How to Make Candy A Complete Hand Book for Making All Kinds of Candy, Ice Cream, Syrups, Essences, Etc., Etc.

audiobook

How to Make Candy A Complete Hand Book for Making All Kinds of Candy, Ice Cream, Syrups, Essences, Etc., Etc.

by Anonymous

EN·~2 hours·24 chapters

Chapters

24 total
1

Transcriber's Note:

0:41
2

HOW TO MAKE CANDY.

0:21
3

CONFECTIONERY.

5:26
4

SYRUP.

1:15
5

CRYSTALLIZATION.

3:05
6

CANDY.

4:28
7

BLANC MANGE.

0:33
8

CANDY—BONBON—CONSERVE.

5:44
9

CHOCOLATE.

9:10
10

COLORS.

6:09

Description

Step into the bustling world of late‑Victorian confectionery with this detailed handbook. The author treats sugar as the core of every sweet, walking the reader through its many phases—from raw crystals to clear syrups—before moving on to more elaborate treats. The text is packed with step‑by‑step instructions that reveal the meticulous, hands‑on approach required of a true candy craftsman.

What sets this volume apart is its candid glimpse into the era’s experimental chemistry. Recipes call for ingredients that would raise eyebrows today—egg whites, powdered charcoal, even a pinch of bullock’s blood—to clarify and color syrups, while a warning notes the occasional use of toxic substances like mercury. Listeners will hear both the practical tips and the cautionary tone that reminds us how far food safety has come.

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Details

Full title

How to Make Candy A Complete Hand Book for Making All Kinds of Candy, Ice Cream, Syrups, Essences, Etc., Etc. A Complete Hand Book for Making All Kinds of Candy, Ice Cream, Syrups, Essences, Etc., Etc.

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (161K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Edwards, Alan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (Images courtesy of the Digital Library@Villanova University (http://digital.library.villanova.edu/))

Release date

2017-02-16

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

A

Anonymous

Some of the world’s most enduring books come from writers whose names were never recorded or never revealed. “Anonymous” on a title page can mean many different things: a lost identity, a deliberate choice, or a work shaped by tradition over time.

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