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To: Red Badger

That is written similar to the 1721 copy of the Magna Carta we have...very difficult to read


18 posted on 06/14/2024 11:06:22 AM PDT by goodnesswins (Climate cultists think we should go back to the goo"d times when people starved)
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To: goodnesswins

When I was researching 5th great grandfather Henry Livingston, I spent several years touring research institutions and attempting to translate masses of documents from those periods. The professors I worked with were a blessing when I couldn’t figure something out. It became almost a guessing game to fill in the missing words. Many institutions let me scan the documents into our laptop but I had to deal with a lot of bad microfilm as well. Made translations doubly difficult.

One of my best treasure troves was at Rutgers when I was looking for documents of Henry’s brother, Rev John Henry Livingston, one of the early presidents of the college. I stumbled across the main archive of Edward Antill’s father-in-law, Governor Lewis Morris of NJ, my 7th. The main archivist was on vacation and the librarian nodded at the xerox machine and said feel free. I whispered to husband that our travel plans had just changed. We stayed there several days xeroxing every single piece of paper in every file of his. I still haven’t done anything with them but...someday...


21 posted on 06/14/2024 11:20:58 AM PDT by mairdie
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To: All

Cherry Bounce / George Washington's favorite
Made from sour cherries, sugar, and brandy, rum, or whiskey. Martha’s recipe was found in her papers, although not in her handwriting, called for brandy. This drink was one of George’s favorites. He even took it along on journeys — on a trip west in 1784, in search of a commercial waterway from the Atlantic to the Mississippi Valley, he packed canteens of Madeira, port, and bounce.

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Martha Washington’s “Excellent Cherry Bounce”:

Extract the juice of 20 pounds well ripend Morrella cherrys. Add to this 10 quarts of old french brandy and sweeten it with White sugar to your taste. To 5 gallons of this mixture add one ounce of spice such as cinnamon, cloves and nutmegs of each an Equal quantity slightly bruis’d and a pint and half of cherry kirnels that have been gently broken in a mortar. After the liquor has fermented let it stand close-stoped for a month or six weeks then bottle it, remembering to put a lump of Loaf Sugar into each bottle.

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Modernized version developed by Nancy Carter Crump for the book "Dining with the Washingtons." You can use preserved Morello cherries at the grocery, and at Trader Joe’s. Calls for the cherries to be mashed and strained; the juice is then mixed with brandy and sugar. To try the old-fashioned method, leave cherries and broken pits in for several months, (the blog The Runaway Spoon has good instructions). It’s sweet but not excessively so, and the cherry flavor really comes through. The flavor improved after just a few weeks, maybe better after a month or two.

Cherry Bounce / Adapted from "Dining with the Washingtons."

Ing 7 pounds fresh sour cherries, preferably Morello, or two jars (25 ounces each) preserved Morello cherries 2⅔ cups brandy 2 cups sugar, plus more as needed 1 cinnamon stick, broken into pieces 2 cloves 1 (¼-inch) piece fresh whole nutmeg (or ½ teaspoon ground nutmeg)

Steps Pit the cherries, cut them in half, and put them in a large bowl. (If you use jarred cherries, drain them first, setting that juice aside.) Mash the cherries with a potato or other masher to extract the juice. Then strain the juice through a fine-mesh sieve, pressing with a spoon to extract all the juice.

Sterilize a lidded three-quart glass jar. In the jar, combine the juice (including the reserved juice, if you used jarred cherries) with the brandy and sugar, stirring to dissolve the sugar (my trusty assistant did this task as well as the mashing; and no, she wasn’t allowed to drink it). Cover the jar with the lid and put in the refrigerator for 24 hours, stirring or shaking it occasionally.

Remove 2 cups of juice from the jar. Place in a saucepan and bring to a simmer over medium heat. Taste the juice and add more sugar if desired. (If you use preserved cherries, you probably won’t need more sugar.) Add the cinnamon sticks, cloves, and nutmeg, then cover and simmer for 5-10 minutes. Set aside to cool to room temperature. Strain the liquid, discarding the cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg, if you’re using whole nutmeg. Pour the spiced juice back into the big jar with the remaining juice and stir. Cover loosely with the lid, and set aside for two weeks, occasionally shaking the jar gently.

Serve at room temperature, garnished with whole pitted cherries, if you like. Store the remaining bounce in the refrigerator.

22 posted on 06/14/2024 11:25:53 AM PDT by Liz (This then is how we should pray: Our Father who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name . )
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