Toast and Water (No. 463)

The Cook's Oracle; and Housekeeper's ... · Kitchiner, William · 1817
Source
The Cook's Oracle; and Housekeeper's Manual
Status
success · extracted 13 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (7)
Instructions (9)
  1. Cut a crust of bread off a stale loaf, about twice the thickness toast is usually cut.
  2. Toast it carefully until it be completely browned all over, but not at all blackened or burnt.
  3. Pour as much boiling water as you wish to make into drink, into the jug.
  4. Put the toast into it, and let it stand till it is quite cold.
  5. The fresher it is the better.
Expeditious Method
  1. Put the bread into a mug, and just cover it with boiling water.
  2. Let it stand till cold.
  3. Then fill it up with cold spring-water.
  4. Pour it through a fine sieve.
Original Text
Toast and Water.—(No. 463.) Cut a crust of bread off a stale loaf, about twice the thickness toast is usually cut: toast it carefully until it be completely browned all over, but not at all blackened or burnt; pour as much boiling water as you wish to make into drink, into the jug; put the toast into it, and let it stand till it is quite cold: the fresher it is the better. Obs.—A roll of thin fresh-cut lemon, or dried orange-peel, or some currant-jelly (No. 475*), apples sliced or roasted, &c. infused with the bread, are grateful additions. N.B. If the boiling water be poured on the bread it will break it, and make the drink grouty. N.B. This is a refreshing summer drink; and when the proportion of the fluids is destroyed by profuse perspiration, may be drunk plentifully. Let a large jug be made early in the day, it will then become warmed by the heat of the air, and may be drunk without danger; which water, cold as it comes from the well, cannot in hot weather. Or, To make it more expeditiously, put the bread into a mug, and just cover it with boiling water; let it stand till cold,[294] then fill it up with cold spring-water, and pour it through a fine sieve. Obs.—The above is a pleasant and excellent beverage, grateful to the stomach, and deserves a constant place by the bed-side.
Notes