An essay on bread; Wherein the bakers and millers are vindicated from the aspersions contained in two pamphlets; one intitled Poison detected: and the other, The nature of bread honestly and dishonestly made. Proving the impossibility of mixing lime, chalk, whiting and burnt bones in bread, without immediate discovery. With plain and easy experiments to discover alum and other admixtures in bread, instantly. To which is added, an appendix; explaining the vile practices committed in adulterating wines, cider, porter, punch, vinegar, and pickles. With easy methods to detect such abuses. By H. Jackson, chemist.
- Jackson, Humphrey, approximately 1717-1801.
- Date:
- 1758
- Books
- Online
Online resources
About this work
Publication/Creation
London : Printed for J. Wilkie, behind the Chapter-House, in St. Paul's Church-Yard, 1758.
Physical description
55,[1]p. ; 80.
Contributors
References note
Higgs, 1679
Goldsmiths', 9346
ESTC T33294