor. The pickled seed-pods are frequently substituted for capers. Botanically, the name "Nasturtium" is applied preferably to the Watercress. Nasturtium. A sprig of a plant with rounded leaves and five-petaled blossoms. Tuberous-rooted Nasturtium: a variety which furnishes edible roots about the size of a hen's egg, of general cone-shape, marked with numerous warty swellings, and red-streaked yellow in color. Plain-boiled, they have an agreeable and refreshing aroma, but are rather watery and not particularly pleasing in flavor. In the mountainous districts of parts of northern South America they are considered a delicacy when frozen after boiling. In other sections, they are consumed in various forms after semi-drying and exposure to the air suspended in nets. In French market gardens they are cultivated to a limited extent in much the same way as the ordinary potato. NEATSFOOT OIL: is a high grade industrial oil obtained from the feet of oxen, sheep, horses, etc. It is pale yellow, nearly odorless and of bland taste. It is commercially valuable because of its property of remaining liquid at a freezing temperature and it is therefore employed for lubricating exposed machinery, clocks, etc. NECTAR: the fabled drink of the mythological deities. The name was formerly used to signify a mixture of wine and honey and it is still occasionally applied to similar sweet beverages of stimulating character. See also GREEK WINES. NECTARINE: a delicate variety of peach, which is distinguished by the smoothness of its skin and its pulpy flesh. It is grown in this country chiefly in California and Oregon. There are many different varieties, divided, as peaches, into "Freestones" and "Clingstones." As a general rule, nectarines cannot be grown in the northern United States except under glass. NEGUS: a well known beverage, named after its originator, Colonel Negus. It is made of either port or sherry, mixed with about twice its bulk of hot water, lump sugar, a little lemon juice, grated nutmeg and a small fragment of the yellow peel of the lemon. The flavor of the beverage is further improved by the addition of about one drop of essence of ambergris, or eight or ten drops of vanilla essence, for each dozen glasses. NEROLI, or Orange Flower Oil: the essential oil of orange flowers, obtained by distillation, used as a flavoring for liqueurs, syrups, etc., in perfumery and soap manufacture and many other purposes. See Seville Orange in article on ORANGES. NEUFCHATEL: a small cream cheese. See general article on CHEESE. NIAGARA GRAPES: one of the four principal grapes of Eastern cultivation (see GRAPES). NOODLES: which originated in Germany and have been in popular use there for centuries, resemble in general character the flat forms of Italian paste described in the article on MACARONI, their title being indeed an American spelling of Nudel, the German word for "Macaroni." They consist of dough of wheat flour, pressed through rollers into large thin sheets, cut into various sizes and forms by special machines and then carefully and thoroughly dried. They are retailed both in bulk and packages--chiefly in strips of three standard sizes, the smallest 1/16 inch in width and the largest 1/2 inch, but also in fancy shapes, "alphabets," etc. If properly made, they will keep for six months or longer, if stored in a dry place and protected from changes of atmosphere. In the best qualities, eggs are added to the dough, the product being then known as Eier Nudeln or "egg noodles." Until a few years ago it was the custom to import noodles from Germany, but domestic manufacturers now supply the market. New York, Philadelphia, Cleveland and a few other places are centers of the industry, which is of considerable proportions as housewives find it cheaper and easier to buy noodles than to make them. Egg Noodles of the best grades, made of fresh eggs and selected wheat flour, are highly nutritious and are so easily digested even by delicate stomachs that they are frequently recommended for invalids and convalescents. The "fine" size is much used in soups, tasting particularly good in bouillon and consommé. The broader types are frequently served as a separate dish, cooked in slightly salted boiling water, or baked like macaroni with cheese, or stewed with tomatoes and butter. Plain or water noodles are frequently colored to imitate egg noodles, so it is best to buy in original packages, giving the preference to those carrying a guarantee of their purity. NOUGAT: a title given to several varieties of candy, usually a paste filled with chopped almonds, pistachios, etc., as almond nougat, etc. NOYAU. See general article on LIQUEURS. NUTS. Among the most popular nuts of general use are almonds, Brazil or Para nuts, chestnuts, cocoanuts, filberts, hickory nuts, pecans, pine nuts or pignolias, pistachio nuts and walnuts. With the exception of the Brazil nut, filbert and pistachio, all of these are now grown in the United States, the domestic product being, however, supplemented by imports to an annual value of nearly $10,000,000. California especially raises big crops of walnuts and almonds, and Louisiana and Texas are noted for pecans. Of imported nuts, Brazil Nuts come principally from the Brazilian states of Para, Amazonas and Maranhao; Chestnuts from Italy, Spain, Portugal and France; Cocoanuts from the West Indies, Philippines and South Sea Islands; Filberts from Sicily and, better grades, from Naples; Walnuts from France, and also to a less extent from Spain, Italy, Turkey, Chile, etc., and Almonds and Pistachios from Spain. Nuts can be carried safely in winter by storing in a cool, dry place, but cold storage at a temperature just above freezing is the only sure method of preserving them during the summer and the only practical policy if the quantity is considerable. Nuts contain a large amount of nutriment in highly concentrated form. They are composed chiefly of oil and proteids, though some varieties substitute carbohydrates (starch, sugar, etc.), as the principal component in place of fat (see FOOD VALUES). Their constantly increasing consumption throughout the United States, augurs well for a better appreciation of their food value by all classes--they are no longer regarded merely as a luxury, or as something to be eaten out of hand at odd times. Sanatoriums are giving many patients nut products as the chief principle of their diets. Nuts should be well chewed, and should be held in the same consideration as the meat or other substantial portion of a meal--not eaten as a delicacy after the stomach is already loaded with a heavy repast. To this latter practice is due much of their reputation for indigestibility. The skin of some varieties is leathery and hard to digest, but cooking may often be advantageously employed to offset this condition--when almonds (1) Butterut (2) Walnuts (3) Black Walnut (4) Brazil Nuts A color illustration of four different nuts, each nut shown both inside the shell and broken open to display the nutmeat. Each nut is labeled with a different number. for instance, are parboiled, the tough leathery skins peel off and the remaining kernel is easily assimilated. Drying must speedily follow the parboiling or loss of flavor will result. Nut pastes and "butters" are rapidly growing in favor, both for home consumption and in confectionery manufacture. They are an agreeable and very desirable addition to the daily diet. They are best bought in small pots or glasses, as they are liable to become rancid if kept long after opening. The composition of nuts and nut products has been studied at a number of U. S. Agricultural Experiment Stations, and the following table summarizes the results of this work, the American data being supplemented in some cases by European analyses. Carbohydrates Water Protein Fat Sugar, Crude Starch, Fiber, etc. "Ash" (Mineral Salts, etc.) % % % % % Acorn (fresh).................. 34.7 4.4 4.7 50.4 4.2 1.6 Almond......................... 4.9 21.4 54.4 13.8 3.0 2.5 Almond Paste.................... 24.2 13.1 23.9 29.4 7.8 1.6 Beechnut........................ 6.6 21.3 49.9 18.0 3.7 Brazil Nut...................... 4.7 17.4 65.0 5.7 3.9 3.3 Butternut....................... 4.5 27.9 61.2 3.4 3.0 Chestnut (fresh)................ 43.4 6.4 6.0 41.3 1.5 1.4 Chestnut (dry).................. 6.1 10.7 7.8 70.1 2.9 2.4 Chestnut (preserved)............ 18.2 1.3 .5 70.7 .3 Chincapin or water chestnut..... 10.6 10.9 .7 73.8 1.4 2.6 Chufa (earth almond)............ 2.2 3.5 31.6 50.2 10.5 2.0 Cocoanut......................... 13.0 6.6 56.2 13.7 8.9 1.6 Cocoanut, desiccated (copra)..... 3.5 6.3 57.4 31.5 1.3 Cocoanut milk.................... 92.7 .4 1.5 4.6 .8 Filbert.......................... 5.4 16.5 64.0 11.7 2.4 Ginkgo nut....................... 47.3 5.9 .8 43.1 .9 2.0 Hickory nut...................... 3.7 15.4 67.4 11.4 2.1 Litchi nut....................... 16.4 2.9 .8 78.0 1.9 Paradise nut..................... 2.3 22.2 62.6 10.2 2.7 Peanut........................... 7.4 29.8 43.5 14.7 2.4 2.2 Peanut Butter.................... 2.1 29.3 46.5 17.1 5.0 Pecan............................ 3.4 12.1 70.7 8.5 3.7 1.6 Pine nut (American).............. 3.4 14.6 61.9 17.3 2.8 Pine nut (Spanish) or pignolia... 6.2 33.9 48.2 6.5 1.4 3.8 Pistachio........................ 4.2 22.6 54.5 15.6 3.1 Walnut........................... 3.4 18.2 60.7 13.7 2.3 1.7 It will be noted that several varieties--the Spanish pine nut, the peanut and the butternut particularly--rank much higher in protein value than a majority of either animal or vegetable foods and that a number of others equal the averages of the best known examples. The fat value is very high--pecans, Brazil nuts, butternuts, filberts, hickory nuts, walnuts, almonds, cocoanuts, pistachios, beechnuts, peanuts, etc., containing 50% or more--up to nearly 71% in the pecan. Most noteworthy among the few nuts which offer a large percentage of carbohydrates and a small percentage of fat, are the dry chestnut and chufa. Many special nut foods, such as malted nuts, meat substitutes, etc., have been devised and extensively advertised by manufacturers for general dietetic use and for the special needs of vegetarians and fruitarians. It is said that some of these products contain soy beans, but apparently the peanut is very important in their composition. NUT OILS. Many varieties of nuts yield oils of value as food and medicine and for soapmaking and numerous other commercial purposes. Prominent among them are the almond, cocoanut, peanut and walnut, all of which are treated in their alphabetical positions. The principal sources of imported nut oils, other than that of the cocoanut, are China, Holland and France. Nutmegs, Kingston, Jamaica. An illustration of the branches of a fruit-bearing tree. NUTMEG (see illustration in Color Page of SPICES). The nutmeg is the kernel of the fruit of a tropical tree, native to Asia, Africa and South America. The pink or red flesh covering it, is the almost equally popular spice known as Mace (which see). The whole fruit, about as large as a peach and of a yellowish-green color, is in the East Indies often preserved entire as a sweetmeat. The tree begins bearing at the age of eight years, and continues to yield for about seventy-five years. It carries ripe fruit at all seasons, but there are three principal harvest periods--July, when the fruit is most abundant, though yielding thin mace; November, when the fruit is thickest, but the nutmegs are small, and March, when both nutmegs and mace attain their finest condition, but the total product is less in quantity on account of the dryness of the season. After the nutmegs have been gathered and stripped of their outer covering, they are placed upon gratings over slow fires and dried at a low heat, not over 140° Fahr., until the kernel rattles freely in the shell. The shells are next cracked and removed and the kernels are sprinkled with lime, to protect them from the attacks of insects and to destroy their power of germination, and then packed for export in tight casks, previously soaked and coated on the inside with limewash. In this condition they will keep for an indefinite length of time. In purchasing nutmegs, choose those which are round and compact in shape, of oily appearance and heavy. They are graded and quoted by the number to the pound--varying from 80 to 140. The largest are the more showy, but those of moderate size, other points being equal, are just as good. Light, dried, dull kinds or those of long, oval shape, should be avoided. Sift-top cans of ready-grated nutmeg find good retail demand and give satisfaction when the contents are pure and fresh. The bulk of the United States supply--which is more than the total consumption of all other countries combined!--comes from Penang and Celebes, of the East Indies. There is also a small, steady importation from the British West Indies. See also general article on SPICES. (1) Pecan (2) Pignolia (Fine) (3) Filbert (5) Almond (4) Litchey Nut (6) Paradise (8) Chestnut (7) Hickory Nut (9) Pistachio A color illustration of nine different varieties of nuts, each depicted both inside the shell and with the shell split open to show the nutmeat. Each nut is labeled with a number. NUTROSE: a food prepared, principally for invalids, by the action of alkali on the dried casein of milk. OATS ( see Color Page opposite 676): a grain which has long been cultivated as food for men and horses. Its several varieties, White oats, Black oats, Potato oats and Pilcorn or "naked" oats, etc., all grow best in cold climates. See OATMEAL, following. OATMEAL. The title "Oatmeal," though properly applicable only to the ground meal of the grain, is commonly applied indifferently to both ground and "rolled" oats. It was formerly retailed principally in bulk, but to-day package goods are almost exclusively used. The change has been of great advantage to both merchant and consumer, for oatmeal exposed to the air, as in the ordinary bin, is much subject to depreciation in flavor--and consequently in value. Unless packed in airtight boxes or bags it rapidly becomes "old" and acquires a disagreeably bitter flavor. In manufacture, the grain is cleaned by various processes, next kiln-dried--which loosens the hull and also develops the nutty flavor of the kernel or "groat"--and then put through machines which remove the hulls. All forms of oatmeal are produced from the "groats" thus obtained. For Rolled Oats, the groats go to heated rolls which flatten them into the flakes familiar to the consumer, the rolling being followed by additional cleansing processes to loosen and remove the fine particles of floury matter, etc., before the flakes are filled into the packages. Fully 90% of the present consumption of oatmeal in this country is of this semi-cooked "rolled oats" type, which owes much of its popularity to its easier preparation for the table. Oatmeal other than Rolled Oats is divided into two classes : Steel-cut, in three sizes, and Ground, graded from Coarse to Extra-Fine. Steel-Cut is obtained by passing the groats through special cutting machines. Ground Oatmeal is Steel-Cut Oatmeal ground between corrugated steel rolls. The use of oatmeal, of the Rolled Oats type, is largely on the increase here, but it is not yet so extensively consumed as in many European countries. There is, however, an important foreign demand for the American product. Oats are very rich in gluten and contain appreciable quantities of fat and sugar. In this country, the grain is used very little for human food purposes except as a cereal or as "groats" or "grits" in the preparation of gruel, but in other parts of the world it is employed in a variety of ways. It cannot be leavened into bread because it lacks the proportion of gliadin found in the gluten of wheat, but it makes excellent "cakes." In Scotland, the most popular form of consumption is as "brose," prepared by stirring the meal with boiling water, or broth, etc., until it has the consistence of "hasty pudding." If more diluted and boiled for a longer time, it becomes "porridge." The coarse meal is also cooked in thick cakes called "bannocks," and finer qualities in thin cakes or wafers. Another palatable dish is made by toasting the meal before a bright fire, then mixing it with a little beef or mutton fat, pepper, salt and fine-chopped onions, and again toasting it. In Ireland, oatmeal is mixed with cornmeal and then stirred into boiling water or whey and milk, the result being known as "Stirabout." In Norway, a common food among the peasantry is a thin cake, called "flad brod," made of ground oats, husk and all, mixed sometimes with barley meal, potatoes or peameal, baked in a griddle or frying pan. See also article on CEREALS. OFFAL: a word frequently applied to all parts separated from the carcass of an animal while dressing it for market. The most important food items which come within the classification are hearts, livers, tongues, oxtails, oxlips, ox-palates and stomachs (tripe). The items more correctly styled "offal" are those unfit for use as food--the hair, employed in making mattresses; the skin, which goes to leather tanneries; the bones, dried and ground for sale as fertilizer, used in refining, etc.; the intestines, which become sausage casings, etc. The white skin and bones also serve in the manufacture of gelatine. OILS: are divided according to their sources as Animal, Vegetable and Mineral, or for various specific purposes, as Edible and Industrial, Cold Drawn and otherwise, Fixed and Essential, Drying and Non-drying, etc. Animals Oils may be divided into those from (1) fish and marine mammals, as Menhaden and Whale Oil for industrial purposes, and Cod Liver Oil; and (2) land animals, as Lard Oil, Oleo Oil and Neatsfoot Oil. The chief Vegetable Oils are almond, castor, cocoanut, corn, cotton-seed, hemp, linseed, olive, palm, palm kernel, peanut, poppy-seed, rape, sesame and walnut. Cold Drawn or Cold Pressed oil, the highest grade of vegetable fixed oil, is that obtained by the first expression, without heat or chemical additions. The general rule in the treatment of fruits and seeds which give edible oils, is to use cold-expression first to obtain the edible grades, then to extract the remaining oil-content after heating or chemical treatment, or first one and then the other, for industrial purposes. The hot-expression always changes the character of the oil and in some cases entirely alters the flavor. Mineral Oils, as benzine, gasoline, kerosene, etc., are in this country obtained chiefly by the distillation of PETROLEUM (which see). Fixed Oils are those which, under ordinary temperature, leave a permanent greasy residue on any substance, as paper, etc. The classification includes the majority of the vegetable oils of general use, the heavier mineral oils and all the animal oils. Essential or Volatile Oils speedily evaporate in ordinary temperature. They are divisible into two main classes, vegetable and mineral. Vegetable essential oils, obtained from herbs, fruits, flowers, seeds, etc., are used in great variety by the perfumer (see PERFUMERY), in medical practice and in the manufacture of flavoring extracts for food purposes (see EXTRACTS). They are soluble in alcohol, ether and fixed oils, but only to a limited extent in water. The mineral volatile oils include the lighter Petroleum products. Drying Oils -- as hemp, linseed, poppy, walnut and some whale oils--are those which on contact with the air form a tough skin and are therefore suitable for use in the manufacture of paints and varnishes. Castor, corn, cotton-seed, rape, sesame, sunflower and most whale oils, are Partial or Slow Drying. Almond, lard, mineral oils, oleo oil, olive, peanut and sperm oils, are Non-Drying. In temperate climates, cocoanut, palm, palm kernel and kindred types are nearly solid fats. OIL-CAKE: is made from the pulp remaining after the extraction of oil from cotton-seed, linseed, etc. When the extraction is confined to the use of presses, the cakes make excellent cattle food, as the residue contains some oil. If all the oil has been removed by a supplementary chemical process, they are suitable only for use as fertilizing material. OKA: a plant native to Peru which is worthy of more extensive cultivation in this country--it has already made a place for itself in Europe. Its principal value is in its roots. When fresh pulled, their flavor is too acid to be generally acceptable, but South American producers rectify this by placing them in woollen bags and setting in the sun for a few days, the result being to give them a sweet and floury character suggestive of fine sweet potatoes. If the drying is continued, they wrinkle and shrivel, acquiring a flavor resembling dried figs. The young leaves and shoots are also eaten as "greens" or salad. Oka An illustration of several lumpy tubers, some light and some dark. OKRA or Gumbo: a West Indian plant of the Mallow family, largely cultivated in the southern states and in warm countries generally. Its mucilaginous pods are excellent in soup or stewed as a vegetable, separate or with tomatoes, etc. They were formerly dried in large quantities for consumption when fresh okra is unobtainable, by cutting into rings and hanging in the sun on long strings, but their use in that form has decreased in recent years, as the canned product is decidedly preferable. Okra seed, known as "ambrette," is much employed by perfumers and is occasionally roasted for use as a coffee substitute. Okra A sprig of a plant with aceriform leaves, large blossoms, and a long, pointed fruit. A closeup illustration of the fruit, which has been sliced to show its interior, appears next to the drawing of the plant. OLEO OIL: is the oil obtained from animal fat, especially beef fat, by the removal of the tissues and solid fatty acids (see STEARIN). It is largely used in the manufacture of oleomargarine. The word Oleo is also employed as an abbreviated form of Oleomargarine and as an adjective signifying "oily." OLEOMARGARINE, also called Margarine and Butterine: was invented by the French chemist, Mege Mouriez in 1871. As manufactured to-day it is generally composed of 40% to 45% beef or Oleo oil; 20% to 25% Neutral lard (from the first rendering of the leaf fat of the hog) and 10% to 30% butter, milk or cream. Vegetable oils, such as cotton-seed oil, are sometimes added. The mixture is churned at a temperature above the melting point, and then chilled and salted, worked, etc., in about the same way as butter. At the solicitation of those interested in the production and sale of butter, Congress passed a law, effective July 1, 1902, placing a tax of one-quarter of a cent a pound on uncolored Oleomargarine, and a tax of ten cents a pound on the colored product. In a great many states, manufacturers are, under severe penalties, entirely forbidden the use of coloring matter. The law also requires that all Oleomargarine shall be plainly so labeled, that it shall not be sold in substitution for butter, and that when used in hotels, boarding-houses, etc., the fact must be made known by announcements to that effect posted where they may be readily seen. The manufacturers of Oleomargarine claim that their product is equal to the finest dairy butter in purity and nutritiveness and that in flavor it is far superior to the cheaper grades of butter. These claims are supported by many chemists and scientists. OLIVES. Asia Minor is generally credited with being the original home of the olive, which is one of the oldest of known fruits and is often mentioned in ancient writings. The tree is an evergreen with abundant foliage of very small greenish-gray leaves. It often reaches a great height and attains a remarkable age--there are trees in the districts near Nice, France, and Genoa, Italy, believed to be more than 2,000 years old. Fruit is borne every other year. The flowering begins in the spring and the olive is formed by the end of July. It is green in color until it attains its full size, but it then gradually becomes yellowish and, later, a dark purplish brown as it ripens. The picking commences in November and frequently lasts until the beginning of April. The oil obtained from the January and February crops is generally considered the best. The olive is cultivated in many countries--in the Eastern Hemisphere in all countries bordering on the Mediterranean; in the United States, chiefly in California. There are many varieties, differing considerably both in the size of the fruit and its oil content, the latter averaging from 20% to 30%. For the production of Olive Oil, the feature next in importance to a sufficient crop is a large percentage of oil. For pickling, the chief desiderata are large size and firm flesh. France, Italy and California produce the bulk of the fruit used in the making of oil. The finest pickled Green Olives come from the South of Spain, some of the fruit reaching the size of a plum. California and Arizona lead in the marketing of the pickled ripe or "Black" olive--on the Pacific coast, the green olive is passing into oblivion. California Olives An illustration of a plant with long, thin leaves and ovoid fruits. Among the best known varieties of pickling olives are the Queen, Manzanillo and Mission. The fruit for pickled green olives are gathered when they have attained full size, but before the final ripening commences. They are assorted according to size and quality, then washed and placed in a solution of lime and potash to remove their bitter taste. Next comes washing with sufficient water to remove the caustic flavor of the solution and finally the pickling, the process varying with the customs of various localities. Some use brine only, or salt and vinegar mixed--others add fennel and thyme or coriander, laurel leaves, etc. The fruit is generally pickled whole, but when it is desired to give it a stronger pickle savor, it is marked with incisions to the stone. A perfect pickled green olive is yellowish-green, very firm, with pinkish pit and agreeable flavor. It must have all of these points, for each is essential to a fine product. Fruit of lesser quality is generally dark in color, with meat soft and mushy or woody and tasteless, these defects being caused either by age or imperfect curing. Pickled or salted ripe or "Black" olives are purplish-black in exterior appearance and dark and rather soft in pulp, with a bland flavor due to the oil developed in ripening. They are processed in much the same manner as the green fruit, as prior to pickling they still retain the characteristic bitter flavor. Green olives are essentially a relish. Ripe olives constitute a wholesome and very nutritious food. Dry bread, unsweetened biscuits, boiled or baked potatoes or similar articles should be eaten with ripe olives, as they are too rich for consumption alone. Olives are not at first taste generally enjoyed by the average person in this country, but appreciation of them is, in most cases, readily acquired and there is a steadily increasing consumption of both imported and domestic brands, many varieties of green olives being very popular stuffed or filled with peppers, celery, etc., especially the first-named. A saucer of olives placed on the counter convenient to the customer's reach, will sometimes start the olive habit in a family and lead to steady sales. When plain olives are not relished, the stuffed varieties may often be advantageously "demonstrated," or offered free to be sampled. Olives should be served in a small quantity of brine and cracked ice, after being thoroughly chilled in the refrigerator. They should never be rinsed in water. OLIVE OIL: is made from the tree-ripened fruit of the Olive and commercially holds first place among vegetable oils. The best is that from the small fruit extensively cultivated in the section of Southern France formerly known as Provence; the Lucca district, Italy, and California. The highest production is generally from trees growing on rocky hillsides. A climate of uninterrupted warmth is essential--a cold spell during the months of November and December will often render the fruit hard and the oil of inferior quality. In regions where quality is of paramount importance, the fruit is carefully plucked by hand. As soon as possible after gathering, it is carried to the nearest mill, for the manufacture must commence within ten to twelve hours, ripe olives having a tendency to rot, to the great detriment of the oil. The result is that, as a general thing, a number of small mills are scattered throughout each district. The olives are first spread out and slightly heated for about twenty-four hours, as this renders the extraction of the oil easier by expanding the oil vesicles. The process requires much skill and experience, as even slight over-heating will damage the product. The fruit is then ground or crushed to a paste until the oil begins to swim on top. The paste goes into round baskets made of rush or alpha weed, called "scourtins," or into sacks of similar materials, or iron hoops covered with crash, and a certain number of the receptacles are piled together, with or without slat-grating between, and subjected to gentle pressure. This first oil is of the finest quality and is called "Virgin Oil." For the second pressing, more force is employed and is continued until nothing further can be extracted in that manner, the oil thus obtained varying in grades and value. The paste is then saturated with boiling water, and subjected to a third and fourth pressing by hydraulic power, but the resultant oil is used only for industrial purposes, for the manufacture of soaps, etc. The oil as extracted by pressing contains a considerable percentage of water and some vegetable matter. This may be removed by repeated "settling" and "decanting." By another method, the oil is put in tanks and mixed thoroughly until it presents a milky appearance. Then fresh water is added and this, as it passes through, takes with it the greater part of the fruit-water, leaving the oil to rise to the surface. This product, skimmed off or "decanted," is known as "unrefined" or Crude Olive Oil. If made by one of the old style firms, it goes next to underground cellars or vaults, where it is allowed to settle for about a fortnight, when the cleared oil is run off and filtered several times. It is then ready for market. One hundred pounds of olives will yield an average of fifteen to twenty pounds of edible oil, i.e., oil of the first pressings. The accompanying illustration shows on the left, a modern olive crusher--the upright, wide, circular wheels crushing the fruit in a stone or metal basin. Immediately to the right, in the rear, is the press for extracting the oil from the baskets or bags of crushed pulp. From the press, the oil goes to a small round separator tank, kept nearly full of water, being ejected into it, near the bottom, through the outlet of a pipe running down the side and making a short turn up into the center of the bottom of the tank. Just below the oil-jet, is a water-jet which keeps the oil-flow and the main body of water gently but constantly agitated, with the result that the heavy impurities fall to the bottom and the oil drops rise to the top, where they are drawn off through a faucet. Olive crusher, press and "settler" An illustration of a room full of heavy machinery. The oil thus obtained is "settled" in the funnel-shaped apparatus shown on the right of the illustration and is then passed through cotton-wool into the settling tanks, where it is allowed to rest for about a month. It is next "racked off" into other tanks, the process being repeated two or three times in lieu of additional filtering processes. As olive oil is very sensitive to foreign odors and flavors, manufacturers are obliged to use the greatest care in handling and storing it. The leading manufacturers stock their finished marketable oils in vaults, with walls of glass tiles to facilitate the most scrupulous cleanliness. The merit of the finished product depends upon many different Fruit bearing Branch of Olive Tree A color illustration of a plant with long, skinny compound leaves bearing clusters of small ovoid fruits. An inlaid cut shows the fruit up close; one of the fruits has been split in half to show its interior. points--the quality of the fruit, its condition when picked--for neither unripe nor over-ripe fruit will give the finer grades--and the methods of refining, etc. The best test is its color--that of a golden or straw yellow tint is best. If it is of greenish hue, it is either an inferior grade or it has not been well refined. When fresh and of good quality, it is of sweetish, nutty flavor. Italian olive oil is more fruity in flavor than the French, and has a more decided olive taste. Some people enjoy this, but the majority prefer the French, as it is more neutral, softer and more delicate. There is an increasing demand among the best class of customers for the finer grades of California olive oil, which in flavor and purity alike have attained front rank. Olive oil should not be exposed to extremes of light or temperature. Light will fade its color, heat will make it rancid and cold will cause it to congeal and separate. Cold does not however injure the quality. Housewives would find it profitable to employ olive oil more generally for cooking, etc. In the average American household it is used only for salads and salad dressing, but it is also excellent for frying--it can be heated to higher temperature than either lard or butter and it has no disagreeable odor or flavor. Now is it expensive, in spite of the general impression to that effect, for one gallon of oil is equivalent to seven and a half pounds of butter for cooking. After all deep frying, such as fritters, doughnuts or French fried potatoes, the oil should be carefully strained and placed in a clean, tight bottle for further use. OLLA PODRIDA: one of the national dishes of Spain--a rich soup stew of meat, sausages, chick peas, etc. Because of the varied character of the mixture, its name is often used to describe any jumble of words or ideas. ONION: a common garden vegetable, of the lily family, cultivated in great variety and supplied to the markets nearly all the year round. It is a native of Turkey in Asia, but it has been an article of diet in various countries for a great many centuries, and is now grown in nearly every part of the world--in particularly large quantities in Germany, Spain, parts of Africa and parts of the United States. In quantity, it stands third among the "truck" crops of the United States, the most important states being Texas, Ohio, Western New York and Connecticut. Among the principal varieties are the White or Silver-skinned, Yellow and Red--all with various names according to their size, shape, season and flavor. The different colors are, alone, no gauge of quality--there are all grades in each color and the choice is almost entirely one of individual preference. The demand varies in different localities and changes from time to time--one section will for a long time give the preference to Yellow, then popularity will veer to White, etc. Local taste is the only correct guide for the merchant on this point. The strong smell and flavor of the onion is due to a pungent volatile oil, rich in sulphur. When grown in warm places, it is generally milder and sweeter than the more northern product. Those of moderate size contain about 91% of water. Onion An illustration of an onion, with the leaves still attached to the main body of the vegetable. The earliest shipments to this country are from Bermuda--which was at one time almost equally famous for Easter lilies and onions--but which is in the latter respect diminishing in importance as the result of the development of the industry in the South--particularly in Texas. The importations of the famous Spanish onions are, on the other hand, increasing yearly in volume, and Spain is now the largest individual exporter to this country--the United Kingdom, Bermuda and Egypt occupying the next most important positions. The domestic crop is always shipped in gunny sacks, holding about two bushels, or in wooden boxes--never in bulk. Many people make a mistake in storing onions. They need to be kept dry instead of damp, and consequently an airy place is the best for them--though, for the same reason, on foggy days all windows should be kept closed. Open crates of lath, such as are used to ship potatoes, make good receptacles, as they afford ventilation and keep the onions from lying in a deep mass. When many are piled together, they are liable to sweat, grow and induce rot. A temperature of 34° to 40° Fahr. is best. Curing in the sun for several days should precede placing in the cellar. Care should be taken to avoid bruising, and damaged specimens should be promptly removed. When possible, it is a good idea to turn the stock over occasionally. If one has bought largely to take advantage of market rises, it is well to leave the tops on until it is time to make ready for market, as they tend to protect against bruising and the consequent liability to rot. When removing the tops, it is also advisable to avoid cutting too close to the bulbs. The uses of onions are many and varied. In this country, the fresh vegetable is cooked in every imaginable way, and there is a large sale of small onions pickled in numerous styles. Increasing in popularity also is Onion Essence or Sauce, in bottles, for flavoring soups, etc. In Europe, the laboring classes eat onions raw as we eat apples. A good idea for the housewife, is to keep a knife with a different-colored handle for peeling and cutting onions. Then there is no danger of its being used for, and carrying the flavor into, other articles. The color signal proves an effective deterrent! Opossum An illustration of an opossum sitting on a tree branch. OPOSSUM: a small animal of the marsupial family found in the Southern States, the Common or Virginia type being about the size of a cat, with greyish fur and black ears and feet. It has recently been popularized as a "new" dish among the white race in the North, generally roasted or baked and served with sweet potatoes (roasted around it) and corn bread. It tastes somewhat like young pig. ORACHE: a pot-herb which makes good "greens." Oranges--Flowers and Fruit A color illustration of a branch of an orange tree, bearing both fruit and flowers. An inlaid cut shows an orange cut in half to show the interior of the fruit. ORANGES. The ordinary Sweet Orange appears to have been first cultivated in the fifteenth century, but it has since spread to every part of the world where the climate is of sub-tropical warmth. The tree is an evergreen of moderate height with white flowers of heavy, sweet fragrance and considerable beauty (see Color Page opposite page 426). It bears foliage, flowers and fruit simultaneously, for the fruit requires about twelve months to become fully ripe. Mature cultivated California trees of good growth will generally give from two hundred and fifty to four hundred fruit annually. Those in more tropical latitudes average considerably higher and often produce several times that number. The first oranges in the market are the early Floridas and, next, the Arizona Navels, commencing November 1 or even earlier. Then comes the bulk of the California and Florida products--Navels and others. The finest summer orange is the Late Valencia of California, in season from the middle of June to November. There is an increasing demand for fancy varieties of the Tangerine type--strongly aromatic fruits, generally small in size and flattened at the ends, with loose dark-colored skins and mild, sweet, rather dry pulp. They have been nicknamed "kid-glove" oranges, because one can eat them without the aid of plate or spoon, as conveniently as candy. The most popular of the numerous varieties are the Tangerine proper, the Mandarin, larger and lighter in color, the Satsuma, and the King of Siam, or "King"--the last named generally of fair to large size and of very rough skin (see Color Page of orange types opposite page 430). The ordinary sweet orange imported from Europe is the variety known as the Lisbon or Portugal and its near relatives. The most noteworthy special types include the St. Michael; the "China," with very smooth, thin rind and abundant juice; the Maltese or "Blood Orange" with mottled pulp, and the Tangerine. The European Tangerine is grown in two sizes--one about half the size of an ordinary orange, and the other very small and sweet, scarcely an inch in diameter. The latter is seldom seen in this country. Still others are the Majorca, a seedless type, and the Egg Orange, so named from its oval shape. By far the greater part of the oranges eaten in the United States are now grown in Florida and California, supplemented by a considerable supply from Porto Rico. The importations from the other West Indian Islands and Europe, formerly very large, have been greatly reduced and are still falling. A noteworthy percentage of the present supply of imported oranges comes from Mexico, and there is also a small regular influx from Japan (chiefly of a type a little larger than the Mandarin), parts of Central America, etc. The fame of the California product has been much enhanced by the fine "Navel" or seedless oranges marketed in increasing quantities each year. Contrary to general belief, these oranges are not the result of scientific development by horticulturists. They are a natural fruit of special variety. Orange Groves in midwinter, California A horse and buggy travel down a road that overlooks an expansive grove of fruit trees. The story of the rise of the Navel to its present commercial importance, reads like a fairy tale. In 1872, an United States Consul at Bahia, Brazil, sent a few young seedless orange trees from the swamps of the Amazon to Washington. The following year, a Mrs. Eliza Tibbets, of Maine, took three of the shrubs to Riverside, California, and planted them on land which her husband had purchased there. Two died, but the third survived, throve and bore fruit. California growers were quick to appreciate the merits of the Navel and competition in its cultivation was very keen. As the oranges were seedless, propagation had to be accomplished by budding, and for a time Mrs. Tibbets secured a dollar a bud for all she sold. Orange Trees protected from freezing by the use of extensible coverings, Florida An illustration of a field filled with small covered plants. In 1880, the navel orange crop was one whole box!--but since, from that one tree has grown an industry whose yearly value averages from fifteen to twenty million dollars. The original tree planted by Mrs. Tibbets still lives and bears fruit. It is now in the court of the Glenwood Hotel, Riverside, California, where it was transplanted with much ceremony in 1903. The Washington Navel, the original type, so called because the first trees were secured from the agricultural department in Washington, D.C., is accredited with better and longer keeping qualities than any varieties of later introduction or development, but that known as the Valencia is considered the choicest in flavor. The Florida orange is too well known to need much description. In its best types, it may be conservatively described as one of the finest fruits the world has ever produced. The skin is generally thin, and the pulp and juice are rich in flavor and very generous in weight and amount. Among the best types of the mid-season Floridas are the Indian River and Pineapple--of the later, the Tardif. The best Porto Rico oranges are of delicious flavor and sweetness, but they do not appeal to the public as strongly as the Florida and California, the product being small and less "fancy" in style, because West Indian shippers have not yet learned to exercise the same care in selection, sorting and "polishing" the fruit. In California, oranges receive much "grooming" after leaving the parent tree--and they are gathered only on sunny days, as the damp fruit would attract dust, to the detriment of their appearance. Sulphuring orange trees to kill parasite life A panoramic illustration of a line of covered trees in a field. ORANGES (1) Florida (2) Navel (3) Tangerine (4) King A color illustration of four different orange varieties on a bed of leaves, each orange labeled with a number. The first step after plucking, is to give them a bath to remove any dust that may have settled on them. For this, they are placed in a long, narrow tank of water, at one end of which is a large wheel with a tire of soft bristles, revolving in connection with another set of brushes in a smaller tank below, the oranges passing in between the wet brushes and coming out bright and clean. This device has almost entirely done away with the method of hand scrubbing, but at some of the smaller packing houses may still be seen groups of women, each busily scouring the golden balls. After their bath, the oranges are spread out in the sun to dry, on long slanting racks. At the lower end, they roll off into boxes, to be carried away to the warehouses for their "rest," for various changes take place in the fruit so recently cut off from the sap supply, the skin drawing closer to the pulp and "sweating" or giving off moisture that would result in damage if the fruit were packed at once. Picking oranges, California A group of men work on ladders to collect the fruit from a grove of trees. Several boxes to hold the fruit lie in the lane between trees. After the days of curing, the oranges are fed into a hopper, which drops them on a belt running between revolving cylindrical brushes, which produce the smooth, shiny appearance of the fine market fruit, and then they go to the "sorting tables," where they are rapidly graded according to color and general appearance, as "Fancy," "choice," "standard," "culls," etc., and, mechanically, by size. The "Fancy" fruit are perfect in form and style and with unmarred skins of the typical orange color. The lesser grades are principally those in which the skin is more or less stained or "russet"-brown in color. Other trade terms of division are "Brights," divided into "Fancies" and "Seconds"; "Golden Russets," "Dark Russets," etc. The sorting tables are built at a slight incline and the divided streams of oranges run in files on tracks of moving ropes. The smallest fruit falls through first, and so on to the largest, the oranges graduating themselves into their proper bins. There are twelve principal sizes, from those which run three hundred and sixty to a box, to the big specimens which take only forty-eight. Sharp corners are avoided or carefully padded in all these processes, for the fruit is so susceptible that even a small scratch might fester and destroy its merit between shipping point and destination. For the same reason, handlers and packers are obliged to keep their finger nails short and filed smooth. Finally comes the wrapping of the finer fruit in paper--there are machines which can each handle forty thousand to fifty thousand a day--and the packing in boxes, the barrel method of shipping having been almost entirely superseded. Though only fruit of fair size and appearance are, as a rule, offered for sale to the public, there is use for all undersized specimens. Very small oranges, generally unripe, are preserved whole in sugar as a sweetmeat, or used to make some varieties of "curaçoa" and other liqueurs, for juices and jams or marmalades, extracts, essential oils, etc. The orange peel most in demand for confectionery, preserves, candying, etc., is, however, that of the sour or Seville orange, described in the next article. Ripe oranges should be stored in a cool, dry place with a temperature never much above 40° Fahr. and never falling to the freezing point. If subjected to careful sorting beforehand and properly crated, they will at that temperature generally remain sound for from eight to twelve weeks. For a moderate length of time, they will stand warmth up to 80° or 85° Fahr., but anything beyond that will dry and shrivel them. In warm weather, a plentiful supply of fresh air is essential to their proper keeping, whether in transportation or in store or home. Wrapping in soft paper and packing in sawdust is recommended. The thin-skinned varieties are especially liable to absorb odors, so proximity to strong smelling articles should be avoided. Oranges received in a green state may be ripened in a temperature of 70° to 75° Fahr. While ripening, it is well to cover the boxes with burlap soaked in water. Oranges are probably the most wholesome and useful of all the sub-acid fruits. Their juice differs from that of the lemon chiefly in containing less citric acid and more sugar. Their free and regular consumption is beneficial to nearly everyone and with many persons they are a real specific for ill health based on digestive disorders. A point to be remembered by the consumer is that many a choice fruit is concealed in a mottled-looking skin! Weight for size, ripeness and soundness, are the principal points for consideration. All of these may be found equally in those of "fancy" and those of less pleasing appearance. Both "Brights" and "Russets" may be plucked from the same tree and under the skin will average exactly the same in quality. The russet color is caused by the puncturing of the rind by a tiny insect known as the Rust Mite, which permits the oil of the rind to exude--but the mite does not touch nor affect the fruit pulp. "Golden Russets" are those attacked later or in less degree. For ordinary family purposes it is not necessary to confine oneself to the more expensive fruits, classed as "fancy" because of their handsome exteriors. Seville Orange, Bigarade Orange, Sour Orange. The foregoing article dealt with the ordinary Sweet Orange, the one with which the general public is almost exclusively familiar. The first orange known to civilization was, however, the Seville or Sour Orange, the French Bigarade, which was brought into Spain by the Moors early in the eighth century, nearly seven hundred years before the Sweet Orange made its appearance in Europe. The Seville Orange tree is smaller than that bearing the Sweet Orange, more inclined to be spiney and with leaves more nearly elliptical in shape. The oil cells of the fruit are concave and both the pulp and rind are heavier and coarser. Unless very ripe and considerably sweetened, the Seville orange is not to the average palate a pleasing fruit to be eaten raw, but it is grown very largely throughout Southern Europe, and to some extent here, for use preserved and in liqueurs, perfumery, etc. In the preserved form it is best known as Marmalade (which see), but great quantities of the green fruit are also preserved and candied whole. The peels, by distillation, furnish the characteristic principle of Curaçoa and are similarly utilized for many other liqueurs, flavoring syrups, etc., and medicinally as a stomachic. Neroli, Sorting and packing oranges, California An illustration of the interior of a factory in which fruit is being sorted and boxed by a group of workers. or Orange Flower Oil, and Orange Flower Water, produced in France in enormous quantities for perfumery, soap manufacture, syrups, liqueurs, etc., are made from the blossoms and, lesser grades, from the leaves and small twigs. The greater part of the commercial supply of orange flowers is obtained from the especially developed variety known in France as Le Bouquetier, or " Nosegay Plant, " which furnishes also the "orange blossoms" of the European florists. The flowers are similar to those of the Sweet Orange, but in Le Bouquetier they grow in thick clusters at the end of the branches. There are some varieties with double blossoms and others with myrtle and purplish-white flowers. The practice of wearing orange blossoms by brides is derived from the Saracens, among whom it was regarded as emblematic of happiness and prosperity. South America is also important as a source of orange-flower and leaf essence--in Paraguay, for example, the wild groves are dotted with numerous small establishments devoted to the industry. In addition to its commercial uses, the extract is employed locally as a healing ointment and the dried flowers are made into a gently stimulating beverage. In some places, a "Tea" brewed from the leaves is considered efficacious in fever cases. The Spaniards brought the Seville Orange to Florida and there it found a soil and climate so well suited to its requirements that wild groves were soon to be found all over the State--to such an extent, indeed, that many authorities held for a long time that the tree must be native to the country. The wild groves have, however, almost entirely disappeared--many of them were killed by the severe freezing spells of a few decades ago, and a majority of the remainder have been budded to the Sweet variety. The Sour-Sweet orange is merely a local variety or adaptation of the Seville. ORANGE AMANITA. See sub-head in article on MUSHROOMS. ORANGE BLOSSOMS: are employed in the preparation of many Southern puddings, ices, etc., being crushed to bring out the flavor as strongly as possible, and they are also candied whole in the same way as violets, but their chief use is in the manufacture of Neroli and Orange Flower Water. ORANGE EXTRACT: is made in the same ways as Lemon Extract (which see), and the orange oil used is extracted in the same manner as Lemon Oil, nearly all the trade supply coming from Sicily. ORANGE FLOWER OIL. See matter following trade title of NEROLI. ORANGE FLOWER WATER: the fragrant liquid resulting from the distillation of orange blossoms after the essential oil, Neroli, has been removed. It is used in the making of syrups, perfumery, soaps, etc., and in the household in the preparation of various desserts. ORANGE MARMALADE. See general article on MARMALADE. ORANGEADE: an orange beverage similar to lemonade in preparation. ORANGEAT: a term applied both to candied orange peel and to orangeade. ORCHANET. See matter following heading of ALKANET. ORGEAT: a form of ALMOND SYRUP (which see). OYSTERS (and method of oyster-dredging) A color illustration of oysters, showing both the interior and exterior of the shell. An inlaid cut shows several men on a boat which is dragging a net along the ocean floor below. ORMERS: a shellfish found on the coast of Florida. The flavor may be described as between that of oysters and very delicate veal. ORTOLAN: a European bird about the size of a lark, distinguished by its black wings and greenish-grey head. When fat, it is considered a great delicacy. The "Ortolans" sold here are generally various kinds of small "reed" birds. OTAHEITE APPLE: a fruit of the cashew family, about the size of an apple and generally resembling an orange in color. Its rind has an odor suggestive of turpentine but the pulp resembles the pineapple in aroma and flavor. OUTING SUPPLIES. When the summer approaches it is well for the retailer to bear in mind that "outing supplies" afford liberal profits. If a dealer proves himself expert in furnishing needed outfits, packing in a superior manner, etc., the information spreads rapidly among customers, for a judiciously selected and arranged supply of good things to eat is equally important whether the buyers merely intend to spend the day in a city park or are going further afield. Among the many articles that may be appropriately suggested for any occasion are: crackers and sweet biscuits; cheese, of the types easily handled; pickles, olives, candy, etc., and canned goods such as salmon, sardines, tongue, devilled meats, boned game and poultry, condensed milk, fruits, etc. Camping parties offer a still wider range of possibilities, for the supplies should also include sugar, tea, coffee, salt and pepper; butter of the very best quality, in screw-top glass jars; pilot bread for chowder or to use with the early cup of coffee; toilet soap and a bar of laundry soap, matches, etc. These are only sample suggestions, for there are scores of other articles in a grocer's stock that may be included. Worthy of consideration also are the numerous "camp kits" composed of collapsible articles that occupy little space and enhance the comfort of a camping party. Included are usually found various cooking utensils and a stove, the whole fitting closely together and capable of being packed in a big boiling pot or fitted into a box that may be slung over the shoulder. A wisely selected kit will include a stove, kettle, frying pan, gridiron, coffee pot, a few canisters and pepper and salt boxes. As individual items, are collapsible chafing dishes and picnic baskets of various kinds and sizes. In many places it pays to advertise in local papers a readiness to meet all demands for outing supplies; to send special circulars to customers, and to scatter advertising matter throughout the district. OYSTERS. One of the most democratic of food luxuries is the oyster--you find it in high favor in the most expensive establishments, yet it is equally abundant in "popular price" restaurants, in lunch rooms and in the cheapest of eating stalls. In stores, it is sold both in and out of the shell, fresh and canned, and it is eaten in every conceivable way! Among the best known varieties are: Blue Points, Rockaways, Lynnhavens, Saddle Rocks, Cotuits, Cape Cods, Buzzard Bays, etc. These titles have in many sections lost much of their first significance by trade misuse. "Blue Point," for example, is often, though incorrectly, applied to all small oysters, irrespective of their geographical source; and "Rockaway" and "Saddle Rock," particularly the former, are similarly employed for large sizes. As a matter of fact, there are both small and large oysters of all varieties, the difference in size being chiefly that of age. A small quantity of European oysters is imported every year--particularly of the French Marennes, which has a greenish color from feeding on a green seaweed, but it is intended only for limited consumption in a few cosmopolitan establishments. The general trend is the other way 'round, for every year sees large exports of American oysters, which are almost universally conceded to be the finest in the world. Oysters have been enjoyed as food as far back as history takes us and have been an object of special culture for a couple of thousand years. Every country has its own particular method of cultivation, for within the last century even those sections where the natural crop is largest have been compelled to resort to special growing to keep pace with the enormous annual consumption. In England, the most popular method consists in spreading the brood-oysters over smooth, hard, clean areas. In Holland and France, they are bred on tiles ranged sideways in rows along the shores and thence later removed to the deeper waters from which they are dredged for the market. In this country, the seed-oysters are generally spread on a carefully laid bed of old shells--oyster shells, mussel shells, etc. The growing period intervening between the first setting and the final shifting, is ordinarily three years, but is subject to variations in accordance with the size of the seed when planted, its rate of growth, the size desired, etc. On some grounds the rate of growth is much more rapid than on others. Between March 1 and July 1, the planter shifts the oysters he intends to market in the fall, from beds of soft bottom to those of hard bottom. This change has been found beneficial to the oyster, as it clears it of mud and other extraneous substances and improves its color and flavor, and it also gives an opportunity for separating the clusters, when necessary, into single oysters. The bed thus cleared by shifting is replanted with seed-oysters, obtained generally from natural beds. The season for marketing opens with September. The oysters are taken by means of dredges and tongs and are prepared for the market by "culling" or sorting by sizes, the dirt and attached shells being removed during the process. In some cases the cleaning is assisted by dumping them on the sand at low tide, removing them at the next low tide. A mountain of "Seed" Oysters ready for plaiting, Hampton, Va. A large pile of oysters near the seashore. The three sizes chiefly recognized in the trade are "half-shells," the smallest, usually preferred for eating raw; "culls," medium size, for consumption raw, stewing, etc.; and "box," the largest, generally for frying--although true oyster lovers take delight in large Lynnhavens or other deep sea oysters "on the half-shell." The eating of oysters raw is as correct from a hygienic standpoint as from that of the epicure. Raw, the component parts of the oyster practically digest themselves in the human stomach. Cooked, the human stomach must do the work as for other food. (1) Raking the "oyster parks" and placing the oysters in the trays or "carriers." (2) Filling sacks from the "carriers." (3) Loading of Chaland, a large flat-bottomed boat used for transporting the filled sacks or baskets. THE OYSTER INDUSTRY AT LOCMARIAQUER AND LA TRINITé-SUR-MER, FRANCE Three illustrations showing the oyster-harvesting process. Each illustration is labeled with a number. (1) Gathering oysters at low tide. (2)Unloading the Chalands. THE OYSTER INDUSTRY AT LOCMARIAQUER AND LA TRINITé-SUR-MER, FRANCE Two illustrations showing the oyster-harvesting process. Both illustrations are labeled with a number. California oysters are very much like those of the Mediterranean and other parts of Europe--small and of the same coppery taste. Those found further north, on the coasts of Oregon and Washington, are similar to the Atlantic varieties. Large quantities are grown also in Japan and China, and in the latter country there is a heavy trade in dried oysters, the bivalves being cooked and then sun-dried. The oyster is peculiar in the fact that age makes no difference in its tenderness. Custom and trade demands result in its being consumed while still young and comparatively small, but if left to live until old and very much larger, the flesh is just as tender and fresh. The illustration on page 444 shows the average size of an oyster at the ages of one, two, six and eight years. By almost universal custom, oysters are tabooed during the months of May, June, July and August, but there is really no good reason for thus banishing them from the bill of fare. The oyster is not a desirable article of diet when spawning, which period covers from three to four weeks, but as the time of spawning differs in various localities, no elimination of certain fixed invariable months can ensure protection against their use in that condition, and the same care that is now exercised during eight months in the year could certainly be extended to cover the remaining four. A typical Tong Boat, and men "tonging" oysters. An illustration of a fleet of small boats at sea. The rule is, however, a tradition of great and venerable age! It was first, we believe, put on record in 1599,recored in 1599, by a certain Dr. Butler, the vicar of an English country parish--but he can hardly be considered an authority sufficiently weighty to bind the human race for all time to come! The custom has been sustained with some reservations by recent European investigations, because of a disease apparently peculiar to that hemisphere to which oysters cultivated there are subject during the summer months, but the symptoms noted have not been found in this country to any appreciable extent and to little, if any, greater degree in summer than at other AVERAGE GROWTH OF NATIVE OYSTERS (1) One year (2) Two years (3) Six years (4) Eight years An illustration of four oysters of various sizes, each labeled with a number. seasons. In some sections of the United States, oysters have indeed always been eaten as freely in summer as in winter without any bad effects being noted. A valuable peculiarity of oysters is the ease with which their lives can be sustained for a long time after being removed from their native element. Placed in a cool damp place, with the deep shell down and occasionally sprinkled with brackish water, they may be kept alive and in good condition for weeks. This tenacity is attributed to the liquor in the shells, which serves to sustain the respiratory currents. Turtle Rock, Newport River, showing a section of tonging area (From a photograph taken at very low tide) An illustration of a bed of oysters. When removed from the shell or "shucked," the oyster may still be kept in edible condition for several days, but it is then necessary to remove its liquor, for, although this is the medium by which existence is sustained while in the shell, it has been found to have the opposite effect after shucking. Shucked oysters which are to be transported any considerable distance, are carefully washed, frequently in five or six waters, until no particle of any substance but the bivalve itself remains. Thus prepared, packed in air-tight receptacles and kept cold, they may be held eight to ten days without injuring their flavor or otherwise affecting them as an article of food. Oysters should always be kept in a cool place, but never where there is any danger of freezing. The Color Page of OYSTERS faces page 436. OYSTER CRABS. See reference in article on CRABS. OYSTER PLANT or Salsify: a vegetable, native to Europe and now generally grown in this country, chiefly for its long and tapering root, which is white and fleshy in texture and contains a large proportion of milky-white juice. It owes its name to its resemblance in flavor, when cooked, to that of the oyster. There are two main varieties, the "White" and the "Black," distinguished by the color of the outside skin, the meat of both types being white. The Black Salsify is also known as Scorzonera. The best market season is during July and August, the home supply being supplemented by imports from Europe, principally from Belgium and Germany. Oyster Plant is prepared in various ways--half-boiled and grated fine, made into small flat balls, dipped in a batter and fried like oysters--or stewed like carrots, etc. The young flower stalks, if cut in the spring of the second year, may be dressed and served like asparagus, which they resemble in flavor. The white part of the stalk and the young top leaves, if well bleached, make an excellent salad. PADDY: a name applied to rice before the hull has been removed (see RICE). PALM OIL: is made from the oily, generally red, pulp surrounding the nuts of several varieties of the low thick-trunked Oil Palm, found in Africa and South America. When fresh, it is generally orange-yellow and of pleasing odor. The color changes with age to red or dirty white, and old stock and inferior grades obtained by local methods of fermentation, are rank in flavor and disagreeable in smell prior to refining. Palm Kernel, or Palm Nut, Oil: is obtained by expression or chemical extraction from the kernels of the same fruit. It is generally white or pink and of agreeable odor and taste, resembling cocoanut oil and being frequently substituted for it. PALM TREES: endogenous plants, native to tropical regions, often growing to great height and generally with straight bare stems and tops of constantly growing, long green leaves. Mark Twain likened them to "huge feather-dusters." No other genus of plants has been so generous a provider for the needs of mankind. The two types most important to civilization are the Date and the Cocoanut. PALMETTO, or Cabbage Palm: a palm growing freely in the Southern States. The young leaf buds are eaten like cabbage and are very delicate in flavor. The mature leaves are used in hat manufacture. PANCAKES. The pancake is probably the oldest form of bread. Ancient ceremonies connected with it are still practiced in some places, although, generally speaking, their first significance long ago passed into oblivion. The most widely observed is the popular custom in many communities of eating them on Shrove Tuesday, which, especially in France, often develops into a veritable pancake feast. English, American and French pancakes all have distinctively national characteristics. The old-fashioned English type is the lightest of all, as the batter is mixed with ale and allowed to rise. This method also makes the English pancake thicker than the American. It is properly served flat, as also is the American, instead of folded like the French, piping hot, dusted with pulverized sugar and sprinkled with lemon juice. The American "batter cake" is usually raised by means of baking powder or yeast, but not with ale nor to the same extent as the English. French pancakes contain no leavening material other than the eggs which are included in the best receipts--it is only their thinness that prevents them from being tough. They are generally spread with jam or jelly, rolled up omelet fashion, covered with sugar and glazed by melting the sugar in an oven or branding with a red-hot iron. OYSTER PLANT (Salsify) A color illustration of a plant with a long tapered root and tall, thin leaves, shown buried in the earth. An inlaid cut shows the plant alone. PANCREAS. See remarks in article on SWEETBREAD. PAPAW, Paw-Paw, Papaya. As the result of an erroneous impression that they are related, there are two entirely different fruits known under the name of "Papaw." One is a wild fruit of the middle United States; the other is a tropical product. The North American Papaw is shaped somewhat like a short banana, but thicker. When ripe, it contains a yellowish pulp which resembles an overripe muskmelon in taste. It is excellent cooked, but opinions are divided as to its desirability for eating raw--some people pronounce it delicious, but its peculiar flavor is not generally appreciated. The tropical Papaw, supplied to American markets chiefly from Florida and the West Indies, is about the size of a cantaloupe, elongated in shape and with a thick, greenish or dull-orange roughly corrugated skin. It is eaten raw with salt, being agreeable in flavor when at its best, and also cooked and pickled, particularly the last-named. It is especially noteworthy for the character of its juice, which includes a principle known as "Papain," which has much the same digestive effect as pepsin, and also "fibrine," a principle rarely found outside the animal kingdom which has been described as "blood without color." Papaw Tree, Honolulu An illustration of the top of a tree with long, spiky leaves bearing a cluster of large oblong fruits. Water containing a few drops of papaw juice is said to possess the property of imparting tenderness to tough meat immersed in it for a few minutes. PAPER: was first made at Nuremberg in the year 1390; in England, in 1450, and in America, near Philadelphia, in 1690. It was probably known in China 2,000 years ago. Modern paper is manufactured from a great variety of articles--wood, rags, rope, etc.--reduced to a pulp. Bag-paper is made principally from wood pulp, the wood being converted by either mechanical or chemical means. Mechanically-made pulp consists of the wood ground up, generally by water pressure, and then pressed into thick sheets or "blankets." When chemically treated, the wood is cut into chips and treated with sulphurous or other acid. The pulp finally appears in "blankets" as from the mechanical process. The next step is the mixing of different kinds of pulp to produce the desired grades of paper, followed by "beating," in which the fibres are drawn out and the pulp again thoroughly mixed, various chemicals being added for "size" and color, etc. The "stock" is then ready for the paper machine, where the fibres are shaken on moving wire cloth, the greater part of the water being thus removed and the fibres so interlocked as to obtain the desired strength. Next comes the drying, a very important process--thorough dryness is essential, yet paper that is overdried is brittle and entirely unsuitable for bag purposes, etc. Paper is put up in reams, containing when full count twenty quires of twenty-four sheets each. It is sold by count, but is usually short of the standard number of sheets called for by the ream, quire, etc. Its quality for bags, etc., is easily tested by its strength in comparison with its weight. See also BAGS and WAXED PAPER. PAPRIKA, called also Hungarian Pepper and Sweet Cayenne Pepper: is the powdered flesh of a long large-fruited variety of capsicum, grown principally in Hungary and Spain but also to an increasing extent here. It is reand and mildly pungent. Paprika Peppers. Whole dried fruits as they appear when ready for market An illustration of two long tapered peppers. The several grades are determined by the selection of the peppers and their treatment both before and after grinding. Pods of especially reddish color and mild flavor are considered the choicest. Sharpness of taste denotes inferiority. Paprika is a very valuable spice for flavoring dishes and is almost universally liked even on the first use. It should always be kept dry. PARADISE NUT. (see Color Page opposity 410): a sweet oily nut resembling the Brazil Nut, but with a thinner, smoother shell, the fruit of a large forest tree growing in the Amazon valley. The nuts are formed inside a large urn-shaped shell, commonly known as a "Monkey Pot," similar in construction to that enclosing Brazil Nuts but generally much larger. Paradise Nuts and the "Monkey Pot" in which they develop (one-fifth average size) An illustration of two seed-filled fruits, shaped roughly like cut diamonds. The high cost and comparative scarcity of Paradise Nuts are attributable to the fact that when the mature pod falls to the ground, the natural gas formed inside blows out the neatly fitting lid which nature has fashioned for the top of the urn or "pot," scattering many of the nuts among the dense tropical undergrowth and at the same time emitting a characteristic report which brings all the monkeys in the neighborhood rushing to the feast! PARAFFIN, Paraffin Wax: a whitish waxy substance, tasteless and almost odorless, obtained as a by-product in the refining of petroleum. It is employed in a great many trades and professions, its uses being almost innumerable. It is best known to the average person as an easy and efficient sealer of preserve jars, as a substitute for wax in ironing and for other purposes in the family laundry, for waxing floors, etc. It is employed in creameries to coat the inside of wooden butter packages; by pickle makers for similar treatment of barrels, kegs, etc.; by packers for coating hams, etc., and in the manufacture of candles, etc. For the sealing of preserve glasses and bottles, paraffin is simply melted and poured on top of the preserve--it forms a cake which makes an air-tight seal with no further labor to the housewife. This use has become very popular. Paraffin must not be kept near steam pipes or radiators, or in the sun. See also WAXED PAPER. PARCHMENT PAPER. See under WAXED PAPER. PARMESAN: the most popular grated cheese. See CHEESE. PARR: a young salmon. Up to the age of two years the salmon has dark markings and is without the silvery lustre which characterizes it when mature. See also special article on SALMON. PARSLEY: a favorite kitchen herb, popular for garnishing and flavoring, for the latter purpose being sold both fresh and dried. Common Parsley is said to be native to Egypt but it is now thoroughly naturalized both here and in several European countries. The variety chiefly grown is the curly leafed type. The finest received in the Eastern markets comes from Bermuda. In addition to its flavoring qualities, parsley contains an essential oil which is mildly stimulating. Hamburg Parsley, or Turnip-Rooted Parsley, is a special variety grown in Europe for its large, white root, which is cooked in the same way as the parsnip and tastes somewhat like celeriac. Common Parsley An illustration of several sprigs of parsley. PARSNIP: a vegetable of the parsley family, which grows wild in many parts of Europe and Asia. The Romans are credited with having been the first to cultivate it. It is one of the most nutritious roots, popular for table purposes and surpassed only by the beet as a food for cattle. In parts of England and Ireland a "wine" is made from the fermented roots. Parsnips make their best growth very late in the fall and it is customary to leave part of the crop in the ground over the winter, the frost action improving the flavor. Dug roots should be kept in a cool cellar or similar place, protected both from light and air currents. A small illustration of a root vegetable with long rounded leaves. PARTNERSHIP. A partnership exists wherever two or more persons combine their labor or capital, or both, to secure the profits to be produced thereby. The terms upon which this is to be effected are regulated by agreement between the parties and are generally, although not necessarily, expressed in a written instrument called "Articles of Partnership." Partners are agents for each other, and any one may bind the firm in transactions within the scope of the firm's business, and each one, whether he be known to the world or not, as in the case of a "dormant" partner, is individually liable for the firm's debts. That one who shares in the profits of a business must share in its losses, is a general principle. No arrangements among the partners themselves can alter these facts to the prejudice of third parties, hence no one should enter a partnership without reflecting that he commits the whole of his fortune to the integrity and intelligence of his associates. On the other hand, any person dealing with a partner in any matter within the scope of the firm's business, knows that he has the security not only of the firm's property, but also of the property of the individual partners. Although it is a general rule that only those who share in the firm's profits can be held liable as partners, one without share may be made liable by allowing his name to be used or himself to be held out to the world as a partner, so it is essential that one retiring from a firm should not only advertise the dissolution in the newspapers, but should also send special notice of his retirement, by circular, to all persons who have been in the habit of dealing with the firm. There are statutes in a majority of states which enable persons to contribute money loans or personal property as "special" partners, and limit their liability to their actual contribution. This is often called a "limited partnership" and the firm name announces it as "Brown & Smith, Limited." Legal advice is most important in entering into any such relation. PARTRIDGE. In different parts of the United States, the title "partridge" is given to various American birds, but in strict parlance it is applicable only to the European bird of that name. Recent attempts to propagate the true partridge have encouraged the expectation that it will in time be added to the list of American game birds. There are two principal varieties--the Grey and the Red-legged or "French Partridge." A large number of killed birds are imported every year for local consumption. Young birds may be distinguished by their tender unworn beaks and sharp toes and by the fine skin over their legs. Good general usage now applies the name "American Partridge" to the native "Ruffed Grouse" (see GROUSE). PASTES. The term "Paste" is popularly employed in a great diversity of ways. Among the articles so styled are (1) for culinary purposes--glutenous dough mixtures similar to macaroni made in fancy forms, such as letters, animals, stars, etc., generally used in soups; (2) in candy-making--stiff forms, such as Jujube Paste, Fig Paste, etc.; (3) Fish Pastes and Meat Pastes (see POTTED MEATS); (4) Furniture Paste, or Cream, composed of beeswax and turpentine, etc., for cleansing and polishing furniture, and (5) an adhesive mixture generally, or chiefly, of flour and water. PASTILLES: a class title for lozenges, gum drops and similar confections. In medical practice, the word has other specific meanings. PASTRY: a class name for a variety of articles made of light, puffy dough, as pies, tarts, etc. The finest and richest kind is usually termed Puff Paste, which requires considerable skill, as its success largely depends on lightness of hand in kneading. PâTéS: meat preparation, both domestic and imported from France, Germany and elsewhere, put up in earthenware jars, tins and boxes. They are so called because they were originally sold in pastry or "pâté" form. The most famous of all is the "Pâté de Foie Gras" or goose liver pâté, described under FOIE GRAS. Other noted examples are the chicken and ham pâtés from Rouen, France; those of truffled game and poultry from Périgueux, Angoulème and Nérac; woodcock, from Montreuil; duck from Amiens; game from Pithiviers, Chartres and Nogent-le-Rotrou, and fish from Abbeville. Pâtés should always be thoroughly chilled before serving. PAW-PAW. See matter under title of PAPAW. PEA. The Pea is one of our most valuable and most nutritious vegetables. Those cultivated for table use are grouped in two main classes--"edible-podded," and "tough-podded" or shelling. Tough-podded peas may be divided into two chief types, those with smooth seeds and those with wrinkled, the former being the more attractive to the eye but the latter generally the sweeter and therefore more desirable. Edible-podded peas are little cultivated here, but in Europe large quantities are grown for use in the same way as string beans. The Cowpea, or "field pea" of the South, belongs to the bean family (see BEANS). Peas should always be kept in a dry, cool place. Tough-podded or Shelling Peas. An illustration of pea pods hanging from a vine. Canned Green Peas. Green peas are extensively canned both in this country and Europe. The market offerings vary very much in quality, many of the cheaper packings described as "green peas" being merely dried peas soaked in water and canned--a practice often resorted to by unscrupulous parties when prices are high. Careful sorting and separating precede the putting up of the better grades. The general formula calls for equal quantities of brine and green peas in each can, with sometimes the addition of sugar, the sealed cans being cooked and sterilized in similar manner to other canned vegetables. The domestic output is graded as "Fancy," "Standard," "Seconds," etc. The most expensive grades are those imported from France. Peas preserved by the French process retain their natural flavor but are artificially colored, as in preparation their original green hue becomes slightly yellow. The coloring process consists in placing them before canning in a solution containing sulphate of copper in the proportion generally of one gram to a liter of water. "Extra fine" peas are allowed to remain in the liquid for eight to ten minutes; "fine" peas, seven to eight minutes; "medium" peas, six minutes, and "coarse" peas, five minutes. The peas so treated resume and retain a fine green color, hence their name of Petits Pois reverdis. French peas are also prepared in a number of special forms--the most important of which is Petits Pois au Beurre, "small, or new, peas in butter." Ordinary canned peas require seasoning before service, but in this style the seasoning is added before canning and they require nothing but heating. A well-trained palate is needed to distinguish them from the fresh vegetable. "Evaporated" Green and "Split" Ripe Peas. During the last few years the market has taken an increasing quantity of evaporated green peas, both whole and "split," domestic and imported. They are sold at much lower prices than the canned goods and they make a very pleasing dish. The peas after hulling are steamed, then slowly dried in the evaporator by a current of warm air not above 162° Fahr., and finally screened and graded by size. The smallest, being the most savory, bring the highest prices. There is also a fair consumption of the ripe pea, hulled and "split," but it merits much wider appreciation. Its food value is very high (see article on FOOD VALUES). In Europe, it is as largely consumed as the dried bean. When preparing dried or evaporated peas for the table, they should be soaked in cold water for eight or ten hours, during which they will resume their normal size and moisture. The subsequent boiling should be long and slow to make them easily digestible, but they are well worth the trouble. Pea, or Pease, Soup is especially agreeable to the palate if a little meat--fresh-beef, ham or salt pork, etc.--is boiled in it. PEA FLOUR: offers the nutritive value of the dried ripe pea in convenient form for easy preparation. As however it is easily adulterated, caution is advisable when purchasing. It is used in the preparation of pea soup, as a thickener of other soups or added to them in the form of small cakes or balls rendered cohesive by mixing with a little fat--and in many other ways. "Erbswurst," one of the staples of the German army and famous as a condensed food of high merit, is a mixture of pea flour, fat and condiments. PEACH: a fruit belonging to the almond family, native to Persia but now cultivated in all temperate climates. There are a great many varieties, capable of general classification under "White" and "Yellow," both types being again divisible into "Freestones," with flesh pulling free from the stone, and "Clingstones," with the flesh adhering to it. The "Peen-to," in shape somewhat like a tomato, is a Chinese variety now largely grown in some semi-tropical sections of North America. In addition to their consumption as a fresh fruit, vast quantities of peaches are canned, dried and evaporated, principally the first-named. Lemon and Orange "clings" and Crawford "freestones" are among the most popular types for canning. Dried peaches come from California, the annual product amounting to from twenty to thirty thousand tons. The most widely sold of evaporated peaches are those from Delaware. Peeled dried or evaporated peaches retailed in cartons bring double the price of the bulk product. Fresh peaches are imported from Bermuda toward the end of April and realize fancy prices at that time. They come from the South during June, and from New PEACHES A color illustration of the branch of a peach tree, bearing several fruits. An inlaid cut shows half of a peach fruit, cut away to show the interior of the fruit and the pit. Jersey about the middle of July. The season is at its height in July and August and ends in October. They should be turned over as speedily as possible, as they quickly deteriorate. They keep best and longest--if properly selected and crated, for two to four weeks--in temperature of 34° to 36° Fahr. Above that, the process of ripening continues and soon spoils them. They should not be eaten raw unless thoroughly ripe, but in that condition they are accounted among the most wholesome and "safest" of all fruits for sick and well alike. Among other commercial products of importance obtained from the peach are Almond Oil, from the seeds or kernels, Peach brandy, Peach water and Persicot (see LIQUEURS). PEACH BRANDY: is obtained by distilling the fermented juice of the fruit. Its consumption was once large, but it has greatly diminished within recent years. PEACH "PALM": a South American tree bearing a fruit that suggests the apricot in appearance though it is somewhat triangular in form. It is generally eaten roasted and otherwise cooked. The dried and ground meal is also made into a cake of pleasing flavor. PEACH WATER: is produced by bruising fresh and peach leaves into a pulp with water, and then distilling. It has the smell and taste of bitter almonds and is used for flavoring. PEACOCK. During the Middle Ages, the peacock frequently graced the banquet table, cooked whole and served with its own gorgeous plumage as garnishing, but modern taste has condemned the flesh of the mature bird as unpleasant and in every way undesirable. There exists, however, a limited demand for the young peafowl, with preference for the young peahen. The flesh is abundant in proportion to the bone, but its quality is a matter of individual opinion--some declare it to be very pleasing and delicate, others decry it as tasteless and dry. PEAFOWL. See matter under preceding caption of PEACOCK. PEANUTS. The plant which produces the fruit generally known as the Peanut in this country, and as the Groundnut in Europe, is one of a class which bury their pods in the earth to ripen, instead of raising them into the air (see Color Page opposite 458). In order to effect this, the flower-stalk, holding the very young pod, gradually curves downward after the flower has passed away and finally forces its point perpendicularly into the soil. When it has penetrated to a sufficient depth, the pod begins to swell, and when ripe becomes the oblong, rugged, pale brown fruit, usually containing two seeds, so well known to consumers. The peanut is native to Brazil, but is to-day cultivated in all sub-tropical and tropical countries. About 300 million pounds are annually raised in the United States, and a total of nearly 600 million pounds in Africa, Spain, China, Japan, Java, etc. The American crop is consumed principally in the form of the whole nut, peanut butter and peanut candy. There is also a growing market for peanut oil, peanut meal, etc. A few million pounds of the American product are annually exported, but to offset this is a small but steady importation, principally of the small but especially delicate Spanish type, both whole and shelled. The 400 or 500 million pounds sent to Europe every year from Africa and Asia are chiefly converted into oils and flour in factories at Marseilles, France--and in lesser quantities at other points on the Continent and in England. Retailers find it profitable to cater to the increasing demand for the nuts themselves, fresh roasted and salted, and products such as peanut butter, both for regular home consumption and for party and picnic purposes. The commercial history of the peanut in this country commences with the Civil War. Before that time, only a few garden peanuts were grown in Virginia and the Carolinas for family use--almost as curiosities. During the war, soldiers discovered that they made excellent food, and the result was that in the years succeeding the end of hostilities the acreage assigned to them steadily increased, until to-day when the crop employs nearly 200,000 persons and covers between 300,000 and 400,000 acres. In parts of Virginia and North Carolina, it is of more importance that corn or wheat. Virginia and North Carolina produce more than half of the present total crop, but every year sees greater attention devoted to it in other States, especially Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, Texas, Arkansas and Mississippi. The best known types of American Peanuts are the Flat or Running, or "Virginia" Flat and Running, the Bunch, "Spanish" and North Carolina or "African." The most widely planted is the Flat or Running type, a large nut excellent for general commercial purposes. The Bunch is similar in nut characteristics, its name referring to its more upright method of growth. The "Spanish" nut is similar to the imported Spanish variety--small in size but very mild and savory, and the choicest for eating raw or cooked, candy making, etc. The North Carolina, or "African," is similar to the Flat or Running variety, but the kernels contain a larger percentage of oil. Tennessee has two varieties, known as the White and the Red. Both somewhat resemble the Flat or Running variety, except that the Red gives kernels covered with dark red skin. The Georgia Red is similar to the Tennessee Red. As American trade demands a bright-colored shell and the pod assumes the color of the ground in which it grows, the soil most desirable is a light, sandy loam. Lime is an essential ingredient and is added when lacking, and the soil must be kept light and friable or the ovary cannot bury itself and develop into a pod. Planting begins in May or June. The nuts form the seed, and about two bushels are required for an acre. The plants get above the earth and begin to leaf out within a few weeks. The pods mature during September or October, the harvesting season in some localities continuing until November. White peanuts are harvested by running a furrow on each side of the row with a bull-tongue plow or a pea digger, so as to dislocate the roots. The vines are then gently lifted by hand, the dirt shaken off, and laid on the ground to wilt. Later, they are brought together and stacked. The Red nuts are more easily harvested than the White as they have but few roots and the nuts adhere closely about the stem. In loose land, they may be pulled up without running furrows. The stacks are usually allowed to stand to dry for about four weeks, the nuts being then picked off, either by hand or machinery, the former generally obtaining higher prices. PEANUT A color illustration of a peanut plant rooted in the ground. An inlaid cut shows two peanuts, one labeled "FRESH" and remaining whole in the shell, the other labeled "ROASTED" with its shell opened to display the nutmeats inside. The peanuts reach the factory in sacks containing from 90 to 100 pounds each. They are first dumped in hoppers and taken through cleaning machinery, which removes all the vines, sticks and sand, and are then graded in sizes by screens and powerful fans. The cleaning and scouring processes are especially important in preparing the product intended for bag trade, as those with clean glistening pods command from 15% to 20% more than others equally good in kernels but of less attractive appearance. The screen-grading is followed by hand-sorting, and those which pass the final inspection are carried by a chain apparatus into bags of about 100 pounds each. The nuts intended for manufacture into peanut butter or for confectionery, etc., are next roasted, generally in the shell, and are then shelled and blanched and again passed through fans which drive out or draw up the hulls, skins, etc., going finally to moving tables where all faulty kernels are picked out by hand. The good sound kernels thus obtained are distributed, by machinery, to the various departments. Supplementing the principal market forms of the peanut, is an extensive trade in the by-products. The little germs or hearts sifted out of the ground nuts in the manufacture of peanut butter, etc., make excellent poultry food. The roasted hulls ground into meal are an excellent food for stock--analyzing about 11% protein and from 8% to 9% fat. The red skins removed from the shelled nuts are also well up in protein and fats. Even the wilted plants left in the fields form valuable fertilizer when left to rot before plowing under, being prolific in nodules of bacteria. PEANUT BUTTER: is made by grinding roasted peanuts to a paste, the germs being removed in the process. It is very nutritious, containing the full food value of the peanut in an easily edible form. An average of analyses shows approximately 29.3 protein matter, 46.5 fat and 17.1 carbohydrates (see article on FOODS). It is consumed both as an agreeable "nut food" and as a "spread" for bread, or bread and butter. PEANUT MEAL and Flour: consist of ground peanuts from which the greater part of the oil has been extracted. The finer grades are sold in large quantities to the bakery and candy trades for use in the manufacture of various kinds of cakes, breads and confections. Economists urge its more extended use as a general food article, as it is very rich in protein and carbohydrates, especially the former. In Europe, the flour is baked into a bread which has a large sale in Germany and France. The lower grades are used for stock feed, etc. PEANUT OIL: properly refined, is an excellent table, cooking and preserving oil, and is recommended for use medicinally when pure vegetable fat is required. In France, it is extensively used in the packing of the cheaper qualities of sardines and numerous other food products. It is also employed in many other industries, in the making of fine silks because it does not readily turn rancid, and as a lubricant for fine machinery because it does not "gum," etc. A bushel of selected, shelled African peanuts will yield about a gallon of good quality oil suitable for such purposes. Subsequent pressings give in addition an inferior quality known in some trade circles as "butterine oil," employed chiefly in soap manufacture and as a basis for liniments. The American Peanut, though superior for edible purposes, does not yield as large a quantity of oil as the true African Peanut. Present experiments are toward a combination of the flavor of the American nut with the oil content of the African. PEANUT ROASTERS: are seen in increasing numbers in groceries. They are now made so handsomely that they are really ornamental as well as profitable. They take up little room and require little attention. PEARS. The pear is of all temperate fruits one of the most susceptible to improvement by cultivation. There are to-day more than one thousand varieties, ranging from the tiny Seckel to the marvelous fruit grown in the Island of Jersey, one of the Channel Islands between England and France. These Jersey pears frequently bring a price of $72.00 or more a dozen in the London market. Only a few of the monsters can though be grown on each tree. The pear grows wild in some parts of southern and eastern Europe and in many places throughout Asia. It is not an easy tree to start in an orchard, but when once well established, it is usually very vigorous and frequently lives to a great age. There are a number in existence known to be more than four hundred years old. The states of Washington and California produce the largest pears found in the American market, but connoisseurs are inclined to favor those of the Middle West and Eastern states as having usually a finer flavor. Among the best varieties for general consumption are the Anjou, Bartlett, Bell Flower, Bergamot, Beurre Rose, Black Grant, Grimes Golden, La Comice, Nelis, Red Astrakhan, Roman Beauty, Seckel, Talman and Willow Twig. The fruit are generally gathered about two weeks before they are ripe, as most varieties are too delicate for transportation when thoroughly mature. The ripening can be delayed for months, if desired, by cold storage. If, on the other hand, the stock needed for immediate retail purposes is received hard and green, the fruit should be placed in shallow trays and carefully ripened at a temperature of 60° to 70° Fahr. Excessive heat must be guarded against, or the fruit may rot inside even though the exterior give no warning of the change. Crowding also should be avoided as much as possible. PEARL MOSS: one of the many names for Irish Moss or CARRAGHEEN (which see). PEARLASH: a somewhat purified form of crude carbonate of potash (see POTASH). PEARLED BARLEY: the polished decorticated whole grain. See BARLEY. PECAN NUT: a species of hickory nut, extensively grown in the West and South of the United States. It is agreeable in flavor, with a very sweet and oily meat, and, in the best "paper-shell" varieties, a shell that is easily cracked. It is generally olive-shaped, though some types are sharp-pointed and others blunt and somewhat four-angled. It ripens about December and is seasonable until April. See Color Page opposite 414 and also NUTS ( Food Values ). PECTIN: a sweet "jelly" which is formed in fruit pulps during the ripening process and the principle which causes cooked fruit to thicken and jellify. It is developed from pectose, which gives the characteristic hardness to many unripe fruits. PEMMICAN: an invention of the American Indian, is lean beef, or venison, dried hard, pounded to a powder and pressed into cakes. Sugar, melted fat, etc., are sometimes BARTLETT PEARS A color illustration of the branch of a pear tree bearing two fruits. An inlaid cut shows a single fruit cut in half to display its interior. added in manufacture. It is now a commercial article, manufactured on a considerable scale both here and in Australia. It is especially suitable for Artic exploration, etc. PENANG SPICES: a term occasionally applied to a mixture of various spices, employed in cooking, preserving, etc. PENGUIN EGGS: the eggs of the penguin, a bird found in all high southern latitudes, but in especially large numbers along the coasts of Cape Colony, S. A., and the adjacent islands. They resemble large plovers' eggs in texture and flavor and are very rich--so much so that if kept for any length of time it is necessary to turn them over every few days to prevent the yolk from settling. They are eaten by all classes in South Africa, but the expense and risk of transportation makes them a luxury when exported to other countries. They are eaten boiled--twenty minutes being the best boiling time--baked, fried, in salads, etc. PENNYROYAL: See general article on MINT. PEPINO, or Melon pear: a fruit native to South America. It is generally of about the shape and size of a goose egg, of lemon color streaked with violet. The interior is a solid pulp of light yellow, resembling a muskmelon in flavor. Pepino An illustration of a tear-shaped fruit attached to a branch with long narrow leaves. PEPPER. The Black or White powdered pepper used as a condiment is the ground fruit of the Piper nigrum L., a perennial climbing shrub, native to the forests of western and southern India but for centuries cultivated also on the Malay Peninsula and in Sumatra, Java, Ceylon and Siam, and to a limited extent in Borneo and various other tropical countries. The fruit is a small, round berry, the "peppercorn," growing in loosely packed clusters of from twenty to thirty, closely attached to a common fruit stalk (see Color Page opposite 468), a good vine producing an annual average of from one to two pounds. Pieces of the stalk may often be found in whole black pepper and examination will show the depressions formed where the berries were attached. The shrub or vine grows to a height of eight to twelve feet and is supported either by poles or trees. The peppercorns are exported in bags of 64 to 128 lbs. Black Pepper: consists of the dried immature berries of the shrub, gathered as soon as one or two on the clusters commence to turn red. After removal from the stem, they are dried in the sun or near a mild fire, the outer fleshy portion of the berry shriveling in the process, turning brown or black and becoming hard, brittle and adherent to the stony, inner portion, thus forming a hardened wrinkled cortex. Among the principal commercial varieties listed in a recent government report are Malabar (Mangalore, Tellichery, Alleppey, etc.), Singapore, Penang and Trang, Acheen (or Sumatra or West Coast) and Lampong (or East Coast), named either from the place of cultivation or that of shipment. Malabar Peppers are those from the Malabar Coast of India. "Mangalore" peppercorns are very large, twice the size of ordinary pepper, of a deep black, very clean and uniform, giving when ground a powder of greenish-black appearance. "Tellicherry" and "Alleppey" are sun-dried and light-brown. Sinapore Pepper is that grown on the Malay Peninsula, principally in the southern extremity known as the State of Johore. It constitutes a considerable portion of all the pepper raised and, because of its dark color and fairly uniform quality, is a product of good appearance. It is not, however, so highly regarded for grinding purposes because of its smoky odor. The pepper and gambier plantations of Johore are usually under one management, and the pepper is dried by placing it on mats suspended over the kettles in which the gambier is boiled down to make the vegetable extract. The smoke from the furnace underneath dries the pepper but at the same time imparts to it a distinctly smoky smell, which is retained to a considerable degree even after the pepper is ground. It is, indeed, one of the tests by which the pepper merchant determines whether a given sample is Singapore or not. Trang and Penang Pepper, shipped from Penang, is grown in either Java or Sumatra. It is of especially rich color. Acheen, Sumatra or West Coast, are names applied to the pepper obtained from Acheen, the western extremity of the Island of Sumatra. Lampong Pepper or East Coast, is grown on the east end of the Island of Sumatra, near the Straits of Sunda. As a general rule, the heavier the peppercorns for size, the better the grade. They should be firm and round, clean and uniform in appearance and not too much furrowed. Acheen Pepper has been standardized by general agreement and the four chief grades are now determined by their specific gravity. "A" grade weighs at least 4 lbs. 13 oz. to the imperial gallon or 481 grams per liter. "B" grade weighs at least 4 lbs. 5 oz. to the imperial gallon or 431 grams per liter. "C" grade weighs at least 3 lbs. 13 oz. to the imperial gallon or 381 grams per liter. "D" grade weighs at least 3 lbs. 5 oz. to the imperial gallon or 356 grams per liter. (Dust not to exceed 3% in any class.) The many advantages of this method will probably result in its extension to all Black Peppers in the near future. The other varieties described in this article are generally superior to Acheen and give much higher results on the weight test. Alleppey, for example, sometimes goes as high as 6 lbs. 12 oz. to the Imperial gallon and contains practically no dust; Tellicherry ranges from 6 lbs. to 6 lbs. 12 oz. and is equally clean; Lampong averages about 6 lbs., with a dust percentage of 1 1/2% to 3%, and Singapore from 5 lbs. to 5 oz. to 5 lbs. 8 oz., the dust though ranging up to 4%. U. S. Standard Black Pepper is black pepper free from added pepper shells, pepper dust and other pepper by-products, and containing not less than 6% of non-volatile ether extract; not less than 25% of starch by the diastase method; not less than 28% of starch by direct inversion; not more than 7% of total ash; not more than 2% of ash insoluble in hydrochloric acid, and not more then 15% of crude fibre. One hundred parts of the non-volatile ether extract contain not less than 3.25 parts of nitrogen. White Pepper: is practically the same product as Black Pepper except that the outer shell or pericarp of the berry is removed to a greater or less extent by friction, following soaking in water. It is sometimes made at the plantations, but just as frequently by manufacturers who buy the peppercorns in open market. Some manufacturers prefer, for White Pepper, berries that have been allowed to ripen before picking as they are more easily decorticated, but this is not an universal rule. Decorticated White Pepper is the term applied to the product which, in