I have learned something about the “break” that has been removed from the Varnish Maker’s Oil. This is from the May 1903 Journal of The American Chemical Society (courtesy of Google Books).
“Freshly pressed linseed oil, or linseed oil that has not been properly settled or prepared for the manufacture of varnish, when heated to, say, 400 degrees Fahrenheit, undergoes a change which the varnish man describes as “breaking”. The phenomena consists in the appearance in the oil of gelatinous masses slightly darker than the oil itself, settling with difficulty, and extremely difficult to remove from the oil by filtration. The bulk of the break appears in some instances to be considerable.
….the principal cause of the break in the linseed oil is the phosphates of lime and magnesia present, although their presence in the oil may be due to a combination between them and some organic base or bases.”
So the substances that cause the “gelatinous masses” can apparently be removed by settling. I wonder if this is the same material that is removed these days by bleaching and other chemical treatments in use today. Settling requires at least some patience, not a commodity easily found in American manufacturing.