STARCH
Black Starch.
Starch Gloss.
| II.— | Gum arabic, powdered | 3 parts |
|---|---|---|
| Spermaceti wax | 6 parts | |
| Borax, powdered | 4 parts | |
| White cornstarch | 8 parts |
All these are to be intimately mixed in the powder form by sifting through a sieve several times. As the wax is in a solid form and does not readily become reduced to powder by pounding in a mortar, the best method of reducing it to such a condition is to put the wax into a bottle with some sulphuric or rectified ether and then allow the fluid to evaporate. After it has dissolved the wax, as the evaporation proceeds, the wax will be deposited again in the solid form, but in fine thin flakes, which will easily break down to a powder form when rubbed up with the other ingredients in a cold mortar. Pack in paper or in cardboard boxes. To use, 4 teaspoonfuls per pound of dry starch are to be added to all dry starch, and then the starch made in the usual way as boiled starch.
Refining Of Potato Starch.
The filtrate is now added to the starch stirred up with water; 1/2 part of ordinary {681} hydrochloric acid of 20° Bé. previously diluted with four times the quantity of water is mixed in, for every part of chloride of lime, the whole is stirred thoroughly, and the starch allowed to stand.
When the starch has settled, the supernatant water is let off and the starch is washed with fresh water until all odor of chlorine has entirely disappeared. The starch now obtained is the resulting final product.
If the starch thus treated is to be worked up into dextrin, it is treated in the usual manner with hydrochloric acid or nitric acid and will then furnish a dextrin perfectly free from taste and smell.
In case the starch is to be turned into “soluble” starch proceed as usual, in a similar manner as in the production of dextrin, with the single difference that the starch treated with hydrochloric or nitric acid remains exposed to a temperature of 212° F., only until a test with tincture of iodine gives a bluish-violet reaction. The soluble starch thus produced, which is clearly soluble in boiling water, is odorless and tasteless.
Starch Powder.
STARCHES: See Laundry Preparations.
STARCH IN JELLY, TESTS FOR: See Foods.
STARCH PASTE: See Adhesives.
STATUE CLEANING: See Cleaning Preparations and Methods.
STATUETTES, CLEANING OF: See Plaster.
STATUETTES OF LIPOWITZ METAL: See Alloys.