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The book of trades; or, Familiar descriptions of the most useful trades, manufactures, and arts practised in England : and the manner in which the workmen perform their various employments.
(undated, inscribed 1829)
The confectioner., p. 31
Page 31
31
THE CONFECTIONER.
THE Confecti oner, who is generally
combined with the pastry-cook, makes
sweetmeats, tarts, cheese-cakes, pies, pre-
serves of various kinds, jellies, jams,
conserves, candies, comfits, gingerbread,
&c. He generally lays in, during the
winter, a competent supply of ice, pre-
served in a proper receptacle, to furnish
his customers with the agreeable treat of
ice-cream in the summer months. The
London confectioners are famous for the
elegance and size of the Twelfth day
cakes: several days previous to this pe-
riod their shops are decorated with a
great variety of them, made of different
shapes, and with various devices; some
weighing several hundred pounds. There
are also various forms and preparations
of gingerbread.
The Confectioner is generally as busy
a man as the cook in the preparations
for a grand dinner or supper: he is, in
fact, the caterer of superfluities. Some of
the London Confectioners bake joints of
meat, like the bakers, for those who give
the preference-'to their shops, but their
charges are double. They also deal in mock-
turtle, dried tongues, &c.
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