192 
EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. 
Conchy liated colour comprehended 
various shades of purple, 130. 
Consumption of the Apple or Vine 
Snail in Paris, 17. 
Consumption of oysters in Ame- 
rica, 81. 
Contar, 14. 
Coque, 27. 
Coquilles de St. Jacques, 101. 
Cormaillot, or Perceur, 70, 
Cornets, or Corniches, 171. 
Corvins, or periwinkles, 135. 
Cotton wool injurious to pearls, 30. 
Coutoye, 41. 
Cozza di San Giacomo, 101. 
Crab found in Ostrea Virginica, 
139. 
Crogans, Cornish name for limpet- 
shells, 121. 
Cromlech, term, 120. 
Cromlech du Tus, 120. 
Crotalia or castanet pendants, ear- 
rings so called, 56. 
Cullis of mussels, 67. 
Cultivation of oysters on the 
western coast of France, 77. 
Cup made of staves of turbo shell, 
116. 
Cups and dishes of pilgrims, 103. 
Curried oyster atlets, 87. 
Curried oysters, 88. 
Cuttle-fish, or scuttle, 163. 
Cuttle-fish, description of, 164. 
Cuttle bones, 164. 
Cuttle bones brought to Liverpool, 
164. 
Cuttles on the Sussex coast, 164. 
Cuttles very large in the Pacific, 
168. 
Cuttle drowns a Sardinian cap- 
tain, 168. 
Cuttle-fish eaten by the modern 
Greeks, 165. 
Cuttle-fish taken on fishing lines, 
164. 
Cuttle-fish, Italian recipe for cook- 
ing, 175. 
Cuttle-fish, Jersey method of cook- 
ing, 174. 
Cuttles, Spanish method of stew- 
ing, 174. 
Cuttles or scuttle, Weymouth re- 
cipe for cooking, 175. 
Cyprina Islandica, called the clam 
in the Shetland Isles, 101. 
Cyprinidse, 42. 
Cytherea Chione or Venus Chione, 
148. 
Cytherea Chione, specimens of, 
from Plymouth, 148. 
Dail, gite or pitau, 161. 
Danes in the eighteenth century 
eat snails, 12. 
Danish Kjokkenmbddings, 32. 
Danish Kjokkenmoddings, oyster- 
shells in, 83. 
Dartmouth oyster bed, 73. 
Decoction of snails, Decoctum 
Limacum, 4. 
Decoction of snails against con- 
sumptions (Decoctum Anti- 
phthisicum), 5. 
Demoiselles, 16. 
Diampa, 121. 
Dijon method of keeping snails, 
13. 
Dijon way of cooking snails, 25. 
Discovery of the ashes of St. 
James of Compostella, 107. 
Distorted and deformed pearl mus- 
sel shells often contain pearls, 
54. 
Dog of Tyrian nymph, 129. 
Donax eaten on the French coast, 
150. 
Donax cooked with rice at Malaga, 
150. 
Donax, called cozzola in Sicily, 
150. 
Donax and Psammobia used for 
making sauces instead of cockles, 
150. 
Donax trunculus sold in the mar- 
kets at Naples, 150. 
Dredgers of Whitstable, 72. 
Dreissena polymorph a, 62. 
Dress of Anne of Cleves, 57. 
Ducks fed on snails, 21. 
Duke of Bedford, arms of the, 
104. 
Dutch oysters, 89. 
