MPIWG

Recipe books are common in print and manuscript is our period. They offer how-to instructions on preparing a wide range of medicines. There is considerable overlap with cookery, with books offering recipes for individual dishes, for medicines, and for preserving; many of the preparation processes were the same.

The compleat servant-maid

[author not specified],
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The compleat servant-maid

[author not specified],
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A choice collection of rare secrets and experiments in philosophy, as also rare and unheard…

Digby, Kenelm
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The accomplish’d ladies delight in preserving, physick, beautifying, and cookery

[author not specified],
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The accomplish’d ladies delight in preserving, physick, beautifying, and cookery

[author not specified],
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The Queens closet opened

[author not specified],
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The Queens closet opened

[author not specified],
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The marrow of chymical physick; or, The practice of making chymical medicines. Divided in three…

Thrasher, William
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The Kitchin-physician: or, A guide for good-housewives in maintaining their families in health…

K., T.
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The family-physician, and the house-apothecary. Containing I. Medicines against all such diseases people…

Harvey, Gideon
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