This section is from the book "Every-Day Dishes And Every-Day Work", by E. E. Kellogg. Also available from Amazon: Larousse Gastronomique.
Fresh, fine-flavored apples stewed in a small quantity of water, rubbed through a colander, sweetened, then cooked in a granite-ware dish in a slow oven until quite dry, make a nice dressing for toast. Baked sweet or sour apples, rubbed through a colander to remove cores and skins, are excellent. Dried apples, thoroughly cooked, sweetened, and rubbed through a colander, are also excellent for this purpose. Soften the slices of zwieback with hot liquid, and serve with a spoonful or two on each slice. If desired, the apple may be flavored with a little pineapple or lemon, or mixed with grape, cranberry, or apricot, thus making a number of different toasts.
Stew some nice dried apricots as directed on page 61. When done, rub through a fine colander to remove all skins and to render them homogeneous. Add sugar to sweeten, and serve as a dressing on slices of zwieback which have been previously softened in hot liquid. One-half or two-thirds fresh or dried apples may be used with the apricots, if preferred.
Prepare asparagus as directed on page 88. When tender, drain off the liquor and season it with a little cream, and salt if desired. Moisten zwieback in the liquor, and lay in a hot dish; unbind the asparagus, heap it upon the toast, and serve.
Peel and press some good bananas through a colander. This may be very easily done with a potato masher, or a vegetable press may be used for the purpose. Moisten slices of zwieback with hot cream, and serve with a large spoonful of the banana pulp on each slice. Fresh peaches may be prepared and used on the toast in the same way.
Canned strawberries, blueberries, and blackberries may be made into an excellent dressing for toast.
Turn a can of well-kept berries into a colander over an earthen dish, to separate the juice from the berries. Place the juice in a porcelain kettle and heat to boiling. Thicken to the consistency of cream with flour rubbed smooth in a little water; a tablespoonful of flour to the pint of juice will be about the right proportion. Add the berries, and boil up just sufficiently to cook the flour and heat the berries; serve hot. If cream for moistening the zwieback is not at hand, a little juice may be reserved without thickening, and heated in another dish for this purpose; or if preferred, the fruit may be heated and poured over the dry zwieback without being thickened, or it may be rubbed through a colander as for apricot toast.
Take fresh red or black raspberries, blueberries, or strawberries, and mash well with a spoon. Add sugar to sweeten, and serve as a dressing on slices of zwieback previously moistened with hot liquid.
Cut the crisp white portion of celery into inch pieces, simmer twenty minutes or half an hour, or until tender, in a very little water; add salt and a cup of rich milk. Heat to boiling, and thicken with a little flour rubbed smooth in a small quantity of milk - a teaspoonful of flour to the pint of liquid.
Serve hot, poured over slices of zwieback previously moistened with cream or hot water.
 
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