Some vegetables are often featured in salads and side dishes – others, such as celery, not so much. A hundred years ago celery was more popular than it is today, and I see old recipes for celery dishes from time to time.
I recently came across a 1921 recipe for an easy-to-make salad called Dressed Celery, and decided to give it a try. Thinly sliced celery is served with a lovely egg-based cream dressing. The Dressed Celery made a nice side salad.
Here’s the original recipe:

Here’s the recipe updated for modern cooks:
Dressed Celery
2 cups thinly sliced celery
Cream Dressing (see below)
Mix celery with desired amount of Cream Dressing. (Any extra dressing can be reserved and used with another salad.)
Cream Dressing
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 1/2 teaspoons dry mustard
3/4 tablespoon sugar
1 egg, beaten
2 1/2 tablespoons butter
3/4 cup cream
1/4 cup vinegar
Mix the ingredients in the order given. Slowly stir in the cream and vinegar while stirring to make a smooth liquid. Put in a sauce pan, and heat using medium heat while stirring constantly. Cook until the mixture thickens, then strain, and cool before using.





It fascinating how much variation there can be from one recipe to the next. Three years ago I 
I never thought much about how many vegetables to serve at a meal until I read recommendations in a hundred-year-old home economics textbook, but my first thought was “the more the better.” That’s not exactly what the old book said:
