Food Materials and Their AdulterationsEstes and Lauriat, 1886 - 183 sider |
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Side 52
Ellen Henrietta Richards. per cent . To the tannin is due the constipating effect of tea . The longer the tea leaves are ... sugar . The Russians add a few drops of lemon . Lo - Yu , a learned Chinese who lived somewhere about 700 A. D. ...
Ellen Henrietta Richards. per cent . To the tannin is due the constipating effect of tea . The longer the tea leaves are ... sugar . The Russians add a few drops of lemon . Lo - Yu , a learned Chinese who lived somewhere about 700 A. D. ...
Side 62
... cent . Hence , the ac- tion of coffee is not as deleterious to the coatings of the stomach as is that of tea . Coffee also contains sugar to five or seven per cent , which is all converted into caramel in roasting . The exhausted ...
... cent . Hence , the ac- tion of coffee is not as deleterious to the coatings of the stomach as is that of tea . Coffee also contains sugar to five or seven per cent , which is all converted into caramel in roasting . The exhausted ...
Side 80
... cent of starch and dextrine , about seven per cent each of sugar , mineral matter , and cellulose , one per cent of fat , and about fifteen per cent of albuminous or nitrogenous substances . These constituents are so proportioned as to ...
... cent of starch and dextrine , about seven per cent each of sugar , mineral matter , and cellulose , one per cent of fat , and about fifteen per cent of albuminous or nitrogenous substances . These constituents are so proportioned as to ...
Side 90
... sugar , 5.5 per cent ; milk fat , 4 per cent ; caseine , or curd , 4 per cent ; saline matter , 5 per cent . The fat is held in suspension in the liquid in the form of globules , of which it is estimated that there are about three and a ...
... sugar , 5.5 per cent ; milk fat , 4 per cent ; caseine , or curd , 4 per cent ; saline matter , 5 per cent . The fat is held in suspension in the liquid in the form of globules , of which it is estimated that there are about three and a ...
Side 91
Ellen Henrietta Richards. stituents , which are only about fourteen per cent of the weight ... sugar is added . In either case , the product is sold as condensed milk ... cent of fat . BUTTER . When cream or milk is agitated for some time ...
Ellen Henrietta Richards. stituents , which are only about fourteen per cent of the weight ... sugar is added . In either case , the product is sold as condensed milk ... cent of fat . BUTTER . When cream or milk is agitated for some time ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
acetic acetic acid adulteration alcohol amount animal article of diet Beef beet beverage boiling water bread butter called cane sugar carbonic acid cassia cause cells cent of sugar Cheese chemical chemist Chemistry cinnamon cocoa coffee color contain cooking copper corn meal cream of tartar detected dextrine dextrose digestive diseases dissolved drinking England examined Fehling's solution fermentation flavor flour food materials fruits germs ginger glucose gluten grain grams granulated grape sugar grinding ground hard water heat hence honey housekeeping husk infusion kernels less lime liquid maize meat metallic milk mill mustard nitrogenous substance nutmegs nutritious Oatmeal obtained pepper phosphate plant Potatoes pound powdered prepared present produced pure quantity rice salts samples seeds soda soluble solution spices starch sugar sucrose sulphate sweet syrup taste tests tion tumeric vegetable vessel vinegar water supply wheat wheat flour yeast
Populære avsnitt
Side 29 - Germ Theory of Disease," says, " This theory is, that many diseases are due to the presence and propagation in the system of minute organisms (ie, living beings) having no part or share in its normal economy.
Side 12 - We are always in these days endeavouring to separate the two; we want one man to be always thinking, and another to be always working, and we call one a gentleman, and the other an operative; whereas the workman ought often to be thinking, and the thinker often to be working, and both should be gentlemen, in the best sense.
Side 63 - Turkey." — (ELLIS.) The sensible properties and effects of coffee, like those of tea, are too well known to require to be stated in detail It exhilarates, arouses, and keeps awake ; it allays hunger to a certain extent, gives to the weary increased strength and vigour, and imparts a feeling of comfort and repose. Its physiological effects upon the system, so far as they have been investigated, appear to be, that, while it makes the brain more active, it soothes the body generally, makes the change...
Side 110 - That the starch sugar thus made and sent into commerce is of exceptional purity and uniformity of composition, and contains no injurious substances.
Side 173 - Corn meal is indeed cheaper, but the oatmeal has this great advantage over corn meal and wheat flour, that it has more protein. Of course, if we are to eat large quantities of lean meat — and...
Side 52 - It tempers the spirits and harmonizes the mind, dispels lassitude and relieves fatigue, awakens thought and prevents drowsiness, lightens or refreshes the body and clears the perceptive faculties...
Side 60 - The Turks have a drink called coffee (for they use no wine), so named of a berry as black as soot, and as bitter, (like that black drink which was in use amongst the Lacedaemonians, and perhaps the same,) which they sip still of, and sup as warm as they can suffer...
Side 13 - Now, it is only by labor that thought can be made healthy, and only by thought that labor can be made happy ; and the two cannot be separated with impunity.
Side 45 - galvanized " iron, as it is called, is fully as bad in respect to rusting. The pipes are prepared by dipping the iron, previously well cleaned by means of dilute acid, into a bath of melted zinc. The zinc adheres firmly to the surface of the iron, and penetrates it to a certain extent, so that we do not deal with a simple coating, such as we have on tinned iron, or on the various forms of enameled pipe.
Side 124 - Press up the bottom of the can ; if decomposition is commencing, the tin will rattle the same as the bottom of the oiler of your sewing machine does. If the goods are sound it will be solid, and there will be no rattle to the tin.