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" The liquor must by no means be suffered to boil : it is known to be sufficiently heated when the scum begins to rise into blisters, which break into white froth, and appear in general in about forty minutes. "
Sketch of the Mosquito Shore, Including the Territory of Poyais ... - Page 233
by Thomas Strangeways - 1822 - 355 pages
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The History, Civil and Commercial, of the British Colonies in the West ...

Bryan Edwards - Botany - 1793 - 520 pages
...mucilage is capable of entangling. The heat is now •fuffered gradually to encreafe, until it riles to within a few degrees of the heat of boiling water. The liquor muft by no means be fuffered to boil : it is known to be fufficiently heated when the fcum begins to...
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The History of the Discovery and Settlement: To the Present Time, of North ...

William Fordyce Mavor - America - 1804 - 432 pages
...increases in force, a scum is thrown up, and the heat is suffered gradually to augment till it rises to within a few degrees of the heat of boiling water. The liquor is then left to cool and drawn off leaving the scum behind. The liquor is conveyed to the evaporating...
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Universal History, Ancient and Modern: From the Earliest Records of Time, to ...

William Fordyce Mavor - World history - 1805 - 410 pages
...increases in force, a scum is thrown up. and the heat is suffered gradually to augment, till it rises to within a few degrees of the heat of boiling water. The liquor is then left to cool and drawn off, leaving the scum behind. The liquor is conveyed to the evaporating...
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The History, Civil and Commercial, of the British Colonies in the ..., Volume 2

Bryan Edwards - Bahamas - 1807 - 646 pages
...sugar when it is potted or put into the hogshead. boiling water. The liquor must by no means CHAP. be suffered to boil : it is known to be sufficiently...into blisters, which break into white froth-, and appear in general in about forty minutes. The damper is then applied, and the fire extinguished; after...
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An History of Jamaica: With Observations on the Climate, Scenery, Trade ...

Robert Renny - Enslaved persons - 1807 - 368 pages
...mucilage is capable of entangling. The heat is now suffered gradually to increase, until it rises to within a few degrees of the heat of boiling water. The liquor is not suffered to boil ; for as soon as the scum begins to rise into blisters, and break into white...
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Hortus Jamaicensis, Or A Botanical Description,: (according to the Linnean ...

John Lunan - Botany - 1814 - 414 pages
...ouncei of tempci Ник ne- • ary to eifect bis paippsc on four hundred gallons of cane-liquor, . It is known to be sufficiently heated when the scum begins to rise in blisters, which break into white froth, ;mJ appear generally in about forty jiruutes. The tire is...
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The Dictionary of Merchandize and Nomenclature in All European Languages

C. H. Kauffman - Commerce - 1815 - 460 pages
...But if the liquor was suffered to boil with violence, the impurities would again incorporate with it. It is known to be sufficiently heated, when the scum begins to rise in blisters, which break into white froth. The fire is then suddenly extinguished, by means of a damper,...
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The History, Civil and Commercial, of the West Indies: With a ..., Volume 2

Bryan Edwards - 1819 - 638 pages
...sugar when it is potted or put into the hogshead. boiling water. The liquor must by no means CHAP. be suffered to boil : it is known to be sufficiently...rise into blisters, which break into white froth, and appear in general in about forty minutes. The damper is then applied, and the fire extinguished ; after...
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A Dictionary of Chemistry: On the Basis of Mr. Nicholson's, in ..., Volume 2

Andrew Ure - Chemistry - 1821 - 512 pages
...nearly rises to the heat of boiling water. The liquor, however, must by no mean* be euffered to boil. When the scum begins to rise into blisters, which break into white froth, and generally appear in about forty minutes, it is known to be sufficiently heat iirepihr rnn-« of impeHV-ct...
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History of Cultivated Vegetables: Comprising Their Botanical ..., Volume 2

Henry Phillips - Botany, Economic - 1822 - 440 pages
...But if the liquor was suffered to boil with violence, the impurities would again incorporate with it. It is known to be sufficiently heated when the scum begins to rise in blisters, which break into white froth, and appear generally in about forty minutes. The fire is...
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