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Martine Bailey's Blog

May 12, 2021

My Book the Movie - The Prophet

Picture Ang Lee's Sense and Sensibility �
​My fourth novel is a historical crime novel in which Tabitha Hart investigates a cold-blooded murder and a utopian sect in an ancient forest. The book follows on from events in The Almanack and also reads as a standalone mystery.

Cheshire. May Day, 1753. Tabitha De Vallory's perfect life is shaken when a girl is slaughtered beneath the Mondrem Oak on her family's forest estate. Nearby, enigmatic Baptist Gunn is convinced that a second messiah will be born, amid blood and strife, close to the oak on Midsummer's Day. Could the murder be linked to Gunn's cryptic prophecy?

As Midsummer's Day draws closer, Tabitha soon learns the destiny that threatens her and those she holds most dear...

I recently got the chance to ‘dreamcast� my choice of actors and director if it ever became a movie.

My heroine Tabitha is a former London courtesan who reluctantly returned to her home village. Recently married and expecting her first child, she is a clever risk-taker. To play her I’d again cast Crystal Laity. I loved her performance as harlot Margaret Vosper in series 1 of Poldark - a mix of sharp wits, charm and physical allure.

Picture Crystal Laity
​​Tabitha’s is now married to Nat De Vallory, a former hack writer and the unexpected heir to Bold Hall. Hiding his connection to the victim, he struggles with his new position. Fascinated by the local prophet he makes an ill-judged test of Gunn’s powers to foresee the future. No apologies for again casting Aidan Turner (Ross Poldark) again. Picture Aidan Turner
​The Prophet of the book’s title is Baptist Gunn, a travelling preacher � or maybe something less wholesome. Camping out on the family’s forest land, he prophecies the birth of a new messiah to take to America. He’s charismatic and slippery; I picture Sam Riley (Control, Malificent) in the spellbinding role. Picture Sam Riley
Sukey Adams is Tabitha’s wet nurse, also expecting a child. Straight-laced and brimming with superstitious advice, she offers solace to her mistress. Kerrie Hayes is my choice, after playing another servant in sinsiter folklore TV series, The Living and the Dead. Picture Kerrie Hayes
Tabitha’s naïve friend Jennet Saxton leads the younger generation. Only sixteen, her search for romance and fascination with Baptist Gunn lead her into danger. I would again love a young Christina Ricci, circa Sleepy Hollow to play her.
Picture Christina Ricci
​My location is Tabitha’s home village of Netherlea, a Cheshire idyll around a manor house, where country customs mark the year. Scenes also move to Chester, a 2,000 year old walled city in England with distinctive black and white high-gabled buildings. The Blue Coat Hospital where the murdered foundling, Maria St James, was lodged, still stands on Chester’s Northgate. Picture
​In my dreamcast I’d love Ang Lee to be director. I’m thinking of the way the changing English landscape was backdrop to the emotional turmoil of Sense and Sensibility. In the final double wedding procession there is also great attention to historical folklore in these ribbon wedding favours. Picture Wedding procession, Sense and Sensibility.
And I’m sure the creator of The Life of Pi would do justice to the firelit sleeping prophecies, the mystical stones and barrows of the forest, and the phantom apparition that appears in Bold Hall’s ancient chapel. Picture Fish scene, The Life of Pi
​With thanks to Marshal Zeringue of the . This feature first appeared onMay 2021.
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Published on May 12, 2021 08:52

April 30, 2021

US Publication of The Prophet

Picture I am always excited to have a new book published in the US where most of my readers live. In The Prophet my pregnant heroine Tabitha finds the body of a murdered woman beneath an ancient Oak, her corpse covered in May flowers. Not far from the oak a charismatic young preacher is camping with his followers: Baptist Gunn is the prophet of the title, appearing to prophecy the future while in a trance-like sleep. Alarmed and shaken, Tabitha soon learns the destiny that threatens her and those she holds most dear...

“Spooky historical detail enlivens a mystery thronged with suspects.� Kirkus Reviews

“Such an accomplished and entertaining mystery, filled with wonderful allusions to folklore - and of course the riddles of the Prophet’s predictions, and what they may mean for newlywed parents to be, Tabitha and Nat.� - Essie Fox, author of The Somnambulist & The Last Days of Leda Grey

“Bailey’s fine sequel to 2019’s The Almanack brings 1753 England to life� Offers an unexpected but satisfying solution to the murder.”� -Publishers Weekly

The Prophet is released in hardback and ebook available from the usual bookstores:
US 1 May
Also available on Audible.com.
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Published on April 30, 2021 12:51

February 26, 2021

UK publication of The Prophet

It is always so exciting to finally open the publisher's parcel and see the final version of my printed books. Green was the obvious colour for the jacket as so much of the story takes place in a forest. I live near Delamere Forest in Cheshire, England, but in my book I call it by its ancient name, the Mondrem Forest. Back in 2019 I wandered through the trees, aware of how easy it is to get lost and how malevolent the dark spaces between the trees can appear. Next, I imagined my pregnant heroine Tabitha finding the body of a murdered woman beneath the Mondrem Oak, her corpse covered in May flowers. Not far from the oak a charismatic young preacher is camping with his followers: Baptist Gunn is the prophet of the title, appearing to prophecy the future while in a trance-like sleep. Alarmed and suspicious, Tabitha vows to discover the woman's killer.

"A fabulous brew of sin and science, predictions and superstitions, with a murder mystery at its heart. You won't be able to put it down."
(Deborah Swift, author of The Pepys Trilogy and A Divided Inheritance)

The Prophet is released in hardback and available from the usual bookstores:
UK 26 February
US 5 April
UK Audiobook 8 March

Picture
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Published on February 26, 2021 05:33

January 26, 2021

New book The Prophet available this spring

Destiny, prophecy and murder weave an intricate web in this beguiling historical mystery. Could a dark prophecy spell danger for Tabitha De Vallory and her unborn child?

Cheshire. May Day, 1753.Tabitha De Vallory's perfect life is shaken when a girl is slaughtered beneath the Mondrem Oak on her family's forest estate. Nearby, enigmatic Baptist Gunn is convinced that a second messiah will be born, amid blood and strife, close to the oak on Midsummer's Day. Could the murder be linked to Gunn's cryptic prophecy?
Picture I'm so pleased to be able to share with you that The Prophet will be published this spring. Many new books have been postponed due to this dreadful pandemic so I’m delighted that my book will reach readers so soon.
The book is a sequel to The Almanack but is also a standalone story. Publication of the hardback will be on 26 February in the UK and April in the US.

If you are a reviewer or blogger you can sign up for an advance copy on Netgalley. Here is one reader’s opinion:

“This ravishing read is atmospheric and exciting, the perfect escape from modern day life.� (beadyjansbooks.blogspot.com)

Just click
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Published on January 26, 2021 08:32

December 4, 2019

News: Paperback release of The Almanack

Picture
I am delighted that the paperback edition of The Almanack was released in the UK in November 2019. An ebook version is also available retailing at under £4. The US paperback and ebook editions will be out on 3 March 2020.
Thanks to everyone who has already read it and especially those who have reviewed it or written to me from as far afield as New Zealand and the US.
The Almanack was a UK Netgalley Book of the Month and had tremendous interest thanks to a great new pitch from the team at Canongate:
‘A puzzle-solvers delight, this engrossing historical mystery is as bamboozling as it is fiendishly gripping. Tabitha Hart’s mother is murdered, and the only clues to her death lie in an old book.�
It has a beautiful new cover design that I love, reflecting the story of blood and entanglement perfectly! I have also had some great quotes for the new cover:
'Historical fans are in for a treat' - Publishers Weekly
'A dark and twisting riddle that is certain to keep readers guessing until the end.' - S D Sykes
'An ingeniously plotted, hauntingly atmospheric murder mystery.' - Deborah Swift
Picture The story runs from Midsummer to Christmas through the English feasts and festivals, so I hope that as winter sets in you will cosy up with an edition in the warm.
Many readers enjoyed the 50 riddles that preface each chapter. In my researches it became clear that riddling is an entertainment people have long enjoyed at Christmas. Why not join them and see if you are smarter than a Georgian lady or gentleman?
The UK book is available at bookshops and from or the
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Published on December 04, 2019 08:09

May 22, 2019

My Book the Movie - The Almanack

To celebrate the launch of The Almanackinvited me to'dreamcast' an adaptation of my novel. It doesn't mean it's actually going to be filmed - I just get the chance to imagine it. Picture Edwaert Collier: Vanitas with Books, Manuscripts and a Skull
My heroine Tabitha was a courtesan in London, and is sharp-witted, light-fingered and bold, a shrewd handler of people, and charming when she wants to be. To play her I had in mind Crystal Laity’s performance as harlot Margaret Vosper in Poldark, a mix of intelligence and physical allure. Picture Crystal Laity, who plays Margaret Vosper in Poldark �
​Tabitha’s love interest is rakeish poet Nat Starling, a Cambridge University drop-out, obsessed with time. His creativity mixes with bouts of stupidity and drunkenness. No apologies for casting Aidan Turner (Ross Poldark) as the intense, long-haired writer. Picture No apologies for yet another dreamcasting of Aidian Turner ​Joshua Saxton is Tabitha’s devoted old flame, now a widower and the dogged village constable. Rugged Alex O’Loughlin would be ideal (convict Will Bryant in mini-series Mary Bryant).
Picture Alex O'Loughlin at Joshua Saxton ​Joshua’s daughter Jennet represents the younger generation: still girlish at 15, her pursuit of romance and superstition leads her into danger. I’d love a young Christina Ricci, circa Sleepy Hollow to play her. Picture Christina Ricci circa Sleepy Hollow Youngest of all is Bess Hart, the infant left in the care of murdered Widow Hart. Precocious and beautiful at 3-years old, she walks in her sleep and some claim she has second sight. I picture her as Sally Jane Bruce, the child actor who played Pearl in the classic noir, The Night of the Hunter. Picture
​The Almanack
is located in Cheshire and the county town of Chester, a 2,000 year old walled city in England famed for its distinctive black and white high-gabled buildings. Tabitha’s home village of Netherlea is scattered around a manor house, where country customs are celebrated, from a blood-stained harvest through autumn bonfires and a snowbound Christmas. �
​I would love to see a director capture the mix of fairy story and murder mystery, so someone with the talent of The Night of the Hunter’s Charles Laughton springs to mind as a dream come true. I’ll never forget the magical escape of the children along the benighted river with a soundtrack of Pearl’s eerily sung lullaby.

I’m sure Laughton (and his wizard of a cinematographer, Stanley Cortez) would do justice to the stars and moon reflected in watermeadows, the snowbound castle, and flickering candlelight as Tabitha and Nat study the almanack for the next riddle and revelation. Picture Images from The Night of the Hunter (1955)
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Published on May 22, 2019 05:58

January 26, 2016

My Book The Movie - A Taste for Nightshade

To celebrate the launch of A Taste for Nightshade I was invited by'blogspot to 'dreamcast' an adaptation of my novel. It doesn't mean it's actually going to be filmed - I just get the chance to imagine it:

Picture In my dream version I’d like to resurrect Alfred Hitchcock to direct my novel. I'm picturing the atmospheric sets he used forRebeccaand the way Hitch used food to drive his plots . I’ll never forget the illuminated glass of poisoned milk inSuspicion, or Marion Crane picking over her last sandwich inPsycho.

Picture My flame-haired confidence trickster Mary is a talented cook, impersonator, and born survivor. I’d give her role to Myanna Buring, Edna inDownton Abbeyand star ofBanishedandRipper Street. Picture Mary’s timid mistress is Grace Moore, warm-hearted and vulnerable Anna Maxwell-Martin (Death Comes to Pemberley, Bleak House). While writing I pictured Grace’s weak but handsome husband as a young James Fox. The other male lead is escaped convict Will, to be played byThe Last Kingdom'sRagnar,Tobias Santelmann.


Picture The main location, Delafosse Hall, is based ona house in North Wales with forgotten tunnels, decaying summerhouse, tales of hopeless love and ghostly hauntings. If it could have Hitchcock's brooding Manderley appearance I'd be very happy. My dark mystery also takes the reader to London’s Golden Square, the convict camps of Sydney, Australia, and Maori settlements of New Zealand.

The food needs to be highly crafted, from aphrodisiacs and poisons, to a tiny sugar four-poster bed for a wedding cake and a miniature baby and cradle. When writing the book I studied sugarwork with TV food historian Ivan Day, who created the food forDeath Comes to Pemberley.

I’m sure Hitchcock would conjure the twisting staircases of Delafosse Hall, the snowbound winter rides, flickering candlelight and create edge-of-the-seat moments from the twists and revelations. Picture Image stills courtesy of Hitchcock's 'Rebecca' 1940.
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Published on January 26, 2016 14:46

December 26, 2015

A Taste for Nightshade - The History of a Novel

The History of a Novel in Five Objects
Picture A Taste for Nightshade � Recipes, mystery and a dark secret
� My novel A Taste for Nightshade (published as The Penny Heart in the UK) was particularly inspired by five objects that resonate with memory and secrets. At the end of the 18th century Britons developed a passion for keepsakes and souvenirs, from painted china and fans to miniature portraits and mourning rings. One interesting theory is that this might be similar to our contemporary obsession with photography; a fear that if we don’t record our lives, our crucial selves might be lost in the bewildering bombardment of life. Together they inspired the story of impersonation and revenge that became A Taste for Nightshade.
1.Penny Heart Convict Token
Picture
​This copper penny was created by a British convict sentenced to transportation to 'the ends of the earth', as Australia was then described. Its motto reads, 'When On this Peice you Cast an Eye, THINK ON THE MAN THAT is NOT NIGH'. On its reverse are the initials of an unknown convict, ‘M.C.' and the date 1792. Now called a Penny Heart convict token or 'leaden heart', these pennies were smoothed and engraved with messages by convicts doomed never to see their families or homeland again. At a time when the criminal classes were mostly believed to lack all tender feelings, these crude keepsakes commemorate desperate people about to embark on the 18th century equivalent of a trip to the moon. Though the most usual emotion expressed is pain at separation, anger and defiance are also found in a rich selection of verses and mottoes. In the novel, Peg, a confidence trickster, has a token engraved at Newgate prison with a rhyme that is part promise, part threat:

Though chains hold me fast,
As the years pass away,
I swear on this heart
To find you one day

2. Crucifix with Human Hair

Picture ​Before photography the most common keepsakes were locks of hair, often exchanged by family members and lovers. While the working classes carried hair clippings in pouches or paper, wealthier people set hair into rings, pendants and brooches. Though we now find hair jewellery rather strange and Gothic, at the time it offered an easy way to carry and touch a tangible part of a loved one. In the novel, Peg's new mistress, Grace, paints miniature portraits embellished with strands of hair, creating what the writer Laqueur calls, 'a bit of a person that lives eerily on as a souvenir.' Human hair braiding became a popular craze, as books offered advice on how to create complex pictures of flowers, feathers and landscapes. When Grace’s mother dies, she commemorates her by braiding her hair using equipment similar to a lace-making table. She has this net-like memento set into a silver crucifix, from which she draws strength and a sense of connection to her mother's spirit.

3. Maori koauau bone flute
Picture
​Peg's adventures in the Antipodes take her to the shores of New Zealand, a very wild place indeed in the 1790s. There she commissions a macabre memento in the form of a bone flute, based on this koauau made in the 18th century. I was fortunate to hear the unearthly sound of these ancient instruments at the Te Papa Museum in Wellington and later to discover the art of bone-carving on the East Cape. While the penny heart that Peg wears on a ribbon around her neck is a constant reminder of her impulse to revenge, the bone flute is a memorial object, summoning a loved one in the grounds of desolate Delafosse Hall:
'Raising it to her lips, she blew softly against the top until a high unearthly note made the grass, the leaves, and the dusk-heavy air vibrate. The tone was off-key and haunting, a summoning call quite at odds with the gentle English glade.'
4. A Sugarpaste Bed
Picture This elaborately carved piece of boxwood dating from the 1720s is a confectioner's mould (courtesy of Ivan Day at ). While learning period sugarwork with TV food historian Ivan Day, I was surprised to find that one of the skills of a great confectioner was carving wooden moulds, in order to make three-dimensional figures for banquets and desert tables. Soft gum paste was pressed into this mould and the pieces assembled to make a miniature dolls-sized bed. Picture ​The wedding bed is decorated with two sugar pillows and an eiderdown of multi-coloured comfits. It would have been used as an ornament on a bride-cake, reflecting the rather bawdy symbolism of the day. Other sugar devices in the novel include a tiny cradle and swaddled baby. Just as we might treasure the 'cake-topper' from a wedding or Christmas cake, these are symbols of hope and fecundity. In the novel however, they do have a double-edge; though beautiful objects, they are in the end fragile, lifeless, and of course ultimately edible.

5. Housekeeper's Steel chatelaine
Picture ​This late 18th-century steel chatelaine would have been worn by the 'woman of the household'. It is a belt hook or clasp to be worn at the waist with a number of chains suspended from it to hold keys, a pincushion, button hook, thimble holder, and corkscrew. In A Taste for Nightshade, Grace, the mistress of the house fatefully relinquishes the household keys to her duplicitous cook housekeeper, Peg. Embodied in her chatelaine is Peg's fascination with locks, keys and chains, and the control she seeks to exert over the household. The steel clasp bears the initials of her vanished predecessor and is also lacking a thimble, later found by Grace in a dark underground passage. Peg's chatelaine is also a rather more dangerous object, as it includes a very sharp and handy knife� A TASTE FOR NIGHTSHADE, is a historical mystery novel that combines recipes and remedies and a dark struggle between two desperate women. It will be published by St Martin’s Press on 12 January 2016.

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Published on December 26, 2015 09:18

September 13, 2015

The Great British Bake-Off - Eaten cake is soon forgotten

Picture Historic baking is the theme of this week's Great British Bake-Off. Following the initial excitement came the disappointment that the Victorian era is the focus. If Georgian cookery is the Elizabeth David of British cuisines (earthy, aromatic and regional), surely Victorian would be Fanny Craddock (overworked display and mass-produced ingredients)? And yet, the first baking challenge is to make a game pie. To put the record straight, the golden age of the game pie was the Georgian era, when gigantic Christmas pies were so popular that Josiah Wedgewood designed special decorative dishes for them. ‘Eaten cake is soon forgotten,� says an old proverb, and this it seems is the case for British bakery.

By the eighteenth century Britons had developed a wealth of old-fashioned bakery: not only game and meat pies but plum cakes, yule cakes, Madeiras, ginger, chocolate, cherry, and marmalade cakes , jam roll, beer cakes and seed cakes. Besides these were an almost infinite variety of curranty buns, shortcakes, gingerbreads and little cheesecakes such as Richmond Maids of Honour.

Many celebratory cakes were linked to the seasonal calendar, such as harvest-time, Saints� days and festivals. Their common origin was a medieval spiced pastry filled with currants known as Banbury Cakes (said to be brought home by the crusaders from the East), with variants as Eccles and Chorley Cakes, Cumberland Currant Pasties, Coventry Godcakes, and Mrs Raffald's Sweet Patties shown below. All around the British agricultural calendar, special cakes were made to use up surpluses, such as the Flead Cakes of Kent, made after rendering.

Picture A fascinating sub-set of seasonal baking is linked to fortune-telling, such as the tradition of Dumb Cakes, simple grain and water cakes baked in the ashes. Made at midnight by unmarried women on various auspicious days, the ritual was accompanied by the rhyme, �Two must make it, two must bake it, and two must break it.� That night the baker would hope to dream of her future husband; however it is possible the direction to remain ‘dumb� throughout the ritual is a later misunderstanding of 'doom', a Middle English word for fate or destiny.

Picture So what remains of these regional traditions? Not very much, for the loss of British regional cooking in the Victorian era was one of the prices Britain paid for being the first industrial and urbanized nation. At my Village Autumn Show last week, the most eagerly entered contest was to bake the best Victoria Sponge, a late invention celebrating Queen Victoria. There were no Cheshire specialities such as flummery, pork pies or soul cakes.

Then again, like most of history, baking is about constant renewal. Recipes, however well loved, are updated. Recently, in an attempt to revive the autumnal delights of Taffety Tart (a much loved Georgian pastry of apples, quince and spices) I devised a Taffety Cake. My recipe, featured in The Clandestine Cake Club's new collection, , uses the modern inventions of ready-made quince jam and fragrant rosewater. It seems to me both comforting and wise economy to bake by season, so with apples bending the branches of our village trees, it is a pleasure to bake nature’s bounty.


Picture In An Appetite for Violets my cook-heroine Biddy Leigh also uses her apple glut to bake a batch of Taffety Tarts:

My Best Receipt for Taffety Tart

Lay down a peck of flour and work it up with six pound of butter and four eggs and salt and cold water. Roll and fill with pippins and quinces and sweet spice and lemon peel as much as delights. Sweet Spice is cloves, mace, nutmeg, cinammon, sugar & salt. Close the pie and strew with sugar. Bake till well enough.

Martha Garland her best receipt writ on a butter-marked scrap of parcel paper, 1758

Martine Bailey’s debut historical novel, , is available in paperback and as an eBook from Hodder & Stoughton. Find out more by visiting Martine Bailey’s and by following her on
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Published on September 13, 2015 14:22

August 7, 2015

The Great British Bake Off - Have Biscuits, Will Travel

PictureGeorgian biscuits by Ivan Day It is Biscuit Week on, with some cracking challenges: to bake Italianbiscotti, wafer-thin arlettes and build a 3D biscuit-box filled with 36 biscuits!

Biscuits originated as rock-hard military or sailors� rations, that were �-ܾ�(twice-baked) to prevent them from mouldering. ‘As dry as the remainder biscuit after a voyage,� says Jacques inAs You Like It, recalling the thankfully forgotten experience of trying to eat one of these jaw-crackers.

The British Navy mass-produced ship’s biscuits or ‘hard tack�, issued to eighteenth century sailors as a pound of biscuit and a gallon of beer a day. ‘As hard as a captain’sbiscuit�, complained a contemporary proverb. These biscuits were inedible without dunking, and were used to bulk out dishes such as Lobscouse, a seaman’s stew of salt beef, biscuits and onions. As for the weevils (flour bugs) that rapidly infested the store –� I have battled weevils in my kitchen in rural New Zealand and there is nothing quite as revolting as finding wriggly white bugs in your flour bags!
Picture The oldest known ship’s biscuit circa 1852 Over time, biscuits became lighter as Elizabethan cooks sought to satisfy the taste for fashionable sweetstuffs. Made of whisked sugar, eggs and flour, these are the recognisable prototypes for sponge fingers, their preservative quality reduced in favour or lightness and flavour. Naples biscuits (long oval sponge fingers) were developed, to dip into wine rather than tea, and to make desserts such as trifle. Many of Britain’s most delicious varieties were invented by the eighteenth century: macaroons, lemon wafers and ginger nuts.

Yet biscuits long remained associated with travel: we find recipes forGingerbread For A Voyageand various forms of hard-tack to be carried in pockets while riding, or stored in airless, metal-lined tins for years on end. Street-sellers sold them from baskets, as this illustration fromThe Cryes of London: Drawn After the Life, in 1688 shows.

Picture The ‘Dutch Biskets� this woman is selling may have been an import from Holland at the time of William and Mary. A contemporary recipe shows that these snack foods sold ‘To Go� were made of yeasted biscuit dough flavoured with caraway, cut into circles and pricked with a pattern.

Biscuits have always been a vehicle for fashion. In my new novel, THE PENNY HEART, the heroine recollects the faded gentility of her mother’s Apricot Jumbles or Knotted Biscuits, made from a ‘receipt� of the time of ‘Good Queen Bess�. These pretty sweetmeats were the origin of the term ‘Jumbled up� � perhaps a foretaste for this week’s Bake Off. Crisp biscuits need a light hand and a hot oven: with Paul and Mary looking over the contestant’s shoulders we should see some fun at crunch time!

Picture Apricot Jumbles, tied in lovers� knots. From Ivan Day at www.historicfood.com To Make Knotted Biscuits of Apricots

Take ripe Apricots, pare, stone and beat them small, then boil them till they are thick. Take them off the fire and beat them up with sifted Sugar and Aniseeds to make a pretty fine paste. Make into little rolls the thickness of straw and tye them in little Knots in what form you please; dry them in the Stove or in the Sun.

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Published on August 07, 2015 15:45