TARTS

Apple Tarts. 
Stew and strain the  apples,  add  cinnamon,   rose-water,   wine  and  sugar  to your taste, lay in  paste, royal,  squeeze thereon  orange juice --bake gently. 
Cramberries. 
Stewed, strained and sweetened, put into  paste No. 9,  and baked gently. 
Marmolade,  laid into  paste No. 1,  baked gently. 
Apricots,  must be neither pared, cut or stoned, but put in whole, and  sugar  sifted over them, as above. 
 
 
Orange or Lemon Tart. 
Take 6 large  lemons,  rub them well in  salt,  put them into  salt and water  and let rest 2 days, change them daily in fresh  water,  14 days, then cut slices and mince as fine as you can and boil them 2 or 3 hours till tender, then take 6  pippins,  pare, quarter and core them, boil in 1 pint  fair water  till the  pippins  break, then put the half of the  pippins,  with all the liquor to the  orange  or  lemon,  and add one pound  sugar,  boil all together one quarter of an hour, put into a  gallipot  and squeeze thereto a fresh  orange,  one spoon of which, with a spoon of the pulp of the  pippin,  laid into a thin  royal paste,  laid into small shallow pans or saucers, brushed with  melted butter,  and some superfine  sugar  sifted thereon, with a gentle baking, will be very good. 
 
Gooseberry Tart. 
Lay clean  berries  and sift over them  sugar,  then berries and  sugar  till a deep dish be filled, cover with  paste No. 9,  and bake some what more than other tarts. 
Grapes,  must be cut in two and stoned and done like a Gooseberry. 
 

American Cookery
Amelia Simmons
1798



Northampton
Massachusetts

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