Cassell's Vegetarian Cookery - A Manual of Cheap and Wholesome Diet by A. G. Payne
page 13 of 289 (04%)
page 13 of 289 (04%)
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* * * * * SOLIDIFIED JELLY. [Illustration] By Royal Letters Patent in Great Britain and Ireland, 1888 Patented in the Dominion of Canada, 1889. Patented in France, 1889. N. S. Wales, 1889. Victoria, 1889. Other Foreign Rights reserved. CHELSEA TABLE JELLIES, The Inventor and Patentee, in introducing this high-class article of food, begs to warn the Public that the great success and enormous demand the CHELSEA TABLE JELLIES have obtained in Great Britain has brought many imitators on the Market. A few Stores and Grocers are offering same to the Public, no doubt for the purpose of wishing to appear cheaper, or for making extra profit. The favour for the CHELSEA TABLE JELLY has been obtained solely upon the merits of the article, and it is held to be the greatest invention of the kind, bringing within the reach of all classes this hitherto almost unobtainable luxury. This has been fully endorsed by the unsolicited testimony of high-class British journals. The article is put up in cardboard boxes, in quantities to make 1/2-pints, pints, and quarts of jelly, and the following are some of the flavours: Lemon, Orange, Vanilla, Calves' Feet, Noyeau, Raspberry, Punch, and Madeira. It should not be confounded with the ordinary fruit Jelly, which is a totally different article, _this being a pure Calves' Feet jelly_, superseding the use of gelatine in packets for jelly purposes--this latter, |
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