French Toast
Submitted by Rod
Classic French toast made with day-old bread dipped in eggs and milk, fried golden brown. Serve with maple syrup, powdered sugar, or tart jelly for a quick breakfast.
YIELD
2 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
10 minREADY
20 minThis is French toast stripped down to its essentials: eggs, milk, salt, and day-old bread, fried until golden. No vanilla, no cinnamon, no sugar in the batter. Just a clean, eggy custard that lets you choose your own topping adventure.
Day-old bread is called for on purpose. Fresh bread is too soft and falls apart in the egg mixture. Stale bread has dried out enough to absorb the custard without disintegrating, and it holds up in the pan with a firmer structure that fries crisp on the outside while staying custardy inside.
Dip each slice just long enough to coat both sides. Don’t soak it. Waterlogged bread steams in the pan instead of getting that golden, slightly crispy surface you want.
Pro Tips
- Beat the eggs only slightly. Over-beaten eggs create a foamy batter that doesn’t cling to the bread evenly.
- Use medium heat in the pan. Too hot and the egg coating burns before the center heats through. Too low and it absorbs grease.
- Fry in a small amount of hot fat, not a swimming pool of oil. You want a shallow fry, not a deep fry.
- Serve immediately. French toast loses its crispness fast as it sits.
Variations
Ingredients
Directions
Combine eggs, milk and salt.
Dip day-old bread into milk-egg mixture (enough for 4 to 6 slices of bread.).
Fry bread slices in small amont of hot fat until golden brown.
Serve hot with maple-falvored syrup, confectioners’ sugar, or tart jelly.
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