Saturday, January 14, 2006

Baked French toast

This has been our only French toast recipe since we first made it a few years ago. Thick slices of bread are soaked overnight in a pan with brown sugar and butter on the bottom and half-and-half and eggs on top, then baked the next morning.

Making baked french toast
Pouring the half-and-half mixture onto the bread

This recipe is easier than any other French toast recipe we've seen; it does take a bit of planning ahead, but once you've sliced the bread and left it to soak overnight all you have to do is groggily pop it in the oven when you wake up, and 40 minutes later you've got hot, crispy, gooey French toast. We made this for our New Years celebration, but since I was too busy last weekend getting my lab manual ready to write a food post, this is this week's end-of-the-week recipe blogging post.

Baked french toast
Hot out of the oven

8 tablespoons (1 stick) butter
1 cup brown sugar
2 tablespoons corn syrup (or honey)
5 eggs
1 1/2 cups half-and-half (or 1 cup milk and 1/2 cup heavy cream)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 pound bread (something like French bread, challah, or ciabatta; don't use bread that has already been sliced for sandwiches)

1. Slice the bread into ~1-inch thick slices (or whatever thickness will allow you to fill a 9x13" baking pan in a single layer).
2. Heat the butter, brown sugar, and corn syrup (or honey) in a small pot over medium heat, stirring regularly, until they are combined.
3. Pour the brown sugar mixture into a 9x13" baking dish.
4. Place the bread into the baking dish, pressing it lightly into the brown sugar mixture.
4. Mix the eggs, half-and-half (or milk and cream), vanilla, and salt in a bowl, and then pour over the bread.
5. Cover and let sit overnight (8 or more hours) in the fridge.
6. Bake in a preheated 350F oven for 40 minutes, or until browned.
7. Serve immediately; we invert the slices so the brown sugar mixture is on top.

We found this recipe online years ago, and have long since lost the link to the source.

Update April 2007: Added honey as an alternate for the corn syrup.

1 comment:

Radagast said...

Importing comments:

Radagast
I knew that French toast wasn't called French toast in France, but I never knew what it was called (my SO and I jokingly figured "American Toast"). Thanks for the info!

As a side note, the more typical method of making this dish in the US is to soak sliced bread in eggs and milk for a few minutes and then fry the bread in a pan on the stove.
January 18, 2006, 9:47:01 AM PST – Like – Reply

abie
waw, I didn't even know this was called French toast in english.
In French, it goes by the name of "pain perdu" (lost bread), because it is made with bread that has become to hard to eat, and baguette bread hardens up incredibly fast, especially the cheap one.