Essence.
If you wash the ashes of its branches and leaves, it will become like tutia. Thickly boiled quince juice cleanses, since it binds well, while thickly boiled apple juice oxidizes, because it has a watery, cold moisture.
Choice.
Baked quince is lighter and healthier. They bake it like this: they make a round cutout, take out the seeds, put honey in the middle of the fruit, coat the fruit with clay and bury it in hot ash.
Nature.
Cold in the first degree, dry at the beginning of the second.
Properties.
Astringent, strengthening. Quince flowers, as well as its oil, bind. Sweet quince knits less. The seeds soften it without binding and prevent the excess from leaking into the insides.
Cosmetics.
Quince retards perspiration, and quince oil helps against cracks caused by cold.
Tumors and acne.
Quince oil helps against herpes.
Wounds and ulcers.
Its oil is useful for scab ulcers.
Tools with joints.
Eating a lot of quince is harmful, it causes pain in the nerves.
Organs of the eye.
Baked quince is applied to hot eye tumors.
Respiratory system.
Squeezed quince juice is useful for “standing breathing” and asthma and stops hemoptysis, and its seeds are useful for rough throat and soften the pulmonary tube. Their mucus, moreover, softens the dryness of the breathing tube.
Nutritional organs.
Quince helps with vomiting and hangover, quenches thirst and strengthens the stomach, which accepts excess. Drinking, infusion and decoction of quince, if taken after wine, prevents hangover. A drink is also prepared from quince, which greatly enhances declining appetite; maybikh strengthens the stomach and stops mucous vomiting.
Eruption organs.
Quince strongly drives urine and menstruation, but they say that this occurs through an incoming action and is a consequence of its fixative property. Quince boiled in honey is even stronger. Sometimes it releases the nature, and does not strengthen it, and gives rise to pain and pain in the intestines. Quince helps against dysentery. If you put its squeezed juice or oil in drops into the urethra, it delays menstrual bleeding and helps with burning during urination. Quince oil is good for the kidneys and bladder, and if taken after meals, it releases the natural state. If taken in large quantities, it will even remove food before it is digested. Enemas are prepared from quince decoction for prolapse of the rectum and uterus.