Author Notes
When I was growing up in Toronto we used to be members at a place called The Granite Club. For our athletically inclined family it was our home away from home. It’s been 20+ years, yet three memories are still with me today – of my tennis coach; a horrible haircut; and the cafeteria cinnamon toast. I hadn’t eaten this for ages and had the sudden urge to do my own version, updated with a few modern tweaks.
Make it the night before and it takes about the same time to reheat it as an EGGO waffle. —Feed Me Dearly
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Ingredients
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4 ounces
good quality salted butter (if using unsalted butter, add a pinch of salt)
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1/4 cup
good quality cinnamon
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1/4 cup
superfine sugar
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4
thick slices of a good quality country white bread, Pullman, or Pain de Mie
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5
eggs
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1.5 cups
half ‘n half
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1 teaspoon
vanilla
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Maple syrup and/or crème fraiche
Directions
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Soften butter for a few hours or overnight.
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In a medium bowl, mix the butter with the cinnamon and the sugar.
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Spread 1 tablespoon of cinnamon butter on each of the 4 slices of bread and lay them in a medium casserole dish- doesn’t matter how as you’ll be breaking them up and re-inserting them at a later point.
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You’ll have leftover butter at this point, which will keep in your fridge for a few weeks and is great for making cinnamon toast (just remember to soften beforehand).
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Chill the dish for a few hours, overnight, even for up to a few days. Stale bread is the key for this recipe.
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Once the bread has chilled, remove and set to the side while you butter the inside of the casserole dish.
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Once buttered, break up the chunks of bread and lay them inside the dish.
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In a medium bowl, whisk together the eggs, half ‘n half and vanilla.
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Pour over the bread chunks, and with a large piece of Saran Wrap, cover and compress it a little with your hands.
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To help with the absorption, put something heavy on top of the Saran Wrap – I used a smaller casserole dish but you could also use soup cans.
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Let the mixture absorb into the bread for 20 -30 mins.
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While the mixture is absorbing, preheat your oven to 350 degrees.
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Remove the weights, and the Saran Wrap, and cover with aluminum foil. Bake for 30 minutes.
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Remove the aluminum foil and bake for another 30 mins or until custard has set.
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Remove the French Toast from the oven, scoop onto individual plates and top with maple syrup and/or crème fraiche. (Vermont Creamery makes a vanilla crème fraiche that’s perfect here).
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NOTES:
Although this may look like a long and complicated process, the active time is short and can be spread out over multiple days making it a cinch to pull together.
French toast can be baked ahead of time, covered and reheated the next day to save time in the morning.
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