104
for Grinding and pre
ssing of cyder by the help of cylinders toothing one into an other yet he
appeald to theire Regi
ster to proue that he had some years before such patent propounded it to
the Society and that the Society had accordingly orderd m
r Shortgraue to make tryall of such
indented cylinders. vpon this much Di
scouse aro
se concerning cyder. m
r. Packer affirmd that by
grinding and pre
ssing out
the juice of
the apple at once a Cyder might be made as cleer as rock
water w
ch. would neither haue any lees or turn brown ^ /& that mr Fettyplace of Batter
sey had made
such juice & kept it cleer 15 dayes/ but if the pulp were sufferd to lye after
it were beat ^ /sometime/ before it be pre
ssed, the Iuice will both turne brown & yield abundance of lees
this was suppo
sd
by to come from a kind of putrefaction begun in the fibers of the Apples before it
be pre
ssed, other suppo
sd it a kind of fermentation, and there was much
said
by RH to shew
that fermentation Differd from Corruption and that they were the working of Differing parts
one upon
and another, and those performed Differing ways for twas ob
serud that the sub
stances
whel
st together in the apple would Rott but when separate in the Iuice or Liquor they
would ferment. It was wi
shed that tryall might be made what kind of Spirit would
be producd by Di
stillation of mellow apples more than of Green ones and fre
sh gathered
D
r. Grewe affirmed that odoriferous plants would yeald a spirit w
thout fermentation, but
It was answerd that though they yealded an odoriferous sub
stance yet that could not pro
perly be calld a spirit at Lea
st it was not of the nature of a spirit made by fermentac
owhich was calld a vinous or burning spirit, the other odoriferous
sub
stance might
more properly be called
the transpiration or sweat of
the plant. very analogus to
that of animales by w
ch. they are di
stingui
shed one from the other very plainly by
the smell. About fining of liquors. S
r. I ho
skins affirmd that
any opaque liquors/thick & muddy Cyder/
/thick or muddy Cyder/may be clarifyd by very fine
strainers. others affirmd that/fish glew di
ssoluied/
beating some Eggsw
th. some of the liquor & then mingled
ing them & putting together w
th it would doe the
same things. as al
so eggs beaten & broken w
thsome of
the Cyder and then mingled w
th. the whole
mr. Henshaw deliverd to m
r Hook. ^/read/ a Letter ^/which
was^/had been/ deliuerd him by m
r Henshaw to whom it was/Sent
when by
th Lord Brounker - the effects
of w
ch. was that M
r. Lewenhook the writer thereof vnder
standing m
r Oldenberg
wa
s dead De
sired to know to whom he might addre
ss his letters for the
future and therein included Seuerall te
stimonialls of his former Exp
ts. and
an account both in Dutch & latin of some new ob
seruations-.
The con
sideration of w
ch. was adiourned to the next meeting in the mea[n]
time
R H ^/m
r Hooke/ was de
sired to make a micro
scope after a way w
ch. he propo
sed
as very likely to doe as much if not in the same manner as
tht of
Lewenhook -
R H. produced an Ephemerides of 12 eclip
ses of Saturne by the moon toge
ther w
th. the tran
situs of

through the sun ^/and a calculation of Eclipses for
the two succeeding years. one of w
ch is omitted in Heckler/ which was inclo
sed in a letter
to him from Gotefried kirch . of Hamborough some Coppys of w
ch. he
promi
sd to Deliuer to Some A
stronomicall Ob
servers.
RH related that sergeant Piles had affirmed that by ra
sping his apples w
th. a
bread grater he was able to make almo
st a 3
dpart more of Cyder than
by the common way. and the same mentioned are expedient Of ra
sping tho
se
apples much ea
sier by help of a cylinder couerd w
th. tin plates made of the form
of a Grater. the Hap whereof is ^/here/ annexed.
To w
ch suggestion m
r. Packer obiected that though by that meanes a 3
dpart more of Liquor ^/was obteined/ yet the quantity of faces after setling would be soe
great that Little more cleer cider could be made that way then by the c
omon.
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