Home1797 Edition

CREAM

Volume 5 · 171 words · 1797 Edition

a general name applicable to all substances that separate from a liquor, and are collected upon its surface; but is more particularly applied to the following.

Cream of Lime, is that part of the lime which had been dissolved in the water in its caustic state, but having again attracted some fixed air from the atmosphere, becomes incapable of solution, and therefore separates from the water in the mild state of chalk or limestone.

Cream of Milk, generally called simple cream, is the most oily part of the milk; which being naturally only mixed, and not dissolved in the rest, soon separates from them, as being specifically lighter; after which it collects on the surface; from which it is generally skimmed, to complete the disengagement of the oily part from the *See Butter, Milk, and Cheese.

Cream of milk is not only an agreeable aliment when recent, but is also useful in medicine as a laxative, when applied to tetter and erysipelas attended with pain and proceeding from an acrid humour.