This is an excerpt from.
The Planter and Sugar Manufacturer, Volume 39 1907
"In the illustration that we give herewith our readers will see the early method of making white loaf sugars. The earthen pot will be seen in the foreground, sure mounted by an inverted cone made of cy”” press with iron hoops and with a hole of about an inch in diameter in the bottom. This is the old Dutch style and one sugar house on the lower coast after the civil war had it in over a thousand of these earthen”” ware pots and many of these cypress sugar loaf, or cone, forms, as well as some made of metal. The old Dutch method was to stop the hole in the bottom of the inverted cone. fill it full of hot sugar from the vacuum pan and let it stand in this way until the sugar hardened. The plug was then drawn out from the bottom and any molasses free in. the inverted loaf of sugar could fall into the earthern jar. To promote this flow and to whiten the mass, it was usual to take white sugars, melt them in water to the point of saturation and then use this thin liquor on the top of the cones in greater or less quantities, until the whole loaf of sugar became white, excepting a small part at the lower, or small end. This dark colored end was then cut off and the white loaf was broken up into lump sugar and became the white lump, or crushed sugar of the commerce of that day. This photograph was recently taken of the last one of the old cypress cone forms and will perhaps serve as a reminder to generations yet to come of some of these incidents in the history of the Louisiana sugar industry."