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Melba toast is a dry, crisp and thinly sliced , often served with soup and salad or topped with either melted cheese or pâté. It is named after Dame , the stage name of Australian opera singer Helen Porter Mitchell.

(2025). 9780544189096, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. .
Its name is thought to date from 1897, when the singer was very ill and it became a staple of her diet. History of Melba Toast The toast was created for her by a chef who was also a fan of her, Auguste Escoffier, who also created the dessert for her. The hotel proprietor César Ritz supposedly named it in a conversation with Escoffier.
(1978). 9780060120085, Harper and Row.
(2025). 9780544186033, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. .

Melba toast is made by lightly toasting slices of bread under a grill, on both sides. The resulting toast is then sliced laterally. These thin slices are then returned to the grill with the untoasted sides towards the heat source, resulting in toast half the normal thickness. Great British Cookbook – Melba Toast

Melba toast is also available commercially, and was at one time given to infants who were as a hard food substance on which to chew. In the UK, this is similar to a commercial product known as French toast, although it is very different from the egg-based dish known as internationally.

In France, it is referred to as croutes en dentelle.

(2025). 9781558321564, Harvard Common Press. .


History
In 1925, the prescribed the "Eighteen Day Reducing Diet" to and Sophie C. Cubbison, autobiographical sketch, unpublished typescript. Summarized in William Shurtleff and Akiko Aoyagi, History of Soybeans and Soyfoods in Mexico and Central America, 1877-2009 (Lafayette CA: SoyInfo Press, 2009), 52-53. Melba toast was also eaten as a component of the .


See also
  • List of breads
  • List of foods named after people
  • List of toast dishes
  • List of twice-baked foods
  • Mrs. Cubbison's Foods
  • Old London Foods

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