The utility of currants, red, black, or white, has
long been established in domestic economy. The juice of the red
species, if boiled with an equal weight of loaf sugar, forms an
agreeable substance called _currant jelly_, much employed in
sauces, and very valuable in the cure of sore throats and colds.
The French mix it with sugar and water, and thus form an
agreeable beverage. The juice of currants is a valuable remedy
in obstructions of the bowels; and, in febrile complaints, it is
useful on account of its readily quenching thirst, and for its
cooling effect on the stomach. White and flesh-coloured
currants have, with the exception of the fullness of flavour, inevery respect, the same qualities as the red species.
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